Newspaper Page Text
^uirtraj) j|nqtrim.
_ MUnm. «MMui
SUNDAY ,..MAY 8, 187*.
ns UN»BV« AND TDK ANT.
n< lody-taf Mt la «hj «•.’« brort
A ad imlM with arid* tad .corn,
Aa >ha MW a plate-dram* ant (0 t»y
With a h«a.f (rain of cor* ;
go aha draw th« aartala of danuak found,
And adjaatad bar ailkaa mat,
Making bar glaaa of a drop of daw
That lap la tba roan'a bnaat. (
Than aha laagbad ao bard that tba ant lookad up,
And analog bar haughty fa™.
Took no atom aottca, bat traveled on
At tba aama Indoatrloua paca;
■at aanddan bloat of autumn canto
Than tba honaalaaa lady waa much amatad,
for aha know not wkara to go,
And booraa Norombor'a early bloat
And aba wlabad for the ant'a warm cell;
And arbat the did lu the wintry atom
’ I'm aura I cannot tall.
fftb the little onae by ifer aide ;
■be taught them all Ilka hereelf to toll,
Ifor mind tba anaor of pride : .
Aad I tbongbt aa 1 ant at the done of day
■atlag my bread aad milk.
That 'twaa wlaor to work and Improre the tin
Than be Idle aad draaa In ante.
WIT iiV HVNOB.
—Aooording to a Kansas decision, a
husband And wife can enter a show on a
Ueket reeding “admit one. Mont right'
noun judge.
—“I’m not getting married no tnHoh an
I wag,” is the latent way of naying ‘no’to
an impaaaioned anlter.
—“Why,” anked a governnean of hor
Utile ebarge, “do we pray to God for our
daily bread ? Why don’t we anlf for four
daya, five daya or a week V” “We want
it fresh," replied the ingenuous child.
—A cynic says marriage in very often a
flnllbook with a very fine prefaoe.
—A candidate for offloe in Omahn who
wears a shirt aollar is considered a bloat
ed aristocrat.
—“They put him under a show cane,”
was the remark of a rural lady, who re
cently attended a oity funeral.
—Mr. Bird, aged sixteen years, was
married to Minn Wormley, aged fifteen,
in Kentucky the other day: “The early
bird,” eto.
—The editor of the “Golden Globe,"
In Colorado, has suspended publication
ninoe a vigilance committee linn suspend
ed him.
—A fellow who was sent to jail in Ohio
for aheep-steaiing, said to the justice:
“Well, I and Bazine aDd Tichhorne can
stand it.”
—Texas men play marbles for one
hundred. Lead of cattle aside. They
should steer clear of such gambling.
—A man in Month Windsor, Connects
out, who was thrown out of his wagon by
a locomotive, atrnok tbo top of a tele
n h pole in deeoending, and “it is
ght he is seriously injured."
—An Iowa schoolmistress lately had
under her charge a little boy with such a
ridiauloualy soft head that be died sud
denly just because she broke a chair on
it. ,
—It is estimated that it takes a domes*
ticated fly a two-billionth'part of a second
to wink, while an industrious mosquito
oan do it in ono-tentb of tbnt lime, Cor
rections solicited.
—When a devoted wifo holds her hus
band out at arm’s length by his sore
and says she wouldn't, crush a worm, lie
realises, all at onoe how fearfully and
wonderfully women are made.
—A school.teacher in DoWitt county,
Illinois, has introduced a new method of
punishment to his sohool. When one of
the girls misses a word the hoy who spells
it hsa permission to kiss her. “Tim re.
salt is that the girls are fust forgetting
all thay aver knew nbont spelling, while
the boys are Improving with wonderful
rapidity."
—While a youthful oonplo wore being
i oined in Wedlook in a justices oourt in
few York, recently, the damsel rather as
tonished a number of spectators by sud
denly breaking ont with “I want to know
whether we are goiug to keep bouse or
board liofore going into this thing ?’’ The
Judge ruled the question out of order, nod
the ceremony proceeded.
