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l-OCST*' * ai) „,,, eiui-K- ;
■ AU-J*!^ fur without further notice.
I tion of the P, ol)9crve the dates on their
I <nh«cri ,K ’ ri ®
I.** 8 *' jghjng the paper furnished for any
I l^r vear will have their orders
I^TXw “ ” y remitting the ttmoa, “
l .rihetinred^ ri p ; i0 n mscoatlnned DnJree by
• N ’ a C “ ! „ters left at the office.
positive onic . Advertisers.
N SQCAKE is ten measured lines of Nonpareil
|d tin' 00 per square; each sulise-
^Ton'ltt inserted every day), 75 cento
stopped at the expira-
..rt-senien^inM
e rt<xl every other day, twice a
vA\ charged $t 00 1** square for
itli contract advertisers.
* h nr oiiff a ,ri
favorable place
Ad inserted but no promise < t coutmuous
I tlirn «rt i a ^ ular , )lacc can be riven, as
m“ f t have equal opportunities.
>>, vs has the largest
I mv an4 wail circulation ° f any paper
' fl - • *-i Savannali.
The Crops.
v ff0U ld request our planting and
tjle fr ieuds in the interior to furu-
?fT«ith any information in regard to
I f "iop prospects for the coming year.
fll!,tion concerning cotton, corn and
I redacts will lie of mutual benefit,
^’'connection we would state that
° n c«-s of importance transpiring in
various counties of tiiis State and
I r n | - when accompanied by a responsi-
|allie ) will find a' place in our
Hil-linur. . * ■
Adairs in Georgia.
vli! . w ho killed Cherry in Macon some
/ ' w and then attempted to kill liiui-
Tri not dead, as has been reported.
I ij r ,. llcirn 1’romlfit. of Macon, is dead.
I> q Gaboury has been elected
| Pr shl- nt of the Catholic University of
rria. and is now in Macon superin-
lj n ,, the erection of tiie buildings.
I f s -i K r Gaboury is a ripe scholar and in ev_
". wav fitted to fill the important trust.
Atlanta is still moving in favor of a cot
ton factory.
Wilkinson county granger says he
will l<uv no more guano unless it is en~
dorsed by lii» family physician,
u is said that the planters of Middle
1 r„ ondfl will this season .change their en
tire system of cropping.
An Atlanta man is'proceeding against
the street car company for $10,000 for
I,recking bis leg. This is pure iagrati-
lu j c ][,. ought to he thankful it wasn’t
A new paper to he called the Enterprise
n il! shortly he started in Dalton.
■p]„. Catholics are contemplating the
erection nf anmincry and a hospital in
Macon.
Mr. T. C. Xisbet, a prominent citizen of
Jlaeon, is seriously ill.
lullau is so quiet that the firing of a
pistnl will break a paregoric bottle a mile
The Sisters of Mercy will shortly open
a convent school in Dalton.
’ The editor of the Atlanta Constitution
asserts that lie is the owner of four lum
inal acres of wild land in Florida. This
is a surprising confession. An editor
that can’t tame four hundred acres of
laud in one season ought to sell out.
Pouce de Leon Spring in Atlanta will
shin be epeifeil for visitors.
The dwelling house of a Mr. Fountain,
r.f (iwiimett county, was accidentally
burned recently'.
The store-house of Mr. Joel Lasseter,
in ltockdale county, together with the
contents, was burned on Wednesday
horning. The fire was of incendiary
origin. There was no insurance.
The city of Atlanta is sued by a num-
• r of people for broken thumbs, sprained
inkles, etc. One mau who fell down and
■;! a pair of brass-mounted spectacles is
now bringing suit for the recovery of a
house and lot.
A correspondent of the Milledgeville
i dm says that the first choice of the
lire -grass counties for Governor is Gen-
•nl Colquitt, and after him Tom Ilarde-
’ man, of Macon. •
The Young Men's Christian Association
■ Atlanta are negotiating with ltev.
Henry Yi ard Beecher for a lecture tour
through the South.
•Messrs. Scott. Bondurnut .t Adams have
brought action against Grant,'Alexander
Co. for the sum of $7a,000 for alleged
violation of contract,
Luther 1). Brady, a Deputy Collector,
V: -°, « year or two ago, embezzled a cer
tain amount of money- belonging to the
government, has been arrested in Chicago
aid brought back to Atlanta.
1 here will lie n series of chicken diffi-
nlties in liihb county shortly. Atlanta
ml Macon will he pitted against Augusta
and South Carolina.
A pair of twins was left at a residence
I’-rar Macon recently. The twins arc girls.
Die Atlauta Constitution sometimes
says a good thing in the most unexpected
wanner, and this is one of them: “As-
prauts for gubernatorial honors may
' up when Col. Hardeman gets politi-
Qli -v unleashed, for there are lots of folks
in Georgia who think he will make a
number one Governor, and will piush him
nut for the race.”
. Ini-on Telegraph: Another terrific night
'■ min has added to the disasters and
! ■ xitiis of the farming community.
' g'-atleaian from Southwest Georgia
■ puts the creeks to be booming, anil
f-mdsof water everywhere. Thousands
acres of river bottoms are submerged,
ri, Uiug lands grievously washed, and
plowing most eliectiuilly wiped out.
‘ in coni had been planted, and the
'-'ms. if permitted to remain, must
l r ,ve nigged aud irregular. Nothing
j~‘ l’ e fatal to a good
Asides, as stated in a previous
; cle - after such piacking rains, the
jsns that germinate aud struggle to the
F-aee will mum up feebly, .and lack
Ror and vitality. “Make haste slowly”
j, ‘™ e 111 farming as well as piolities.
Jrlay on your oars, or, more i>rop-
Ispend a few days in collecting wa-
I.m, f lh ' re pairing fences until the
I ;K." t moisture disappiears, and
I if I/" . V T lul< i replunt your corn,
I f,.u-. rc any danger of a de-
| P rt Te stand. It will pay in the end.
i jT?? 1 .' >y f;' r us. the com season is not,
, “gu latitudes, narrowed«down to a
A I lore ttci> crops of very early
Irenes may be raised. The writer, in
aero ves ^ 1 ^ “bout eleven bushels per
.| i v r0M , u field seeded on the -1 th of
v i„- ’ ou *ne seaboard. Secure your piro-
"op at all hazards and let the
[ (|j re ? ahties’ attach to the cotton veu-
I tlio L. ere again for your comfort permit
^oktion Of a little personal ex-
Mm c r; "nave known, in a season of
Hie co tl°u seed to remain in
(lreuoiK 1Ui and then, after a
'id rr-m.i ”i raiu 011 the 20th of May, come
i fallouo i f 11 ' produce with a favorable
die lauj° £ | .dest crops ever raised ou
tiierofo* iT 0U t jeopardize your success,
iui> in o’ “ y hurried and careless plnnt-
tiroi nf neglect of the proper prepara-
of f'-rtilizhi^ 1 !m<£ tlle oareful application
BOLLDDiGB BuEKEI). —
I Chronpfj 17 - —A special to the
early th: / rom Modoc City states that
i issuinp L mo ™ing fire was discovered
I The fk, £ ° m t le oil Exchange HoteL
1 Hiteiaan xj s P read rapidly, reaching the
‘ie Sf 0u fv 0n the . °PP* 8 ite side of
\f i ."bout thirty-five buildings
.
