The Sun and Columbus daily enquirer. (Columbus, Ga.) 1874-1874, August 14, 1874, Image 2

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lnUj COLOIBOB. «a7. . ‘ FRIDAY AUOUHT 14. 1874. JOHN H. MARTIIV. • • - KdlUr. writ sOMtiipriON mkumvev uilkmi PAID FOR 131 ADVANCE. lit. Charlk* H. Markham in the agent for tbo EvQuiRRR-ihTH for Manoogee and Ronh«U ooonliM. He ta authorized to aolioit advertining and nabnoriptionn, and to raoeipt for the same. We commend him an a gentleman in every way worthy of oonfidence. Tee Mack for l». Oar colamnn are burdened with oom- manioationn presenting the claima of can* didatee for offloe. We ahall charge regu lar advertining raten for auoh commanica* tioaa, showing preference and allowing exemption to none. They are written and pobliahed in the interest of individnala, and though they may be of some general interest, their number and bulk are too greet to impose on a newspaper publiaher (who has to pay hia printers for every line of them) withoat compensation for hia apaoe and expense. Thi New Orleans Picayune of Wed nesday reports a ohsnge of the situation in another of the Louisiana parishes. The eaption to its aocount is euffloiently expressive, vis: “The Citizens of Glair- borne Pariah Argue with the Garpet-bag Officials. The Latter Bee the Point and Reaign." Til Washington Star aays : “Two Southern gentlemen, now in this city, who reside ia different fltatea and are of different political associations, both of whom are well known socially and politi cally as men of character, offer to bet equal sums of money on the three follow ing propositions, all to be taken together. First—that, life and health permitting, Gen. Grant will be a candidate for the Presidency in 1876 ; second—that Gen. Grant will be nominated as a candidate for the Presidency in 1876 ; and third— that, if a candidate, Gen. Grant will be elected President in 1876.” The Montgomery Advertiser calls at- tention, opportunely, to two sections of the new Constitution of Alabama. One provides that persons who have been con- vioted of treason, embezzlement of public funds, malfeasance in office, crime pun ishable by law with imprisonment in the penitentiary, or bribery, shall not be per mitted to register or vote ; and the other declares that no Executive pardon shall relieve inch persons of their political dis abilities. We reckon that the State Journal con siders these constitutional provisions an other “device to complicate the exercise by the negroes of tbo right of suffrage.” Charles Clinton, Radical, Auditor of Public Aocounts of Louisiana, has re signed, because of tho nomination by the late Radical Convention of Dubnolet, negro, for tttate Treasurer. He aays that the uominatiou of Dobuolet is in oontra- vent ion of a resolution adopted by the Convention, to the effeot that it would nominate none but honest men ; that Du- bnelet, as Treasurer, has beon acting in eonnivanoe with a remorseless gang of speculators, and would continue the same •ourae if re-elected. We copy one para graph from Cliuton’s letter to the Gov ernor: 1 decline to serve longer with such au associate as the nominoo of the Republi can Convention, or to be longer held re sponsible for acts which, though I oppoi.o them, I may not be able to prevent. I also regard the endorsement of Mr. Du- buolet an a condemnation of my course bv my own party, and gladly avail myself or the opportunity to escape from a thankless and moet uupleasant offloe, whioh, otherwise, I would have felt bound to rotaiu. Major Bidasy Herbert. We have been indebted to this olever gentleman, for two or three weeks past, for very iutereating letters from several seats of learning in Georgia, giving ua ao- oounta of their Commencements, Ac, His letters were the more aooeptable, both to as and to our readers, because of the oars which he took to give us particular information concerning graduates, stu dents, and visitors from Columbus and this section of the State, In this connection, we owe the Major and apology for the non-appearance of two of his letters—one dated Athens, August 5th, and the other the 4tb. Nei ther of these letters reached uh until yea- terd y, and we would be a week behind our ootemporaries