—Bt. Paul Episcopal Church is one of
the very prettiest of its kind in a town of
the West. The rentory formerly had a
large and imposing door plato inscribed
“St. Paul’s parsonugo.’’ One day a wag-
gish friend of the reotur rang the boll
fiercely and asked if 8t. Paul wore at
borne. The reotor enjoyed the joke, but
called for a screw-driver immediately,and
the door plato has since boon missing.
—A recent advertisement contains the
following startling information: “If
the gentleman who keeps a shoe store
with a red head will return the umbrella
of a young lady with the ivory handle to
thsslato roofed grocer's shop he will henr
of eoriietkiug to hia advantage ns the
name is Uio gift of a deooosed mother now
no more with the name engravod upon
it.” The man who would keep an um
brella after such an appeal is unfit to
live. We would eurromler a circus (cut
upon slighter provocation.
—Fond inother--“John, do look at the
child; It ha< your watch in its mouth,ami
it will swallow it.” Joliu (who is a bach
elor brother-iu-law and very fund of ba
bies)—“Ob,dou't be thelenst bit alarmed;
I've got hold of tile chain. It can’t go
far.” •
—A farmer and his wifo called at a De
troit photograph gallery to order some
photographs of her, and while the opera
tor waa getting ready the husbaud gave
the wife a little adviae as to how she
must aot: “Fasten your mind on some
thing," said he, “or elae von will laugh
and spoil the job. Think about early days
—how your father got in jail, mid your
mother was an old scolder,nnd what you'd
bean if I hadn’t pitied you! Just fasten
your mind ou that!" Sue didn’t havo any
phu'ograph taken. Neither will he for
some time.
—A fine distinction was that thopreach
er of the Iticlimond First Baptist Church
made: “My brndders,” aaid be. “when
you wore all slaves dnr might lia' bean
aenaa for outtin’ a slice off tiro tuarser’s
baoon, or bookin' a handful of oorn meal,
or robbin’ do hen roost; for you all work
hard den, iny brndders, and you cam it,
my bnulders and Dialers. But now you
all is free men dar ain't no souse whatev
er; you’s all on yor own responsibility.”
—An English bishop querulously re
marked to hjs servant that he waa dying
“Well, my lord,” aaid the good fallow (if
we are to trust our authority) you nre go
ing to a better place.” “John,” replied
the prelate with an air of conviction,
“there's no place like Old England."
—The introduction of Pullman draw
ing room and aleeping cars into England
appears to havo been eminently success
ful. The trial trip was uiado in cara
built in this country for the Midland Hail-
way Company. “The verdiot,” says the
Bnglith Mtenaaic, “is very much in fa-
vor of the ears. The carriages are so
well mounted that oscillation is reduced
to a minimum; and tboy are ao oostly and
comfortably fitted up that oertainly a
moiety of the ineouvenieucies axe elimi
nated from tbo Pullman oar.” Snob a
verdiot, although reasonably expected,
cannot but be gratifying to the American
inventor; and we can readily appreciate
the oomfort of these cars when run noon
the eiuootli and heavily-ballasted English
roads.
LADIES’ DEPARTMENT.
Mill! hr AsaiHs, Nt Sfae Hapy
Winter lingering Loth* Up editing”
has debarred jw eeelag much of
toilets; yet oaesrioaslly, mnUDaharuata
clouds, and sunshine, and oold north
wind*, we have nought glimpses of those
tender hues that ate to appear with (he
belmy epijsg daya. The many week* of
delightful weather we have been Warned
with during the poet winter months filled
our minds with vision* of early gram
fields, fresh (Iowan, and sweet odon (the
latter, thanks to our kind friends, we have
been kept constantly supplied with), and
our thoughts naturally dwell upon s drase
in harmony with natare’a. Bat the late
spring ia very convenient on many ac
counts. It gives us time to do our shop
ping leisurely, and strength to. go fain
one establishment to another, and have
the gentlemanly dark pull down andopan
out a thousand and on# thing* we ho** no
intention of baying. Yet it is good to
see and know slot the world is wasting,
even though we eannot indulge in such
extravagances ourselves.
