Newspaper Page Text
g«tlg fftWtire*
COLUMDUM, UA. I
FUIDAY JUNE 6, 1874.
AW 80 SUMlBIlWORJlk
PAID POB 111 1M1ICA
' Jr- —to «a^a- ; t f „-. f.,,
Thi Corpus .Christ! Ship cfisnnrl HaI nont for UQf^i'iiU;
proved a hucocm. One of tbe Morgan
steamsrs paaaed through it lent week, car
rying bar cargo withont lightening.
m nnoi'i dim. Tmi act ww
We eon by our exchangee ttant for the VD0VBDBT. .-W* ^ ••
first time eince tbo war iho gravel of i Tbe Atlanta papers o( Trtahiay publbh
NaKbern and Southern soldi ore were if Mr. Hill's third letter, h ling hSP'reply to
corated by tbe friends of each in oalD-
m..n This bg beep fiotalilv.jiom.Mo-
bl, iiflNedj Y<M, ■Vfashifgtotff and
thfbughi^ianypf die big-hearted Wtetten
got intp a h«f net's
ion oTiiie narrow
spirit manifested' by the ex-Union sol
diers who had ehargw of the decorations
at Arlington, and who protested against
Sams op Oaoasu Stooss. —Twenty
nine shares of Southwestern Uailroad the same day that their owt
stock were sold in Msoon, on Tuaodnjr, at | W “ !* S 0 . 1 ” 8
a fraotion over 77 eents on the dollar.
Forty sharea of Oeorgia Uailroad stook
were sold in Aagnata, same day, in iota,
at from 89 to 80} per share.
The Central Uailroad has declared a
dividend of 4 per cent, on its stock, pay.
able on and after tbe 22d lost.
Hon. Taos. Habdemax, Chairman of
the Demooratio Executive Committee of
Oeorgia, has appointed Col. Martin J.
Crawford, of Oolumbna, to fill the vacancy
occasioned by the death W Mr. Wooten,
of Newnan. Col. Crawford's large politi.
cal experience, good judgment, and
thorough devotion to Conservative and
Democratic principles, make this appoint
ment the vary best that could have been
Taa Carrollton Timet says that the
mines just over the State line are yield,
ing finely. The proprietor, Mr. Bichard
Woods, has just returned from Baltimore,
wherp he quickly sold 8 oar loads of ore
at prices that netted him $1,200. He
comes back determined to procure the
necessary machinery for smelting the ore
at the mines. The Timet alludes, no
doubt, to the new oopper miuos in Kan-
dolph county, Ala.
Tns City Council of Montgomery, Ala.,
has determined to issue “certificates of
indebtedness" to an amount not exceed
ing $80,000, or so ntnoh thereof as may
be neoeaaary to mast the indebtedness of
the city. The denominations are to be
from one to ten dollars. Unless this
money should be worth more in the dol
lar than the State “obligations" lately is
sued, Alabama will have added to her
present tronblss and iocumbranoes a still
larger amount of currency greatly depre
oiatsd even below tbe greenback stand
ard.
Wx learn from the Home Courier that
Oen. LeHardy, of its city, is engaged in
the construction of a type-setting and
distributing machine, which it is thought
will perform the work of half a dozen
printers in composition. Should it suc
ceed, and should the press (also invented
there) to print both sides of a sheet of
paper at one revolution, ooine up to the
promises made for it, liome will enjoy the
distinction of having at last accomplish
ed faeilitlaa for the art of printing which
have for Many years engaged thefhld UP
bora and ingenuity of mauy mechanical
minds.
the decoration of Confederate graves on
that their own ceremony
years since
the writer oi fre, article first advo
cated this movement, and carried
it in a part of one State in the faos of no
small opposition. If this ceremony con
tinue—and Its wisdom may be doubted,
though we admire the noble motives that
prompt it—It should be done by tbe peo
ple in oomtqon ; for tbe soldiers who laid
down their Uvea in this war are no longer
the property of "Federal" or “Confeder
ate”—they are tbo nation's dead. We
b»ve reoeded so far from tbe war that the
bloody chasm which onoe separated the
soldiers is completely lost eight of, and
each year destroys the petty lines of dif
ference between true men, end they take
in both sides and feel that the glory of
tbe terrible war has become an index of
the valor of neither North nor South,
bnt of the whole American people.