J. H. ESTILL, PROPRIETOR.
SAVANNAH, SATURDAY, MARCH 21, 1874.
ESTABLISHED 1850.
BY TELUfiiPI
—TO—
THE MORNING NEWS.
Noon Telegrams.
GOSSIP FROM GOTHAM.
Honors to the Commander of
Hritisli War Sloop Jiiobc.
the
THE ILLNESS OF PRINCE BISMARCK
Disraeli and the Fenian Convicts.
FROM THE TRAPEZE INTO ETERNITY.
Tiie Cose of Sloau versus Itavrls.
NEW YORK NOTES.
New York, March 20.—The British
sloop-of-war, Niobe, has arrived. A com
mittee of Council has been appointed to
tender her commander the freedom of the
city, and the officers of the Army and
Navy propose a formal reception in recog
nition of his conduct at Santiago de Cuba
in the Virginius affair.
One-tenth of the horses of the city are
suffering from the new disease.
There are fifty indictments against Jos.
T. Franklin for being concerned in t the for-
gery of railroad bonds. He has been ar
rested.
A meeting of the Importers and Gro
cers Board of Trade adopted a memorial
to Congress for the abolition of the moiety
system and against compromising with
palpable frauds upon the revenue.
Another indictment has been found by
the United Slates grand jury in Brooklyn
against Sanborn, Hawley and Vander-
werkeu on a charge of conspiracy to de
fraud the government.
CONGRESSIONAL.
Washington, March 20.—In the House,
Mr. Dawes gave notice that he would
bring up the four hundred million bill
next Monday. The House proceeded to
the Georgia contested eleotion case. The
majority report being in favor of Sloan,
the contestant, and against Rawls,' the
sitting member.
In the Senate, Mr. Hager, of California,
made a speech in favor of the modifica
tion of the treaty with China, so as to
suppress Chinese immigration.
ENGLISH NOTES.
London, March 20.—The Daily Neict
says it has been given to understand on
good authority that Disraeli will advise
the early release of the remaining Fe
nian convicts.
Arthur Peel has been designated as the
Liberal “whip” during the present ses
sion of Parliament.
Tempestuous weather is reported on
the Scottish coasts, with some damage to
shipping.
DEATH OP%V TRAPEZE PERFORMER.
New York, March 20.—James Sylves
ter, a trapeze performer at the Thirty-
fourth street Opera House, in attempting
the “ leap for life” last night, missed his
cidculation and, not catching the rope,
fell to the floor of the theatre. He fell a
distance of only about seven feet, but his
head striking the corner of a private box
injured him so severely that he died in a
few moments. He was twenty years old.
OERMAN AFFAIRS.
Berlin, March 20.—Viscount de Gon-
taul Biron, the French Ambassador, is
about to resign in consequence of un
pleasant relations with Prince Bismarck.
The adjournment of the Rischstag is
probably on account of Bismarck’s illness.
ANOTHEB suicide.
San Francisco, March 20.—Lieut. F.
P. Ella, in the Navy Marine Corps, com
mitted suicide by leaping from tho steam
er Great Republic during the home
voyage. The cause is unknown.
delayed mails.
Washington, March 20.—Three days’
mails are due from New Orleans.
1/ The Blue and the Gray.—On March
2d several ex-Confederate soldiers in
Chester, S. C., exhumed the bodies of
two Union soldiers, formerly of General
Kilpatrick’s command, and jwho fell in a
skirmish near the above named place in
February, 18(1.A The remains were placed
iu burial caskets, on which were put suit
able plates with the names of deceased
tliereou, aud were then forwarded to
Colonel Black, U. S. A., commanding the
post at Columbia, S. C., with a polite
letter stating that this action was.
“prompted specially” by the following
considerations:
1. • ‘The generous and fraternal conduct
of survivors of the Union army, as ex
hibited in their decorating the graves of
the Confederate dead at Madison, Wis.,
in May last, in which ceremony, at tho
suggestion of the orator of the day-, Gen.
C. C. Washburn, Governor of Wisconsin,
the orphans of many Union soldiers par
ticipated. 2. The recent successful re
commendation by Governor E. F. Noyes,
of Ohio, that the Legislature of that State
should make a liberal appropriation to
surround the Confederate cemetery at
Columbus with a suitable iron railing. 3.
The utterances and action of the many
distinguished officers and soldiers of the
Union at my who assembled in the con
vention of Mexican war veterans held at
Washington, D. C., January 15, 1874.”
Colonel Black made an immediate and
patriotic reply, iu which, among other
tliiugs, he said that:
“From such manifestations may we not
discern the dawning of n new, a better
era: when the soldiers of the Union and
of the Confederacy, with clasped hands
and united hearts, shall enter upon the
duties aud exercise the privileges which
living iu the same ^and and under the
same government imposes and permits ? ”
Killed at a Gaming Table.—Soon af
ter 10 o’clock on Saturday evening the
inhabitants in the yttle settlement of
Breslau, on Long Island, were startled by
the announcement that a murder had
been committed in tho grocery of one
Heyse. A party of men had been for
several hours playing cards for money in
the place. Between each game they
drank heavily, and were soon intoxicated
and quarrelsome. Nearly every man in
the house was drunk. At the hour named
Andrew Killiman slipped out of the
grocery and before he had scarcely been
missed by his- companions he returned
with a loaded shot-gun. He stood for
several minutes looking at the gamesters
at the table, nnd as the general story of
those who were present goes, he said not
a word to any one, but leaned on the
stock of his gun. Suddenly he stepped
briskly to the centre of the room toward
the table, cocked the gun, took delib
erate aim at Andrew Miller, who was
playing with the other, and pnlled the
trigger. The muzzle was but a few feet
from Miller, and the charge blew
his head from his body, and spattered
his brains all over the room and
on the table and walk In the confusion
that followed, Killiman slipped from the
room and fled. Yesterday he was search
ed for and captured by the police officers.
