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COLUMBUS:
WEDNESDAY FKUUUAllY 4, 1874.
l»ONIT|VK.
Wo aro forced \>y tho uoooftBity of our
business to make Iho following aunpnfice-
mont. The advertising aim fmbsctlption
rates printed in this initio will he strictly
ndhored to, and wbero subscriptions are
not paid atrictly in advance the following
prices will bo insisted on :
——■****■*»—*——6“— •• -<r-.ei.irt-...
menu Dial we could not t>o driven to do- j or fragments, (hero would bo some law
MB
Daily.
Weekly
Huuday iAtf....,
Sunday and Weekly
Monthly subscribers
.#10 <M>
AN OW»OIirU.\ITY.
On 'Lliiirfuluy we will issue an extra edi
tion of 6,000 Aliens, to be distributed to
farmers and others through Iho Granges
and post office#. Our merchants should
avail thQU|AolvoH of this opportunity to
lay their spring business before tho peo
ple. Call with your cards.
A “Salary Guam” on a small sealo is
incubating at .Jackson, Miss. It is a hill
to pay the uneuibark of tho Legislature
•ff/ilH) each, work or play. .
Tiik New Orleans l*icayunc thinks that
the cotton reocipta of its city this unison
will oxcoed thosn of last fioason 100,000
hales, hut that Mobile will lose.
Tine old French Heutijuout luauifuated
itself, last week, in tho oloctioim in Alsace
for members of tho Gerinun Heicbslag.
Thu French candidates were elected by
overwhelming majorities, Lismnrck did
not put them through a course of thor
ough “reconstruction."
Tukuk appears to be doubt about the
truth of the report that Kellogg had made
a requisition on (Jov. Shepherd for the
rendition of Ex-Gov. Wurmoth. Now Or
leans papers say tint Kellogg, when inter
rogated on tho subject, ou Saturday, by
his own friends, would say that it was a
State secret, of which he could givo no
information ; hut when ouo of Waruioth’s
friends asked about it, Kollogg denied
that there ups any fcrnth in tho report.
Tins Washington reporter of tho Now
York Herald writes that two inodes of
getting rid of Judge Dared aro suggested
by liopublicntiH, with the view of avoid
ing his mipoaehmoiit and the damaging
effect it might, have upon the Adminis
tration. One is that he shall resign, and
a tremendous pressure is being brought
to boar upon him to that end. Another
is to abolish tho present United States
Judicial District of Louisiana, and to
erect in its stead two judicial districts,
which would legislate Duvell out of otlioo.
Tin: Legislature of Mississippi will bal
lot to-day for two United States ftountora
—one to 11U Ames’ short unoxpired term,
aud the other for u long term commenc
ing tho 4th of March, 1877. Ou Friday
night a Kadicul canons nominated 11. K.
Itruo.e, colored Sheriff of ltollvar county,
for the long term, and 11. it. Bouse, white,
for the short term. Jbit a <1 input oh of
Saturday, from Juckson, says that a num
ber of Itopublicans arc organizing a bolt
to defeat Hrnco. Not “on account of
race, color, or previous condition of ser
vitude’—oh, no!
on Saturday,the 14th February
>. M. BBOOK#, Ordinary.
MAttfUr.lh
j cuko of actual danger— associating tho planets’ distances with | ^ Kev!"Dr.*j’.! fl^Key, Mr! *.!aMfs D. r oii!u£K*u
urd would do that—hat, their dimensions, which wo know is far ' AIrH MaRTMA J. BKACKLeV, both «t Mucou
from the case ; fid, that if La Place# the- > ' urg ' ,i '— —— 3
ory were correct, tho orbital motions and j iUsuogUKCOUK r OF ORDINARY.—Wiiiian
axial rotations of all tho planets would ^ x «^upUon^of''FeraMmlt^und^wg/p 1 ' 1
necessarily bo in ouo unvarying direction,
whereas we find that there is one solitary
exception, in the case of a satellite of
Uranus, which moves nearly at right an
gles with the orbits of all the others; lib.
that the appearance around stars in the
observed nebulous regions is more like a
gathering in of the noLulous matter to
wards tho slurs than the rotation arouud
them of a nebulous mass.