Bo long os there be scotional dec
orations, Motional “reunions," and sec-
tionsl museums of war trophies, so long
there will bn sectional bitterness and seo-
tional hate. If tbs heart of this great
country were proportioned to her body
and a reflex of individual generosity, she
would fold to her broast the helpless
wounded of both sides, as a mother folds
her late warring obildren, and give to
them a common sustenauue and protec
tion. She would gather the widows and
orphans of the laud whose husbands and
fathers wept down for what they thought
right in battle; and, forgetting the uni
forms her beroeB wore, she would raise
above tbo suffering dependents the mgis
of the Republic, and say, “This duty is
mine." As we remarked in a
former article, had we been fighting
a foreign power, wo might swell
glory in the valor of onr soldiers, and we
might on gala-days flaunt the flags of thoir
late foes beneath that of the Union. Bnt
we fought no foreign foe, and tbe strag
gle we passed throngh was as inevitable
as the rising of the atm—it was the
decision of a question by the sword which
our statesmen, after forty years of de
bate, failed to settle. Tbe great question
for the stateamsn of to-day who contem
plates the perpetuation of tbe Union, is
the harmonizing of sections, and the
giving of every Btate a nnity of interest
la the Federal Government. Nothing
could so soon or so well do this as the
means we have sugtested ; and we feel
that the people themselves are in the van
of onf statesmen in this direction. *
A oosnsroHDiNT of the Atlanta Herald
narrates a novel expedient adoptod by
some raidora on a ohuroh in Whitfield
county to save and return a Bible bolong.
ing to one of their own side. The chnruh
was claimed by three Bunday (Schools be
longing to different denominations, and
one night last week a party broke into the
honM and destroyed the library in dis
pute, except a Bible belonging to the (Su
perintendent of ouo of the Schools! This
Bible they tied to tho horns of en ox be
longing to the Superintendent, and he
carried it home, but oarried' with him no
exposure of the parties committing the
raid, exoept so far as their attachment to
one of the disputing schools could be in
ferred from their curious mode of return
ing the special property of this Superin
tendent. The raiders no doubt considered
it an orthod-ox way of making discrimi
nations in the destruction of ohuruli pro
perty. a| m tm
Tan investigation of the Mill River dis
aster, in Massachusetts, has disolosed tho
oauae of the ealamlty. Tbo plan of the
dam waa not sufficient to ensure safety,
and the contractor did uot even make it
M strong as the specifications required.
Mr. Bassett, the contractor who built the
reservoir, npon cross-exsminatlon, made
two extraordinary admissions. He de
clared that even if tbe specification* con
tained in his eontraot had been adhered
To rigidly, tbe dam bnilt in accordance
with them would not have been seoure,
and he then acknowledged that he had
not done the work with even the careful,
ness and the preoantion that were required
by his oontraet. It wm also stated in the
testimony that the President of one of
the mills wm iu constant apprehension of
some great duwater, and would sometimes
rise from his bed in the night and ride
five miles to see if all was right.
HON. UEVBT R. HARRIS.
From uudoublod authority we learn that
Mr. Harris, our courtoous and conscien
tious Representative in Congress, will be
a candidate for renomiuation the coming
eleotion. This announcement is n
aery, m rumors have been oircnlated that
he intended to withdraw from the oonteat.
We hear of many gentlemen who are
about to run, and we know of one, oer-
tainly, from our own city. We can ex
press no ohoioe in this matter at this
time, as it is the duty of the nominating
convention to select; but we can state,
as a general principle, that a man ia only
useful in Congress in proportion to his
familiarity with its workings, and this it
takes, even a careful man, fully one term
to master. The great power of New Eng
land in tbe IIoum, is not so muoh in her
men being abler tbsn others, as in thair
being thoroughly familiar with ell the
machinery of legislation.