of other cities of the Stats in publishing now accounts of the sxeroiNes at Athens. We do not know the oanse of the delay of these letters, bnt suppose it was carelessness or inat tention by some one through whose hands they passed. MIXED SCHOOLS AT WASHIHO* TOM. A late dispatch announces the proba bility of the adoption in September of the plan of mixing the white and blaok ohildreo in the schools of the District of Columbia. We hope that the experiment will be tried there at onoe, ao that ita evils will be made upparent before Con gress meets in December. The Govern ment has not lately had much auoceaa iu this way, and experience as well as reaaon tells us that it will fail with ita expert- maul of mixed schools in tho Distriot. It used to allow the people of tho District the right of local Holf-guT.rnm.Dt, and this worked generally well until the right to vote we. conferred on the negro ee. Waah- lngton City was overrun by them, and they obtained the ascendancy in the gov ernment of the District ; then Congress had to aatakli.h the syetem and oonfer the appointment of a Governor, do., upon the President. The Federal Government baa also tried the mixed white and bleck sys tem at West Point, and the coneeqnenoe has been strife and rebellion in the mili- tary institute, and tha failure of every ne gro eadet who baa been examined—at had one of them charging that he wae dropped not on aooount of hie incapacity, AIU »l THE III* ttr THE TIMES. It ie now reeeonebly cure that the Southern State* ere to hold, in the next Gongreee, * poeltion materially different from that of the laet eight yean. Here* tofore onra he* not been conaidererf a aeetion of equal political rights. Our helpleaenaes baa been au apparent that our very weakneae ought to have inspired the feeling of mag nanimity, lnatead of hatred, in peal ing with ua. But now we appear to be gainiog a position from which we ean bring to bear our numerical aud intellec tual etrength. Oat weakneae having af forded ua no protection in the peat, partly because of the predominance of passion at the North, and partly beoanae of divi sion. at borne that checkmated oor own movements, we have now to take advan tage of eirenmetanoee presenting more favorable oonditlane at both the North and the South. We will have strength in the next Congreax if we have the right kiud of men to use it—men fnlly com prehending the righta and the wroug. of their aeetion, and able and fearless in vin dicating the former and exposing the latter. Of oonrse the primary object to be considered ia euecaia in the elections of Congressmen, and this ie a consideration that should be kept steadily in view iu the selection of candidates in close Dte- triote like oar own. We trust that thia will ba tbe controlling sentiment witp the delegatee to our District Oopvention—tha selection, Aral, of a man who ean win the race, and next of the bat and ablat man who oan win it. We do not write in tbe interest of any particular candidate, or to disparagement of any one, but merely to impress upon oar people the improved elatua which they (re likely to have in the next Oongrem; the necessity of aiding to gain that stains by the election of a good Demoorat from thia Distrust; and the importance oi sending tbe ablest Democrat upon whoee election, after a nomination, we oonld count with any as surance. Let ua strive, first, to acquire the atatus desired and note promising, and naxt to send man fnlly able to main tain that status. THE It ia uaelsaa to state why we look with interest to the New York Herald'e opin ion of the significance of political eventB. Everybody knows that it ia a oloae and shrewd observer, The Herald of Monday, after referring to Domocratio suoeesaes in 1878 (last fall;, and repeating the Kepubiiean argu ments, that they amounted to nothing, inasmuch aa 1878 was an “off year" in polilioa, aud tbe Kepublioan “reserves" would be called out whenever any polit ical issue of national conoeru was pre sented, oontinuea s “But the eleotione, ao far, of 1874 teaoh ua a different lesson. From New Hampshire aud Connecticut, from Ore gon, Kentucky, Tennessee, Mississippi and North Carolina, we have the auggea- ttve record of Uepubliuau defeats aud