In lieu of La Place's theory of contrac
tion and separation from a groat nebulous
mass, Prof. Proctor ndvanoes the idea of
tho fjrowth of worldn from an accretion of
nebulous matter. Ho admits that such a
growth must now be so slow a process as
hardly to be appreciable in a million
years—computing that our earth “ in
creases only ono inch in diameter by tho
fall of metoors in 400,000,000 yours!’’—
but thinks that the nebulous accretion
was at ouo time far more rapid than now
aud the matter much more abundant in
our system.
Wo copy from ono of his lectures, to
show wherein lio thinks that his theory is
free fjjoiu objections urged a gain at La
Place’s :
There is evidence that these nebula* are
gaseous. Well, thou, these nebulous
masses would bo thrown into tho grout
center. There would be ono center of
aggregation. That center would grow
continually in sizo and power, gradually
draw in more and more matter to it ; and
tho more it drew in of those nebulous
masses, tho greater its power would be-
corno. llow, then, does tho secondary
aggregation take its origin ? I suppose
they would arise not iu ouo direction only,
ljf.it some iu ouo and somo iu auolher,
with a superabundance in one direction ;
groat subordinate masses would ho form
ed, perhaps, not continuing separate for
auy length of time. Iu the neighborhood
of a groat central aggregation, a gather
ing of that kind could not form, for tho ! Corner St. Clair ami Jackson Sts.,
reason that all the motions near tho great ] COi.i Mltrs, GEORGIA,
central aggregation would be vory rapid. | fob3 dlwxsxlt
Take our sun, which is the original center 1
“ALAN! MY t'OUXTKY 1”
Tho most civilized nations, whore cul
ture, progress and order reign, aro tho
places where human life is most pro
tected, and whore tbo sanctity of tho law i
covers the poorest and weakest as with a
mantle. Tho people who are the most
barbarous aud uncivilized, aro those who
have no respect for life, and who permit
brutal passion to usurp tbo place that jus
tice should occupy. We question if tho
truo standard of civilization iu n nation
cannot bo established by its treatment of
murderers, and tho safeguards thrown
about a human being's life. In England
mul Germany, our models of tho highest
civilization, neither ago, rank, wealth nor
iucontivo are considered whore a life is
taken, and it is impossible in Germany to
bail a man, even where in tho preliminary
trial it is shown the prisoner killed his
opponent iu self-dofonco. And when
cleared, as ho is apt to lm in theso rare
circumstances, lmis ostracized by society
and becomes socially dead.
Those who have opposed our repeated
denunciations of the reckless and indis
criminate murdqra we have been called
on to chronicle, say, “Yon cannot change
this, nor prevent murder, if you wore to
write from now till doomsday. Indeed,
you only eudanger your own life by the
lieivoness of your attacks. Speak iu a
general way, and after u time things may
mend, aud men cease lo carry arms.” If
we did not know that fifty yes, y
live per cent, of Southern men, look ut
murder as we do, we would cease to write
here, by going back in sorrow to tbo
place from which wo came.
It is of leu argued there is us much critu
in New York city, as among auy equal
population in the country. We would
agree b> this, and even cope ode that Lon
don would compare well with New York :
but in those places crime does not tali
tho form of a reckless destruction of life
so much as an effort to obtain the proper
ty of others by illegitimate meaus. .Said
a gentleman to us a short time siuce, talk
jug ou this subject, “I can walk down
Broad street iu this city, aud iu one hour
1 can point you out twelve men looked
upon as good citizens each of whom has
taken or attempted to take a humun be
ing’s life, and in nine cases out of tou
without tho shadow of au excuse." Since
wo have boon iu this State, throe times
we have stood with pistols to our hearts,
aud the consciousness of a loved wife and
child at home. More than throe times
our life has beon threatened, and in two
cases men have sworn they would kill us
on sight if we visited tho place where
they lived. Under the code of murder,
fend ourseb
tho veriest
dospito uli that lias been said, and all the
threats against us, we have never seen the
time when w o felt forced to carry a pistol,
or when wo would havo mud it had we
been cowardly enough to havo carried one
on our hip.