TUB PHYSIC WORKING.
We learn direct from North Alabama
that tbe revival of Bumner'a Civil Rights
bill in Congress has had a great effect in
uniting the people of that Motion in op
position (o Radicalism. Iu that part of
Alabama there are many white men who
have heretofore acted with the Republi
can party—so many that they have been
onabled to csiry several counties. It was
only this white support of Radicalism in
North Alabama that prevented the Demo
crats and Conservatives. from obtaining
such a majority in the last Legislature as
wonld have effectually frustrated the ac
complishment of any scheme * for
sealing . S Radical mnjority and
oleetlng such a man as Bpencer to the
United Btstes Senate. But we loam that
the prospect of the passage of the Civil
Rights bill is convincing these deluded
white men cf the error of their oonme in
siding with the Radical party, and that
North Alabama will hereafter be almost a
unit in support of Conservative men and
prinoiplos.
No doubt < similar reports from North
Alabama have reached Montgomery also,
for we s*e that the State Journal is now
laboring hard to repudiate tbo Civil Rights
bill as a Republican measure 1 It declares
that “the Republicans of Alabama are
committed to separate eehools for white
and oolored children”; and it asks :
“Hat any bill yet pMted Congress
whioh forces white children into tbe same
clam with blaok children in the publio
schools of Alabama ? Not at all, and no
one kuowt this hotter than tho fomeuters
of strife who perpetrate the libel the bet
ter to carry cut their Infamous designs!
Hu any tuoh law been approved by the
President/ 1 Net at all, and this is well
known to ail tho yelping pack who would
“fire the Southern heart," on a false is
sue, to the enj) that they may inaugurate
“the war of races" to which they have so
frequently referred, end by means of
whioh alone they hope to roenvor their
lost ascendancy. Is there any prospect
even of the passage of any such bill at
the pre8eut session of Congress ? None
at all, and this is well known, too, to tbe
unscrupulous leaders of Democracy who
would foment passion and prejudice on
account of it.
Wa wonld not be at all surprised, if the
news from North Alabama continues of
the nw tenor as above reported, to see
the State Journal ehsrgiug that the Civil
Rights bill is a Democratic, instead of a
Republican measure! It could certainly
do so with as much veracity as it exhibits
in the above extract. The rumblings
from North Alabama are as terrifying to
it as those of Bald Mountain ore to the
settlers on Us trembling heights. But its
weak denials can never reassure aroused
and insulfed white men who have actual
ly felt the convulsive swell. The Radical
party must shoulder the responsibility of , *0
the Civil Bights bill, whether it passes
this Congress or not, and it will prove a order. may
mill-stone about thair necks in Alabama. | j«s at
cose* Superior Ooert. Is favor of Asiaasl M. Car
ter. exfeutor of Pariah 0<rtor, dscriaad, BffaiMt
Property poisM Mi tf
poarpobxo .''f. J e 1
j..wit
Muscogee Sheriff Sale-
WILL to sold OS tha last Tuaaday la July
” Beat, botwaaa tksj««ai Maes of wit. to-
fore the auction hove* of Hite IHermoe, *****
street, Wmmbm, Os., U» frifetoag 4eeerl. ed
P T^Coiambue’steem Planing MU!*, *lt»at*4 on
lot 240 end that pert of lot 2j$, in the city of Co
lumbus, 0>i„ together with the Machinery betonr-
ing to said mills. Levied en a* the property of R.
B. (ioetr.li ie> »ad R. II. England, survivor*. to let-
in fy a fi. fa. issued from Muscogee (Superior Cohrt
In favor of Mary Hodges, Administratrix, ve. Mid
Gootchliis A England. Property pointed ont fn
uid fi. fe.
j-6 s4t H. O. IT XT, 8ha riff.
Sheriff’s 8ale for Tax.
