The daily times. (Columbus, Ga.) 1875-1876, May 02, 1875, Image 1

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.). B. WIILCrHT iSt CO., I AND PBWMKTVIit. ! XKRMS OF THE Columbus Daily and Weekly Times. DA IT A': One Year. JJJJ Six Months * 'J) Throe Months JJ9 One Month 7a (We paying postage.) WF.EKIA'i One Year § 2 00 Six Months. 1 (We paying i>uhUki‘.) 11 ins OF ABVEKTlwnie. ECS® ssuimbfl SS3KSS3SSEESS-JU.M jj.wav I S3S3S3SSS3S33S gSBSSSsKBSSSw -XH.MAV ". gggssagosgsgscs SSSSSSSSSSSSE-i vv 55335833333333 wiit!3Si2B>2Si 3SBfj|SBBS3BBBBI Sssssisssesiiss r. 83833333833333! §i§BBS33eSSM3| HinwKC 38333333833333 SBsS*3BS3BStS3S si H uo W i -5833853383353S Sbßs**SSSs!6B . s 33833338333335 ls*i = slS£B3Sll ■nuull 33333838383532 iioissasiissss A t 5833835355385S .'4l pur ft. additional in Loral Column. Marriage ami Funeral Notices SI. Dally, evorv oilier day for one monUi or UillHlll l M il N. Flower thieves are rampant in Sa vannah. Crons in Tat nail are in a very flourishing condition. Savannah had a disastrous lire on Wednesday night. Loss #:i,ooo. A young boy named Willie Bar nett, of Sparta, suieided Friday. Whooping eougli has been pre valliug in Calhoun for several weeks. A negro boy murdered a white hoy, in Atlanta, over a game of curds, j The Savannah negroes got nie ad of Harris, and had their spelling bee first. -Kimball is appealing to Atlanta for only Wi.oon to complete the much talked of factory. —The Macon Council, at their last meeting, decided to take£.l,ooo worth of stock in the new gas company. Washington claims the champion speller of the United States. He has never been “stumped” yet. Mrs. Bradshaw, of Harris i-ouutv, died recently from the effects of inju ries received during the terrible cy clone. Mr. Marshall Upshur, of Atlania, was seriously run over by a loaded wagon. His stomach is now out of order. A negro on the Macon chain gang was bucks hotted the other day. lie lingers awhile with the matron of the hospital. -The Fort Valley Mirror says that Anna Dickinson went down to An dersonvllle last .Sunday to visit the Federal cemetery. Athens is said to he' the most quiet place in Georgia, nothwith standing they have very near a crowd of “untamed” boys. -Atlanta now swears the water works will be in full oj>eration by the 4th of Jidv. Can’t Moore then make a spread eagle speech '■ Wholesale dog poisoning is car ried on in Athens. A number of ca nines have thus been destroyed by some malicious individual. -In the case of Carl Hoping vs. John H. Hall, Governor Smith has ordered that the plaintiff be author ized to make the State a party plain tiff to the same cause ; provided the State shall not be liable for any cost,. A celebration of the passage of the Civil Rights day, in Atlanta, is booked for the "<1 proximo. I-’red Douglass, J. M. Langston, K. li. Klli ott, H M. Turner and Dr. 11. E. Haul din are announced to speak on the oc casion. A merchant of llesaea, says the Koine Commt'rciul, employs a number of children to collect bullets from the hard-fought Held. He pays them five cents a pound, and has already ship ped to Baltimore sixteen thousand pounds at a goo 1 profit. He bus on hand two thousand pounds more. ■ The Forsyth AdrrrtUrr says that a petition, numerously signed by the citizens of Monroe county, has been forwarded to Judge Hall, asking him not to hold the adjourned term of his court iu May. as was determined at the February term. The farmers suv they will lie too busy to leave their farms, and if they are required to do so their business will suffer. They are behindhand on account of tie continued rains, and are working hard to catch up. —The Hinesville 6f audit- thus quotes the conclusion of Judge Hersehel V Johnson’s charge to the grand jury of j Tatnail county: ‘‘l speak not as a , judge, but as a Georgian. My course | is almost run. T have nothing in tin way of political honors to look for ward to. All that I wish is to be use ful in the position which I occupy. We have a herculean tusk before us, if we want the rising generation to be anything. Money is not all. We may accumulate the riches of Gol eonda, and what will it all be to our children if they are destitute of char acter and principle V i may awaken the censures of some by this digres sion from a judicial charge, but if I can be instrumental in sowing some good seed that may spring up and grow, I will welcome their censures. Hot us do our duty and leave this world with the satisfaction that we have not lived in vain.” ll.Aßini NEWS. A large crowd of Montgoirierian.s j went to the Fair at Mobile. Spring lights opened in Opelika . last week. Nobody hurt bad. Ann Pollard, a noted negro wench, is one of the Radical political agita tors of Montgomery. Ann is a team m her peculiar way. The present Constitution of Ala naina is a badge of inferiority. It was fairly defeated by the people, after a nve days’election supervised and eon THE DAILY TIMES. 