Newspaper Page Text
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.$10 00
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toT^' C, S» re8t0P P Cd the “ P H ira ‘
- “a for without further notice.
„ of «* ^ observe the dstes on their
l^.rihr.-
*« the P»* r fuhuished toj^;
•asms»*—• ^ will have their orders
' I,* th.ru on remitting the amount
Sgaptlf atteedett to
■«* ontintted nn,es9 by
. |d l,t h'f. at.heofliee.
fctneot* advertisers.
. .r KB isten measured linen of Nonpareil
*eMoa> BioSW5 '
firsttu^ 00 /if'fnsertedevery day), 75 cents
w , iosrtion («
,*rf°u- ,. vvlth contract advertisers,
j rates mt „ favorable place
1 {i oo per square; each subsc-
MOhv- , gerted r eery other day, twice a
■wris® 81 . .-.. r „ c ,i $t 00 per square for
I libera ^il have a
1 bntn0 promise<f continuous
Alicatiou
iJrertrs
„ pi a particular piace can be pven, as
"mast have equal opportunities.
i |as r thc largest
,„1 mail circulation of any paper
!bed in Savaimali.
The Crops.
,, e ffould request our planting and
iule frie^ in tbemtenor to furn-
ith auv information in regard to
'Ipprospects for the coining year
'.StLuuouPStuiug cotton, com arid
mriacts will be of mutual benefit.
* , connection we would state that
* „ 0 f importance transpiring in
et various counties of this State and
, accompanied by a responsi
ve) will fmd a place in our
linuius.
I Captain
iflairsin (ieorina..^
1 jfjije Atkins, of Cnthbert,
L. in Savannah last week, accompanied
r family and Mr. Jos. T. Kiddoo.
. Captain dropped down to Thunder-
I Fridny. and while there concluded
vercise his anus in the ten-pin alley,
muscular man, nnd when he
largest balls with the
t grace
friends
1 (tV
fit ** fl
I- -
J. H. ESTILL, PROPRIETOR.
SAVANNAH, TUESDAY, MARCH 24, 1874.
nures at home. But little com will be
bought in this county this year. Of meat,
too, there was enough raised the past
season to do the white population through
the year. Let onr planters adhere to the
economical measures they are now in
augurating, and another year will witness
a reign of plenty in our borders. •
best
Er !'
jj one of the
of ft veteran, he advised
to look out. It is too
t0 sum up the damage that was
ae by the ball, for up to this date
e remains of the negro boy who puts
, in position have not been dis-
Ironwl. The only evidences that a negro
I wv was in the place at all are a lonely
Kinder auda dilapidated wool lrnt.
■('qiuiu Atkins has confessed that he is
|„| amateur at ten-pins. It is but simple
lice t 0 state that, at the time of this
Incurrence, Mr. Kiddoo was in his rooms
; }bu Pulaski House, reading a chapter
s the Bible.
A note from Baltimore informs us that
; H. Griffin, formerly of the advertising
B of Griffin ,t Hoffman, lWleft that
Lj without leaving his addrei If he
lilvhas disappeared a great ma^y Sonth-
i editors have lost one of the most as-
■shuus correspondents that ever wasted
la fortune in postage stamps.
it is said that a man with a wart on his
In* is not eligible to office in 'Wilkinson
|c«tr.
Some of the more forward of the Geor-
editors are making arrangements to
|disjo»e of their winter duds, -j
A subscriber in Clay county writes on
a!*stal curd: ‘Therewith enclose you
j dollars to renew my subscription to
Weekly News.” We are going to
x that card run through a rag-mill, and
B! the money is in it we will send the
pisnal receipt.
A Hancock county mnu threatened to ex-
se the editor of the Macon Telegraph
embezzling ten cents. This confirms
rumor that Watson bad been seen
|r;!i a new lead pencil.
| An unsuspicious countryman, who de
leted the editor of the Griffin Star in
> act of wearing a new hat, refused to
u his subscription.
I They are still taking up collections in
|&nta to buy red flannel for indigent
■nibals.
| It is rumored that a Boston man has j
fei fishing for shad on St. Catherine’s j
I bail with a hook and line for two
I: aths, l'p to this date he hasn’t caught
It;.
II Dooly county man hns returned from
I as with a number of chills, a carlmu-
■tand four bunions.
I ihc Augusta man who put a fly plaster
F his back instead of one of the porous
H. writes to his wife, who is visiting
J relatives, that there is still room for
kprovemeut in modem medical juris-
Jmdenee. In a confidential postscript
f sws that he will have a saddle mark
j- ''is back to the day of his death.
I The high water on the Chnttnlxooehee
1*1*1 two of the Cbluinbus factories to
J-'i 1 operations last week. Work has
Iscc been resumed.
1/ A Gray, who killed Hays in Fort
|hiy some time ago, and who recently
“capt-d from the jail in Perry-, has been
‘Bared by the Columbus pohee.
II little girl about two weeks old was
| ' u l'ou tire ]>oreh of Presiding Elder
Idlehee, of Columbus, one night. The
I’tihy man had the little waif carried
' J i by a policeman.
I 1 Hines, of Baiubridgc, was robbed
J t u dollars one night last week by a
I bud named Robert Pryor. Pryor
■^guislies in jail.
J lite Conyers Examiner lifts up its voice
I r,, marks: “The Morning News is
r u “o ri le best journals published in the
j.strictly Democratic in politics and
I’T* c °ntains the latest news of the day,
Jfcffier with a large variety of choice
.8- Those in this section who desire
[ ' 'i' :r from the seaboard cannot be bet-
*rred than by subscribing for the
“axo News.”
1 * gnst mills in Clay county have
‘Jhowned out by the recent freshet.
I robbers are prowling around
P lj . # county.
|t-Oeel Thomas F. Jones, a prominent
040 °F Clay county, is dead,
viop Beckwith administered the rite
(tusifirmation to four persons in Louis-
* last Wednesday.
K iC ' 1S teFMtom While Mrs. Jno.