W ILL he sold on the ftnt Tuesday in July
next, between the legal hoars of tale, In
front of Bills k Harrison'* auction home, tbe fol
lowing property, to.wlt.:
North half of lot No. 101, la the city of Colum
bus, and county of Muscogee, as tha proparty of
Mrs. Mary Caldwell, for (State nod county taxes
for the year 1873. Levy made and returned to me
by Wm. Maheffey, lawful cone table.
• ' wtd II. 0. IVEY, Sheriff.
FRESH FISH I
TO ARRIVE BY STEAMER JACKSON.
G. W. BROWN.
Jei It .
Wanted,
fpO PUR0HA81 LATHI, for turning Iran.
X Parties having such far ante, address, giving
full description, screw outtiug or ^elthouj, ^
Jb5 1 w Powerevllle, Houston On., da.
DOCTORS.
Dr. J. H. CARRIGER,
SURGEON AND PHYSICIAN,
/'AFFIOB up etnlrn S.E. nor of Broad fc Ian
U iloiph Streets, where he any be found day
or night whoi not professionally engaged.
Columbus, Apr 1 2-*, 1874. dtf
next,
fft r ' iviv . Uami tbe auction
Mr. KNfephetJb’ lont.^Tt In devoted mainly Rteod atr*st, Columbus, On-,
(o thtequMtions of personal varaoity and ,c l£f of stack In th. Mmem,
ConfiWcncy raised in the controversy, and Hop. DuUJiox, ud a Ilka Interval 1C lb. late oaf
we nrtret to say that wa
profixteent in tha temper — —
On the oontrary, thtx iv the bitterest and
moat caustic latter that baa yet appeared
Mr. Hill oontenda that hi. trathfolneas
and Mr. Stephans’ falsehood have been
clearly astabliabad, and the statement,
made in the “historical addrcM” tolly
vindicated. He allndM particularly to
Mr. Stephana’ abandonment of the asacr-
lion that he (Mr. Hill) wm not in Rich
mond at the tima in diapnte, and to Mr.
Stepheol' distinct admission that Presi
dent Davis did not embarrsM the Hemp-
ton Roads Commissioners with any in
structions, but left them to exeroiM their
own discretion. Mr. Hill aeys, in refer
ence to Mr. Btepbens’ offer to drop the
diacnauon of theM matters as immate
rial :
This is no “Idle," “collateral,” or “non-
essential” issue. Two public men of the
Confederate Government are on triel for
their characters—their character for truth.
The issue wm distinctly made.
The proof is full and oomplete. The
guilty man it fixed. In bis agony he ories
out, “I waive all furthar traverse.” Will
the jury of tbe publio waive judgment?
That ia now the only question.
In no spirit of vindictiveness, bnt from
s painful eensa of duty to tha poblio
character and interest, I demand that the
punishment be inflioted to the fullest ex
tant of tn outraged poblio conscience. I
announced in advance that If tbe proof
fixed tho guilt on me I was willing to sub
mit to tbit sentence. The reasons which
demand this sentence are ell inexorable,
if the people of Georgia wiU preserve
their Ov;n character from stain.
In the first place, Mr. Stephens now ad
mits that my statement in the address de
nying the manor against Mr. DaviH, was
oorrect. Then why did he attaok my
meant of knowing the troth of a correct
statement f Did fas not thereby intend t»
imply, at least leave the country to be
lieve, that the statement itself was false ?
He cannot esoape this conclusion, and it
shows a willingness for tha people to be
lieve an nntrnth against Mr. Davis.
In the saoond piaoa, ho made hie attack
npon my means of knowing this correct
feat, in a most violent, vindictive and
wicked spirit. Why sbonid he be so vin
dictive towards me for knowing and
stating a troth ? Has he not told a false
hood, prompted thereto by th. moet
groundless and ioaxouaable maliee ?
What punishment is too Mvere for anoh
a malignant intent and wanton act ?