1 trolled by the military of the United ■ Slates, so don’t hesitate to go into a convention that will undo this Radi cal job. —The dwelling of l)r. James Kelit, of Selma, was destroyed by tiro Fri day morning, about lb o’clock. Out house? and kitchen shared the same fate. —H. K. Faber, of Montgomery, Is . running for mayor, lie is huh'jn'ii j (b’af, which, in its last analysis, means I opposition to the white man’s candi j date. The Ashville . light describes a , mineral spring which was discovered ! lately at Springville, St. Clair, coun ty, and which a competent judge pro notmoed equal to any of the Virginia springs. Col, B. M. Woolsoy has been nom inated by the simon pure Democracy, and without a doubt, white man’s par ty of Selma, for mayor. Success to you. Cardinal, for you ought to beat, but rings and half-hammered Demo crats. The good people of Coosa, Talla poosa, Chambers, Lee, and perhaps other adjacent counties, are prepar ing fora grand reunion and picnic at Goodwater, on the line of the Savan nah A Memphis Railroad, on the stli day of May. Faber, "the Independent,” says he iimsf run for mayor of Mongomery to serve the (/<’<(/• people. We have known instances where the dear peo ple could dispense with this half-Rad- I ical, half-nothing, politician, and we j hope to see the same tiling again. • ♦ • FI.OUIIII Mins, Tile Halifax river country is rap idly tilling up with actual settlors. Dr. Rogers, of lVnnsylviinia, died nt Mellonvillo last week. ladies in Key West vary the! monotony by sailing about in yachts. Dull times in Key West. We Im agine that when it is dull there, it is very dull. The U. S. light-house steamer Arbutus was sold at Key West the other day at auction. Mr. Charles Tift bought her for $4,535. At Cedar Keys, on last Wednes day night, a brutal murder was com ! mitted by Westley Hodges, who kill ed Paris Jackson, shooting him ! three times, any one of which shots would have proved fatal. A forest fire came near burning j out Judge Tucker and Mr. Robertson | at Mellonvillo last week. Had the city been more coin pact, (its houses | are now a quarter of a mile apart i doubtless many houses would have ' been burned. The press is not muzzled in Flor- 1 Ida, but the people certainly are liv- [ ing under absolute despotism. Take! the official advertising for instance, j which compels public officers and I others who have legal matters to ad vertise to give them for publication I to certain designated organs, Radical ; newspaper-, thus preventing Demo crats from supporting their own I organs. On (lit that a foundry is about be ing established in East Jacksonville 1 by ix well known founder of Snvnnnh. i ■l-irk.'ioitrlih 1 JVi’ir Smith. L.ukik PimciiASE. Ex-Mayor Cald- I well, of Elmira, N. X.. bought out on j Thursday last the Brock property at Enterprise, including the hotel and [two hundred and fifty acres of land, j for twenty-five t housand dollars cash, j The purchase includes the whole ! town of Enterprise, except some old 1 lots previously sold to private par ities. Mr. Caldwell intends to reside permanently nt Enterprise, and will I in future conduct the business of the , hotel personally, /bid. Hodge, formerly city marshal, ' shot a colored man by the name of [ Jackson, at Cedar Keys, on Saturday [last. A quarrel between the two re sulted in the immediate death of j.Taekson, Hodge has been captured and is in custody. Fears of summary ! proceedings are entertained. t;i.\i:it w. stu mi.i<\ m:s. A pair of spurs worn by the fa ’ mouH John Randolph, of Roanoke, {have been deposited with the Vir : ginia Historical Society. General Colton, of North Carolina, , now in the service of Egypt, writes i from New Dongola that for a good, | well-cooked, weil-.v-aHoned dinner, it ,is iiurd to beat, tho Arabs. They gave | him more than twenty courses, the main piece being a sheep roasted I whole. The New Orleans Tiuies has offi -1 eial authority for the statement that | the Sergeant-at-Arms of the House i of Representatives lias, since the ad journment of the Legislature, been offered sr,oo to approve a bill for sta tionery purchased for the use of the ■ < teneral Assembly. The wife of Mr. Harry C. Ford, of Baltimore, (/,<’,■ Blanche Chapman) has presented her husband with a lit- I tie girl. The baby comes of a lino of actresses, all of whom are