Speaking p-k if in the presence of that
God whom all good men love, we say the
South is cursing herself, aud that she is
reviving, or rather keeping alive, tho bar
barism of that most cowardly epoch in tho
world’s history, tho middle ages, by her
contempt for life, and her overriding of
criminal law. The men will not hear us,
at least those whom wo wish to reach, ond
v/o therefore appeal to the women, whose
true hearts never fail to respond when
religion and humanity uppeal. To tho
wife we can say, “some armed scoundrol
muy shoot your spirited husband down as
ho is going to his homo, and ho, tho man
yon love, tho father of your childreu, with
a hall iu his heart, where your imago ever
dwelt, will be forgotten, w'hile the bar*
barous, maudlin, ungodly sentiments of
the community try to frumo excusos for his
murderer; and with weak judges and venal
juries try to prove that the man you loved
deserved his death." Oh, woman, you do
not foul it whon some other wife is wid
owed, as is tho wife of poor, impetuous,
young Davis! Oh, yo children, clamber
ing round your father’s knoo this morn,
ing, and ho so happy and strong, yo can
not imagine the feelings yo would havo if
ho were carried home, bleeding, and his
white throat gashed with a murderer’s
knife! Ye o.iuuot feel like the three
holies of poor Davis, and many another
muu’n babes, but utidcr this cowardly bar
barous and brutal code, your father’s time
may bo the next.
Murderers and their sympathizers may
force us to leave this State dead or alive,
but as if called for judgment, so long as
God gives us strength, uncaring for tho
consequences, wo shall denounco murder
and murderers. It mattors not their
namos, their standing, or tho chances of
thoir being cleared by ignorant judges
and corrupt jurios. If wo cannot do this
and ho protected, then wo shall shako the
dust from our foot and loavo. But our
faith in tho honest sturdy farmer is too
strong to weaken our hope. Our manly,
moral and luw-abiding citizens are too
pnro and upright to make us think of
failure, but above all wo placo our faith
iu tho mothers, wives and sisters of tho
Month, and tho fact that wo boliovo in tho
justice of God, evon though Ho permit
llis most holy command to ho violated.
“THE GROWTH OF WOlt IDS.’
The Theory of “Accretion.”
Tho advancement of n now' scientific
thoory of tho processes by which planets
were ovolved out of thoir primary ele
ments, is an occurrence so rare and inter
esting as to call for nowspapor mention.
Siuco the promulgation of Ln Place’s won
derful and attractive Nebular thoory of
creation, but few new ideas on this sub
ject have boon advanced. The learned
l-’ro n ohm mi’s theory has beon vigorously
assailed by many men of science, and as
stoutly dofoudod by others. Churchmen
havo ontored the ring and denounced it
as antagonistic to revealed religion and
inconsistent with the recognition of a Su
preme oronti vn power. Ou tho othor
hand, men of soionce havo denied the in
fidelity of tho belief iu a groat compre
hensive plan of creation, which put in
motion the processes by which not ono
but many worlds were formed, aud left
these processes to oporato through many
agos according to tho natural laws that
controlled them. Borne, too, have plaus
ibly attempted to show that thore is no in
consistency between tho Mosaic history
and tho latter-day theories of scienoe. It
is not our purpose to uphold or discuss
any of those theories, but only to mako
this mention of them by way of introduc
ing the first notable attempt to substitute
for the system of La Place a new scieti-
tilic hypothesis of cosmogony or tho pro
cesses of planetary development.
Tho thoory to which wo allude is one
advanced by Prof. U. A. Proctor, of Eng
land, iu a series of lectures delivered a
few days since in New York. Before
stating it (which is nil we proposo to do)
it may bo well to refresh tho memory of
the render by brieily giving tho outlines
of La Place’s thoory, in the luuguago of
Prof. Proctor:
“La Placo had tho idea that there was a
groat nebulous muss having the sun in
the center, extending on either side far
heyoud the proseut extension of the putli
of the uttermost planet, that is a path of
« r >,OUO,OUO,t;OU miles diameter, uud the
nebulous system of La Place extended be
yond that. That mass was intensely hot
and vaporous, and it was rotating, and as
the rotating mass contracted and it began
to rotate more rapidly, the result whs tuat
a ring was thrown off by centrifugal
force. Iu time the ring would gradually
break up, its parts would gradually amal
gamate ; many parts would have diff erent
rates of motion, and different parts would
encounter each other, aud in tho course
of millions of ages there would be au
amalgamation into ono mass, having tho
same direction of motion that the nebu
lous mass had, ami traveling around n
center which was the sun. But as this
minor mass weut ou contracting it would
follow tho same law as the original body
which gave biitktoit. It would goon
contracting, and go more jand more rap
idly: perhaps it would throw off’ true
rings, which would become satellite
the earth was formed ; she turns ou her
axis in ‘„M hours in the same direction,
while she takes 365 days in going around
the sun. Bo it was with Jupiter and Bat
urn aud al! the planets—all in rotation in
the same direction. That process would
go oil nutil one planet after another was
formed. And bo it was that the solar
economy, as we at preaeut know it, would
arise.”