We dip the following letter from the
Philadelphia Prut, written by an Ameri
can girl in Paris, after a visit to the assn
draaa maker who baa famished ao many
dresses to our ladies of fashion at highly
extravagant prism: ^
. Pams, April 5, 187*.
I paid a visit the other day to the estab
lishment of the renowned Worth, and
came away with my bead fairly aching by
reason of the maltipUoity end variety of
the attractions which I had beheld there.
Tbo dreaeea of Worth surpass all other
Peris dresses as far as (to use ahigbly at-
iistio simile) the portraits by Vandyeke
Hurpaas thorn painted by other artists.
Originality, tasto, fertility of invention
and boldness of conception characterise
his chefs d’cenvre. The worst of it is that
these lovely dresses are, by reason of the
intricacy of their out and the elaborate
ness of their trimming, well nigh inde
scribable. One drees I saw which in its
superb simplicity merits mention and imi
tation. It waa composed of a rich dow
ered brocade, the groundwork black, and
the prevailing color of the brocading a
dark green. The skirt was made perfectly
plain in front; it was opened behind to
give place to a train of plain dark green
sillt The sleeves of the pointed corsage
were of groan silk, and the corsage itself
was simply finished around the edge with
a green silk cording. A lovely diem in
preparation for a young Hussian lady was
composed of white crepe da oheue; It
was in the Princess or GaMiaUt form, and
the skirt behind was formed of throe lon
gitudinal puffs starting from tbs waist
and finished around the bottom with a
narrow fiat plisse flounce. The front of
the dross was left open and looped np to
display an elaborately trimmed overskirt
of white brooadod Ohafnbery gaose, and
was trimmed with ruffles of nsrrow lace,
which also finished the inside ef (be
sleeves. This toilette of pnreat white was
exquisitely fresh and girlish in its elegant
siiupUolty. A polonaise wee elae shown
formed of broad strips of pale silver gray
orepe de ohone, alternating with a broad
silver gray silk gimp, thickly worked with
steel, while the odge of the garment wee
finished with e wide fringe of silk end
steel. A dress of black satin striped gasa
do Ghsmbery or silk grenadine was trim-
uiod iip the back of the skirt to the waist
with flat narrow plisse raffles; the front
was covered with three rows of wide fes
toons of the gauze, two festoona to aaoh
row, and oach bordered alternately with
jet fringe and laae. A jaoket of pala
blue Hicilienne was shown, trimmed with
gold braid and narrow black lace, and out
to lit the figure loosely. This dainty gar
ment was prioed at the moderate stun of
$100. by-the-by, has the new material,
Sioilienne, found general introduction on
your aide of the water ? It lea soft, heavy
fabrio, resembling in texture a venr heavy
co rded silk or a soft, rioh eilk poplin, and
is extensively used for jaepete and cloaks.
It comes in all the colors of the rainbow.
Bonnets are bewilderingly pretty, while
tho shapes are not nearly so exaggerated
os they threatened to be at the beginning
of the season. The orownlem bonnets
are the greatest novelty, and seem des
tined to meet with general favor. Flow
ers are employed in reoklem profusion,
but the favorite method of employing
them appears to be by disposing them in
the straight, close ooronets, of which I
have already spoken. Mme. Magnier dis
plays some charming bonnets. One en
tirely composed of blaok thread loos and
encircled by a garland of rotes, while a
fringe of jet finishes off the edge of the
front, is extremely rioh and tasteful. An
other bonnet is composed of a broad dia
dem of violets, wide in front and dimin
ishing gradually in width towards the
back; a band of jet is plaoed in the cen
tre of this diadem, and seems to oonfine
it to tho head, the lower edge of tho
wreath falling on a fringe of violate over
the front hair of the wearer. A bow of
laoe and ribbon finishes off tho bonnet
behind. There is no orown and no strings.