living, its grandmother is Mrs. Harry Chap man' and ils great, grandmother Mrs. Alexander Brake, the celebrated tra gedienne. (i,ii'i‘i\;s Ex Senator Nye, of Ncvndu. is in the Bloomingdale asylum, affected with softening of the brain, and it. is thought will not recover. —Our telegrams announce that a cargo of salt, impregnated with ar senic, arrived in New York recently from Liverpool on the steamer Nia gara, has passed into second hands. -The whole of the gas consumed in the Clifton house, Niagara, is made on the United States side of the river, is carried across the suspension bridge, and is subject to a duty, which is paid by the Canadians to the Uni ted Slates goverment. The freemasons of lowa are very much exercised over a recent decision of the grand master that dancing in the lodge rooms is inconsistent with the good of the craft. Two subordi nate officers have been deprived of their positions for violating the spirit of the dicision. - The silver inkstand which sup plied with ink the pens of the signers of the Declaration of Independence is now in the possession of Governor Hartranft, or Pennsylvania, and efforts are making to procure its re turn to its original position in Inde pendence Hall. Messrs. Charles O’Conor, Charles A. Dana, Richard O’Gorman, Arth “nr O’Leary, Joseph O’Donohue, and Thomas 11. Connery, of New York, have consented to act as trustees of the John Mitchell testimonial fund. The Irish societies will bo asked to collect money and forward it to the trustees. COLUMBUS, GA., SUNDAY, MAY 2, 1575. lirssEU. nucriT court. SENTENCING TIIE CONVICTED I*lll HONF.HH AN AFFECTING SCENE. Special to the Daily Tikes by 8. k A. Line.] Seale, Ala., May L—This morning tin' court disposed of a few jail cases. Then sent for the prisoners, who had been convicted during the week. They wore brought Into court by the sheriffs, and were sentenced one at a time. The scene was very solemn, and when Worrell was called upon to say whether he had anything to an swer why the sentence of the law should not be pronounced against him, ho rose to speak; his voice choked ; with some difficulty ho final ly said that ho was in the hands of the law that he was unconscious of what ho did—never had any ill will against any of the parties engaged in the unfortunate affair for which he was about to suffer. He was then sentenced to ten’years in the Peni tentiary. Elland was then ordered to stand up, and in reply to the same question said t hat he doubted not he had hud a fair trial; that he luid naught to say against the judge or the jury who had tried him - had no doubt they discharged their duty as they con ceived it. He had boon vigorously prosecuted for which ho blamed nobody; that in the unfortunate oe eurrenee for which he had been tided he acted in defence of himself his own life was in imminent danger; that he thought, at the time, of his wife and seven small children of their helpless condition if he should be killed, and for their benefit more than his own he struck to save his own life; that the rencontre was sud den; that he was very much excited; that he had always loved Ids antago nist, even up to tho very moment of the difficulty : that he was of a hope ful disposition his wife and children were not so; lie thought, he had tho fortitude to hear the situation, but it was not so wit h them; they are much the greater sufferers by it; that the blow of his conviction would bear heavily upon them; besides this, they could not support themselves without his assistance; that he com mitted them to a generous public, I : and trusted (hey would be protected and not allowed to beg bread, i The Judge addressed some fecl- I ing remarks to him, telling him he ! had the sympathy of the Court and j believed it was in the jury box. He was then sentenced to twenty years lin the penitentiary. His ease will be I appealed. He will remain hero {until Hie Supreme Court in July : passes upon the ease on appeal. Green Brower was sentenced to five years in the penitentiary; Rog ers Lynn and Lem Wright, to six months’ hard labor for the county. • Morin ut Fort Valley. Fort V a i. lev , (ia ~ May l. A turri• bit* wind, rain and hail storm passed over this place this afternoon at six o’clock, doing great damage to cot ton, wheat,corn, garden and all man ner of vegetation generally. Over live hundred window panes were bro ken out in private dwellings. • ♦ • storm in south Carolina. Special to tin) Times by R. k A. Line.] Columbia, May 1. A tornado passed over this city, commencing at 4 i>. m. and lasting an hour and a half, de molishing the Presbyterian Church steeple, unroofing tho