This, we believe, a pretty fair gonoral
statement of La Place’s theory, as far as
it goes, though it does not mention some
of its strongest supports derived from tho
formability of plauetary densities.
AMUSEMENTS.
Springer’s Opera House!
ONE NIGHT ONLY!
5lt Arne Theatre Comhination
From Now Yotk.
WEDNESDAY. FEBRUARY 4TH,
Groat SoMoty
Divorce!
Act 1. Given In Marriage.
Act 2. Tho Strife Bogun.
Act 3. Tho Cursu of Interference.
Act 4. The Law Retaliates.
Act 5. Tho Divorced.
Tho above play will bo presented with all that
attention to dribs and detail that hud made it
elsewhere n fashionable succor*, arid ndcorded the
eiidorfeoment of both preen and publ
REAL ESTATE AGENTS.
ELLIS & HARRISON,
Real Estate Agents
AND AUCTIONEERS,
W ILL ATTEND PROMPTLY TO TllH SALK,
KENT AND PURCHASE of KJSAL ESTATE
in the fit\ uud country. and will ad
lie) FREF
the prop* rty is sold.
OF CHARGE, uillci
CITY LOT No. Out,
liree dwelling-! on tli
jgethef or depurate, ut
J a -7
VALUABLE CITY PROPERTY, situated in the
biidiue s centra of tbo city. IVfit sell ut a great
iirgaiii, or to un acceptable party an undivided
interest. The property c%u be made to pay a Urge
interest on iho iuvedtuiont.
DESIRABLE IIOUSB AND LOT, with ten
i ground, in Liuwood, ouo mile from S. W. K.
K. depot; a very comfortable and desirable homo.
HOUSE with fivo good rooms, within 200 yards
Southwestern Railroad depot, oue-hulf* ucro
ground.
For Rent.
Gallery, 60c.
Seat* can
Hook Store.
is $1 6U; U(moral AUiniddion, $1.00;
bo secured ut IV. J. Chaffin's
Prices Eednced to Suit the Times.
Sash, Blinds and Doors.
bxlu sash unglazed 8c, and glazed 30c per light.
10x12 •• ** 10c, “ *• 25c “
13x14 “ “ 12c, “ “ iluo “
12x20 “ “ 18c, ‘* “ 61c
12x24 “ “ 22c, “ “ 67c “
Lip susli 2c per light additional.
BLINDS 60o PER FOOT, uiousuiiug length nn
not over regular sizes in width.
2 panel doors, Y% In. thick, 3x7 feet, plain, $2 1
4 “ “ \% « 3x7 “ • - 3 f
Fifty cents per side for moulding doors extra.
R. R. GOETCHIUS & CO.,
SADDLES AND HARNESS
sun k neighborhood tlio motions aro vety !
ranid. A body coming out of space and j
falling into tho sun would roach tho sun TTr-ii YT j l TT 1 11
at a velocity of D80 miles a second; VV ill i\0l L)C U ll(ierSOI(l
and if only going around tho sun,
it would travel 2!)!i miles u second. '
hut at tho distance of Jupiter tho velocity 1
of an arriving object would bo only about j
Hi miles ft second ; therefore it would bo
oasior for an aggregation to form at that j
distance, some great distanco from tho
contor. It would not havo to overcome •
the tremendous velocities which au aggro-
gation would have to in attempting to
term soar the sun ; it would havo timo to !
catch the Hying musses. A seoondaiyuc- J
gregation at a considerable distanoo would
uot have thin (treat velocity. Au ^groga- f Mr "' All ofmyVood, !,»,!
tion there Would have greater power over I made, made at homo, and Hatisfactiun guarantee
that matter around it, and a larger and I REPAIRING dune cheap and good. Will muk
larger aggregation would form, uml as it j any kind of New Work to order,
became larger and larger it would be more ' 1 l' ,)si,|vt >ly will not bo undersold by any Itousi
...wi t ..e i Mill givo tiiuo to prompt puylug customers.