, „ ;® wnlow lady, was cooking din-
U e i f B “rsHay, 12th inst., her clothes
iooUo i a “ri G' 1 -’ flames reached her
A, - trs before she discovered it. There
V, P er scn in the house at the time,
‘ son"”? 11118 brought to her assistance
hnu ■ i was at w °rk not far from
II diM t--t to ° bite to do any good,
h ffied from the mj uri es Friday morn-,
r'uial.K , re ?'ried near Preston, was ail"
J.iljj ( . 11 L ™y and leaves two or three
cotton Standard: Up to the present
ire ,' llln ” operations in the county
i'ed lftt^ eSSf ri favorably, having re-
rat,le < i, or no drawback from uufa-
ttra tions fc ^ tller '. As a general-tiring pre-
’“ded vriiu e >een thorough, and at-
tforj p ta more pains-taking than here-
n «s Have been cleaned,
®or mnH„ 1,. 8 re opened and other
Pv^ rS n ( ^ ispatclied witl1 prompfc-
ver ytuing promises well fora
fX>d Cm - —“6 wen ior a
“B an<1 the farmers are dpi-
fe » have t? 1 “““toeodable zeal. Not -any* of those present were
->le U’enf^ J 1 com Tinder the favor- renlv. hut after a few minn
imtherewiim tb - e I )ast two ’weeks. Of
1,0 » P er sent, more planted
6 flouri^: THe oat and wheat crops
elda mu an ri promise abundant
mere is a decided falling off to
litfluT^ 11 toe purchase of guano,
*eets T ,H a y“tg_ passed through our
lies tWtha “F- “it im-
Florida Affairs.
Charles W. Blew has disposed of the
Jacksonville Republican to a firm with J.
S. Adams at its head.
Geo. A. Baltzell succeeds Frank Balt-
zell as editor of the Marianna Courier.
KeUogg, formerly of the Jacksonville
Union, will preside over the city depart
ment of the Republican under its new
management.
General Francisco Vincente Aguilero,
President of the Cuban Bepublic, arrived
at Key West on the 8th, from New Or
leans, and was received in a most enthu
siastic manner by the citizens. Four
thousand persons were said to have turned
out in a grand torchlight procession.
Palatka laments the lack of hotel room.
The Marianna Courier says that the
planters of Jackson county are considera
bly- ahead in their farming operations.
Most of them have finished planting com,
and a few caterpillar frightened ones have
commenced planting cotton.
Steams, Lieutenant Governor of Flori
da, has stepped into poor old man Hart’s
slippers and assumed the reins of govern
ment. The people of the State gain little
by the change.
Travel on the St. John’s continues un
abated.
Jacksonville wants to know why frail
is cheaper in Savannah than in that city.
The farmers of Jackson county have
plenty of com and no liens on their corps.
The late Governor Hart was a native of
the State, and at one period of his history
was a howling Confederate.
The Apalachicola Times says Frank
Cook, a colored citizen of that place, has
recovered from the United States $3,000
for cotton taken from a warehouse of that
city by United States blockading fleet
during the war.
The Palatka Herald says that the skill
with which an Ocklawaha pilot navigates
a boat longer than the river is wide,
around the turns, is something mar
vellous.
Mr. Philip J. Kyal, of St. Augustine,
is dead.
The death of Mr. Bartolo Ponce, one
of the oldest inhabitants of St. Augus
tine, is announced.
Mrs. Jennie Becket, of Apalachicola,
was burned to death last week from the
bursting of a can of kerosene oil, while
she was attempting to make a fire by
pouring the oil upon the burning wood.
The Jacksonville Republican says that
Mrs. Governor BandaU, widow of the
late Postmaster General, made a short
visit to her brother, Chief Justice Ean-
dall, last week, and arranged for fitting
up her place across the river, adjoining
Mr. Hndnall’s, preparatory to establish
ing her residence there. She has ordered
a large number of orange trees and other
fruits to be set out immediately, and will
make it an elegant and tasteful home.
Subscription books to the Jacksonville
and St. Augustine Bailroad will soon be
opened at each of those places,
’ Palatka Herald : It would be startling
to estimate the sum total of the aggre
gate amounts sunk in the efforts to pro
duce sea island cotton in the past four
years. Four planters in every five who
relied upon a sea island cotton crop alone,
and had to contend with depraved labor,
have absorbed their capital or the funds
they borrowed. Some havo failed com
pletely. Have these losses and failures
been caused by neglect of economy, un-
skilfillness or want of management ? Em
phatically, no! Very few have ever
worked so perseveringlv and well in any
other localities, or have restricted them
selves and their families to such simplicity
of clothing and food. They have not
had the means, generaUy, to obtain the
usual comforts of life. Growing sea is
land cotton appears, truly, to have ceased
to afford a money profit.
St. Augustine Press: On Friday week
last, as one of our 'native citizens, a
respectable, quiet, industrious and in
offensive man, was sailing in the bay in
pursuit of business, which is that of a
fisherman, some strangers who were also
in a boat, deliberately fired at him. He
was sitting alone at his helm. The bul
let, whicli was not a small one, struck his
boat a short distance from the bow, and
buried itself in the hulk. The party then
raised a shout of derision. The
citizen so assailed upbraided them as
‘•cowards and scoundrels,” informing
them that but for the impossibility of
reaching them, on account of wind and
tide, he would teach them a lesson in
good behavior. We have little doubt but
that he would have made his threats
come true, for he is known to be a deter
mined as well as peaceable man. We,
however, congratulate these facetious
gentlemen on the fact that said native
citizen did not get up to them on the oc
casion alluded to. Otherwise, somebody
would have been overboard or have worn
liis hat jauntily on one side for the nex£
fortnight, the other side being decorated
with strips of emplnstrum adhasivum.
Congregation of Unbelievers.
A new German congregation was formed
in Baltimore the other night, of which
the American gives the following account:
“The occasion of the organization of the
congregation was the presence of Mr. B.