market-house, partially destroying the furniture warehouse of A. C. Squire, unroofing Carroll & Spillman’s carriage reposi tory. Tin* South Carolina Railroad depot and several small buildings were torn down. Trees are piled up in the streets; fences and signs scat tered promiscuously. Up to this hour (8 o’clock) no deaths have been reported; several persons are hurt. Tho storm ranged from west to oust. Hail was also quite severe. ■ ♦ Mexican IlcjireiliiUon* on tlic Texas Frontier. San Antonio, Tex., May l. Advi ces from Laredo confirm the news of the Mexican forces in Cariza, seat of Zafuta county. On the 20th ult. Dr. D. D. Horel, Chief Justice of the coun ty, was murdered in the presence of fits wife and children, his store rob bed of $4,000, custom-house and post office pillaged. The latest advices report increased excitement all along ths Rio Grande. - ♦ - tinnier ill Hl’llipllh. Memphis, May 1. William Morris, a Canadian, and Henry Waldron, both raftsmen, while intoxicated be come involved in a quarrel in front, of a saloon about fifty cents, which resulted in Waldron stabbing Morris with a pocket-knife, from the effects of which he died in a few minutes. Waldron attempted to escape, but was arrested. tluriler in \ett Orleans. New Oiileanb, May 1. Ore I linn Brown, alias Bill Davis, alias Whis key Bill, was arraigned yesterday be fore Judge Evans and sent before the Superior Criminal Court, without the benefit of bail, on the charge of wil ful murder. Brown’s crime was com mitted April 16, when he stabbed and mortally wounded Alex. Davis, on Franklin, near Girod street. Davis died shortly after in the Charity Hos pital from tho effects of his wound. -Five million young shad have been let loose in the Hudson. Three years ago many hundred thousand were let loose in the Rappahannock, yet the Fredericksburg papers say shad were never so scarce there. A ! place on the Neuse near Newbern j has been selected for another experi- I ment. TKLKOICAI'IIK ITIIfIH, Special to tbc Times by 8. A- A. Line,| -Edward Bowling Stephens, the F.nglish sculptor, is dead. Gutierrez, who was President of the revolutionaryjunta of Cartagena, Spain, is dead. -Dispatches from various points in the West encourage the hope that tho cold weather has killed the grasshoppers. —The Emperor of Prussia hus given his assent to the introduction of a bill abolishing all religious or ders iu that country. Tho paper mill, books and office of John McLean, at FuotoryviUo, near Ballston, New York, were burn ed Friday night. Loss $70,000; insu rance $3-2,000. —Dan Bryant’s widow, In an appli cation to the Surrogate for letters of administration on bis estate, sots fortli Hint the property left by him does not exceed S2OO in value, j The loss of horses and mules in i Fayette county, Tenn., from the buf j falo gnats, from last, Friday night till Monday, is estimated by the Somerville Falcon at. from 300 to 800. Kellogg sued Auditor Clinton’s bondsmen for various sums, alleged to have been withheld from the State, and for money unauthorized, paid by Clinton. A half million is involved. Frank Morris, leader of a negro gang of burglars, who was shot by Deputy Sheriff Hall in the outskirts of Montgomery, Ala., early Thursday morning, was placed in tho city hos pital yesterday morning. —The people of Nashville, Tenn., took Joe Reed, who killed a police man while attempting to arrest him for whipping his wife, and threw him over a bridge ninety feet high. His body has not been recovered. The American College of Music will bo organized in New Yo.tk in a few days under a recent ant of tho Legislature of that State. Some of the best, known and wealthiest citi zens have applied to bo enrolled among t he patrons. -It is represented that the ill feeding existing between Frenchmen and Englishmen,engagod at tho fish eries oIT New England, will likely lead to a collision. The governments j of France ami England have resolved to send war vessels to these waters, I to prevent disturbances. • ♦ • i'olllnlom ol ships nl \rw Orleans. New Orleans, May 1. While the I steamship New Orleans was going j down the river on her outward bound j trip, she collided with the schooner j Lunate, lying at tire foot of Esplu | nude street, breaking Iter bowsprit and damaging her considerably oth erwise; at the same time pushing her against, the third district ferry landing, and tearing it, away. Total damage estimated at SI,OOO. mne Explosion In lUiKlniut Forty l.ivrs I,ah!.. London, May 1. Tho number of miners killed by the explosion in Bunker’s Hill colliery, Nort h Stafford shire, yesterday, was greater than at first supposed. Forty-one