opposition auooeaaM or of opposi tion gains and Kepublioan losses. Disturbing local divisions and (ao- tiona are sill! pleaded a. the explana. tiun of these Kepublioan reverses; hut if these disturbing foroes exist from New Hauipabire to Oregon and from Oregon to North Carolina, ia not the general out look fur the year to the Kepublioan party unusually dark and dieaouragiug ? Tbe truth ia that the spirit of unity, harmony Mr. Editor thank my friend who ao oompUmantarily suggests my asms for tha Legislature; and hereby announce myself a candidate, subject to the Nomi nating Convention of tbe Democracy of Muscogee county, pledging myself, in event of eleetion, to a firm support of the oanatitutiooal amendment forever pro hibiting tbs payment of the fraudulent bonds issued by Bullock A Co. Bespeotfuliy, E. F. Colzit. tttMOIA MEWS. —At a meeting of Ihe.Direetora of the Georgia Kailroad on Tuesday, tha officers of tbe road were authorized to issue $260,000 in bonds, at tbsir discretion. —The Atlantic and Gulf Bsilroad car ried to Bevannah, from the 1st September 1878, to the let of August, 1874, 1,208 bales sea island and 128,002 bales upland cotton. —Maooo received her first bale of new eotton on Tuesday. It was from the plantation of Mr. I’. W. Jones, of Baker, who has for four consecutive yean sent tbe first bale to Maoon. —A Mr. Langford, inmat. of a Surgi cal Institute of Atlanta, made an attempt to shoot himself .with a pistol on Tuasdsy night, and tbe weapon bring taken from him, be afterwards escaped from tbe in stitute. He wee from West Tennessee. —A pet deer in City Hall Perk, Augusta, •aa poisoned the other dsy by eating a oak. of “Sere Pop" bug destroyer, whioh some one threw over into the enoloeure, either maliciously or csrelessly. The deer died eoddaply after driokiog water. —A suit for $40,000 damages was called up in the Superior Court of Spaul ding county ou Tuesday—Mrs. J. S. Sears sawing the Central Kailroad for tha death of bar hnaband. B. H. Hill for plaintiff; Spear ft Stewart and Gao. Law- ton for defendant. -The improvement of the upper Sa vannah river ie now engaging much at tention in Auguste. Forty years ago Co lumbus was equally hopeful of the im provement ana navigation of theCbatta- tahoochee above this city ; but it! im practicability ia now geuarally admitted. —The Augusta Conetitutionaliet laarns that on Sunday last, in Sparta, one negro killed another in a quarrel about a water melon. If the circumstances of the kill ing are as reported, it was murder. The slayer was arras tad, and was to have been tried on Tuesday before a magistrate. —Savannah ia tbe fourth cxportingolty In the (Tutted Statea, according to data published iu Frank Leslie's lUuetrateit. New York ranks first, New Orleans second, Sau Franciaoo third, and Savannah fourth. Savannah’s exports last year amounted to $82,000,000 in vains; Philadelphia $28,- 000,000. —The State Agricultural Convention met at Stone Mountain on Tuesday, with a large attendance, whioh was expeoted to be considerably increased on Wednes day. After tbe address of weioome and reply, President Colquitt opened the Con vention with an interesting address, abounding in reminiscences and foots of present iinportanoe. Dr. E. M. Pendle ton, Professor of Agrieulture, aud Mr. B. H. Hardaway, of Tbouiasville, read inter esting papers. ALABAMA NEWS; —The Selma Timee says that cotton ia reported to be ahedding very badly in cousequence of the hot and dry weather, and great damage ia being sustained daily. Bain ia badly needed. —The Dadeville Headlight of the 12th inat. asya: “Hein is groatly needed here now. Everything is drying up. Late com ia suffering, and ootton is beginning to throw off many of ita forms.” —The Hayneville Examiner states that Mr. George O. Morgan, who earns to Lowndes oounty from Cbieago four years ago, aud beeame a planter, deolares that ever it five minutes, when a doll, heavy, aching sensation erupt over us, and our ayaa began to swim. It will kill a bnmsn being in twenty minutes. The gaa whioh escapes hose is tbe rankest kind of car bonic ; hone* ita sore destruction of life; also qaeneblng Asms instantaneously. To Bent. p*0R tbe coining yeer, tbe dwelling on north- weet