Beitzel, of Washington, who came to this
city for the purpose of urging upon those
whose opinion on religious matters agree
with that entertained by him, the views
of his own sect. This gentleman is the
preacher, or rather the speaker, as-he in
sists on calling himself, of a congregation
at Washington, which bears the title of
‘The Free German Congregation. ’ Its doc
trines are somewhat peculiar, so much so
that it may be said to have no doctrines
at nil It is neither Christian, Jewish
nor Mohammedan, and rejects both the
Old and New Testaments; considers,
however, Confucius and Christ great re
formers. Its aim and objects, as it as
serts, are to ‘liberate the minds of men
from' the tliraldom of the superstition
which first originated with priests and
tyrants, for the gratification of their sel
fish ends.’ In the lecture last evening at
Vorwart’s HaU, on Fayette, near Fred
erick street, Mr. Beitzel explained that
the Free Congregation does not accept
as its members free-thinkers, who still
cling to one of the creeds, but all con
necting themselves with his congregation
must first have renounced all ties with
other churches. He also complained that
many are not strict foHowers of any of
the commands of any church, are still too
hypocritical and cowardly to openly avow
their disbelief, and join the ‘Free
Congregation.’ At the conclusion of
his remarks, Mr. Burkhardt, Presi
dent of the Free Congregation, asked
those present to organize immedi
ately in this city a congregation on the
same plan with that which he is the pre
siding officer. Some time elapsed before
any* of those present were bold enough to
reply, but after a few minutes Mr. Juenger
moved
agitate _ . _
; gregation. Before action was taken on
this motion, about thirty persons came
forward and subscribed their names to
the constitution. The signers were then
appointed to act as a committee to en
large the membership of the new congre-
B! TEIMUPfl
—TO—
THE MORNING NEWS.
Noon Telegrams.
THE CAKLIST REVOLUTION.
The Siege of Bilbao SOll Progressing.
\
STBIKE OF THE LABOBEBS ON THE
EEIE BOAH.
TYPOGRAPHICAL. TUOUBI.ES IN NEW
ORLEANS.
Incendiarism in Indianapolis.
THE EEIE STBIKE.
New Yoke, Maroh 23.—The fri
handlers at Long Dock refuse the
and the Erie Company have employci
hundred others, who will come to the
dock by water. Seventy-five police have
been detailed to protect the men. It is
said that there are three million dollars'
worth of freight now awaiting transporta
tion at Long Dock. The company
suffer a heavy loss from- their '
receive freight.
THE SIEGE OF BILBAO.
London, March 23.—A special telegram
to the Standard, dated Santander, Sun
day, says the first movement of govern
ment troops for the relief of Bilbao, by
way of Bilbao river, was a failure. It
was found impossible to effect a landing,
and the expedition returned to Santander.
A dispatch to the Hour reports an ex
plosion of ammunition in Serrano's
killing and wounding fifty.
COXGEESSIONAU.
Wxshinoton, March 23.—In the House,
among the bills introduced and referred
was one by Mr. Hunton, of Virginia, re
pealing the law forbidding payment for
army suppHes, etc., to persons not known
to be opposed to the rebellion.
In the Senate the financial question was
discussed at length during the morning
hour.
TROUBLE WITH THE TXPOS,
New Oeleans, Marc!
Printers’ Union to-day passed a
reducing the price of composition to sixty
cents per thousand. The proprietors will
adhere to their resolution to pay only
fifty cents from and after March 23. The
indications are that all the printers be
longing to the Union will strike to-mor
row.
BAILROAD ACCIDENT.
San Francisco, March 23.—Joseph
Booth fell under the cars at Virginia,
Nevada, to-day, and both legs were cut
off. A young man who witnessed;-the
accident fainted, and his’hair, wEich was
black, turned instantly grey. It is pro
bable that neither will survive.
INCENDIARY FIRE.
Indianapolis, March 23.—Nearly a half
million fire originated in Exchange Block
in Pennsylvania street It was the resnlt
of incendiarism.
MAILS RECEIVED.
Washington, March 23.—The New
leans mails to the 19th, as late as (
have been received.
LETTER FROM ST. MARY’S.
The Galt' Coast Water Line, or Coloi
Halford's Canal Project.
■el
St. Mary’s, Ga,, March 19,1874.
Editor Morning Neits:
Among the recent visiters to our city
was Dr. William Van Zantd and lady, of
St. Louis, Mo. He is a fine looking,
portly gentleman, seventy-four years of
age, and retired from his profession four
years since and engaged extensively in
the grain ’ .business of that city, being
among the heavy capitalists. He is well
read, well traveled, and consequently well
informed on any subject that can be
named, and is doubtless one of the most
interesting and instructive gentlemen in
conversation that I ever met. I could sit
silently and.listen for hours to the wisdom
and noble sentiments which fall from his
Incremation.
A late London letter says: Aside from
politics and the Tichbome trial the prin
cipal subject of discussion on this side of
the water is incremation. Do. you know;
what an excitement has been created here
by an article on this subject by Sir Henry
Thomas, which appeared recently in the
Contemporary Review, assuming that it
would be greatly to the advantage of-pos-
terity, promoting their health, wealth
and general prosperity to have the bodies
of the dead burned instead of buried? A
large party among the utilitarians and
scientists ore in favor of the innovation,
but the great mass of the people are
already on fire with indignation at the
insult offered to the bones of 'their ances
tors, or rather their own bones, since we
would be the first victims sacrificed in
case the custom should be established.
The most disagreeable feature in the
case is that Sir Henry, instead of showing
reverence for the ashes of the departed,
os did the ancients whose rites he desires
to revive, has proposed to scatter them
over the fields, so as to “ increase the fer
tility of the island,” thns, in the language
of Mr. Holland who has just replied to
his article, “using the bones of ourau-
cestors as a substitute for guaho-tnmq)
dressing.” This- incredible project ^f
economy on the part of Sir Henry, cer
tainly uncalled for, has given a bitterness
to the debate which it would not other
wise have possessed.
For my own part I confess tliat^I have
always had a heathenish admiration for
the old pagan rite, pd have wished;
without waiting for Sir Henry’s sugges
tion, that it might be revived. The cere
mony is certainly an imposing one. The
solemn funeral pyre, the vivid flames—
symbolical always—mounting on [big#;
the instant resolution of the dead body—
that sacred, deserted shrine—into the
free, invisible elements; the gamering in
costly urns of the cherished ashes—£dl
this appeals to the imagination and is
grand and poetic. Given the choice for
my individual self, I think I
cide to dedicate this machine; which
to me “V.V.,” to the funeral pyre rather
than to the grave; considering it a good
thing, as far as it might be done by one
person, to cheat the worm of his tradi
tional banquet, (who has not an abhor
rence of worins?) and know myself to be
cleanlily disposed of in the baptismal
heat of purifying flame.