Mr. Hill says that be hue frequently
hoard, since the war, that Mr. Stephens
was asserting in bis private conversations
that “Mr. Davis had given the instruc
tions to demand oar independence as an
nltimatum," and suggests that it waa be
cause of these reports (now admitted to
be untrue) that Mr. Stephens so bitterly
Msailed bis means of knowiog tha oontra
ry when he proclaimed it in his bistor.
ieol address.
Mr. Hill say. that Mr. Stephens' state
ment of the terms or basis of their re
conciliation of an old-time quarrel ia not
oorrcct; that the “mutual friends" to
whom they referred the matter were Gen.
Toombs end Col. Kenan, and that they
reported tbe settlement as Mr. Hill lor
merly stated it, and it wm aocepted by
both of them.
Mr. Hill's conclusion leads us to expect
someting new in his next. He sayfi:
In the next, I will take np the letter of
March 14tk, 1884, and its history. In do
ing so I do not wish to bo understood as
admitting that anything that Mr. (Stephens
has said ur oan say needs denial. Hu has
outlawed himself from credit. No hon-
orablo man con believe ono who stands
convioted of a falsehood whioh he is too
unmanly to retraot.
But that letter hM • history, and I will
now take pleasure in giving it. If a dis
cussion is now opened whioh shall bring
into question the fidelity of Mr. Stephens
and his aooomplices to the Confederate
canae, I am not responaible. My position
as Saunter, as Chairman of the Judioiarv
Committee, and m 'one friendly with
all our public mep, and faaviog no de
sire but success to the oausa, enables me
to know many things learned in private
oorrospondeuee and conversation whioh I
have not felt at liberty, m aa honoruble
man, to atate in pnblio discussions. Bat
I am glad the letter in question hM been
exhumed. The fraudulent deliberation
and laborious wickedness whieb Mr. Ste
phens has exhibited in bis efforts to make
impressions from that letter whioh he
knows to be untroe, exceed anything I
have ever kuown or read of in any oun-
troveray. Sorely, this msn defined him
self when he said a statesman was a real
demagogue. He is no bkam, but a real,
genuine, natural born and life long dem
agogue, and he seems to love to gratify
his ruling paaaion in the praotiee of his
favorite calling.
Pare Gold Soda !
Kissengen and Vichey Water
FROM
TUFT'S NEW SODA FOUNTAIN, AT
J.
. CRIFFIN’8 ~
DRUG STORK.
Prices of Flour Reduced I
Empire Floor Mills.
WHOLESALE PRICES.
If you want to Mfluy a f>Asmtl,(*tlkli
Clear Mu.hctory,
Batweaa In* aa4 Mmccrm Dm
Dealer Msasd Maaafl
r lease.
gat M—r Bwnl Stmt Sapat.
JaMfiag 4m at sotloa. W
mi igacisaaUvaa IMeiikte Or ff^ttyla*
•^s^r.7^ ■
wm. snow, n., 8 co.,
alga Folate**,
r, (Dal (Dfte <4 (idS.I
aa,
MSEFM. F. FOE.
AMnaerMAmr. -
sad Jadge mt ONaty Owt
OS^al^wMU 8 On, Bmadlt.
JtiS ' '
SAMtm> 8b 8MMU
Atteraey Stlzrar.
081m tear Witness Ktesal'a.
d. K. MdSDIMi,
Practical la court* at Otergla and
OOca U» Bleed Mdmr tMMSad 4k Oe.V
gpaclal aOmdQRHaw*. W4l«*4»m. jatt
Poena r „ ■»■«***•«»•
INOBAV dt dmAWFOKDO,
AtteradJrnS* te*,
Will praMios ia tea hau ate fteirml Oam el
OOesewrPner, tl
coram Brad sad Mt.
A
Aftera*y aad OeaawHm at Utr,
Pradios* Ia distaste Padmml OovrWiaBurO*
OSoaHa»raaa^OalM?tL,B4. ' jal
Maze H. pa waste ten* p. Oaaaaaa.