Homo of the bonnets are finished round
the front with nsrrow plaiting* of thin
muslin. Theso are mostly of a shape re
sembling that of tha Charlotte Gorday
cap.
From dresses to bonnets, and from bon
nets to jewelry, are easy transitions. I
called the ether day at the establishment
of Messrs. Tiffany, Heed & Go., which is
situated at No. Rno Ghateandnn, next
door to American Consulate. I am happy
to state that onr American jeweltr enjoys
an enviable reputation among the Ameri
can residents in and visitor* to Paris for
courtesy, probity, and moderate prices.
The jewels now displayed at his show
rooms might have dimmed Aladdin when
first he emerged from the enchanted cav
ern. Such lovely and lustrous gems, so
divinely mounted, never before tempted
a woman's heart, it seem* to me. Feney
a peacock formed of diamonds, the green
and bine spots on hia outspread tail being
oomposed of emeralds and sapphires, ana
his throat and crest of the same gams,
while he stands on a peart aa large as a
small filbert This daxaling fowl is in
tended to be worn as s brooch. Then
there is a looket shaped like a shell, end
formed entirely of diaiuoads, while in the
centre of the shell hangs pendulous a sin-
S le large, pare peerL Here, too, ere
rsnohes of rases, geraniums, and forget-
me-nots ; the leaves and stalks are oom
posed of massed diamonds, while the
dowers are artificial blossoms daftly fast
ened into receptaoles prepared to reoeive
them. These novel ornaments have tbis
advantage, that a lady can change the eat-
ore of the flowers at will to suit her toi
lette. A chatelaine and bracelet of the
new- styles of enamel, end studded with
diamonds, are among tha novelties dis
played. The chatelaine is deeoratad with
three miniiturea—Marie di Modioison the
clasp, Henri Quatre on tha chain, aud La
Belle Gebriolle ou the book of the tiny
watoh. Nor are the attractions confined
to ornaments suited only for the wealthy
purchaser. A lady to whom had been
confided the earn of twenty-five dollars
wherewith to purohase a looket, told me
that, after looking all around the Paris
jewelry stores in vain, she had relinquished
the attempt, and was about to return the
money, when, happening to oall at Tiffa
ny's, aha was enabled to fill tha order
without any trouble, and to her entire sat
isfaction. Messrs. Tiffany A Go. now have
an immense factory in process of erection
et Geneve, and when that is finished I
think they will be enabled to defy all
competition in the prices as well as in the
beauty of their warts. Loot Hoops*.
Ttw psistha krtfSt, the taaatlfal,
**bsm
IheMaM hat
A brother la h»M*4;
The IdsMr wee* la friers *ark hear,
net prone the tries* ia*es4;
Tha elm far eeerejr, eeftly breathe J,
Wats Jostle. throat*ao Lift,;
The aim ef a emeries heart—
These ihlsfe shall atver die.
Iff* JMMfv Of ft KM,
As* all the Mia, eweal aa* halt.
That awke as len's trot UlM;
If with e Ira, saehaaxts* Caleb.
Aa* hot, tract an* bleb,
Them hsa*e have clasped, them lips have not,
Them thlage the!! sever 4le.
Tha atari aa* the bitter wonl.
That wees*#* aa It fell;
The chillies want of sympathy,
Wa fast. Cat sever tell ;
The her* ropelte, that chilli the heart,
Whose home wen boua*ls* high,
Ia aa aefadiar record kept—
Then thtafi ■bell aover die.
tat aothlaf pate, far every bead
Moot tad tent work to do;
Looo mot a ekaaoo to wakoa love—
Bo trot as* Jett aad trot -,
to ■kail a Ushl that caaaot {ado
Boon oa Into iron oa high,
Aa* aagol volott tap to thee:
Them thtege ihati meet *!e.
—Alt Me Veer Ness*.
—Moresan ese is tha evening of tnrbu.
lenoe.—Tender.
—Art most anchor in Nature, or ibis
toe sport of every breath of folly. -Hom-
—A drop of light is batter to give
reoeive than an ocean of obeourtttaa.—
Jew tart.