bodies have boon recovered from tho mine. Those are probably all who have perished. Many bodies of the victims were mu tilated beyond recognition. A great number of the dead miners left large families of children in a destitute con dition. — IMSIIION ITEMS. Dresses must be bouffant at the sides and front. Rumor says that large crinoline is to bs worn once more. Knickerbocker is the gavorie cheek for gentlemen’s suit. White muslin dresses should have their overskirts and sashes edged with lace. A gross-grain parasol, to he in style, must, be trimmed with a llounce of lace. The most stylish buttons for dress or jacket are of mother-of-pearl, bone or metal. - Dress skirts should measure 3J or 3J yards in width. ~ White gloves are not worn with evening costume, but are tinted the shade of tho dress. (Quarantine regulations go into effect at. Key West on May Ist. John Mehaffey, \T HIS OLD STAND, corner of OgWboifft anil Bridge streets. '(zolumbns (ait.. Will Buy the Market Price FOB ICaioi. Oiil Cation, Hides, llrj anil fiiTcn, Fill’s OK ALL KllffM, Been wax and Tallow, Old Metals, &c., Delivered at Depot* and Wharfs in Columbus, Georgia. jan3l If , Wanted, Ukn ! For which I will pay $‘2.80 per hundred jiouiulh. THE Opelika Weekly Times, BENJ. H. KEISER, Prop'r, Hah now a wide and extensive cirou lation in Chamber# and Tallapoosa counties—the largest of any newspaper in tho Lantern portion of the Statu. Merchants of Columbus, by advertising in the TIMES, would bu certain to reach a majority o the people of East Alabama, arid And it to their Intercut to inform it numerous reader# of the qualities of their good#. Postoffioe receipt# prove# my assertion to be facts. Term# moderate. Address THE OPELIKA TIMES. sp2 2w W. F. TILEVER, DentNt, Randolph street, (opposite Btrupper's) Columbus Jaul Jy) Georgia. | FINANCI AL & COMMERCIAL, i ( OIJ Wltl K DAILY MARKET. OFFICE DAILY TIMES, Muv 1, 1H75. FINANCIAL. Money l 1 * to 1% per cent. Gold buying 112 Helling 114. Silver nominal. Sight bills on New York buying *c. discount; douiud bill* on Boston %c. discount; bunk chock* ,‘4O. premium. COLUMBUS COTTON MARKET. NEW CLASH. Market closed dull at tho following quota* ttons; Ordinary 72 (<)l3 Good Ordinary H (^l4'i Low middlugrf 16 (‘V — Middlings 15‘siui Good Middlings <#— Warehouse sales 000 bales. Receipts 05 bales—s by 8. W. R. K., :5 by M. & G. It. R., 0 by Western R. R., 1 by N. & 8. R. R., 9by River, 10 by wagon*. Shipment* 209 bale*—2o2 by H. W. It. It.; j 00 W. It. 11.; 7 for homo consumption. DAILY STATEMENT. Stock August 31, 1874 _ 1.030 Received to-day ( *5 •• prey iously 56, 844—50,009 57.045 Shipped to-day -‘O9 • • previously 51,740 —51,052 Stock on hand •’,993 Same day last year—Received ** •• •• •• —Shipped 57 •• •• *• —Sales 10 —Stock 5,121 Total receipts to date 50,004 | Middlings I<>. v. s. FOETH. Receipts at all ports to-day 2,402 bales; ex ports to Great Britain bales; Continent 5173 bales. Consolidated ; exports to ! Great Britain bales; to Continent ; ! stock at all ports 471,250. VISIBLE SCRIM.Y. Visible supply 2,844,859; American 1.673,199; ; visible supply same time last year 2,890,005; j Amcarien 1,738,415. MVItIt FT * IIY TKLKI-ll %I’IK. Special to the Daily Times by the 8. A- A. Line. I FINANCIAL. New Y-uik, May I.—Gold closed at 115*.,, COTTON. LIVEUROOL, May 1, 1 R. m.—Cotton dull; hales ! 7,01 K) bales, speculation 1000; American ; mid dling uplands 7 7 £a8d; middling Orleans B%d; ar- j rivals . May and June delivery, not below good or dinary 7 13-1 fid. , j May and June delivery, not below low mid- j tilings, 7 13-1 Od. June and July delivery, not below low mid dlings 8 15-Itid. New York, May I.—Cotton—New cluss spots closed dull ; ordinary Id % ; good ordi nary 15%e; strict good ordinary —c; low mid dlings 15'*; middling 10',; good middlings 10**; middling fair 17'4 ; lair 17.%; sales of exports ; spinners —; speculation —; transit.—; export# to Great Britain ;to tho continent ; stock Futures closed firm; sales of 14.3(H) bales as follows: May 10%; June 16% ; July 16 9-16; Au gust K> 11-16*23-32: September 10 17-32a9-lli; Oc tober 163-32; November 15 29-32*15-10; December 15 31-32*19; January lfl3-8’2a,%; February 16%a5-10. New Ouleans, May 1. —Receipts 135 ; sales 1250; middlings 16%; low middlings ; good ordinary : exports t> Great Britain quiet. Charleston, May 1. -Receipts 242 bales ; sales 100; middlings 15% ; stock 14.032 ; ex ports to Great Britain ; to tho continent Mobile. May I.—Receipts 121 ; sales 300 ; middlings 15,%; stock 25,177 ; exports to Great Britain . to the continent ; coastwlso—; market quiet. Philadelphia, May I.