W. R. KENT,
Saddles, Harness, Bridles.
Collars, Whips, Trunks,
Satchels, Wagon and
Plow Bridles,
Names, Back Bands,
Trace Chains,
we would ho justified iu killing all tho locities, Ac., with known laws of gravita-
meu referred to ou tho plea of self Don nud other natural forces,
defence, but we know down in our heart Prof. Proctor says that ho has difficulty
we would havo boon tho moat arrant, cow- in accepting this theory of La Place—1st,
urdly murderer to havo doue it; and. because wo have no evidence that a great
much as wo love our dear ones, wo would I nebulous mass of such enormous dimen-
ratUer leave them, dying for n principle, j nions and extreme tenuity could rotate as
than to livo with the blood of some other ft wholo or exist as a whole; l?J, that iu
wife’s husbaud, mmio other chbdreu’s the case of such a rotating mass, poriodi-
father, on our hands. By this wo do not cully or progressively throwing off rings
and more mighty; by u sort of geomolri- I
o»l progossion it would grow larger and !
larger, while all tho objects attempting to [
form withiu its influence would bo kept :
down, reduced in size. Thus wo explain !
tho fact that wo find Jupiter, Iho greatest j
ft{4g rt5 gftli° n > “l ft much greater distanco i
than the inner family of planets and the 1
asteroids.
Boyond Jupiter we come
system, which shows signs of greater
tivity and development. At Saturn’s dis- j
tunoe tho motions would bo loss rapid
than at Jupiter’s distance. Thoro would j
still romaiu a great qtiuulity of matter out !
of which nn aggregation would be formed 1
—and so wo should find Batura not so
large as Jupiter, because tho mutter
would naturally doorcase outwards from ,
the huu ; but owing to the smaller velo- 1
city thoro would be a greater freedom of \
aggregation, and so wo havo Saturn, with
a ring around it, aud its large satellite.
And then we uoxt cotno to Uranus an 1 1
Neptune, aud they aro smaller, because I
tho quantity of matter diminishes with
distance. Then take tho inuur family, !
close to tho suu. Close to the suu, they '
aro prevented from accumulating much
by tbo sun’s neighborhood, because of \
tho tremendous velocity of matter there.
Passing far out again, we find tho influ
ence of Jupiter bog’nning to bo felt, Ju- |
piter resisting tho formation of au aggro- j
gation within his influence. Tho cum- J
bined influence of Jupiter and Saturn
preventing aggregations'from forming, I
results in the smallness of Mars ; and !
close within tho path of Jupiter’s inllu- i
once wo find tlio zone of asteroids, each
too small to form a planet, so incousider- (
able iu size they seem to ho unable to
travel without hitting against each other.
Wo said that wo did not intend to dis
cuss, but only to state, the main points in
this now theory. But wo must say that to
our unscientijic view of tho matter Prof-
Proctor’s theory does not appear as rea
sonable as La Place’s, and some of his
views soom to be more inoousislout with
admitted facts. Ho docs uot sustain liis
ideas by tho application of accepted ele-
meutary principlen ; and somo of Iho dif
ficulties which make him reject La Place’s
theories appear to have fully us much
forco against his own, without a better
accordance than he has yet shown.
Tho theories of both aro rather bold
and ingenious speculations than conclu
sions reasonably educed from known nat
ural laws or well established discoveries.