—Then is bnt one kind of lore, bat
there ere a thousand different copies of
it—Boehefoueauld.
—True gladness doth no* always apeak;
joy, bred and horn hat in the tongue, it
weak.—Ben Jonton.
—Nalnre baa given us two ears, two
eyas, and bnt one tongue; to the end, '
should hear and sea more than we speak.
—Sooratst
—The web of onr life is of a mingled
yam, good and ill together; onr virti
would be proud if onr faults whipped
then out; aad onr crimes would despair
if they were not cherished by onr virtues.
3kmktp4Mr§.
—The London Mirror says it hss had
M the plsesnre, daring the pest year, of re
cording the dutribatlon of no lees than
donations of XI,000 each, and one
.000, to London ohsrities, in addi
tion to a multitude of earns of a smaller
aaeant.
—The lUligiout Tolttoope thinks that
•mbs ministers in the West are “aspiring
to be Wseleys.” It says: “A soft-headed
minister in Mlsaonri has withdrawn from
th* Uhttad Brethren Church, and i* or
ganising another, oalled the ‘Free United
Brethren Church.' Another minister, of
the same sort, in the same State, is get
ting np a ‘Protestant United Brethren
dumb.'”
—It is now almost ninety years since
Swedenborgianlsm was first openly avowed
in thia oountry, and now the believers in
this faith number over four or five thou
sand. In Baltimore, where the first so.
oiety was organised eighty years ago, the
regular attendant* do not txoeedone hun
dred «nd fifty, in Philadelphia two hun.
died, find in New York city the'attend:
ance is about fir* hundred.
—Two very mnnifloent donations have
just been presented to Union College, one
of $100,000 by Mr. Bfown, of New York
oity, and th* other of $80,000 by e lady
who decline# at present to permit the pub-
lio use of her name. She made the gift
in the belief that it waa a fulfillment of
the purpose of her father, who died with
out having oarried it into effect, end os a
memorial of filial love end doty.
—As the result of the revival in St.
Louis, more than s thousand persons have
already been added to the various churohes
there, and the gathering of the frait has
only jast began. Better even than thia
large aooeasion to the churches is the
strengthening of the ties of union be
tween the churches and the pnlltng down
of barriers between denominations wbioh
the revival has brought about. Old fends
and grudges have been buried, and the
rising tide of Christian lore has sub
merged the old landmark* of division.
—M. de Sainte-Marie, the Frenoh con
sul at Tonis, has recently procured a
Phoenician inscription of peculiar inter
est. Though mntillated along the edges,
enough remains to determine ita general
character, which is that of a daily ritnal
tor the offering of first fruits at some au
tumnal festival, together with a hymn or
prayer, evidently e portion of the offerto
ry aerrlee. Besides the feet that this is
the first instance in the ritual of an offer
ing of first fruits, the value is enhanced,
owing to the presenee of one or two new
Phoenician words. The inscription, with
a full commentary by M. de Derenbonrg,
will b* published in the next number of
tha Journal Atiatique.
-JL 'W \ ' ”1 '' ■.N.trPIW.ffta* N. W. ffNWABM, flmkkr. ItNAM,
Fontaine Warehonse* Tte Chattahoochee National
A CL ‘ ?*5
‘U-.r
ALLEN, PREER & ILLCES,
Cotton Factors Si Commission Merchants'
COL7MB7S, G»JL-
M nn+trnp—M MiHfNnt, ghw* prenipt i
MNtadMw jMrtfc Md Invite* oerreepoadsao*.
jno. r. flocknot.
C.O. NcGXHBC.
MUT. T. NATONHt.
^1 ston arehouse.
Takla* ON the ■ trees.