—Receipts 255 hairs ; , middlings 16*3; exports to Continent *to Great Britain —; market quiet. Providence, May I.—Stock 16,000. Savannah. May 1. Net and gross re- ! oeipts 285 bales; sales—; middlings 3 low middlings ; goml ordinary ; exports to Great Britain ; to continent—; coastwise Norfolk, May 1. —Receipts 811 ; sales 200; low middlings 15®,; stock 3,035; exports to Great Britain —; market quiet. Wilmington, May I.—Receipts N7 ; sale# —; middlings 15)£; stock 1433; exports to Gn at Britain —; market inactive. Boston, May I.—Receipts 103 : sales 157 ; middlings 16,%; exports to Great Britain ; stock 14,570; market quiet. Galveston, May I.—Rocoipts ; sales holiday. Baltimore, May 1.- Receipts bales; sales 75 ; middlings 15%a 16 : exports to Great Britain - ;to Continent ; sfoek 11.954; market dull and easy. Auowsta, May 1. Uetseipt# hJ ; sales 17H ; good ordinary ; low middling 15% ; middling ; market firm. PROVISIONS. New Orleans, May I.—Sugar firm ; common 7a% ; fair 7%a% ; fully fair 7*B; prime, U; choice h a%. Molusse# quiet and steady; choice 6Hu7O; prime 60; fair 47; common 50. Flour higher; choice $6 60*7 00;choice XX $5 H 7%. Hack corn active; mixed Hsa%; white 86;choice yellow 80 %; yellow mixed 86. Vt lioicsnle Prlrctt. Apple*—per barrel, $5; peck, 75e. Bac:<n—Clear Sides H lb - Oleur Rib Hides 14c; Shoulders 11c; Ice-cured Shoulders 12%c; Sugar-cured Hams 15c; Plain Hams 14c. Bagging—l6(q!l6. Bulk Meath-Clear Rib Sides 11%>. Buttkk—Goshen lb 40c; Country uocf Brooms—'j) dozen, $2 60(flj)$3 60. Candy—Stick lb 16c. Canned Goods—Sardines fuse of 100 boxes sl7; Oysters, lib cans T* dozen, $1 20 to $1 35. Chkkhe—English lb 00c; Choice 18%; West ern 17c; N. Y. State 16c. Candles—Adamantine ty lb 19c; Paraphino3sc. Coffee—Rio good lb 23c; Prime 23c,% ; Choice 24 %<:; Java 33c to 37c. Corn—Yellow Mixed bushel $1 12%; White, $1 15 car load rates in depot. Cigars—Domestic, *4 1,000 f2O*GS; Havana, s7o(q)s 150, Fuhtr— Kxtra Family, city ground, "p }t> $8; A $7 50; B $6 60; Fancy $lO. Hardware.—Swede Imu IK:.; Refined Iron 4c.; Sadiron 7c.; Plow Steel 10,'jm, lie.; Horse and Mule Shoes 7'jf<6Bc.; p* r lb.; Najlu per keg $4.26; Axes sl2(qisl4 per doz. Hay—cwt. $1 40; Country 40®60c. Iron Ties —'£4 lb 7,%c. Lard —Prime Leaf, tierce, ft lb 16e; halve* and kegs, 15c. Leather—White oak Sole lb 25c; Hemlock Sole 33c; French Calf Skins s2fft/f 4; American do. s2(h;s3 50; Upper Leather $2(,53 50; Harness do, 50c; Dry Hides 11c, Green do. 6c. Mackerel—No. 1 bbl No. 2 sl2 50; No. 3 sll 60; No. 1 kit $1 40053. Pickles—Co*a dozen pints f 1 W); J*. quart $3 26. Potash—jj4 ease Potatoes—liSsh 'f.', bbl $4 60(>5.7 00 Powder—'# keg $6 25; % keg $3 50; % $2 (V), in Magazine. Rope—Manilla # lb 20c; Cotton 30c; Machine made 6%e. Meal—# bushel $1 20, Molasses—N. O. gallon 75c; Florida C.GtD O.V; j re-boiled 75c; common 4f>(e 50e. Syrup—Florida 60(jG5c bushel 85c. Oil—Keroseno V gallon 25c 1 Linseed, raw, $1 20; boiled $1 26; Lard sl2s; Train sl. Bice—V lb B%c. Halt—V sack $1 85; Virginia $2 25. Tobacco Common lb 650 ; Medium Bright 70c; Fine 75c; Extra $1; Navy OOfqiflSc; Maccaboy Sunff 75(^860. Shot—sack $2 40. Sugar—Crushed and Powdered V- lb 13@13„%e; A. 12>aC.; B. 12c,; Kxtra C. 12c.; C. 11‘ .c,; N. O. Yellow Clarified 10%c; do. White 13c. Soda—Keg 7c *4 lb; box 10c. Starch—fl lb B,‘ a c. Trunks—Columbus made, 20 Inch, 75c; 36 inch $2 HO. Tea—Green 75c; Oolong 65c, Whiskey—Rectified V- gallon $1135; Bourbon s2<g>s4. White Lead lb ll(§;12%c. Vinegar—sl gallon 35c. COUNTRY PRODUCE. Whole tale H> Util. Goshen Butter $ 40 $ 60 Country •• 80 40 KkK* - lb Frying chicken# 20ft/,25 25^.30 Grown •* 30(338 800033 Irl#h potatoe# OOp'k 4 50 •• •• 500 bbl 6 00 Sweet potatoe# 75 30p‘k Onions 90 bbl 95 p k Cow pea# 80 bu 1 00 bu ilry €>oilm. wholesale price*. Print, TqMOqi’.V J-r Ji bleached cotton 6\@9c. “ 4-4 •• •• 10016 c. Sea Island •• Coats’ and Clark’s spool cotton. .70c. Tickiug* 10(u 25c. 9-4, 10-4, 11 4 ami 12-4 brown aud bleached sheoting* 30(3)60c. Wool flannels—red and bleached 20(n)75e. Canton flannel*—brown und bl’d 12 %(ai2sc, Linseys 15t30c. “ Kentucky Jean# 15(tt Mc “ COLUMBUS MANUFACTURED GOODS. Eagle and Phknix Mill#.—Sheeting 4-4 10 %c., % shirting H'jC.; osnaburgs, 7 oz.. 14c.; % drill ing Pic; bleached shooting and diUing 12(<t13c.; Canton flannels 20c. Colored Goods.— Stripes lOfni U%c.; black gingham checks 12,%(i'13c.; Dixie plades for llebl work 17c; cotton blankets s2h $4 50 per pair; bleached huckaback towels $l4O per dozen; yarns ss. to Is. per bunch of pounds $1 35; ropo 25c. to 27c.; sewing thread, 16 bulls to the pound, 60c.; knitting thread, 12 balls to the pound, bleached, 55c.; unbleached 50c.; wrap ping twine, iu ball*. 