corner Jackson afld 8t. Clelr streets, now oc cupied by Mrs. Wm. C. Grey. Apply to WM. C. COART, auglt tf at Oeorgin Home bank. FRESH FISH! RCEIVRD per steeaer Jackvon a flue lot of Freeh VUh, conulitlng of TROUT, PERCH BREAM, Whioh 1 tn selling cheap. JNO. L. HOGAN, sngld It LAKH ICE DRPOT. S' FRESH FISH! »ugi4 n G. W. BROWN. To the Democrats of Mui- eogee. I announce myaelf n candidate for th« Leghla- ture, * abject to the action of th« Nominating Convention next Saturday. augU Id W. F. WILLIAMS. Park High School, Tuk«g««t Ala* l It haa been uudn i*< reined nod cuitirated community, ample play t rounds, new, well arranged and comfortable Gliding', Complete gymnasium, good library, cheap board and tuition, thorough and flr«t-cl> *h Inatruction by teacher* who are honor graduat n * of Southern UnivenUlee, and who have pro ra tional pride, oklll and experienca. Entire oxjmnaee per annum need not exceed I?00. Send For catalogue aug13 wlmadeodlw GROCERIES. H. F. ABELL A CO. HAVE JUST RICKIVKO Creem Cheese, Pina Apple Cheese, New Miokerel in kite, Flour from New Wheal, Out Mail, Rye Flour, Wheat and Corn Grit*, Canned Fruit* and Meats, Cider Vinegar BOo per gal., Keroeen* Oil, 40o gallon, Sugar of all grad**, Coffua, Rio* and Cracker*. All purchases delivered. aug7 tf the Givil Rights bill is too horrible for snd active o^ope™tl^heih to he“«» l P" 1 *.!° .“*»* , if ® T « fore existed between the party aud the TOt °" * uotb6r Uoket is this State it will be National AdmiuiHtrntion oxintn no longer. Tbe objects of the party are no longer the pnrpohUH of tbe Ad aim miration. The compact between tbe PreHident and the parly eutered into in 1868 baa expired. I’be engagetuooU of the party wore ful filled iu hie election for a second term, amt tho reciprocal duties of General Grant bave been disoharged in tbe completion of the Republican programme of Southern reoouNiruutioD aod restoration. Grant In no longer bound as an agont of the party, aud the party ia no longer bound to his Administration. * * • * “Nor bIdoo Inal autumn baa Gen. Grant shown any feeliog but that of indiffer ence in regard to tha reunite of the State e actions. Tbe Administration did noth ing for the Republican ticket last npriog in New Hampshire or Connecticut, and did nothing to rayd tbe party from ita re cent heavy defeat in North Carolina. On tbe otbor bund, in 1872 no atono waa left unturned by tbe Administration to carry thene States, and they all were carried. The conclusion inevitably follows that Gen. Graut now desires to prove to the Republican party that he is necesnary to its stillness and upon his own terms, or tbnt he desire* n new puty in its place aud under tho flag of Geo. Grant for a third term. For eithsr of these designs his reticence up >u this third term myste ry is working well in the demoralisation of tha Republican party, and there is no third proposition whioh will fit the case. Returning, then, to these recent Southern elections, their bearing upon the Presi dential succession may be readily defined. They do not point to Geu. Grant as tho Republican candidate; they have not tur i$d upon Grant as tbe probable oppo- Kition caudidate. They point to the over- throw of the Republican party and the Administration. Kditor Enquirer-Sun /—As there seems to be some misapprehension on the part of some people with regard to Mr. Watt’s being a caudidate for the Legislature, snd in order to settle that question, we, tbe citizens of the county, announce him as our candidate from the country. We are willing for the oity people to have any man that auita them. As Mr. T. W. Grimes has already announoed himself, we have no objection to him, but feel that he has some claims on the couuty, as he suffered bis name run in 1868,'only to be defeated. We are willing to sap port any good, available man from tbe city, in connection with Mr. T. J. Watt. Let us sot understanding^ in whal we do. Musoooee. «. DsLssaey far (lie tegtolstare. Ou Saturday next the people of Mna- oogee oounty are called for the purpose of selectlug two gentlemen to represent the oounty in the House of Keprmmnta- tivos in the next Legislature. We present to the people of the oounty the name of G. deLauney, a gentleman