In Syria the people never take off their
oops or turbans when entering a house or
visiting a friend, bnt they always leave
their show at the door. The reason is
that their floors are oovered with olean
mats and rugs, and in the Moslem houses
the men kneel on the rags to pray, and
prow their foreheads to the floor, so that
it would not be deoent or respectful to
walk in with dirty shoes and soil the sij-
jadjr on which they kneel to pray. They
nave no foot mat or scrapers, and it is
much cheaper and simpler to leave the
shoe*, dirt and all, at the door. J
It is very onrioua to go to the Syrian
■ohool-botiM* and see the piles of shoes
et the door. There are new bright red
shoes, and old tattered ehoee, and kob
koba and blaok shoe*, and sometimes yel
low show. The kob koba are wooden
clogs, made to raise the feet out of the
mud and water, having a little strap over
the toe to keep it on the foot. You will
often see boys and girl* running down
steps end paved streets on theso danger-
one kob koba. Sometimes they slip, and
then down they go on their noses, and the
kob kobs fly off end go rattling over the
stones, and little Ali or Yosef, or what
ever hie name is, begins to shout, “Ya
Imme! Ya Imme!” “O my mother!"
and erica jnat like little ehildren in other
countries.
Bnt the funniest part is to see the boys
whan thay oome ont of sohool end try to
find their shoes. There will be fifty boys,
and of eourae a hundred shoes, ell mixed
together in one pile. When sohool is ont
the boy* make e rash for the door. Then
enmw the tag of war., A dozen boys ere
standing and shuffling on the pile of
shoes, running their tow into their own,
stumbling over the kob kobs, end then
making a dash to get ont of the orowd.
Sometimes shins will be kicked, and hair
polled, and tarbooshes thrown off, and a
great aoreaming follow, which will only
cease when the teacher comes with “Asa,”
or a stick, and quells the riot. That pile
of show will have to answer for a good
many school-boy fights and braised nows
and hard feelings in Syria. Yon wil^won
der how; thay oan tell their own show. So
do I. And the boy* often wear off each
other’s show by mistake or onparpow,
and then yon will see Salim running with
on* shoe on and on* of Ibrabam't in hia
hand, shouting and earring Ibreham’s
lather and grandfather until ha gate bock
his lost property.—The JWomen of tho
Aral*.
FLOURNOY, McCEHEE & CO.,
Warehouse & Commission Merchants,
ColumbiUy Ga.
Special Attention given to the Storage and Sale of Cotton
and other Merchandise.
ear- All Order* Promptly Executed. fwyt *ewtn
LOW! LOWER!! LOWEST!!!
flvmnr CUSTOMS* trading with JOMPH A BROTHER knows that their un
AJ passed stock of Dry Goods of every variety has lmen selling at
The Lowest Cash Prices Ever Known in This Section !
THIS WELL KNOWN HOUSE HAS LAID IN
A Fine Stock of Spring Goods!
To meet the went. or tholr irony enatotnero, end will routine, to roll thtlr stock of Doth attic Aad
roroloe Goo*, ec prlro. tint dvfr coinpctllloB.
*»• Come on* mo for yoanotf. 7h. (rofa anal ho <o)d.
JOSEPH & BRO.
i*.
WAREHOUSES.
DISSOLUTION.
has been dissolved by tha eoaaent of all rar<
tina coneernad. All unpaid advances are in tba
hands of tha nadara’gnad for aatttaaant, who will
also p<iy nil claims agsJnst the old firm.
NOTICE.
IJIHS UNDURSIONK) will still ooatloo. th.
Warehouse and Commission
Business
AT THI
LOWELL WARE-HOUSE.
Thankful for tha patronage bestowed upon us
the present season, we respectfully solicit Its con
tinuance the coming season, with a promise to use
every effort to promote the Interest of our pat-
O. A. BEDD,
GEO. Y. BANKS.
April 1, 1S74.—Atf
HIDES.
HIDES! HIDES!!
Wl WILL PAT TNI
Highest Market Price
TOR
Green i Dry Hides,
Furs, Beeswax, Ac.
BARNETT A CO.,
■hM Sin Crawf.rd Street.
M. M. HIR8CH,
Oglethorpe and Bridge Street*.
Hides snd Furs s Specialty.
Will Pay the Highest Market Price tar
Hides, Furs, Beeswax A Rags.