As soon as it was known by the residents
that he had been taken, a large crowd
gathered around his house and proposed
to hang him. A hanging post was erect
ed and a rope was attached to the beam.
Then a crowd assaulted the house. Just
at this moment a number of men arrived
from Babylon, and after a good deal of
talk John Lux prevailed on the mob to
disperse. Coroner Hamill then sent Killi-
mmi to Riverhead for safety, as there is.
no jail in Breslau.—JT. T. Sun, March 17.
Instantly* Killed.—Toledo, 0., March
17.—Geo. Lavine. a farmer residing five
miles below the city, while on his way
home last night drove his team over an
embankment fifty feet high and was in
stantly killed.
More Truth Than Consistency,
A recent editorial in Harper's Weekly
contains the following suggestive para
graph:
“The public disgust and wrath with
corruption of every kind are quite as re
markable at this moment as tiie corrup
tion Itself. The country is dividing into
those who believe in political honesty and
who mean to secure it, and those who
laugh it to scorn as impracticable senti
mentality. What sincere Republicans
ask, and do not receive, is some unmis
takable sign from Washington that their
administration is with the former and not
with the latter. They do not see that
sign in the appointment of Gov. Shep
herd, in the Sanborn contracts, in the
nomination to the Boston Collectorsbip,
as they did not see it in the approval of
the “salary-grab,” in the retention of Mr.
Casey, in the tendency to inflate the cur
rency, and in the hesitation to retrench.
That demand, however, will not be re
laxed. An attempt in the White House
to Johnsonize the Republican party failed,
and an effort to Butlerizeit will be equally
useless.”
Coming, as it does, from the pen of Mr.
George William Curtis, the above extract
has a force and meaning which cannot be
misunderstood. It shows that the men
who have hitherto furnished the brains of
the Republican party, who have stood by
that party through evil as well as good
report, and never found anything in its
precepts or practice too strong for their
political stomachs, are, at last, becoming
disgusted with the present management,
and are ready to inaugurate a change.
This is certainly a healthy sign, but
does it not come a little too late? The
Republican party would be in no danger
of being “Butlerized,” if it were not al
ready thoroughly Grantized. The Presi
dent is undoubtedly a firm friend of But
ler, but it is because the member from Mas
sachusetts understands and sympathizes
with him, and is always prompt to do his
bidding. That Butler compels tlie*Presi-
dent to do what he does not want to do,
is simply ridiculous; he only encourages
and supports the presidential inclination,
and contrives to keep himself in harmony
with it. If Butler died to-morrow the
administration would go on precisely as
it has done for the last five years; if the
President died, there might be some hope
of a revolution toward honesty and de
cency. In other words, the dangerous
influences now at work emanate, not from
Butler, but from a higher source—and
that source, we fear, is beyond the reach
of present or prospective purification.
What we blame Mr. Curtis, and those
whom he represents, for, is the obstinate
shutting of their eyes against the evils
they now lanlfent, at a time when the
cause of these evils might have been put
aside. Six months after the first inaugu
ration of President Grant, the leading
features of his future policy were os
clearly developed as they are now. Never
was there an executive who “held his
own” better than the present incumbent.
He commenced wrong, and has main
tained a perfect consistency in wrong
doing ever since. He is no worse in 1874
than he was in 1870, and it would be im
possible to show any official act of his
second term which has not its counter
part in his first, so far os the moral ten
dency of that act is concerned. Yet
when President Grant stood forward at
the close of his first term, with all his
imperfections full-blown and fragrant,
with no apologies for past misconduct
and no promises of future amendment,
Mr. Curtis and the would-be reformers of
to-day nominated and elected him the
second time. Knowing what he was,
they deliberately lenewed his lease of
power, and even claimed that renewal as
“a great Republican victory J"
We submit, then, that these gentlemen,
now on the point of revolt, are only gath
ering the harvest whose seed was planted
by themselves. They cannot make a
scape-goat for presidential sins out of
Butler, for Butler is but the lively shadow
of an unyielding substance. If they are
as sincere and manly as their utterances
are painfully true, they will cease belabor
ing the subordinate and strike at the chief
—hut the chief can defy them for three
years longer.—St. Louis Republican.
Danger,
That “new movement” idea advanced
by the Whig (and dropped like a hot po
tato,) the reference by the Governor of
State affairs to the judgment of the Presi
dent, and a certain vague but unmistaka
ble feeling of alarm among thoughtful
men, all testifying to the danger we are in
lest at thiB late day Virginia be tempted
by some of her leaders to Grantism. And
what is Grantism ? Do we not all know
its nature and the guide it has adopted ?
Do we not all know that now when some
of our leading politicians are so earnest
to avoid captious opposition and all .oppo
sition to Grant, at this very moment it is
most plainly confessed that Grant is But
ler and Bntler is Grant? The North and
the Northeast, Massachusetts itself and
Maine and the whole body of respectable
Republicans are disgusted with this “rule,
of the worst,” this Kakistocracy, this
Butierism to which the administration
submits itself.
Here is what a Maine paper, the Port-
HEROISM AT SEA.
Kearns of the Crew of the Fodlin.
, , _ , . ... memorative or tue event.
land Press, has to say of this guide and , lCaptain ^ receives the hearty com.
ruler of the administration:
“When we do fail in our respect for
such things as are honorable and decent,
and of good report, when we turnj from
truth, right and justice to worship mere
brute force and diabolism, we shall not
mince the matter, but. shall boldly erect a
shrine to Beelzebub himself.”
Yet Virginia is to bow before Butler
aud Grant, to profess at least a negative
or tacit alliance with them, to look to
them for guidance in her domestic affairs.
That there is a tendency to accept these
ideas in high quarters it is our duty to
recognize—to repudiate it in thought and
word and act is our only safety.—Norfolk
Virginian.
Horrible Slaughter bv a Madman.—
Between one and two o’clock on Son-
day morning, in the tenement house No.
382 Hicks street, Brooklyn, N. Y., Dennis
Delaney—in a temporary proxysm of in
sanity, it is supposed—rose from his bed
and mortally wounded his wife Elizabeth
by blows on the head with a hatchet, and
then cut his own throat with a razor,
nearly beheading himself.