well qualified for the position, and one, while protecting the interest of hia sec tion, will protect tbe interest of the whole State. The gentleman named is no scrambling politician, and being well but for prudential causes. It requires no | qualified, are cogent reasons why the gift of prophecy to foretell very oonfl- , people should seleot such men is the dently a like inglorious failure of the 1 opinion of Bised school system ia this Disuiot. \ ‘it* Manx Crruaxs. a Conservative ticket. —The Headlight man has been in the jail of Tallapdoea county, just completed, and pronounces it “tho safest in the State, and certainly the best aud most conveniently arranged ” He gives dne credit to Gapt. J. C. Porter, of this oitv, who planned aud superintended the work. Gapt. Porter ought to have calls from Houston and Pulaski counties, Ga., also from Russell county, Ala. —The Radical Congrefisional Nomina ting Convention of the First District, at Belma, had balloted one hundred and eighty times up to Wednesday night, with out making a nomination, and with very little obange from the first vote. The negroes have a majority in the Conven tion, lint they are divided betwoen Haral son uud Bruoe, and it is evident that tbe whites will fight it out all the fall before they wlU permit the nomination of either. A Bo-called white man will be nominated in the end. COMCBBTE DUG A Me ARRIVAL OF A CARGO ON MONDAY. The schooner Lily of the Valley, which arrived yesterday from Belize, Honduras, and Hullo, brought oue hundred tons of what is known in Honduras as concrete sugar, being tbe first cargo of this sugar ever brought to New Orleans. It is made from eaue in the crudest manner possible, the juice being boiled in an open kettle and the sugar poured into barrels whilst in a heated state, where it oongeals, ob taining the hardness of maple sugar, and ia about the same color. The grain is very ooarse, and for refining purposes it is considered excellent. We understand this load of sugar ia brought here as an experiment, and aa the initial cargo of a proposed healthy trade. We understand from the captaiu of the Lily of the Valley, that a large quantity of thia sugar is manufactured along the Uouduras and Moiioan coasts, and were there a regular aud certain market for it the qnautity could be largely increased. Hitherto it has mostly been exported to Europe.—N. O. Times, IMA. The Grain Crops. Achibon, August 11.—The grasshoppers have literally devoured everything in Northern aud Southwestern Kansas, aud Nebraska. The damage inflioted on veg etation is far greater than in I860. The oora crop through all this region is totally destroyed. Detroit, August 11.—In corn and oats the greater portion of Illinois will average only a two-thirds crop. The central part o( the State will yield full crops. Ia Iowa the corn is in fine condition snd the proa- pects are good for a heavy crop. Oats look well, and a larger crop than usual will be made. In Kansas corn is almost a total failure, and oats are not fiat taring —the Effect of graaahoppers. A Deadly Spring.—A writer in the Colusa (California) Independent says: About one-half a mile over a mountain from Bartlett Springs there is what is oalled the Gas Spring. This is probably tbe greatest curiosity of the mountains. The water ia ioe cold, bnt babbling and foaming aa if boiled, and the greatest wonder is the inevitable destruction of life produced by inbaling the gas. No live thing »to be found within a circuit of one buodrod yards near the spring. The very bird*, ir they happen to fly over it, drop dead. We experimented with a lizard on ita destructive properties by holding it a few feet above the water ; it stretched dead in two minutes. We stood ER A FARINA, FINE TEAS at low price*. Cross A Blackwell's Pickets, all kiud*. Extra Choice Rio, Old Governmeut Java and Mocho Coffee. Roasted Coffee. Beat brand* llama and Breakfast Stripe. Bt. Louie Pearl Grlte, 20 lb for $1. Blackwell's Durham Smoking Tobacco, 75c f lb. Lorlllard'e Bright and Dark Century Chowiug Tobacco. West's Extra No. 1 Kerosene Oil, 40c gallou. Pare Older Vinegar, 50c ft gallon. ROB'T S. CRANE, [febl dl2mj T mates. CALL FOR A CONVENTION Democrats of Muscogee? m In obedience to tbe instruction of tbe MvJL Democratic Convention of Inst Saturday, I do hereby call upon tbe Democrat* of Moecogee to A«Fctnble in Convention nt tb* Court House of Muscogee, at 12 N-, ON SATURDAY, THE 1*TH of thi* month, to nominate four delegatee for tbe Conicreftsionat Convention.