All klnda Wrapping Paper
and Paper Bags on hand.
1.88 Sly
DOCTORS.
Dr. J. H. CABRIGER,
SnnOEOX AMD PHYSICIAN,
/"tFFIOE upstair. S.E. ror of Broad fc!Kau-
KJ <lolph Streets, where he mty be found day
or Bight when not profa.sMaaUy eegeaod.
Oolambur, April a-, 1174. dtf
MILLINERY.
8PRINC MILLINERY.
eluding*11 th. M0VI1.TIK8 of ,h. .
FARM ROOK*.
TIME BOOKS
FOR
PLANTATIONS AND FARMS
gp5a> Knnhlro «n- one lo keep neeurnt. >c-
eonot. wilt their employee.. Price
$1 M
The form 1. one fureisli.1 |,y * planter of nnu li
eipt-riettce. Its use will enable a Farmer to mive
wary times Its cost during the year.
Print 'd and for sale by
THOMAS GILBERT,
SUN JOB ROOMS,
Columbus, Ca.
£9* Tha Book will be forwarded by mail, on
receipt of prlca. fall dfewt1
Wanted,
gY TUKKK YOUNG UIRL8, (orphans) aiUur
lions to take care of children, or do geieml jiouac
work. For particulars, apply to the |
aprSO tf 8IITBRB 0» MBR^Y.
BOILER MAKING.
GEO. T. GIFFORD,
Boiler 3Ma,3sLer
and Sheet l(en Worker.
MONETARY.
R. M. Water* A 0o., 86 Broad St.,
New York, reoeive Deposit Aoeouhts
on favorable term* from Bank*,
Banker*, and Corporations, subject
to ehock at eight Loane made only
on Cotton and Approved Stook Ex
change Collaterals.
LAWYERS.
W. A. Farley,
AttornoyneteuXiriw
ones eta, OuATTAuoooun oo., ai.
•Mpuhl atteatlo* given te aellaetlea*.
HINES DOZIER.
Attorney at Law,
HAMILTON, SAi
> practh
■ any wl
“Pay i
FRESH GOODS!
PROFUMO * HOFFMAN
Have Just Received a Trash Lot of
Dates, Prunes, Raisins,
Figs. Choioe Apples. Ac.
febW tf
NOTICE.
Wanted, Agents to
Rone but good, practicable men used npply.
Call or nddrew
TH* HOWl MACHINE CO.,
TO Broad It., Colombo., Oa.
apris In QUA*. 0. gQDDgg, Managar.
HOTELS.
OITY HOTB.L
CENTRALLY LOCATES.
Troy, Alabama.
R. H. DARK, Prop’r.
deoT-Ally
Thia Sank tranaoets a Sonarol Banking bnelneee, paye Inte**
►••••HwS*.
*»t
••i
•"WNHh
-mtttn,
Rankin House,
Columbus, Ou.
J. W. EYAN, Prop’r.
Fsane Goldin, Clerk.
Iiuby Restaurant,
Bar and Billiard Saloon,
Uxdxb Tax Baxxih Hodsk.
nyt4 d.wtf J. W. KTANi Prop'r.
DRESS MAKING.
Dress Making.
M BS. FOUAKTV and Mr.. BALLOU rropertfnlly
notify tbe L*dii s of Columbus end vicinity
they have taken rooms in Strupper’s building,
over Pease's book store, where they are prepared to
CUT, FIT AMD MAKE I*ADIES* AMD
CHII*DBBM*ft DRBMKI
n the latest and best styles. Will also do Stamp
ing for Embroidery, Braiding, Pinking, Ac., and
take Gontlemen's sowing at reasonable rates.
Important to Farmers.
Yf x. T, J. STEVENS i. mil kanwa to th.
JYJL Planter, of Ororgla aad Slahwaa aa ... of
th. OK>.t rollabl. and aflieiaut 01N-WR10HTS In
th. wuntry. Whernrr h. ha. w.rkad k< hu
g nu .atlrihctlou; aad, as ha pronooro to woke a
nr In a .kora Uuro, planter, owdlsg Ola rape Ira
■kontd hand In their a.Me. and lorolloa. "Work
uril dost U twioo dono." rahM dewM
MEiCUITS’ III HECHIIlt!