■UlXMMRB * OAJUUUBD,
Attevaeye aas TKaaialtera te law
OSes Ms. tt Broad attest, svsr WtMIsk 8 na
sal's Jswstty Slats.
Will .radios la tha SU*s and fsd.nl Courts.
MM.MHU. tea*. J. I
DUSABLE « SWIFT,
/Utora*y* sad Qoauasllor* at tew. WiH pnettm
la Iks Courts of ossrfis tOk*ttsks**fcss OKuslIi
aad Aiakaae. OSes arm0. A. Ssdd AOs.'.stars,
Broad drast, OolBwbua. 8 a. jal
It OMd, Oote
Sassa, la, Oflutefs 8t, spiteia
ursaoateat
x. ‘«b r, sr^^»'ifi»,^
AD kind* te Omrftetlnerp aad FrtaMs,
mhmjsssa^asL
Umiy one Saw StoMaA
BOBEBT TK4MSFSOM,
Livery, Sal* a
! 0*i«niaie Ww ahliw k BO>,
A. OAKltEfa ’ 1
Livery aoO Sato Sdahtea,
Partisolsr altsaUsa (tvoe to foodts« aad Sola
HmZm ate Mete ksardod la atakloo dw tkt
RMtaurants.
K ADDIS COUNTY DESTAUDANT,
Sa. SS Dread S teste.
Da ten of Porol«* and Doaostio Uqesn wad
tMsafe. Maaloatallteun. .
dsol*J. 1. BbARlLT. Prup’r,
L. T. DOWSING,
0.8. Ooa’r ate Baglstar la laskrupUj. OOw
aovMOi ovm Brook* Bate Mlsso. Owaaaea. Sa.
WM. FDD* ••
Work** ta Tin, Skate Irsa, 0*,,**.
Ordon firoa aktoad pron*4>P atisedod ts. ’
Ja7 Ms. rn Bread Run
Atteraeys te Law.
Ornct seat t. Din t Os.'s Staaa, Basts *f.,
novldj Wan lias.
D. J. DOSES,
Attorney aad Canneatlar at Law*
J. W. FATAUOK,
Stalls Ns. B aad IS, Mavkat Hate...
Trask Masts of a vary kite sad ksst eeaUly,
i bdb4.
9 00
, • 00
O Floor ........a 600
Bmpirfe Mills While Wheat Graham Flour.. 9 60
H Flour
Attorney at Law, Calaaakna, Oa.
Will pradios is aay Coart.
OSes ovm Aoss A Mardseh's stars. [sovtt
Doctors.
W. F. TIONEB.
Otxtut,
OppoalU Btrupfar’a ImUalng, lUudolpA §u
j SpMI ulieutfea git9* to tha iasortiom of Artt*
itfel TaaU. M wall at to Oparativa featiatijr,
Bran, V I0(li) 1b.
Bruu, leu* than 1000 lb..,..
Hlilp Stuff* and Bliortfl, V 100-> fe,
Hhip Htuffa and Hhorts. fe loo fe
14 00
l 50
17 5(1
3 00
Raakfc aoe aad OAaa ooraar of BC Glair aad Ofle*
thorpaita. OHoa hoar*—7 to t a. It to 1».
7 to tf r. m. aapfff 4W
Best White Tablo Moat and Qrits, pai bushel, 1 16
O. W. WOODRUFF.
Columbus, Qa., June 1st, 1874. fmy31 eodlw
NOTICE.
A FTi’R this data the following rates will be
uharned:
Col luilius to Union Springe—6th class 87 cents,
6th clast 26c, 7th class 20c fe 100 fe.
Columbus to Nos. 9 and 10—6th class 43c, 6th
class 30c. 7th cl tss 23c fe 100 fe.
umbus to Troy—6th clan
The Savannah oorroapoudant of the
AugunU Chronicle reports the probable
settlement of a libel osse in Savsnnth
that was watched with interest by prin
ters especially. It was commenced last
year, when Home “etriking” printers
of the A"eiOA published a circular
reflecting on two of the editors
of that paper, and Mr. Retell, the
proprietor, had three of them arrested
for libel. These three were Messrs. M.