^ hereafter to be held, for nominating a candidate for this District, and alio to name candidate* for the Legislature to represent Muscogee county. HENRY L. BENNINO, Chairman of Saturday's Convention, anvil •'eodidawlt - MISCELLANEOUS. Kill the Cotton Worms! WITH ROYALL’t COMPOUND, Paris Green and Arsenic. FOR SALE BY E. C. HOOD A BR0. CREAT BARGAIN I Safe and Paying Business Already Established, for Sale. M y drug stock and business on favorable term*. Consumer* and country merchants would do Well to call, a* I am determined to redoes my largo und well aelccted Rtoclr Jo-5 2m W. W. SHARPE A 00., Publishers’ Agents, No. 25 Park Row, Now York, Are authorised ta Contract for Ad vertising Im ear papor. my!4 tf 100,000 F EET SECOND CLA88 LUMBER for sale at Beasley’s Mill, consisting of Scantling. Inch Hoard* and dheathing. Also a good lot of First Claes Lumber ou band. Addre** B. BBASLY, auxB tf Columbus, Ga. ^BdOLUTE DIVORCES OBTAINED FROM courts, of difforont States, for doaortion, Ac. No publicity required. No charge until divorce granted. Address, uiy30 dftwly M. H0USB, Attorney, IM Broadway, N. Y. Cotton Factory. Bowery Academy. $ mill oxorcisea of this School will J. bo resumed on Monday, tbe X7th or Jnly, 1174 ' Board can be bad at $lt.60 per month, payable htvaxiabut tv ad- varcx. ' — . Tuition in Uterferj Department Mr (be sens of 80 icholaatic day*, $13 00. In Muaiesl Department $4 per month, one-half payable at tbe end of the Srst two months, k*l a ance at the close of tbe term. No deduction from tuition except ia cases of protracted aickneoe. _ , Tbe Prinoipol end Tpacbotn, koYevtng that un less the facts of any branch of study are acquired ia oouarctlon with tbe exasoks upon which they any) tho practical, umful and tuccttxful men of the world. For this reason ’'Hard Btcdt” la the motto at Bowery. Bach pupils aa are too delicate to undergo close mental discipline are not solic ited. Each patron of this school is earnestly requested to meet the Principal, Teacher* and pupil* on the morning of the STtb, at • o’clock. For farther particular*, address the Principal, at Talbottoo, 6a. J. O.CALHOUN, Prin. MISS |. A. V. MILLER* Azi’t. MRS. 0 M. BITliUNE, Jy> d2tewlm Mneical Teacher. GEORGIA Pio Nono College, Maoon, Ca. for the reception of students on TUmvjii, OCTOBER 6th. 1874. It 1* 00NDUCTKD BY SECULAR FRIRSTS, aided by Lay Proftosort, under the enpervieton of the Hr, Bxv. W. H. GROSS, D.D., BUhon of Savannah. Situated two mllofl from tho city proper, and occupying n lofty emlnenoo ovorkwtriog .he eon rounding country, the Plo Nono College, with n delightful grove and recreation groaafia idVsrMg forty-five acres, affords every advantage to the student. ... The Domestic Department and Infirmary are under the care of the Bisters of Mercy. Term*—Boerd aud Tuition per annum, $**0.00. ,.r ll ,nh., P .n,c.l l ,^d TaijociiT Jy3l dowlm IMPORTANT THE CAMPAIGN Weekly Enquirer A LIVE paper, D avidson college. Next Sosslon will Wgln Sept. II, 1894. Healthy location. Moral atmosphere. Rtriot dis cipline. Thorough teaching. Moderate charge*. Seven professors. Tor Catalogue or Information, apply to _ J. R. BLAKE, A. CLEGG & CO., Columbus, Ca., A RE prepared to supply merchants promptly and iu a aathfaotory manner with the beet quality of Cotton Checks, Ginghams and •tripes, all of which are in fart colors, and of the latest and most approved patterns. Factory corner of St. Olair and Jackson • ‘ t. Office on Jackson street. ST. CECILIA ACADEMY FOR YOUNG LADIEB. This institution sued* upon an eminence north of the city of Nashville, overlooking the valley «f the Cumberland river. For beauty of aceuery and health fulness it Is unequaled by any instltotlon in the 8ontb. Sicknen* is almost unknown. Chalybeate wa or. in constant supply. Is within the. enclosure, aud the purest White Sulphur Inst outside the grounds. The course or study is thor ough and solid ; the nyetem of the school (n accor dance with the beat models in tho country- Re tired, yet within easy reach of the city. It ha» for young ladies all the advantages and none of the dr*** tacks of city school* The Academy re fer* with confidence for verification of It* pa»t elfic eucy to its many finished graduates, and It* " pile scatter Address augl 4w Jetl THE WHOLESALE Grocery House J. & J. KAUFMAN, No. 14 and 10 Rroad St., Columbus, Ga., KKIFS CONSTANTLY ON HIND A10UT 100,000 pound* Btoon. S00 barrel* Flour. From 100 to 200 b*rr*l* f ugir. 100 b*g* Colt**. From 100 to 200 barrel* Syrup. 