And yet there is much to be said upon
both sides, as this very discussion has
made evident. Lingering in a peaceful
graveyard, like St. James’ Cemetery in
Liverpool, or in the cloistered, aisles of
Westminster Abbey, it its easy to per
suade oneself that there is a tender sanc
tity in Christian burial, and an appropri
ateness in giving the dead a local habita
tion in a secluded and beautiful resort, in
viting meditation on themes eternal,
which more than replaces the scenic dis
play of incremation, and will always ren
der it more satisfying to the modem head
and mind. It ought to be oonsidered a
question of sentiment and feeling, not
surely of morality, and still less of econo
my. The generations of the futifte, I
trust, will-not be to base' as to deny iis
burial on that ground.
A Startling Discovert.—Chicago,
March 18.—One of the Sisters connected
with the St Maiy’s Hospital in Milwaukie,
made a startling discovery this morning
in nncovering an old cistern which had
been unused for several months past. On
lifting the cover she observed a human
hand extended above the water, and im
mediately called assistance. Some work
men answered her call, and it was soon
found that the hand belonged to the body
of -a woman who bad been missing for
about four months. 'The body, which
was badly decomposed, was removed with
difficulty. It is not yet known whether
she met her death by suicide, or by the
lianiiii of an
He gave us an accurate account of the
Jstory of General Grant while living on
lie Dent place near St. Louis. He is
personally acquainted with the Dent fam
ily, and speaks of Mrs. Grant as one of
the noblest women of the age. He says
she made Grant what he is, as she clung
to him with all of the affections of a pure
I woman’s heart, when his relatives and
friends loathed him as being beyond the
hope of redemption from his known in-
’ fiirniity, for infirmity it is. Although he
is strongly Democratic in his views, he
says that Grant naturally has a good, gen
erous nature — that he is a good
fellow, but thinks that he pledged
himself to his party, and sticks up to his
promises. Does it not seem like destiny
for one who occupied the position of
Grant at the beginning of the war to be
raised to the highest position in the gov
ernment? I could here go into extended
derails that would be new to and startle
most persons, bnt -they would be out of
place here.
The Doctor is infatuated with this sec
tion, and seemed astonished to see that
we had gardens in this city that could
produce a fine quality of all the vege
tables that aru raised in any portion of
the United States. He thinks that we
have a great country, that must, when de
veloped, ns in his opinion it will be before
ftlfe lapse of many years, make ns a great
and powerful people. I showed him a
piece of reclaimed land that had been
overflowed by salt water for years, and
told him what it produced, and that there
were millions of acres of just such land
on the coast of Georgia. He seemed
perfectlydelighted.
Dr. Van Zantd’s especial object, how
ever, in visiting our city was to see Col.
Baiford personally, and get full informa
tion in relation to the canal project. He
met some man on the St John’s river
who represented himself to be an ex
member of Congress, who told him
that the only feasible route through
Florida was via Silver Springs to
the St John's, on the Atlantic, to
some river on the Gulf. I know who
this ex-member is. He never was in the
United States Congress, bnt in the Con
federate Congress, and owned land upon
or near the banks of the Springs. The
Doctor asked him how much water there
was on the St. John’s bar, and he ans
wered that it was shallow, but it could be
~ g dug out. The Doctor shook his head and
’ said that the city of St. Louis and people
of the Mississippi Valley wanted an out
let to the Atlantic for their products, but
the St. John’s would Hot do; they wanted,
and must have, good harbors and deep
bars. Having disposed of the sickly argu
ments of this ex-member, he proceeded
up to Palatka, where he met two gentle
men, and being anxious to find out if
there was really any practical route in
contemplation, he inquired of them, and
they told him that if he would come to
St. Mary’s and see Col. Baiford he could
get all the information he wanted, and he
assured us that he lost no time in getting
here, as he felt a deep interest in the
subject. He met Col. Baiford, and says
that for the first time in his life lie
is fully satisfied that he has found
the proper route from St. Loiis
to the Atlantic. Eureka! Eureka! !
in substance said he. He is very
enthusiastic, and is having a very large
map illustrating the route made to take
with him. He proposes to call on liis per
sonal friend, ex-Govemor Aiken, at
Charleston, and attempt to enlist him,
and although he did not anticipate going
any farther north than Bichmond, so
deep is the interest he feels in what he
declares is the only route that can be made
a success, he has determined to go to
•Washington to enlist Western members.
He lived with a relative in Savannah when
he was a boy, and one of his wealth,
learning and position cannot fail to have
an influence in Washington and elsewhere.
He says he intends to give all his ener
gies to what he considers one of the
greatest projects of the age. He will en
list a portion of the Western journals
and have published and circulated on an
extensive scale in the West a map illus
trating the route, with full printed expla
nations. I hope that you nay have the
good fortune to meet him in Savannah.
By the by, the United States Senate
Transporiation Committee seems to have
been exceedingly favorably impressed
with Colonel Baiford’s project, judging
from a synopsis of their report published
in the New York World. The prospects
of the Great Western or Mountain Boute
does t seem to be half so popular as
Mr. Weems tried to moke me believe it
was, but I am more infidelic on that sub
ject since. the report than before, and I
was certainly unbelieving enough then.
We are not all quite so “soft” down this
way as some of the friends of the Moun
tain Boute lake us to be, and it was
really Refreshing to me to listen at the
decent style of speech commanded in
pronouncing our route dead and aban
doned, and their foute alive and trium
phant. In fact, it is impossible for the
Great Western to die, because there never
was any life in it. Some of the friends
of that rente have done all in their power
to put out false impressions to destroy
the prospects of this route, which has, in
the end, had an influence entirely in the
opposite direction. This is the only free
route proposed and the only one that will
be adopted by the government
I Eltintebo.
conduct of the Agricultural Colleges. By
the House Military Committee—into the
practicability of reducing the army.
Experienced members express the be
lief that hereafter investigation will be as
much a recognized function and duty of
Congress' as legislation, for the reason
that the government has grown so com
plex and its expenditures so enormous,
and, it might be added, its civil service
so bad, that the only way to secure a
tolerably honest and economical expendi
ture of the public moqey is for Congress
to hold the rod of investigation and ex-‘
poaure over all the departments. Con
gress most, it is argued, not only appro
priate money bnt closely watch the men
who spend it.—AT. T. Tribune.