It is stated that Delaney was perfectly
sober when he retired for the night. He
was employed as watchman at Woodruff
& Robinson’s stores, had resided in the
above house for the past fourteen years,
and had the reputation of a sober and
honest man. The cries of the children
alarmed the neighbors, and Officers Clark
and Doran, of the Third precinct, re
moved Mrs. Delaney , who was still breath
ing,though unconscious, in an ambulance
to the hospital.
The physicians said there was no hope
of her recovery. Mr. Dunn, the landlord,
says Delaney always lived happily with
his wife, but had lately manifested occa
sional symptoms of insanity, sometimes
waking up in the night, in fear of being
attacked.
There were five children in the room
with their parents, the ybungest seven
months old. The eldest, a boy of ten,
says that when he awoke he saw his father
standing with the hatchet in his hand by
the side of the bed. His mother seemed
to be asleep; she did not make any noise
when his father hit her. When he saw
hia father strike her he jumped up and
ran out to the door. Then he saw his
father go to the mantel, take the razor
and cut his throat.—Netc York Journal
of Commerce.
g Petinset has been exploring the
Terra del Fuego. He found the natives
docile, though cannibals through hunger
and necessity. Coal and copper abound,
as well as cinnamon and fuschia trees.
He thinka the natives would sell their
whole country for some sacks of flour and
biscuit, with a few quintals of jerked
beef.
_ _
Tired of Life.—Louisville, March 17.
H. A. Holmes, for many years salesman
for Bamberger, Broom Co., shot him
self through the head this evening, and
will die. Cause—family troubles.
On Saturday we referred briefly to the
rescue of the crew of the Norwegian brig
Fodlin by the Canard steamer Algeria.
The following account by an eye-witness
is interesting:
“Tbe Canard steamship Algeria, Capt.
Lott, on her recent trip from this port to
Liverpool, experienced a gale of unusual
magnitude and duration. Beginning on
tbe morning of tbe 23d, the gale continued
with increasing fury until the 27th ult.
The seas following the steamship threat
ened her destruction, and the whole situ
ation was one of grave apprehension as to
the possible result.
“On the 26th ult, in the midst of the
wildest period of the storm, when the of
ficers were strapped to the bridge and the
quartermasters to the wheel, signals of
distress were seen and a dismantled brig
wait discovered in a sinking condition.
Without a moment’s hesitation, Captain
Lott ordered ‘all hands on deck,’ and be
gan the difficult operation of ‘wearing*
ship so as to bring her into communica
tion with the shipwrecked sailors. Signals
of encouragement were given to cheer
the survivors on the disabled vessel, if,
indeed, the waves, which were making a
clean breach over her had spared any of
the crew.
“After an hour passed in bringing the
steamship within reach of the vessel, it
was decided to send oat a lifeboat, and
Captain Lott, from the bridge, addressed
the steamship crew, telling Diem that his
doubts as to the possibility of the lifeboat
living in such an angry sea were so great
that he would not order any boat off, but
if there were any willing to volunteer he
would permit them to go. Instantly a
boat’s crew was formed, headed by Third
Officer William Frederick Hartford, with
Boatswain William White and six brave
seamen. The boat was launched with
great difficulty, amid the roaring of the
wind and the raging of the waves. In the
launching the boat was thrice capsized by
the careening of the steamer, and Hart-
ford had his right hand nearly drawn
from his wrist, having been caught in the
tackle, but he grasped the tiller with his
left, and in a moment the boat had passed
up on a mountain wave mast high, and
was then carried out of sight. All hearts
wcut up in prayer for that gallant crew,
for it was growing dark and the storm
seemed to gain fury at every moment.
“An hour was passed in breathless sus
pense, when the life boat came in view
again, riding like a seagull over the waves.
As it neared the steamer the anxious
watchers saw that it contained eight res
cued sailors and two dogs. It was at this
moment that the peril was most immi
nent. It seemed as if no human power
could devise means by which the poor
fellows could safely board the steamer.
Ropes thrown to them as they came down
on-the waves broke like wisps of straw,
and the iron sides of the Algeria offered
only certain destruction to their frail bark.
At one moment they were as high as the
yards, and the next they sank apparently
into the depths of the sea.
“Man ropes were thrown out over the
steamer’s side, and as the lifeboat was
carried by the waves near the ship, Cap
tain Lott ordered the men to jump for
their lives, and by a Providence as marked
as that by which the steamer had been
driven out of its course by the gale to
wards the foundering ship, the distance
between the steamer and the lifeboat was
so reduced that the men were enabled to
grasp tho ropes, and were hauled on deck
exhausted and bruised.
“One poor man alone fell between the
boat and steamer and was cruelly crushed,
his collar bone and several ribs having
been broken. Exhausted, he lost his hold
and sank. Drawn along the steamer’s
side by the waves, rope after rope was
thrown around him, but failed to raise
him. Three times he fell back, and he
passed beyond the reach of all but one
man. With superhuman courage that
last man—William White, one of the res
cuing crew—coiling his feet around the
rigging and throwing himself downward,
cost a rope around the sinking man, and
he was drawn on deck.
“A meeting of cabin passengers was
organized in tho evening by the appoint
ment of Mr. W. P. Campbell, of New
York, Chairman, and Mr. Theodore W.
Moms, of New York, Treasurer. One
hundred pounds was subscribed, and on
the following evening Captain Lott, on
behalf of tho passengers, gave Officer
Hartford £40, Wm. White £7, each of
tho rescuing crew £5, £10 to the wound
ed man, aud £2 to each of the rescued
sailors.
“The wrecked vessel was the brig
Fodlin (Norwegian), and had been dis
mantled by the gale-thirty-six hours be
fore the steamer was sighted. The Al
geria's officers and crew subscribed £15
for the men who had lost everything,
and who were now even without shoes.
The Norwegian captain said that it was
the wildest storm he had ever seen, and
he hod no idea that the lifeboat could
live in such a sea, and declared the con
duct of the crew heroic beyond all pre
cedent.
‘Officer Hartford proposes to buy a
chronometer with an inscription com-
jemorative of the event.
pear upon the scene, of whom Sanborn
is the chief. This man is a common
place. keen-eyed, bnsiness-faced fellow,
also in the detective line. He is the
identical person to whom Benjamin But
ler suggested that he should take a Bos
ton hotel-register and have it photo
graphed, in order to appear to put a
Western member of Congress inimical to
Butler in improper relations with certain
females also registered there.