200 barrel* Whlakay. 200 box** Tobaooo. S00 « Soap. 200 “ Cindl**. 100 barrel* Lard. 50 “ M*ok*r*l. BOO **ek* Salt. >0 tit roe. Rle*. 500 r**m* Wrapping Pap*r. 100 o*t*a Pot**h. 100 “ Sardine*. 100 " 0y*t*r«. 100 “ Pickle*. 100 box** Candy. 100 “ Starch. 100 from Parlor Matches. 1*000 pounds LorUlard'n Snuff- *0,000 Cigars. 1*000 pounds Green and Black Ten. BOO bags of fthofi. 100 boxoa Soda and Fancy Crackers. 100 Ckoono la noanou. 50 barrels Vlaofar. fO casks Scotch Ale. 100 dosoa Wooden Buckets. 100 doaoa Brooms* And everything in the Grocery line, which they offer to the trade by the package, aa low a* any other Jobbing House ia the United Btatee. *Prl6 6m J. A J KAUFMAN. H. R. R. BICH, BABB, BftCT FLIRTATION CARDS! Theee are French Flirtation Cards, and toil how it 1$ done where they know how; and are Juet re- oeived from Parle 1 Are very nobby! Only 20 eta. But one. J. BRIDB A 00.,Box2U Frankfort, augl &■ N. J. BUSSEY, Agent AMERICAN Cotton Tie Company. The trad* *uppll*d it low**t mar ket rate*. myt7 d6m TBB New York Knittini Machine Co/s Automatic Family hiUiif Lckte. FOR SALK AND RENT. To Bent. E Rone year from tha 1st of Oetober next, the entire second story of building corner of d and Orawiord etreete, (over City Mills oflee) containing three very large room* aud fl«e bed room*, together with second etory of kitchen, containing three rooms, and the cellar under store No. 172. Price $600.00. Apply to W. R. BROWN, or W. H. HAULS, sug!2 tf at No. 172 Broad street. For Bent, J IUB HOUSE, or a portion of it, corner , Forsyth and franklin streets, now occu*J plod by the subscriber. Post • sooner If desired. aug8 tf aion first October, J. A. TYLER. For Bent. no XL. at present occupied by Dr. K. C. Hood. Six oem- fortable rooms, out-honeea, garden, excellent well of water. Po**ei*lon given 1st October next. Apply to C. M. JOHBWON, E*q. For Sale or Bent. r E RESIDENCE second door eonth of 8t Paul's Church, at present occupied by Mr. Peyton. With a week’s notice, possession will be given 15th August. Portias desirous of renting can assure n home from August 16th proximo to Etcher let, 1876. Apply to Jy30 dlawtf J. 8. JONES. REAL ESTATE ACENTS. LANDLORDS! -po BNCl'RK TENANTS FOR THU OOMINO year, NOW is the proper time to place your houses with me. XUg2 tf JOH* BLACKMAR. JOHN BLACKMAB, St. Glair Street, Qunby’s Building, next to Preor, lllgas fc Go. Real Estate Brokerage A Insurance. vitti.no M •chink. In improving and perfect lug r Automatic Mar Mime, we have aimed at SIMPLICITY, and we confidently asiert that any person ot ordiuniy ingenuity will be able to use ihe Knitting Machiue with letter aueeeee than a Sowing Machine. Our Machine ie not lia ble to get out of order. It can he attached to an ordiunry tabic and worked by a child. Fall ia- struct ion* aicompany each Machine, families may club together and buy one Machine, as one will do the KHitting for a doien household*. Send tor Circular* and Price Liet. N B.—Wo ere aVo the sole and exclusive Agents for the celebrated Bickford Kmittlmw Mm* rklnc* New Vurk koitliag Midum C*., Jy12 dftwtf 689 Broadway, Naw York. imTAKTTO CilllllCUL TIAV1LIIS* C OMMERCIAL Traveler* who solicit orders by Card, Catalogue, Trado-LUt, Sample, or other Specimen, ai*o those who visit their customer* aud solicit trade by purchases made direct from •tork, and who travel in any section, by rail or boat, selling any close of goods, are requested to send their Business and Private Addraae, ae be low, ntating class of good* they sell, and by whom employed; also those who are at prasent under no engagrment. This matter I* of great importaaoe individually to salesmen