As these investigations, which of late
occupy about two-thirds of the time of
Congress, nine times in ten result in a
majority report exonerating the accused,
would it not be just as well for Congress
to create a permanent commission, to be
called “The Congressional Whitewashing
Board?” This would give good, fat
offices, with abundant pickings in the
shape of bribes, to a half dozen patriots,
and save ranch trouble and expense.
Congress would have more time to de
vote to party matters, and delinquents
would have fewer persons to bribe.
A NOVA SCOTIA FRESHET.
$ry (SojoAs.
0
A Co
ESTABLISHED 1850.
KliRTILIZIill.
MILLIONS or VCRKS
RICHFARMD 1 LANDS
IN XEBHAS . A
NOW FOR SALE Vi :Y CHEAP.
- .n-: : .Y/Ui-JJT
T«n Tean Credit—Interest < i Ijr Six per rent.
Descriptive Pamphlets, wii Actional Map?,
No. 147 Broughton St.
UPTON’S AMMONIATED SUPERPHOS
PHATE OF BONE LIME,
M ADE from Bone, Gelatine and Add, and con
tains no mineral phosphate whatever. Pam-
New Spring Goods!
HAVE JUST RECEIVED
H andsome Japanese poplins, at ss
cents per yard;
Handsome BROCADE POPLINS;
Riel} JAPANESE SILKS;
Rich SILK and WOOL POPLINS;
Elegant DEEP MOURNING DRESS GOODS;
6-4 BLUE FLANNELS, for Gentlemen's Suits;
NAVY BLUE FLANNELS, for Boys’ Suits;
Full Lines CASSIMERES and COTTONADES.
phlets with analysis, other Information and testi
monials can be had on application to the under
signed.
For sale by
marSO-lm A. MINIS & SON.
JOHN W. ANDERSON’S SONS
COTTON FACTORS
AND GENERAL
Commission Merchants
AGENTS TOR
44U
S T
Full Lines Ladies’ and Children’s WHITE COT
TON HOSIERY;
Ladies’ LISLE THREAD HOSE;
Ladies’ Striped ENGLISH COTTON
HOSE—
Extra Long;
Children's Striped COTTON HOSE.
BARGAINS IX* BLACK ALPACA!
MARSEILLES, CROCHET, HONEYCOMB and
TOILET QUILTS;
SHEETINGS, SHIRTINGS. TABLE LINENS;
TOWELS, NAPKINS, Ilamask TABLE CLOTHS.
Bargains in Linen Handkerchiefs!
mh23
£tate Errasury Notices.
Treasury of Georgia,
ATLANTA, March 14, 1874.
The. Necessity of Investigations by Con.
"«ress—A List of Those Now In Pro.
Clubbed bt Policemen. — A man
named Jos. Xollman, a property owner,
was severelyclnbbed in his own house, in
New York, an Wednesday night, by po
licemen John C. FouHey and Hugh Fitz-
so that his life is despaired of.
was a noise made by some of the
‘ the honse, and the officers,
being partially inebriated,
t in, came in collision with Mr. Koll-
man, and besides clubbing him; beat and
kicked his wife. The coroner took the
,, , „ , ante-mortem statement of the wounded
that a committee,1m appointed to ^ebim facts were substan-
the question of organizing a con- stated.
A Clergyman Turns Inventor.—Father
Druon, of the Catholic Church in St. Al
bans, is trying for the prize of $100,000
offered to the inventor of a device for
propelling canal boats by compressed air.
C0XGRESSI0X.1L INVESTIGATIONS
Washington, March 17.
At the beginning of the session it was
the general opinion among Republican
members that everybody in and out of
Congress bad got enough of investigations
last winter, and that there would be no
demand for anything of the kind this
session. Instead of this proving to be
the case there are now almost as many
inquiries being prosecuted by committees,-
with power to ’send for persons and
papers, as were carried on last year, and
almost every week a new one is ordered.
The following are the investigations now
in progress:
By the Joint Committee on Affairs in
the District of Columbia—into the doings
of the District Government. By thq
Honse Judiciary Committee—into the
condnct/Of Judge Durell, with a view to
his impeachment: into the conduct of
Jndge Storey,' of the Western District of
Arkansas, and into the Chorpenning
claim. By'-the Honse Committee on
Indian Affairs—into alleged frauds in the
Indian service. By the Honse Committee
on Expenditures in the Department of
Justice—into the alleged frauds in the
Arkansas courts, and into the expenses
and management of the Department. By
the Ways and Means Committee—into
the workings of the moiefy system, and
the Sanborn contracts. By the Banking
and Currency Committee—-into the con
dition of the Freedmen’s Savings Bank,
and into the failures of the Ocean Na
tional Bank of New York, and the First
National Bank of Washington. By the
House Committee on Education—jnto (he
Holders of Over-Due Bonds
OF THE
STATE OF GEORGIA,
A RE hereb notified that the Bonds must l»e
presented for payment at the
State Treasury in Atlanta,
Whereupon, if Genuine, those payable in New
York, or elsewhere out of the State of Georgia,
will be paid in Exchange on New York, if de
sired, and those payable at the State Treasury or
elsewhere in Georgia, will be paid in currency or
checks on Athens, Augusta, Columbus, Macon or
Savannah, as the holder may prefer.
All matured coupons of approved bonds of the
State of Georgia, wherever payable, will be paid
on presentation at this Department, and all paya
ble out of the State will be pai I ou presentation
at the Fourth National Bank of New York.
No Interest ou Over-Due Bonds will be
Allowed
after the 31st instant.
Express Charges to lie paid by the owner of
Bouds.
By order of the Governor.
JOHN JONES, Treasurer.
mhlG-dtApl
Treasury of Georgia,
ATLANTA, March 14, 1874.
Holders of the Change Bills
OF THE
Western & Atlantic Railroad*
I SSUED before and during the war, are hereby
notified that they can present them for exami
nation at the State Treasury on and after the
First I>ay of April Next.
The i»erson presenting them will be required to
accompany them with the following affidavit,
to-wit:
GEORGIA,
L
Detraction of the Village of Sherbrooke. PilTilSOlS aild Sun Umbrellas.
Halifax, N. S., March 11, 1874.