They aro attempting to solve a great mys
tery—one that may well engage tho pro-
fouudest attention of men, but which is
as yet beyond tho limit of human know
ledge, and seems to beyoud tho scope of
conclusive human reasoning. Like com
ets of long periods, such men as La Place, ■
Uerschell and Proctor may extend their
researches far out into boundless space,
aud build upon them theories that dazzlo
while they bewilder us. Bat tho vastne*;
of tho problem which they undertake to
solve—tho inaccessibility, as yot, of somo
of tho principiti after which they grasp,
aud the vagncuoss of the knowledge of
others—make the task apparently too stu
pendous for hutuAn science in its present
advancement. We may admire their lofty
and laborious enterprises and bo intensely
interested and chatmed by their hypoth
eses, but, after all, we realize the truth of
the poetic sentiment of Campbell—
“Ok! star eye-1 Science, toast then wandered
there
To waft us homo tho message of despair'.' 1 ’
—A colored mau applied to a Boston
savings bank wishing to draw one dollar.
Tho clerk informed him that the iron rule
■ of tho institution forbade tho withdrawal
of less than three dollars. Our colored
brother was in deep study for a few mo
ments. aud thou said : “Bar, I take do
free dollars." Tho three dollars were
paid to him. when he at once added:
“Now, sar, if ver please, sir, 1 'll ’posit
two dollars in de institution." Tlio
amount was duly received aud credited,
when, with his loose dollar iu his pocket,
be gave the clerk u sly vviuk, and walked
away.
jiil doortiwtf
102 Hruail Street, Culumhwa, (
NOTICE.
ITIIIK mule
nnotber 1 oiior.'uu urn
SADDLES,
HARNESS,
TRUNKS,
And other goodn in lita line,
At Very Reduced Prices!
unit p
N. 11.—All \\
FOR CAN 11 ONLY !
imvincvd, ple.tHc cull und exuu
H. MIDDLEBR00K.
Columbus, January lRt, 1874. eodfcw2ni
BOOTS AND SHOE8.
YOUR
TT ENT ION is
respect fully culled to the fn
SECOND TO NONE in tho Iu
lccmeiits offered to buyers of
llOOTN AND H1IOF.K.
We keep our stock well assorted, replenishing
our sales make it nee-saury, from the best
neturers. We shall endeavor by fulr mcaua
HEAD
the lint of competitors for your trade.
OUR LKATHFIt DKPARTMKN'
ell stockt'-l. V\u have just received u large lo
of FRENCH CALK AND KIP SKINS, OAK \ND
HEMLOCK SOLE LEATHER, *«., Ac. It
IS
:o add largely tc
. favor us with
“LEVEL”
o the number
orders by n.
tuucu to do our
AU kinds of KF.l’AtUlNU doue iu the bout sty
*4' Wo nu v the HlC.llKSr MARK I T PUK
FOR DllY HI OHS.
WELLS & CURTIS,
73 Broad Street.
DRUGS AND MEDICINES
j. i. GitirFiN,
IMPORTED
Brins & Medicines,
PERFUMERY
AND
i'ANCY GOODS,
AT Ri:i>lCi;i» PKIIES.
AU goods gnur uitcd. Yreveriptloi
fully prepared ut nil hours. J. I. GRIFF
Jatbdvudawly 100 Droi
EPPING’S BUCHF
For Sale.
Mclutosh street, with
Sitne. Will lie sold
low figure, for cash.
Springs,
ELLIS & HARRISON,
AGENTS FOR
GEORGIA SOAP FACTORY
OF ATLANTA, GA.,
^yiLL sell theso excellent Soaps of ALL grades
added.
Merchant i
ing vine*he
' H-IC >Ht, tl>.
KU uolr
will do well to examine before buy-
p. They are guaranteed as good, at
n other goods iu this hue.
FOR SALE AND RENT.
For Rent.
2 LARGE ROOMS, with sido entrance, with u*
parlo
family .
aifl kitchen. Parties
ii very reasonable terms
w-ll located. Address
iti board with
if preferred
Notice tc all Purchasers of this Excellent
Compound Extract of Buehu.
*$ T
ad you will get the Ueuuiuo,'
Original Extract. Thera IS NO OUTSIDE
AGENCIES—EITHER SPECIAL OK GENERAL.
1 am individually Sole Prcprietur.
March 6 th, 187:i
L. PIERCE.
Notice to the Ladies.
M rs. joiinson
ti.
\ PERCY
they have opened with an
elegant assortui lit of I1VMAN IlAlK, and will
RENEW AND WORK OVER ALL OLD HAIR.