This photographed registry was. then
disseminated through the member’s dis
trict; and there began that indiscriminate
parade of the weakness of public men in
things non-essential and non-official,
which has been, on the whole, of no sat
isfaction, either to the public service or
the purity of the press. Yet, such a
fellow, the tool of an assassin, is also
proved to have become rich by the secret
practice of discovering evasions in the
Domestic Revenue, and in nearly every
case his discovery was so commonplace
that a blind official might have gone to
the spot. It is palpable that this law was
made to increase the area of moiety, and
transfer from the Treasury large sums of
money to spies, counsel and officials, all
together in the conspiracy.
The burden of such villainy as the
above is to be traced directly to but two
or three men in the Congress of the
United States. General'BuDer is the per
son who is the medium of nearly the
whole of such turpitude devised in the
departments. He is the counsel for both
the spy and the sufferer. And yet, in the
absence of Mr. Dawes, he has assumed
to be the leader of Congress, and, it is
whispered, win support Dawes for the
United States Senate—combining for that
purpose the vote of the Berkshire mem
bers with such in the East as he can con
trol
fainting.
mendalion of aU the passengers for his
humane conduct and masterly manage
ment of the steamer, and upon the de
parture of the passengers on the tender
in the Mersey Sunday, March 1, three
hearty cheers were given for the gallant
Commodore.”—N. Y. Post.
[George Alfred Townsend in the ChicagoTribiuie.]
Jayne and Sanborn.
The person-intrusted with the keys of
character is a singular man to look upon.
His name is Jayne, and he told me that
he was a connection of Dr. Jayne, the
nostrum-maker of Philadelphia He was
raised in Northern Pennsylvania, although
brought up in New York State. He has
a low forehead, a scared, wild look, a ner
vous temperament, and a body apparently
run down with bad health or nervous ex
citement. Men in such pursuits com
monly drink the bowl they are preparing
for others. What detective against high
character ever died with much estate,
health or honor? Even Lafayette Baker
expired obscurely. Jonathan Wild was
hanged. Some go crazy; others are dis
graced; one or two have gone to the
Pennsylvania Legislature, apparently • to
give it character; and some pass, in the
most natural way, to the Penitentiary.
Society and morals, law and publicism,
of the spy system. It is a bad way to
make a thief to catch a thief. Even the
newspaper business has been invaded by
police-detectives; and I am told that
William P. Wood, the organizer of
all the spies in the United States
service, has established a “ school
of journalism.” God help us who
expected to write and not to sneak
for a living! This man Jayne who had
himself made so many men tremble, as
they were confronted by him in the pri
vate inquisition-chamber of the Custom
House,showed,before the Waysand Means
Committee, actual sensibility, and cried
ont that what be had done was in strict
accordance with the law and his commis
sion; and, turning to the merchants testi
fying there, he said that they were smug
glers as a class. He was made to keep
quiet; but he proceeded, nevertheless, to
iobby among the members, and. make
sentiment against the importers. He is
said to be absolutely rich, having made
above $200,000 or as much as the Presi
dent of the United States can honestly
save in eight years. Thus do we Bee what
mighty dividends arise from the accumu
lation of the $250,000,000 aforesaid. May
it not strike many readers that the Cus
tom House system is in itself a concen
trated evil, particularly when duties are
laid to accomplish a price in the home-
market, instead of with the object of
satisfying the plain exaction of the reve
nue?
But while Jayne may plead that he is
an officer undgr the law, what sort of
law was that—passed, like many acts of
Congress, without challenge or reflection
—which authorized the Treasury Depart
ment to delegate to persons other than
official the discovery of evasions of the
revenue ? Here a new set of spies ap-
Cremation.
In Great .Britain, France and other
thickly populated countries there is a se
rious discussion os to whether the old,
traditional Christian .form of burial of the
dead will not have to be changed to the
burning of their remains. This was the
practice of some of the great nations of
antiquity, and it is argued with much
force that it agrees far better with the
principles of physical science, and con
duces to the preservation of health, which
is jeopardized and lost by the burial sys
tem. Animal life derives its support
from vegetable life, and the latter in turn
cannot exist without the decomposition
of animal remains and animal gases
thrown upon the soil or inhaled by its
plants. The human species is buried
too far beneath the surface of the earth
for the soil to derive any benefit from the
decomposition. Then in the over-popu
lated cities and districts of tho Old World
the ground assigned for the repose of the
dead cannot be afforded by the living. In
the Catacombs of Paris the remains are
taken away after they have been there
seven years. That is the limit of their
repose, after which they are carted away
and made useful.
However great the outrage may be to
the finer affections of man—however laud
able the feeling which teaches that the
ashes of the dead are sacred—yet after
all we are confronted with the stem truth
that the. earth belongs to the living, and
not to the dead. The manner in which the
dead are disposed of is mainly a question
of sentiment with the living. To tho de
ceased it matters not, after the vital spark
has fled, whether the remnants of bad
mortality are consumed in a furnace or
thrown into an earth pit to ba food for
worms. So far as the thought that that
is to be his end is dwelt upon by the liv
ing, either is sufficiently awful. Although
we know that it makes no difference to
the poor victim in the coffin, there are
few or none who can see it lowered into
the grave and covered np with earth with
out a shiver of horror. No familiarity
with the practice, no amount of stoicism
and philosophy, can really change this
feeling, however much it may be dis
guised. It is au instinct of humanity to
dread such a disposition of its remains.
It is at the burial ground that we really
appreciate the vast change which has
been wrought by death. Men may moke
up their minds to death as a relief from
pain—may believe that the death spasm
is not so bard to undergo, but that which
lies beyond, even on this earth, over
whelms the imagination of the thinking
portion of humanity. The writer was
once whispered to by a friend, as they
stood together to witness the grave
diggers perform their work: “Ah ! this
is hell!” We dwell upon this to show
that mankind may, in time, come to re
gard the burning process with as much
complacency, under an inevitable neces
sity, as it does now that of the grave.
Probably the dangei of destroying the
living by premature burials is greater
than would occur with the furnace. The
advocates of the fiery process tell us that
the Divine sentence upon man, after his
expulsion from Eden—“Dust thou art
and. to dust thou sholt return”—would
strike all beholders, when uttered at
funerals, even more forcibly than it does
now.
In all our large cities the places of
sepulchre are constantly becoming more
expensive, for, in order to find room, it is
necessary to go a' considerable distance
into the country; and every funeral con
sumes the best of a day for the relations
and friends of the deceased. Periodically
new burying grounds have to be pur
chased when the old ones lire abandoned,
and the graves of our ancestors are pro
faned and violated. This has been done
more than once in this city, and will be
done again. The repose of the grave
with us is much longer than it is in FariSj
but it is far from being permanent. The
discussion of this question suggests the
interesting thought that, after an expe
rience of thousands of years, the philoso
phers of modem civilization are seriously
impressed with the idea that the “an
cients” knew better what to do with the
dead than we. Aside from the disposition
of the remains even, they certainly did so.