The past twelve months have been un
exampled in the history of Nova Scotia
for disasters by land and sea. Commenc
ing with the shipwreck of the steamship
Atlantic at Marr’s Head, on April 1, 1873
—that terrible calamity which sent such
a thrill of horror over the land—disasters
of lesser magnitude have visited the
province from time to time during the
past year, causing mourning in many sec
tions. .This was notably the ease in the
fearful Drummond colliery explosion last
May, and in the destructive hurricane
which swept ovA the eastern part of the
province and the Island of Cape Breton
in October. Now another calamity has
befallen this ill-starred country, and the
people of the eastern sections of the
province particularly are again bewailing
the severe losses sustained by them dur
ing the recent great freshet, which caused
sad havoc in Pictou, Guysborough, Col
chester, and Antigonishe Counties. In
Colchester county, distant from Halifax
about forty-five miles, three districts, em
bracing one of the most fertile sections of
our agricultural country, were almost sub
merged and all the bridges swept away by
the swollen waters of the rivers. In
Pictou county the same story of destruc
tion is related—bridges tom away, fields
and roads inundated, and travel impeded.
But the worst feature of the freshet was
reserved for Sherbrooke, a small village
of about five hundred inhabitants, situa
ted in a valley on the left bank of the St.
Maiy’s river, one of the deep streams
which ran through the southwestern por
tion of Guysborough county to the ocean.
The village is not many miles from the
border line of Halifax county, and its
principal business is gold mining.
The snow-storms of the past winter left
immense drifts of snow in the woods and
fields, and many fears were expressed
that in the event of a sudden thaw and
rain-storm some dreadful disasters would
result. So far os Sherbrooke is concern
ed, the worst fears of its inhabitants have
been painfully realized. On Wednesday,
the 4th inst., the weather was delight
fully warm; toward evening it began to
rain, and from midnight until Thursday
morning the ram fell in torrents. Thurs
day forenoon, although the rain-storm
had ceased, tlie waters in the St. Mary’s
river, swelled lyy the mountain torrents,
rose so fast that the people in the village
began to feel very uneasy and to manifest
considerable alarm. Two miles above
the place there is a natural dam of rock
across the river, Above which, for a long
distance, it is called Stillwater, os there
is very little current. Here the ice in
the winter becomes very thick and
strong. The only hope of the apprehen
sive inhabitants of Sherbrooke was that
the ice on the still water portion of the
river might be able to resist the pressure
from above, for the ice, from half a mile
below the village, was hard and fast nearly
to the sea; and consequently, if the still-
water icc gave way, the whole valley
would be completely flooded. The hopes
of the unfortunate inhabitants were soon
to be frustrated, for while they stood in
the streets of the village and on the banks
of the river, doubtfully discussing the
situation and utterly unable to put forth
one effort to prevent it, the ice of the
still water suddenly broke up and the
waters came furiously rushing in enor
mous masses over tlie dum, with a roar
like Niagara, and sweeping down upon
the doomed village, which was soon sub
merged, as well as the valley for a con
siderable distance. The river, from the
forks, soon overflowed its banks, and ice,
trees and lumber were carried along in
one irresistible sweep. The scene was
desolate beyond description. The solid
ice below the village stood firm, the chan
nel of the river at that part being nar
row and protected on ■ each side by
steep and rooky banks, and the valley
where Sherbrooke stood was soon con
verted into a seething sea. The in
habitants fled from their booses to the
high land: every available boat and canoe
in the place being brought into requisi
tion. Nothing more frightful can be
imagined than the scene which followed.
The rushing, roaring current, the enor
mous ice-floes, trees, timbei and ’rubbish
indescribable, which filled the streets of
the village ; the scared inhabitants fleeing
in every direction, or taking ref nge in the
upper portions of their houses to escape
the destruction and death which seemed
inevitable. The women, children and old
people were first removed in boats, and
after that the cattle were driven out of
the town, the drivers being obliged to get
on horseback and drive the frightened
cattle to wade through the boiling waters.
It is impossible to obtain a correct esti
mate of the damage sustained. In the
village baras,ont-honses and offices,and all
bnt the most substantial structures, were
swept away by the flood. Two of the
bridges are destroyed, and a part of the
new bridge across the St. Mary’s river,
farther up, is also gone. A vessel of su
perior bnlld, and nearly finished, built by
Alex. N. McDonald for a firm in England,
was smashed, entailing a loss of about
$5,000. Besides this, McDonald lost
about $1,000 worth of prepared timber!
Cumminger Bros, lost about $900, be
sides many others of the inhabitants,
whose losses are variously estimated.
The worst feature of this-calamity was
yet to come, for on Thursday night the
weather changed, and the flood, moun
tains of ice, logs, trees and rubbish froze
ap, fixing the village in a frozen sea of
min, from which only a gradual thaw can
extricate it. A sudden thaw will assure
its complete destruction. Those of the
inhabitants who have seen floods nnd
freshets in other countries state that the
Sherbrooke freshet was by long odds the
most terrible they had witnessed. While
the flood was rising on Thursday the
scene was grand beyond description, but
on Friday morning Sherbrooke, frozen
np in a lake of rains, was one of the
most desolate scenes if is possible to
imagine. Saturday morning the water
commenced to fall, and people began to
laddie their way back into their own
louses; but the village was still frozen in
by the surrounding debris, in which con
dition it has remained up to latest dates
from the country.
Mr. Evarts can tell a good story. We
have seldom seen a better child’s blander
than the following:
A few summers since, at the urgent re
quest of his youngest daughter, he sent
np to his country place in Vermont a
donkey for her use. She had read abont
donkeys, bnt was not familiar with their
peculiar vocalism. The animal’s strange
noise inspired her -with the profoundest
pity for his evident distress. So she wrote
to her father: “Dear papa—I do wish
yon would come up here soon, my donkey
is so lonesome.” As Mr. Evarts renders
this pathetic appeal it is irresistible.
ONIA
SOLUBLE PHOSPHATE
eoldb;
ierly bc
LQUITT
by N. A. HARDEE, SON & CO„
Jk BAGGS.
Former!
and COr
ALSO, AGENTS FOR
Gullett’s Improved Saw Gin,
AND
Henery’s Improved McCarthy Gin,
Corner Bryan and Drayton Sts.,
SAVANNAH, GA.
fF" Liberal advances made on Consignments.
feblS-tf
GUANO.