: OOX-mXBTJS, O-BORo^
W. L. SALISBURY,Pnsid't. A. 0. BLACKMAIL CakJ
MnuyM.HIl If 1
SECVEUTY—FKOUPTSESS—UBmUTT
THE
Georgia Hgme Insurance Comp’
CNNTlffVBN T* OFTEN TH PtTNLlC *
Loss by FIRE!
Having Paid hor Friends end Patrons Since the War MOO
•ha Wants a CRanowto Ce* It Rfflek.
J. RHODES BROWNE, GEO. W. DILLINGHAM, SAM*L S. MU
OoUmbw, Oct. ut, irx
H»r
FIREMAN’S FUND INSURANC
Chicago Loseee Paid Promptly In FuH, - $529
Boeton “ " “ 180,00
Total Aaaata—Gold—January tat, IBM, $062,083.62. '*
LIABILITIES. -
Loose*Doe aadUapaid Konfc
Loose* In process of adjustment, or adjusted and not do*.. goo m
All other Otaima.... lef,
COMPARATIVE STATEMENT,
Income, 1878 $619,887
Ittoome, 1872 5*6,217
$"9MW
Lessee rraraptly Adjaste* aa* d airly Settle* Np
GtJNB/ JORDAN, Agent,
17 COLBK3US, OA.
1840.
1874.
D. F. WILLCOX,
GENERAL INSURANCE AGENT,
SX Bro«d ffltr.
Representing Oldest and Strongest American -and English Compuiia
SAVE YOUR MONEY
M08T ANY ONE CAN MAKE M0N&Y, BUT ONLY THE
WISE ONES SAVE IT !
If yoti will only Save what you Waste, It would be im
trouble to become Indeoendent.
EAGLE& PHEIIX SUES .'KNIT,
Lees than one year old, and has 378 Depositors.
The Legislature of Georgia bind*, by law, over $3,000,OM
for the eeourHy of Depositors—$12 In Meets for every dol
lar of liabilities.
Deposits of $1.00 end upwards received. Seven per cent
compounded four times a year. Deposits payable on demind.
N. J. BUSSEY, Pres’t. G. GUNBY JORDAN, Treas’r.
fate *tr
DRY GOOD*.
“My Kingdom for a Cash Buyer!
KT A Mr KNTW IT!
WK AH t OFFNR1NG KXTKA 'P.DINARY INl'IOKMBNTdi TOCAfU
• iiunin ea at all Lnxatria, profit or no frofll—ibe gmniB bd»I novt*.
Our Stook of Spring and Summer Dry Goods
is being w>iiat*ntly r filouttthefi. Jnat teccltod,
lb FUZjZj ZiZlN-X) OX 1 3PARA0O
no uk thvifi ’tiiotlior lut of tbono vitb l>oi,u .mi Silver-mounted Hand let, iu Sword, P|>«* r . *
bur chas e uv/i^na O r atotk of
sTAOONZrr TRIMMINM
•red fb e <
oouhider It no trouble.
aprlfi tf
A k Mil
;.ll and t-iyu; in**
NEW YORK
STORE.
B. UNMIK* *
Spring Goods and Staples
j.
db OO.
HAVE JUST LAID IN A ICPKBIOB STOCK OF 8PBINO GOODS, WB '
OPPEM AT TUB LOWES 1 CASH PRIOKK.
Their 8toek .1* Complete in Every Department, and wa* BOUCHJ
FOR CASH, *1 tho Lowoat Now York rrioea, end Will h« •® ld c
roapondingly low.
Beat Prints 10 cents.
Irish Linens Expressly Imported!
Ladles’, Children’s and Misses’ Shoes. Also, good
ply of Plantation Boots and Shoes.
Carpets and Rugs at reduced prices.
j, gun * w