40c. Woolen Goods. —Cssi I meres, 9 ok. per yard, f>6e. to 70c.; jean# 20c. to 137 %c.; doeskin jeans 55c. Muscogee Mill*.—% shirting 8%c.; 4 I sheet ing 10 Flint River 8 oz. osnaburgs 15c.; do. yarns $1 35. Columbus Factory.— 7 shirting 8,%c.; 4-4 Bliectiug 10,%c.; sewing thread, nnbluacuod, 50c.; knitting, do., 50c.; wrapping twine 40c. Clegg’s Factory.—Plaids or checks 13c; stripes faucy fashions, 12 %c. PRONPECTUH OF THE New York Weekly Herald. JAKES uoimox HEX NUTT, I’roprit'tor. Ili'oiHlway a,i<l Ann Htreet POSTAGE FREE. Annual Subscription Price $ 2 CLUB rates. Three Copies & Five Copies h Ten Copies 16 Twenty Copies 25 I An extra copy will !>'• sent to every club of ten j or more. Additions to clubs received nt club rates. These rates make the Weekly Herald the cli< spent publication in the country. Terms cash in advance. Money s> ut by mail will be at tin* risk of the sender. A generous portion of the Weekly Herald will i he appropriated to Agriculture, Horticulture, j Floriculture, Pomology and tho management of domestic animal*. Particular attention will be j paid, also, to Reports of the Markets. : The aim will bo to nuiko the Weekly Herald superior to any other agricultural ami family newspaper in the country. Every number of the Weekly Herald will con tain a select story aud the latest and most impor tant news by telegraph from all parts of the world up to the hour of publication. During the session of Congress the Weekly Herald will contain a summary of the proceed ings and the latest news by telegraph from Wash ington, Political Religious, Fashionable. Artistic, Literary aud Sporting Intelligence; Obituary No- i tlces, Varieties, Amusements, Editorial articles ou tho prominent topics of tho day, a review of , the Cattle ami Dry Good* Markets, Financial and j Commercial Intelligence, and accounts of all the j Important und interesting events of tho week. The price of subscription, whenever practica ble, should be transmitted by Post Office or ders. It is the safest mode of transmitting money by mail. At small Post Offices in the country, where Post Office Orders cannot be obtained, money may be remitted in Registered Letters. Advertisements, to a limited number, will be inserted in the Weekly Herald. Tin: DAILY IIKIIA LD POSTAGE FREE. 1 ilium I Nubsrplptlon Price #l2 Alvin)* in Advance. Write the address on letters to the New York Herald, iu a bold und legible hand, and give the name of each subscriber, of Post Office, County and State ho plainly that no errors in mailing le pers will bo liable to occur. TIIE Weekly Enquirer! A Paper for the People, it Friend of the Farmer and Industrial Classes. A IIEAI'TTFUL NEW CIIHOMO entitled "PERRY'S VICTORY!” (■lven lo Kvery fit 2 Nubscrlbcr. This picture represents Com. Oliver H. Perry j in the act of passing from one ship to another in j a small open boat, during tlie beat of battle, ex posed to the fire of the enemy. II lleiiMire* id by 22% Incite*, is artistically finished in thirteen colors, and 1* undoubtedly the most desirable C'hromo ever offered as a premium. Mingle copies of it sell at $3. We have at a great outlay secured the exclu sive control ami sale of it, and therefore are •n --abled to present it to our patrons as above. The Enquirer still stand* pre-eminent u* first-class Newspaper. Its various department allotted to Editorials, Humorous, Agrirulttirr, Poetry, Coircspondciici', Ti’li’srriqihic imif j (•(‘iieriil Notts , all give evidence of the. care and pains taken to supply its reader* with all the news and a variety of reading that cannot fail to intertHt each and every member of tho household. Subscribe through our agents or send direct to us. We desire uu agent at every Postoflice, and where none are yet appointed let some of onr friends apply for the agency. Address FARAN & McLEAN, Publishers, Cincinnati, Ohio. H. D. MOORE’S REPAIR SHOP, j Month Store in Joue’s Building, Oglethorpe St. j I >UYH and sell* old Furniture : on<’omiuiHHion,Upholster- W iaK ’ ane W°rk an ' l Repairing ! done generally, in good style. ' fLmyggV I am now using Johnson's cole ! bruted stains, which are the best in the United State#. H. D. MOORE, Jn#t(Bouth of McKee’s Carriage Bhp. aprlH ly CITY TAX! |)ARTrEWH(> HAVE HOT PAID THEIR CITY TAX for 1875, WILL BE ALLOWED FOUR PER CENT. DISCOUNT, if they pay BEFORE FIRST OF MAY NEXT. ./. N. BARNETT. aplp tuiyl Collector uml Treasurer. Assignee’s Sale. \I TILL be sold at tho place of holding public VV sales on Tuesday, the 4th day of May next, in the city of Columbu*. Georgia, to the highest bidder, the Note*, Account*, and Book* of Ac count of McCrary k Cos.. Bankrupts. Bold by order of L. T. Downing. Register in Bankruptcy. Term# cask. W. A. LITTLE, ap23 dJJAwIt Atmigure. For Rent. V FOUR-ROOM dwelling house on lower Oglethorpe street, with a good garden spot, well of water, etc. Apply at VOL. I.