•!. Davine, John A. Britton and D. 1). Up-
degraff. The Chronicle* correspondent
says that the o%ko will probably go over
to the next term, and in the meantime
will be nol. proued by the prosecutor
upon the peyment of costs by the defen
dants.
Column
th cl«B!
roy-
) ft
44c, Oth clara 32c,
J, M. FRA7.BR, Agent.
^BSOLUTR DIVORCES OBTAINED FROM
conrta, of differant Stataa, for daaartlon, Ac.
No publicity required. No charga until divorce
grau tod. Adth-era,
M. HOUSE, Attorney,
194 Broadway, N. T.
rnySO tUwly
E. C. HOOD A BRO.
KEEP CONSTANTLY ON HAND FULL STOCKS
—or—
Drugs, Chemlotls and PGrfUmtry,
my3 AT I*OW FIGUBBfl.
Piques, White and Colored.
Bishop and Vlotorla Lawn*.
Beautiful Colored Muelins,
A*
PEACOCK a SWIFT’S.
Wood. Wood!
J^EST WOOD, ready sawed,*4.00 per cord. Wood
sawed for 50 eents per cord. Order* tiled prompt
ly on (ippllcation to the
lebdl if MUSCOGEE MANUF’NO 00
Masonic Notioe.
Regular Meeting of Darloy Chapter.
W. W. SHARPE A CO.,
Publishers’ Agents,
Nu. 2.4 Pmk Hair. Nhw Vurk,
Are aatherlasd to Csilnel tor AS-
vertletns ta ter pafm.
iayl4 tf
Btt. S. A LAW.
Offlos eoram Bros* te Bsteslpk atisst*. Semes'
beltdlag.
RasMsaos sa Vmsylk, tfcrss Assn ksisw At. OWr.
Ja*
DD. S. A. UDDUHADT,
D$. a.«. VMS,
OOm ovar Ellia A Havrlsss'a CsBBltese Haem,
asps Atat Asm to tali.
Druflttiota.
a. i. oiimx,
Imported Draff, ud Cksmlisls,
Pnscriptieas cars folly prssorad.
JolS Bo. 104 (rast atraat.
C. D. PALDED, Llee—ed ApBkmmy
One Asm aksvt virffiala Orossry.
W piiyalclaas’ Prracriptios* bsA. a sposiaMy.
dac 17 j xtfflit baUtolmm Aoot.
IOHX L. JBDBAB,
DreitHI,
Tvs Assn bslow Oas. W. Brown's,
Broad Atraat, Odum baa. Os.
aa" Niffbt Ball rlffkl of ssetb Aoor. sap*
A. M. EDANMDM,
Worn Sin*, Baoon Amaev, Oaunmv*, 8*.,
Wkeleaete aad Mteall Deal to Ma
Cotton Faetorieea
colukmus manSfaotumimo oo.,
Mannfeeturan of
AksatinffS. BkirUega. aad Bswtec aad
Kalttleg
Card* Wool sad OrieAa Whsat ate Me-
Offlct la nu of Wittiok A Kissors, MaaSlph *t.
JaU R. H. CHILTON. ProMsol.
Warm Springs,
MERIWETHER UO., GA.
T lllg TAVOHITB RESORT is sow opon for
visitors. The best fora and tha finest
1) .thing on tbe continent,
A pply for quarters to
JOHN L. MU8TIAN,
. * m above.
5 Per Cent. Discount
W ILL nK ALLOWED ON RIAL ESTATM
City Tax, ll paid I t fur. the Ant day Joly.
„ i. N. BARNETT,
j» • td Colif'ctor anil Treaunrer.
J*6 11
Piano Tuning.
R. RICE will be iu Columbus
To the Blind.