COMBINGS, etc, iu all the latest styles. Store
third door above J. S. Jones' dry goods store,
jail lm
Charcoal for Sale Cheap.
^ LARGE QUANTITY OF CHARCOAL o»
baud at the Gas Works, for sale at 77<r.r cento t
Ruohel till tho present lot is disposed of. Cheapei
tli.hu Wood. fel-0t
Broad street, u
nope*. Apply
Jh23 /tuw Dv
For Sale.
kuowm as tho Barnard .
limited mar tlio uppor cud of I
upiod by Mr. L. U.I
0 N
1* K A BODY A BRAN NON
For Rent,
dost comfortable Dwellings
ton, tlie residence of Thus. Hl||
used. Terms easy. Apply™ 31
AUCTION AND COMMISSION MERCHANTS
k. McNeill. g. w. kosette. s ., ,,,
s - E - UWHOK.
R. McNEILL k CO,
AUCTION,
Commission Merchants
AND
Real Estate Agents,
121 Broad Street, Columbus, Ca.
H AVING formed a copnrtnernbip to conduct tlie AUCTION AND COMMISSION
buain0B», solicit a share of tho publio patronage. ' UA
HAVE NOW ON CONSIGNMENT,
in, OHS, CORN, APPLES, P0T4T0ES i
FRESH BUTTER,
Which is offered at WHOLESALE AND KETAIL, at prices that will ba &
inducement to Cash Buyers. R. McNEILL A CO.
Columbus, October 12th, 187:1. di'.m
HAT STORES.
FOR THE NEXT THIRTY DAYS I
I OFFER MV ENTIRE STOCK OF
FUR AND WOOL HATSl
AT
Greatly Reduced Prices!
January Hist, 1874. 2\v E. E. YONCE.
O'
Executor’s Sale.
S' the brut Tuesday iu February next, I will
cell at public outcry, before tho uuction
iu uf Ellis & Harrison, in Columbus, between
usual hours of sate, tho following real estate,
it:
tc undivided half interest iu the premises
a ii as tlis storehouse lately occupied by llall
loses, uud now by Williutu Beach, as a hard-
) storo.
so, an undivided half hit* rest iu tlie store
to next the corner on Uruad street, under Con-
Hall, and au undivided fourth interest iu
[*ert Hail.
n> said property loing the interest of the late
•b I. Moses. Tel 318 cash.
cdl td ISAAC I. MOSES. Exceutor.
GROCERIES.
Wew Grocery Store. |
DANIEL & BARBEE,
For Sale Low.
Jj. SCHOLARSHIP IN the medical col
lege AT EVANSVILLE, INDIANA.
novO tf APPLY AT THIS OFFICE.
Rooms to Rent.
J. K JOHNSTON & CO.
FERTILIZERS.
CHEMICALS—PURE !
FOR
HOME-MADE FERTILIZERS,
AT LOW PRICKS.
E. C. HOOD & BRO.
jii 21 tapl'J
Guano Notice to
Planters.
}
mins attention of my customers is called to the
JL payment of their Notes, Lions and other
obligations given for SOLUBLE PACIFIC GUANO,
w ith tho privilege of paying iu Cotton at rate of
fiftoou (16; cents per lb for Low Middlings.
Cotton will bo received by me nntl
all my AKents in accordance with
contract until maturity of such ob-
ligations, after which date this priv.
liege will cease.
Those owing less than a bale will ship the bale
to Columbus, Gu., uud the bulanco will be returned
to them at market price.
Deliver Soluble Pacific Guauo
for Another Season
To my prompt paying customers.
Parties anticipating thoir Cotton Notes and
I.I*Mis will thereby SAVE KINK OF I.ONN
BY FIRE ANI) I,OSS IX WEIGHT,
d e., and uro entitled to the benefit of any excess
should price for low middlings exceed fifteen (16)
cents at maturity of notes.
Eagle aud Plienix money taken at par.
W. H. YOUNG,
A’«t Pacific Cuano Comp’y,
Xo. 12 Broad Street.
I am now delivering my well known
“Rust and Smut Proof’
Seed Oats,
Home-Made Fertilizers!