P URE PERUVIAN, IMPORTED DIRECT,
and for sale at Government Prices by
R. G. LAY, Agent,
mh2-d&w2m Savannah, Ga.
It Cannot be
Surpassed.
Solomons’
Rowland
Compound.
It Makes
Oue Ton of
FERTILIZER
For $25,
Equal to Any,
And Superior
To Many
Commercial
Fertilizers.
M. J. SOLOMONS,
140 Bay Street.
mhl2-jan5-3m
gaiutittij.
PAINTING!
County.
, of said comity, do solemnly
swear that I ain the bona fide owner of certain
Chance Bills of the Western and Atlantic Railroad,
herewith presented, amounting to. (Leave this
blank, us some, on examination, may be rejected
as spurious.) That I became possessed of them
hi the i egular coarse of business, and that I did
not purchase them, or any part of them, for extra
profit or speculation, and that I have hail them in
my possession from and after the first day of
April, 1S£I.
(Signed with the owner’s name.)
Sworn to anil snbscrilied before me, ,
N. J*. or J. P., or any filler officer authorized to
administer oaths or take affirmations.
By order of the General Assembly.
JOHN JONES, Treasurer.
mhlC-dtApl
REMOVAL.
T HE continued success in onr business for the
last six years, has compelled os to seek more
spacious quarters, and we nave secured that fine
Store. No. 9S Bryan street, between Drayton and
Abercom streets, where we have, with much can*
and expense, fitted up 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.
THE PIO: iEER,
A handsome Illustrated Pa; r, cor lain in g the
Homestead Law, mailed tree ■ - an parts of tlie
world. Address t‘. F. DAVIS,
Land Commist i ner U. P. R. R„
Omaha, Nbb.
NEW YORK DAY-BOOK
A Democratic Weekly. Established 18G0. It
supports White Supremacy, political and social.
Terms, $2 per year. To dubs, nine copies for $S.
Specimen copies free. Address DAY-BOOK, New
York City.
r „ for $50!
FOURTH
Grand Gift Concert
| FOR THE BENEFIT OF THE
Public Library of Kentucky,
Oil March 31st, inst.
60,Q00 Tickets, 12,000 Gifts.
LIST OF GIFTS.
One Grand Cash Gift $250,000
One Grand Cash Gift 100,000
One Grand Cash Gift 50,000
One Sand Cash Gift 25,000
One Gkand Cash Gift 11,500
10-Cash Gifts, $10,000 each 100,000
30 Cash Gifts, 5,000 each 150,000
50 Cash Gifts, 1,000 each 50,1100
80 Cash Gifts, 600 each 40,6(0
100-Cash Gifts, 400 each 40,000
150 Cash Gifts, 300 each 45,000
250 Cash Gifts, 200 each 60,000
325 Cash Gifts, 100 each 32,500
11,000 Cash Gifts. 50 each 560,000
Total, 12^00 Gif la, ail Cash.
r amounting to $1,500,000
« Concert and Distribution of 'Gifts will
Did unequivocally tale place on the day
whether all the tickets are sold or not,
!,000 Gifts all paid in proportion to tha
Tickets 60ld.
PRICE OF TICKETS.
Whole Tickets. $50; nalves, $25; Tenths, ot
eachdonpon, $5; Eleven \Vhole Tickets for $500.
Send for circular.
The! time for the drawing is near at hand, anil
persons intending to purchase tickets have no
time tb lose.
THO. E. BRAMLETTE,
Agent Public Library of Kentucky, and Mana-
gerGlftConcert, Public library Building, Louis-
vtlk, gy.
BOYS AND MIDDLE-AGED MEN
Train d for a Successful Start in Business Life,
taugbt how to get a Living, Make Money, and be
come Enterprising, Useful Citizens. Eastman
Business College. Poughkeepsie, N. Y., On-tbe-
Hndsou, the only Institution devoted to this es
pecial y. The oldest and only practical Commer
cial School, and only one providing situations for
Grade ates. Refers to Patrons and Graduates in
nearly every city and town. -Applicants enter any
day. (Address for particulars and catalogue of
3,000 graduates in business,
H. G. EASTMAN, LL. D„
Poughkeepsie, N. Y.
1)0 YOUR OWN PAINTING
WITH THE
Averill Chemical Paint!
WHITE
ANt) ALL TIIE FASHIONABLE SHADES,
! or PROPER CONSISTENCY FOR USE.
Are sold by the gallon at less price than a gallon
of th^best Lead and Oil can be mixed, and the
Averin wears longer and is much handsomer.
Beautiful sample cards, with what the owners
of the; finest residences say of it, furnished free
by defiers generally, or .by the
AVERILL CHEMICAL PAINT CO.,
32 Burling Slip, N. Y.
WOOD’S
HOUSEHOLD MAGAZINE,
The Best Dollar Monthly.
(ftP f/v (ft I a day made by canvassing fax
jptl LU this Magazine—now in its 14tix ,
volume—with Chromo, -
The Yosemitc Valley,
14x20 fnches, in 17 Oil Colors.
Magazine, 1 year, with Mounted Chromo... .$2 05
Magazine, 1 year, with Unmounted Chromo. 1 50
Magazine, alone, 1 year 1 00
Examine onr Clubbing and Premium Lists.
Twin First-class Periodicals for (lie price
of ode. We solicit Experienced Canvassers
and others to send at once for terms and speci
men Magazine. Address
1 S. E. SHUTES, Publisher,
41 Park Row, N. Y. City, or Newburgh, N. Y.
WANTED!
Coal, Iron and Timber Lands
Favorably located, on or near railroad or waler"
transportation routes. Address
NICHOLSON A CLARK,
111 Broadway, (Room 16,) New York.
Exterminators
AND
INSECT POWDER
For Rate, Mice, Roaches, Ante, Bed-Bugs, Moths,
&c. |. F. HENRY, CURRAN & CO., N. Y.,
Sole Agents.
CHRIS. MURPHY.
CHAS. CLARK.
gUtlinmj.
Great .Reduction!
In order to make room for my
SPRING SUPPLY,
I liave reduced the price of my goods
75 per cent.
FOR THE NEXT TWENTY' DAY'S.
rr A DOZEN CORSETS, worth $1 75, at $1 each.
tj \/ Corsets worth SI 50, for 75c.