Y SPECIAL request DR. W. A. 1100TEN
(Oculist) will visit Macon, Ua., on the 1st
i nay o r June and COLUMBUS, <14., on the 3D,
, 4T1I, 3T1I and 6T1I of JUNE, (four day* only) and
' will l>e prrpurod to treat ail DISEASES of tha
i EYE. Oan *»e round at th* residence or W. C.
Qrav, Columlma, Ua. mvl9«od*w2w
Pleasant Summer Resort!
‘ATOMA MPBINGM, GA,
w j fi»r the parpoae of Tusinff ud Bepairidff Pluoa. j IITILL PR OPENED JUNE lit. 1874. A ear.
•Order, may tolaftst Paw A Noro.se’. Book gtora ' .i.T. ‘*“ P*r mootk-
befora th* 16ih of next month I
children and servant* half prlo*.
| myfti (Usds w. 0. HEWITT.
DUMUOGEE DAEUFAUTUMING CD.
Mannftof tai* of
8HRETIN08, SHJRTINOB,
TAIN, ROPE As.
OOLUMRUI.SA.
8. P. SWIFT, Prmldoat.
W. A. BWIPT, Bscratary A Ttometo. setll ly.
Watohmakera.
C. 80BOMDUDG,
Prsoctosl Wteskaaaksv te Jisdlr,
finco—or to I*. Gutowaky,
, 196 Brood street,
>11 Colombo*, On.
O. H. LKQUIlf,
Wotchmokor,
134 Broad straot, Colombo*, Ga.
Watches and Clock* repaired ia th* host mao-
r and warranted.
Oarbpr they..
LOUIE WELLS’ AH AVI WO SALOON,
(8occe—or to ■. Hooe*,)
Under Oeorgia Homo luoraoce Bolldin|.
From |tt and poll!* barton id attendants
Ja26
Jn*
Crawford St^ nndar Rankin Hooaa, Columlma, Ga
Dross-Making.
. DUE D. A. HDLLIMOMWDDTD,
Tin and Copporsmith*.
Fresh Meats.
J«U
Olwajr* (i
a. v. COOK,
Frwek Dates ef /
Dentists.
T. W. DDMTE,
Qwr Jo—pk A Rrothur'* slora.
V.T.FiM,
J^L
oovtS] 101 Broad gt«t Cotomkp*, Cr.
W.J. IRSIAf
—p6J Georgia Home Building, Qolomku*, Go.
Cun and Looksmitha.
PMIUP XIF LED, :
• Cn Z rari . ■«* t»
w _rBwr i OoljimUte^_«» i _^_^*,
WILLIAM SCBOBEB,
0s» sod Lsokswlth and dssUr la Osssiae tew
tsslals. Oppa.lt. Laffalrar OteaT
trooDr*.
Bsslm la
DAN'L U. DIME,
I. D. HAMILTON,
WkeleeaU mm* matrnU 8rs«sr,
* Off^kmg,^
I4U8AD UODFEB,
: Hotel*.
Psvtee at au tbs SBiaa.
8MIB8R, Propr’m,
m
JBL
Taiior*.
Mmkaat Tailor aai Csttsr.
A fell stack ef Iissek sad Eo(ll.h Broteelotks.
: Osolamt and VmUn.a. ’
mvU No- W Broad Burnt.
J. a. MQMTIE,
FMhloaeVto Teller,
Mo. —, Broad Atnat, lat door above a.-ai-
lt'Uro.
RIMRt BELLMAN.
Cettlaff, Clsaalaf ate Bapahrlaa
Base la ths last alyls.
sprit]Cornar Crawford aad Frost Its.
Boot and thoamakars
Baslm lb Lsatkro ate Flsdls*.. Nsxt ts 0. A.
tedd A Co.'s. Frowpt sad strict ittsatioe clna
‘ ~ BL.
LAWYERS.
W. A. Farley,
Attorn#r-At-I(Aw
OURS ETA, OeattanAoombb Oo., Oa.
«.(-3psoUl attseUoe givee usollutliea.
HDTSS DOSREB, ‘
Attorney at Law,
WILL pssmus la.tks testokrotlte Oroell
•"stir