How mnch would we give if we had the
art of embalming human bodies to the-
perfection reached by the Egyptians?
At the Wotld’s Fair in Paris, in 1867, a
mummy was presented which, from pretty
authentic testimony, represented a person
who was contemporary with Father Abra
ham, and that is going back a considera
ble period in the world’s history. We live
in a highly inquisitive age. There is
hardly any thing existing—no institution,
custom or habit, however strongly forti
fied by tradition and public feeling—that
modem radicalism does not direct its at
tention to, to see if it can not be improved
and better adapted to our system erf soci
ety. Thus it is that bold and original
thinkers lay hold of as sacred a matter as
the ' disposition of oar dead, and upon
material reasons alone venture to propose
a change in the system, and against the
dictate of affection they press the over
whelming argument of public economy.—
Cincinnati Enquirer.
PAINTING!
REMOVAL.
T IIE continued success in our business for the
last six years, has compelled us to seek more
spacious quarters, and we have secured that fine
Store. No. 9$ Bryan street, between Drayton and
Abercoru streets^ where we have, with much care
and expense, fitted np one of the finest PAINT,
OIL and GLASS ESTABLISHMENTS in the
country.
We would respectfully ask from our friends and
the public a continuance of their past favors at
our New Stand.
CHRIS. MURPHY.
CHJLS. CLARK.
MURPHY & CLARK,
98 Bryan street, between Drayton and
Abercorn Streets,
SAVANNAH, GA. -
HOUSE, SHIP, STEAMBOAT, SIGH AND
Oriiam’tal Painters
GILDING, GRAINING,
MARBLING, GLAZING, AND PAPER
^ HANGING.
\ye'are prepared to offer estimates ifor every de
scription of Painting in any part of Georgjv.
South. Carolina and Florida, and guarantee satis
faction in the execution of oar work.
\Ve keep always in store a select stock of the
following articles:
PURE ENGLISII B. B. LEAD.
ATLANTIC and ali other brands of LEADS.
OILS, VARNISHES. PUTTY, BRUSHES.
Furniture, Demar and other VARNISHES pnt
np in quart, pint and half pint bottles, ready for
use.
GROUND and ENAMELED GLASS.
STAINED and PLAIN of various colors.
Double and single thick French, English and
American GLASS.
GOLD LEAF. BRONZE, Glaziers’ DIAMONDS,
Machinery OILS, and Axle GREASE.
STEP LADDERS,
Skylight and Builders’ LADDERS.
A select stock of GOLD and PLAIN PAPER
HANGINGS.
Persons desiring work aud material in our line
wonld do well to give us a call before going else
where.
PLAIN AND ORNAMENTAL
SIGN WORK
Executed with neatness and dispatch.
feW7-tf
LOW EESERVOm
'Z / '/"ji ijijiw
Ire Suited to ail Climates,
AMD FAMOUS F0&3EIS0
B3ST TO USE!
CHEAPEST TO BUT1!
EASIEST TO SELL HI
Famous for doing nit ft 11 d
BETTER CQOKim
mani-jr
Quicker null iiUhftfie*
Than any £toveoi‘!2.r rs-t«
famous fos nivL’/a
Satisfaction Evetjvhsn
AMD Rim a
Especially Adaptec
SOIi3D -BY
Excelsior Manufacturin'; Company,
ST. LOUIS, MO.
ANB BY
Lovell & Lattimore,
SAVANNAH, GA.
octl 3d W,S& wGm
Cooking Stoves.
A GREAT VARIETY, for sale at reasonable
prices.
Also, a very large Stock of
Parlor and Office Stoves.
Do not forget that the comfort of a family is a
good ('ook Stow, and you can liud it. The
“Southern Home Stove,”
Made by the J. L. Mott Iron Works.
For sale by
COllMACK HOPKINS,
No. 1G7 Bronghton Street,
febll-tf Only Agent in Savannali.
lotteries!.
300000
Missouri State Lottery!
Legalized by State Authority and Drawn in
Public In St. Louie.
GRAND SINGLE NUMBER SCHEME!
50,000 Numbers.
Class C, to be Drawn March 11, 1874.
5,880 PHIZES, AMOUNTING TO $300,000!
A Heaetless Swindle. — Louisville,
March 17.—Mike Mahon, alias M. L.
Mason, was presented before.the City
Court this morning on the charge of
swindling. It appears Mason lias flooded
the South with letters addressed to va
rious parties, representing himself to he
proprietor of the AUSntic House in this
city, and has in his possession trunks and
money belonging to a relative of. ihe
party addressed who died at his house.
He requests the payment of a bill against
the deceased and the valnables will then
be forwarded. Hundreds of letters con
taining money have been received to
Mason's address in the last few days. He
was once a peddler in the South and
availed himself of his extensive acquaint-.
once. There is no Atlantic Honse in the
city, and the whole thing is an ingenious
swindle.
Commodore Hewett, of the lAshantee
expedition, was recently presented by his
sailors with a small black page boy. This
youth, about two feet high, had been
rigged ont in full sailor costume, with a
cap adorned in front with letters almost
big enough to cover the whole little head.
The boy had been strictly drilled to stand
np to the full of his diminutive height at
“attention,” to salute, and, on being
asked his name, to reply with the utmost
gravity and solemnity, “Mixed Pickles,
Esq.”
500prize*of.. . $100
9 prizes of.... l,uuo
9 prizes of.... 50«
9 prices of....
9 prizes of....
30 prizes of....
30 prizes of....
ISO prizes of....
5,000 prizes of....
300
850
800
150
100
10
1 prize of. $50,000
1 prize of 13,450
1 prize of 10,000
1 prize of 7.000
4 prizes of. 5,(KM)
4 prizes'of...... 2,M>u
20 prizes of 1,000
20 prizes of 500
40 prizes of 250
Tickets, $10 f Half Ticn-.D, , «^utuu,io, *■— w.
Onr Lotteries ore chartered by the State, are al
ways drawn at the time named, and all drawings
are under the* supervision of sworn Commis
sioners.
The official drawing will be published In the St.
Lonis papers, and a copy of drawing sent to pur
chasers of tickets.
We will draw a similar scheme the last day in
every month during the year 1874.
Remit at our risk by Post Office Monev Order,
Registered Letter, Draft or Express. Send for
Circular. Address
MURRAY, MILLER & CO.,
• P. O. Box 2,44$. St. Louis, Mo.
rab2-Tn,Tb.S.&wly
giispatcH (fomptuj.