Corsets worth 75c., for 50c.
Millinery and Millinery Goods
At correspondingly low figures.
If. C. HOUSTON,
Masonic Hall Building, Ball street.
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 Cook Stove, and yon can find it. The
‘Southern Home Stove,”
Made by the J. L. Mott Iron Works.
For sale by
COGRMACK HOPKINS,
No. 167 Broughton Street,
f ebl 1-tf Only Agent in Savannah.
Cigars! and SPobarra.
GOODMAN & MYERS,
133 BAY STREET,
SOLE PROPRIETORS OF THE FOLLOWING
WELL-KNOWN CIGARS:
PARAGON,
DAUNTLESS,
JEWELS,
MESS ALINA,
DON CARLOS,
PECADok,
MEMORIAL,
CELERON,
JEAN NTCOT.
nov!2-tf MERRY WIVE8.
(Cordials, £tjntps, &c.
MURPHY & CLARK,
98 Bryan street, between Drayton and
Abcrcorn Streets,
SAVANNAH, GA.
HOUSE, SHIP, STEAXBOAT, SIGS AND
Ornam’tal Painters
GILDING, GRAINING,
MARBLING, GLAZING, AND PAPER
HANGING.
We are prepared to offer estimates for every de
scription of Painting in any part of George,
South Carolina and Florida, ana guarantee satis
faction in the execution of our work.
We keep always in store a select stock of the
following articles:
PURE ENGLISH B. B. LEAD.
ATLANTIC and all other brands of LEADS.
OILS. VARNISHES, PUTTY' BRUSHES. .
Furniture, Demar and other VARNISHES pnt
up 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.
Persona desiring work and material In onr line
would do well to give us a call before going else
where.
PLAIN AND ORNAMENTAL
SIGN WORK
Executed with neatness and dispatch.
febT-tf
§owst aufl
Horses and Mules.
W E have just received forty head of heavy
timber Hole*, from five to eight years old.
Thirty head of Medium Moles.
Thirty head of Plantation Mares and Horses.
A few extra Saddle Mares and Roadsters.
mar20-tf HENDRICK A DARNAfJ.
FAST HORSES!!
I HAVE JUST RECEIVED A NUMBER OF
Fast Road Horses,
to which I would invite the attention df those who
are in want of good Teams.
j. P. FOX,
Stables, West Broad Street, opposite State.
dee30-tf
ilovms, gulbs, &c.
C. C.
/CORDIALS, In quality the best;
V7 Syrnpe that stand tbs test;
Ginger Ale that can’t be beat;
Cider from Apples nice and sweet;
Soda Water—none each made;
.Sarsaparilla that lays all other in the shade.
For Christmas Buy These Things i
GIVE ME TOUR TRADE.
Ides (Cider excepted) are home
. , minted as represented, and sold
at low rates (quality considered) in any required
quantity. JOHN RYAN,
Proprieto -[ 10 Brougftou'st.
IsUUIabed 1852. dscW-tf
The above a
nnvU-U
HOSES,
C AMELIAS,
AND OTHEU
PLANTS OR FLOWERS.
Catalogues free.
J. H. PARSONS' dtr CO.,
No. Ill Slat. Street.
gritfcs.
Bricks.
13 000 EASTERN nARD BRICKS,
^ Suitable for paving purpoaea,
landed from schooner A. E. Chase, from Maine.
For sale by WILDER * OO.
daot-tf
FITS 1 EPILEPSY
Positively cured. The worst cases, of longest
standing, by using DR. HEBBARD’S CURE. A
bottle sent free to all addressing J. E. Dibblee,
Druggist, 814 Sixth Avenue, N. Y.
J. & P. COATS'BLACK
MORPHINE HABIT
speedily cured by Dr. Beck’s •
only known and
SURE REMEDY.
NO CHARGE
for treatment until cured. Call on or address
DR. J. C. BECK, Cincinnati,.0.
‘-pSYCHOMANCY OR SOUL CHARMING.”
JL How either sex may fascinate and gain the
love apd affections of any person they choose, in
stantly. This simple mental acquirement all can
po seas, free, by mail, for 25 cents; together with
a Marriage Guide, Egyptian Oracle, Dreams, Hints
to Ladies. A queer book. 100,000 sold. Address
T. WILLIAM & CO., Publishers, Philadelphia.
mar7-d&w4w
Doming, &t.
Baltimore Pearl Homiuy Co.
H aVing Ihe Sole Agency for the sale of the
above GOODS in Savannah, I beg to call tlie
attention Of Grocers, and the public in general,
to the following articles, manufactured by the
above named Company, from pnre Southern White
Flint Corn, 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 nOMTNY, so popular
with Virginians and in the Northern States.
“CORN FLOUR,” very choice, and white, as
snow; can be used in connection,
“B3ARL MEAL,” with; wheat Flour, for all
kinds of Pastry and Bread, children’s food, btenc-
“\fn&ITE CORN MEAL,” in sacks, well adapt
ed for the country trade and ordinary use, being
superior and cheaper than the home-made Meal.
“MILL FEED” or “CHOP,” a superior article
of food for neat cattle, horses, cows, swine, Ac.,
being cheaper than any other feed, and increasing
the flow of milk in cows.
All of which will lie sold at manufacturer's
pricesifor CASH, freight and expenses added, 1>y
J. A. MERCIES,
feb!6-2m ' No. 166 Bay street, Savannah.
iblf-2
s
and SratritmakMS.
F. D. JORDAN,
135 Congress Street,
TNEALER in IMPORTED and AMERICAN
LJ WATCHES. Fine .JEWELRY, Pure SIL
VER and SILVER-PLATED WARE, CLOCKS,
GOLD PENS, Ac.
Watches and Jewelry carefully repaired.
Sole Agent for the Celebrated Diamond SPEC
TACLES!. mhIC-tf
Cut This Outo
M. W. NEUBTOGER,
(Successor to FRED. GOEHMAN,)
PRACTICAL. WATCHMAKER AND
' ^JEWELER,
180 li RYAN STREET,
B ETWEEN Barnard :
Dealer in Swiss and Ame:
Silver WATCHES, fine
Plated WARE, CUTLERY, .fee.
Repairing In all branches done at short notice
mbt-lm
streets.
Gold and
Silver and