of this claee, or men their attention. Those who comply with above requrst will be confidentially treated aad duly alvised of object in view. Please address, (by letter only) OO-OPBBATION, care Qex P. Rowell k Co., 41 Park law, jylteodlm New York Oily. For Sale Low. 1 SCHOLARSHIP IN THU MUDICAL COL- LUOI AT KVANSVILLB. INDIANA. •or* 'll APPLY AT TUI Of lira. ELLIS & HARRISON, Real Estate Agents AND AUCTIONEERS, W ILL ATTEND PROMPTLY TO TUB SAL*, RENT AND PURCHASE of REAL ESTATE la tba City and country, and will advertise the •ame (at private sale) fMKF Of CHARGE, unless the property ie sold. For tale. VACANT LOT Of LAND, being the west por tion of the “Nance lot,” on Bryan e reat, adjoining the residence of Hon. M. i. Crawford. Call soon If yon want n bargain. M»l$ tf CITY LOT No. 601, on McIntosh street, with irta f—— — ’— * *■ igethe Ja27 YALUABLI CITY PROPERTY, aituated ia tba business centre of the city. Will sell at a great bargain, or to an acceptable party an undivided interest. The property can he made to pay a large Interest ou the Investment. R. depot; n very comfortable and desirable home. H0U8K with five good rooms, within 200 yard* of Bonthwestern Railroad depot, one-half acre ground. For Rent. A STORE HOUSE ia the valley of Talbot county, at a cross-road, three miles of the Chalybeate Springe. A very desirable location for a Dirt Ooods and Orocory business. eeplT Notice—Change of Firm. \K71 take this method of Informing the tradlug public that wo have thia day aaaoriatMi with ua iu buslnea* Mr. CHARLES II. WATT. The firm name will not be changed. W;J WATT, „ , , J- A. WALKER. Columbus, Ga., Aug. 4th, 1874. In addition to the above, we beg to inform oor customer* and the pnblie generally that we intand ^ < * r *i»6ys on band, iu quant ties to suit uy class of purchasers, making a specialty of PLANTATION SUPPLIES. We return onr thank* for tke liberal palaonace ex- *° Md guarantee aa good bargains as Within the Reach or Every' Woman and Child I 40,000 Subscribers Want At fO Ornate Aplaot! There ie e premie, at »a , o*l oempelgn thl* f«U ia o«„ rfj „ *nS It ie of vital importenee to>^ people that they Bhould be Ih poatod on Ih* queetion of party i and also ae to the life and ohanitw tha men for whom they are to voi,. All thi* want tbe pnblinher of the ENQIJ ih KR- Si t hu determined to eatablieh no soon „) ein get one thoueand aobeeribere, THE CAMPAIGN ENQUIRE whioh he will wnd to any addreee oe i receipt of ' FIFTY CENTS FOR FIVE MONTI Ten thonaand extra oopiea will beim on the lint edition—an important fu whioh advertiaere should avail themwli Candidates, and ohairmen of oomi teen in Georgia and Alabama, as *ei Granger* and other bodies, ehoold a up olubs at onoe, and send na all the | litieal information they oan glean. 1 issne* are of great importance, ani' people should be rowaed to the emergw Greet as will he the expense involvd '' this enterprise, I wtll, aa an extra Inhy meat, send free for one yeer the Wis or Svxdai ExqutunSua to anj ■ending me twenty names aad ton doll tor THE CAMPAIGN ENQUIEI Hard times oaaaot be urged (or taking thl* paper, as its low cost pi** within the reaoh of all. Let onr (tie I go to work at onoe, spread the news aid ns in aeonring auoh * oircoKtioo will make the new enterprise amodii of the greatest good. Good men only will b* endowed, * no effort wiU be epared to rid Alabu* the harpias now praying on htr. “ Ta addition to all political M**- ^ Gaunpaifa Eaqnirei * thirty-two column paper, will wlltl General sad Foreign New*, the 1** Market*, Crop Ksports, Hints (or Pl« are, able Editorial*, Household Kecip* Keligioua Intelligence, Sketches o( lit* Original Kiwi**, Poetry, and Local IK Hgenee. Form Your Clubs at 0n« ity°* r4 °t** " *°°* t******* av*5 deuwOt WATT * WALK NR. any beat la the city. .Knife.._ known property situate ou the northeast cor- yAUJABLR v known pi RTY. . That well eer oi vgietnorpe and Bridge streets, consisting of e six-rooned, two-story from* building, with store house end e number of other out-boildlngi, oe e half acre lot of good lead. For terms, apply to Dr. W. T. POOL*, 101 Broed btaest, Oolumbee, or ANDRBW WILLIAM!, Weet J««0 w$m Address A. R. Calhoun, Engvirer-Sue, COLUMBUS, <>*