Ifrtilisrris.
FERTILIZER.
-T7- ■
UPTON’S AMMONIATED SUPERPHOS
PHATE OF BONE LIME,
■\cADE from Bone, Gelatine and Acid, and con-
-VI tains no mineral i>hosptaate whatever. Pam
phlets with analysis, other information and testi
monials can be had ou application to tbe nnder-
shrued.
For sale by
marfd-lm A. MINIS & SON.
Trade Hark.
TO THE PLANTERS!
Georgia, South Carolina, Ala
bama and Florida.
MILLIONS OF CUES
RICH EAlDIINi LANDS
I 4 IN NKBKAS
NOW FOR SALE TE. V CHEAP.
Ten Years Credit—Interest < . y Six per cent.
Descriptive Pamghleta^witU ctional Maps,
THE PIONEER,
A handsome Illustrated Fapl r. containing the
Homestead Law, mailed free I all parts of the
world. Address O 7. DAVIS,
land Commissi .erU. P. R. IL,
Omaua, Neb.
| NEW YORK DAY-BOOK
A Democratic Weekly. 1 -*tablished 1850. It
I supports White Supremacy, political and social.
Terms, $2 per year. To dfube; nine copies for $8.
Specimen copies free. Address DAY-BOOK, New
ppFlrW!
FOURTH
Grand Gift Concert
FOR THE BENEFIT OF THE
Public library of Kentucky,
On March 31st, inst.
160,000 Tickets, 12,000 Gifts.
LIST OF GIFTS.
One Grand Cash Gift *250,000
One Grand Cash Gilt 100,000
One Grand Cash Gift.... 50,000
OneGnrod Cash Gilt 20,000
One Grand Cash Gift 17,500
10 Cash Gifts, *10,000 each 100,000
80 Cash Gifts, 5,000 each 150,000
50 Cash Gifts, 1,000 each 50,000
80 Cash Gifts, 500 each 40,0.0
100 Cash Gifts, 400 each 40,000
150 Cash Gifts, . 800 each 45,000
260 Cash Gifts, 200 each 50,o.w
385 Cash Gifts, 100 each 82,500
| 11,080 Cash Gifts. 50 each, 550,000
Tbial, 12,000 Gifts, ail Cash,
amounting to *l,50u,0iM
sfr^Tht'ClMecrt and Distribution of Gifts will
positively dud unequivocally take place on the day
note fixed. whether all the tickets are sold or not,
and. the 12,000 Gifts all paid in proportion to tho
number of Tickets sold.
PRICE OF TICKETS.
Whole Tickets. $50; Halves, $25; Tenths, oi
each coupon, $5; Eleven Whole Tickets for $500,
Send for circular.
The time for the drawing is near at hand, and
persons intending to purchase tickets have no
time to lose.
THO. E. BRAMLETTE,
Agent Pnblic Library of Kentucky, and liana-
gerGlft Concert, Public Library Boildiuj
vilie, Ky.
Library Building, Louis-
D. C. FLAX NAG AX & SON, Importers.
B y the snips brothers, arcadia,
TOLEDO. CRIMEA, SCOTLAND AND |
FLORENCE CHIPMAN, Urect from Liverpool,
we have received onr supply of
BOYS AND MIDDLE-AGED MEN
Trained for a Successful Start in Business Life,
StonewallGuano
, AND I taught how to eet a Living, Make Money, and be-
English Superphosphate
AAA | TT...1-nn Anlw InStltUtiOF vl/M'At/wl ♦#. fin. Cu_
of Lime,
Or DISSOLVED BONES.
These Manures having been used in Georgia
with great success for tue last seven yeai s, have
become Standard Articles, and are
ly Institution devoted to this cs-
The oldest and only practical Ccmmer-
i providing situations for
atrons and Graduates in
, Hudson, the onl;
pecially. The oJ
j cial School, and only one i
Graduates. Refers to Patrons aim
nearly every rity and town. Applicants enter any
day. Address for particnlats and catalogue of
3,000 graduates in business,
1 H. G. EASTMAN, LL. D,
Poughkeepsie, N. Y.
Without a Rival as a Cotton Manure. I DO YOUR OWN FAINTING
The ENGLISH SUPERPHOSPHATES being
high’y concentrated, was prepared specially with |
reference to utilizing cotton seed. Those two
articles, when combined in equal weights and the
addition of two hundred pounds of Mnriate of
Potash to each ton, makes a good, reliable and
cheap Manure.
We have received also by the ship SAVANNAH,
direct from Bremen, all of the various grades of
MURIATE POTASH.
This article is of great value, and should be used
by every Planter in his Compost heaps, Mnck. &c.
These Manures are put up in England under
formula prepared by J. W. MALLETT, of the
Agricultural Department of the University of
*r—*-f~ — J approved by Dr. VOLCKLER,
_ Dr. VOLCKL
>yal Agricultural Society of
Virginia, and
Chemist to the
;land.
ch cargo is analyzed by Dr. Volekler, and
pronounced folly np to the standard before re
ceived. The interest of the Importers and Plant
ers are identical, and hence the quality of the
Manure can always be relied on.
We keep on hand SULPHATE OF AMMONIA,
NITRATE OF SODA, LAND PLASTER, and
everything necessary to make a first-class home
made Manure.
All Chemicals sold by us are of the best quality, i
We have imported this season a few hundred
casks of \
English Cotton • Compound,
each cask weighing five hundred pounds nett, to j
which five hundred pounds cotton seed and one j
thousand pounds stable manure must be added.
Price, this article, $20 cash; $25 time,
Price of Stonewall, $67 50, cash; $75 time.
English Superphosphate, $50, cash; $55 time.
FLANNAGAN, ABELL & CO.,
feb21-lm Agents.
JOHN W. ANDERSON ’S SONS
COTTON FACTORS
AND GENERAL
Commission Merchants,
agents for
S T 1
Trade
Averill Chemical Pauit!
WHITE
AND ALL THE FASHIONABLE SHADES,
OF PROPER CONSISTENCY FOR USX.
Are sold by the gallon at less price than a gal.'on
of the best Lead aud Oil can be mixed, and the
Averill wears longer and is much handsomer.
Beautiful sample cards, with what the owners
of the finest residences say of it, famished free
by dealers generally, or by tiie
AVERILL CHEMICAL PAINT CO.,
32 Burling Slip, X. V.
WOOD’S *7'
HOUSEHOLD MAGAZINE,-'
The Best I>ollar MonthljC .