AITT have just received a stock of Chetnicnls
>> for making Fertilizers, viz :
5,000 lbs. Sulphate of Ammonia,
5,000 “ Muriate of Potash,
5,000 “ Nitrate of Soda,
50 tons Nova Scotia Land Plaster,
(Fine Q round);
50 tons Ammoniated Flour of Ri
Bones, &c., Ac.
as- Get our prices before purchasing.
HOLSTEAD A CO.,
Agricultural Depot, 1U:) Broad Street,
i**2J Columbus, (la
SEEDS.
SEED OATS !
And Groceries and Provisions,
—AT—
BARBEE & IVEY’S,
J»-l dlW
Crawford Street.
Diaries for 1874.
^LL SIZES, Styles of Binding
For sale by
de3l J.
W. PEASE & NOKMAN.
At Watt &jWa1ker'n old stand, No. 152 BfOHd StfOOt.
ctfully notify our friends and tho public that we have opened ut the abo
FAMILY GROCERIES, LIQUORS OF ALL
BOOTS, SHOES, HATS, &C.,
KINDS.
est market prices. We resj ect'ully solicit a slmro of the public f>
of goods, and will not lio uudorsoltl iu this or any other mdgblioii
Respectfully,
DANIEL A RAKUKK.
DRY COODS.
J. KYLE & CO.
*»nd tlio public gene*al!y, that their FA
01)8 is now complete iu every denartm
Hiially found iu a first class Dry Goods Hcubu. They were bought dui
irk for money, und will be solo nt prices to correspond with the timer
minis ting of every
the mouey panic ii
cash. Wo still keep a large line of
IRISH LINENS, OF OUR OWN IMPORTATION!
ALSO, A Sl'LBSDID LINK OF
Ladies’, Misses’ aiul Children’s Shoes |
of the Lutest Stylo and Best Make. Also,:
Beautiful Line of Carpets, Rugs, &c., at Reduced Prices,)
All wishing to purchaao will do well to give ns a call, a
Culuiubua, Oct. 6th, 1S73.
Grand Clearing Out Sale!|
TO MAKE READY FOR THE SPRING TRADE, WE NOW OFFER
Our Entire Stock of Fancy Dress Goods |
AT AND BELOW COST. FOR CASH !
AND EVERY OTHER ARTICLE AS LOW AS TO RE FOUND ELSEWHERE.
CHAPMAN & VERSTILLE,
Jn4 il -JOIIROA It NTIIKI1I
BOATRITE & CLAPP,
WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALERS IN
Dry Goods, Clotihing, Hats, Boots, Shoes and Notions,
HAVE JUST RECEIVED
New Prints and other Staple Goods,
AND WILL CONTINUE TO SELL
Winter Dress Goods, Flannels and other Cold Weather Fabrics
AT PANIC PRICES, FAR BELOW COST.
TRUTHS
LITTLE CASH—LOW PRICES^
JOSEPH 6l BROTHER
H aving r-solved t.» quit the prv Goods business, aro still soiling their magnificent stock
ttUl’EKIOK WllY UOOWK AT COST FOIL CAKH !
To Mt-rchuuis desiring t • invert, a fortune is idler d iu ti « chance to buy out the stock «> 0
Never agalu in this section will such nn opportunity be offered to buy articles fur Clothing clual'
THE DOMESTIC STOCK
Will be sold at lower prices than can be given in Georgia, and all O' 1 ”
articles lower than in New York.
iity ennuot List forever, r-turr open early nntl let 0,
JOSEPH & BROTHER,
60 Broail street, ColumLo*.
Spring is coming, aud thin
Columbns, Jan. 18, li*
BARGMHS! BH!! BIRGIINS!!!
Important to Those in Want of Dry
C ONTEMPLATING a sDirht change iu our l usinoss. we offer front tlii« date otic || t ;|K
NTO( K OF OltllSK AM) I AM Y GOODN AT O.A F.-II A >•* i-
V Al.l'E, and invite thu»j tu want vu call, vxamlue and b« convinced. No charge* in.
KOtM,i - .ii he
Our Terms from this date will be Cash. No goods wi
sold on longer time than thirty days.
„t|y requested lo mil uud .Hlle nt once,
JOHN McGOUGH & CO
J.uiury lit, 1874. dtf