—NO. 102 W. W. MACKALL, Jr., Al lpu<>y al Law ColuilibUMi C*M. Offico over D. N. Gibson’* store. Practices iu U. 8. aud Stuto Court*. Kkferknckh—Gcu. Joseph E. JohuMtou, Bavs 11- nah. (hi,; Gen. G. M. Horrcl, Savannah, Os.; Owv. J. Black Groomc, Auuupolis, Met.; A. k J. E. Lee, Jr., Esq*., Ht. Louis. inli23 tt Joseph F. Foil, Uloniry A < ’oiui.w-llor nl l^m. OFFICE west side Broad street over store ot W. H. Hobart* .y lrfu*tii*e# 1h Htate and Federal Courts. Advice aud service# tendered to Administrators, Executors, Guardians, Ac. Hue cialty made of Conveyancing. Examining Titles, j Ac., iu Georgia, or anywhere in the Uuited States. Ar.r. business promptly attended to. 1.1)7 dtf .1. I>. KAMBO. AGornoy nt Liiir. Office over Holstead A Co.’s, Broad street, Co lumbus, Georgia. In Office at all hours. ? jsnS dly J. 11. McNEILL, Attorney and Counsellor at Law, I PRACTICES in Courts of Georgia aud Alabama. I Office 128 Broad street, over C. A. Redd k ! Co.’s. J9 l>- Special atteutiou given to collections. janlO ti A. V. IMIZIKB. AUoriu-y at lan, I 1 PRACTICES in Hint, r.ml Ffidcral Clulrts of Georgia aud Alabama. Makes Commercial Law u specialty. Office over C. A. Redd A Co.’* store. janb’l 6m THORNTON k GRIMES, \ I lot’ll,’.AN 111 I^IIV. <\FFICE over Abell k Co.’a, corner of Broad " and Kt. Clair streets, Columbus, Ga. jaalS ly IC. THOMPHON, Livery und Sale Stable. / \GLETHORPK BTKET, between Randolph aud N / Bryan. The best of Saddle end Harness Horses. A fine lot of Carriages aud Buggies always on hand. Special attention given to the accommodation of Drovers. They will find it to their interest to put up with him. f, bl 4 tf G. A. KtEHNE, 51KKCIIA1VT TAILOK 134 Broad street, HAS on bund a handsome assortment of Gen tlemen’s Dress Goods, English and French CussinieTcs, Vestings, Ac. Cutting done at reasonable rates. Have your Clothes made by mo, and 1 guarantee perfect satisfaction in style aud pried. janßl ly J. T. COOK, Stalls 15 & 17, Market House, constantly on band and for sale (he BEST MEAT’S that can le obtained. rnb23 dly OR. J. A. URQUHART HAH AN OFFICE and wleeping apartment on tho premises formerly known a* the Dr. Bozeman lot, at the corner of Mclntosh and Randolph streets. Entrance to the Office on Mc- Intosh street, where professional calls, made either at day or night, may be left and will be promptly attended to us soon a# received. Jau22-ood tf. E. L. Okay. E. H. Okay. K. L. GRAY Ac CO., AGENTS FOB HALE OF Texas Lands OABTIEB desiring to emigrate to Texan, wi X do well to call on oh, rh we have lauds i almost every county in Texas for Hale. Will give letters of introduction to respousibh parties, who will take plcaauro in showing lands all over the State. Wo also nettle old land claims on reasonable claims. Mr. E. L. Gray has just returned after a resi denc.e of twenty years in Texas. Olliec. at Alabama Warehouse. [inblO (Jm Jolm Blackmar, St. Clair Street, Gunby’s Bunding, next to Freer, Illges & Cos. Brokerage, Real Estate & Insurance. REFF.H, BY PERMISSION, To Merchants’ and Mechanics’ Bank, this city. Jan23-ly L. P. AENCHBACHER, I Fiisliioiinble Tailor. ROOMS over Moffett’s Drug Store. lam reg ularly supplied with the latest FASHION j I'JoATJSS, and am prepared to guarantee perfect ; satisfaction, at reasonable rates. iuh2i eodfim WILLIAM MUNI)AY, Livery and Sale Stable Keeper, Oglethorpe Street. rnilE BEST TEAMS IN THE CITY FOB HUU) 1 at all hours day and night. Funerals served at short notice. Drovers accommodated on liberal terms. jaBl tf TOWN PLATS, FOB HALE, Willi or without ORANGE ORCHARDS. i IN THE TOWN OF BEECHER, FLORIDA. Information relative to BMoher or Florida, can be obtained. The former from a finely execu t'd map, 20 by 28 inches, on linen paper, contain ing Fruitlund, Fen insula. Town plat of Beech* r. and tbo only accurate map of the Hjt. Johns river to lake Ilarney. The latter from a large pamphlet, English or German, on Florida, its climate and productions, with a sketch of its History. These will be forwarded free of postage, on re ceipt ol 26 cents each. Address, ICim i.X A. STI OWELL. MANAGING DIBECTOIi, THE BEEOHEE LAND 00., FLA, P. 0. Bo* 2822. 34 Park Row, New York. Jan23-d&W.tf tom rtm. is on jriLF. with Rowell & r* hesman . Advertising Agents, i THtflß 4 CHESTNUT STS., ST. LOUIS,|MO.