At +A K a day made by canvassing V oi ‘
5)0 IU this Maguzino—uow in ite 14th
volume—with Chromo, •
The Yosemite Valley,
14x20 inches, in 17 Oil Colors.
Magazine, 1 year, with Mounted Chromo $2 00
Magazine, 1 year, with Unmounted Cliromo. I 50
Magazine, alone, 1 year 1 00
Examine onr Clubbing aud Premium Lists.
Two First-clans Periodicals for Ihe price
of one. We solicit Experienced Vsi 11 vax.sers
aud others to send at once for terms and speci
men Magazine. Address
S. E. SUI TES, Publisher,
41 Park Row, N. Y. City, or Newburgh, N. Y.
WANTED!
Coal, Iron and Jimhcr Lands
Favorably located, on or near railroad or water
transportation routes. Address
NICHOLSON A CLARK,
111 Broadway, (Room 16,) New York.
Exterminators
IHSECTPOWDEK
I For Rate, Mice, Roaches, Ants, Bed-Bugs, Moths,
| Ac. J. F. HENRY, CURRAN A CO., N. Y.,
Sole Agents, .
FITS I EPILEPSY
I Positively cured- The worst cases, of longest
standing, by using DR. 1IEHBARD’S CURE. A
bottle sent free to all addressing J. E. Dibblee,
1 Druggist, 814 Sixth Avenue, N. V.
4 *»OSIA , ( 6,>
SOLUBLE PHOSPHATE |
Formerly sold by N. A. HARDEE, SON £ CO.,
and COLQUITT Si BAGUS.
ALSO, AGENTS FOR
Gnllett’s Improved Saw Gin,
AND
Henerj’s Improved McCarthy Gin,
Corner Bryan and Drayton Sts.,
SAVANNAH, GA.
SjT Liberal advances made ou Consignments.
feblS-tf
BDYJ. & P. COATS’ BUCK
fill
AimiPHINE HABIT
speedily cured by Dr. Beck's
only known and
SURE REMEDY.
NO CHARGE
for treatment until cured. Call on or address
DB. J. C. BECK. Cincinnati^ O.
P SYCHOMANCY OR SOUL CHARMING.”
How either sex may fascinate and gain tin;,
love and affections of any person they choose, in- '
stontly. This simple mental acquirement all can
for 25 cents; together with
•ptian Oracle, Dream's, Hints
to Ladies. A queer Look. 100,000 sold. Address
T. WILLIAM & CO., Publishers, Philadelphia.
marT-d£w4w
It Cannot be
fiomiuy, Su.
Solomons’
Rowland
Compound.
Surpassed, j Baltimore Pearl- Hominy Co.
H AVING the Sole Agency for the sale of the
above GOODS in Savannah, 1 l>eg to call the -
attention of Grocers, and the public in gcn-nil,
to the following articles, manufactured by the
above named Company, from pure Southern White
Makes
One Ton of
FERTILIZER
For $25,
Equal to Any,
‘European Sample ana Dis
patch Company.”
P. It. KEITH & CO.,
25 Reaver Street, New York,
I FORWARDERS oP Cotton Samples, valuable
’ Packages, &c. Jewelers’and Importers’or
ders received. Prompt attention guaranteed.
Correspondence solicited. Wants an Agent in
Mobile, Aku; New’ Orleans, La-; and Charleston,
S. C. Address JOHN R. FISH,
)an21-W,S&9m Box 175.
SOUTH GEORGIA
WINES,
P ROM the-Delaware, Concord* and Hartford
Grapes, from the PINEY WOODS VINE
YARD, are kept for sale by Victor S. Studor, W.
M. Davidson, Gomm & Lemur, and A.
. Davidson, Gonwi«!
dec13-S.W.4m
iflier. and A. GoebeL
JOHN STARK,
Thomasville.Ua..
And Superior
To Many
Commercial
Fertilizers.
J. SOLOMONS,]
140 Bay Street.
I Flint Com, and warranted to keep for years in
any climate.
‘‘BREAKFAST HOMINY,” in barrels and cases,
of 10 caddies of 50 pounds each.'
“SAMP” or COARSE HOMINY r so popular
| with Virginians and in Die Northern States.
“CORN FLOUR,” very choice, and white ns
| mow; can be used in connection. .
**PkARL MEAL,” with whc#t Flbnr, for all
kinds of Pastry and Bread, children s iood, blanc-
“V^iilTE CORN MR Ali,” in sacks,well adapt
ed for the country trade and ordinary use, being •
superior and cheaper than tl^e ,hpme-made Meal.
“MILL FEED” or “CHOP,” a superior article
of fOod for neat cattle, horses, cows, sw ine, &c.,
being cheaper than any other feed, and increasing
the flow of milk in cows.
All of which will be sold at manufacturer’s
prices for CASH, frt ight and expenses added, by
J. A. MERCIKR,
feblG-2m No. 1C6 Bay street, Savannah.
fawkris and
F. D- JORDAN,
HI.
mhl2-jan5*3m
P URE PERUVIAN, IMPORTED DIRECT. |
and for sale at Government Prices by
!i. G. LAY, Agent,
mh2-d£w2m Savannah, Go.
ROSES,
CAMELIAS,
dotH-H
PLANTS OR FLOWERS.
Catalogues free.
J. H. PAKMONM 4c CO.,
No.ru
ALABAMA LIME
As a Fertilizer.
I TIACTORS ami PLANTKRS win find this the I
* best article for using with Ft
pounds. It’is pure rock, Ireshly burned, and |
comes in a few hoars fiom tbe kihis. with no toes'
by air slack. For sale at low rates by
JOS. A. ROBERTS & CO.,
mhIT-C 124 Bay street.
'fpitr ffarite.
P. W. MELDRUI. I S. B. ADAMS.
'LAW CAKU
M.ELDRIM & ADAMS,
ATTORNEYS AT LAV,
Corner Bay and Barnard Sts., Savannah, Ga.
mhl4-tf
D ealer in
WA’
.Fine JEWELRY, Pare Site
VER and SILVER-PLATED WARE, CLOCKS,
GOLD PENS, Ac.
Watches and Jewelry carefully repaired.
Sole Agent for the Celebrated Diamond SPEC-
TACLKS. . . , mhlfrtf
Cut This Out*
M W. NEUBURGEL,
(Successor to I
PRACTICAL WA
JEWELER,
180 BRYi
B*
1ETWEEN Barnard
Dealer in
Silver WA'
Plated W A!
Repairing in
mh4-lm