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time less than remitting the amount
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110 CI, Li.« left at the office,
positirc o -' To advertisers.
Sl) j-. V IJE is ten measured lines of Nonpareil
01 'Ti°"i x ' r ,iqnare; cach 8nbse ‘
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^- rocn , inserted rcenj other da«, twice a
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each insertion,
i literal rates mariei
Advertisements nil] have a favorable place
A . jnserttnl, but no promise of continuons
pnbhcation in a particniar pincc can be given, aa
,vith contract advertisers.
all
advertisers mast have
equal opportunities.
The Moriilwr
and mail circalation
lisbnl in
Xcivs has the largest city
of any paper pnb-
Savaimali.
Allairs in Georgia.
A Wiirrenton man offers to cure or kill
jmy m ad (login America for a certain
amount of bullion.
A West Point man lias invented an in
sulator for telegraph vires.
3lr. Allen Fleming, of Columbus, is
dead.
The wires anil appurtenances of the
Darien telegraph line were recently sold
for one hundred dollars.
Jonathan Pierson was held to bail in
in the sum of $15,000 at Baxley recently,
the charge of forging a land grant.
Mr. J. T. Gibson retires from the
Kockmart Reporter and is succeeded by
Captain Thomas \V. Dodd.
Psalmuel Bard is educating himself for
the onerous duty of taking the stump for
Freeman. Psalm is evidently on the
look-out for shekels.
The Perry Home Journal says that the
wife of Joel It. Griffin, of Fort Valley,
died from the effects of cruel treatment
by her husband. Her will was jirobated
ill Perry o«i Monday, and takes all her
property out. of his hands, leaving him
penniless. Dr. Austin, the executor, will
rent out “Union Hill,” thus breaking up
the most infamous den of social equality
in the State.
Dalton has bad several deaths recently.
Brunswick is troubled with a band of
highway robbers. The members have re
hearsals nearly every night.
Mi\ It. M. Johnston has retired from
the local department of the Bainbridge
,Sun. It is evident that It. Melville can’t
stomach social equality.
Mrs. Nancy Baughn, of Oglethorpe
county, is dead.
The Perry Home Journal will be sus
pended two weeks.
Lightning burned the barn of Mrs.
Harriet X. Smith in Oglethorpe county
recently.
A Talbot county negro manufactures
wooden ropes.
Dr. II. L. W. Craig has taken charge of
the local department of the Atlanta Daily
Wars.
A new paper is to be started in Monti-
cello. Jasper county, by Mr. E. H. David-
on.
It will be some satisfaction to Colonel
I Burgess Smith to know that Phatty Har-
j rts will shortly bring suit against the A t
lanta correspondent, of the Augusta
I Chronicle. The suit is for the purpose of
| vindicating wliat Phatty calls liis charac-
1 ter.
A Macon negro killed a small colored
I hoy with a spade the other day, and then
eloped to the ewanip.
Mr. Giles, Ordinary of Houston county,
| has withdrawn from the Radical party.
Atlanta is promised a full expose of the
| postal card business.
The Ikwkinsville Dispatch picturesque
I ly alludes to Radicalism as “ the black
[ vomit.” X
Mrs. Nancy Anderson, of Atlanta, is
1 creating quite a flutter among the magis
trates of that city. She is tolling tales
| put of school.
Cattle in Murray county are troubled
[ with murrain.
A disease called “milk sickness” is pre-
(vailing to some extent in Northern
| Georgia.
A revival of religion is progressing in
I the Baptist Church at ltinggold.
The Atlanta Herald learns that it has
J been customary with several grand juries
I empanelled in Fulton county to call up
I witnesses and attempt to find true bills
■ upon suggestions offered by anonymous
j writers or postal card scribblers.
The following is a specimen of the
| Paragraphs indulged in by the subordi-
I hates ou the Western papers. It is from
I the Courier Journal, and has the appear-
I ance of having been revised and corrected
I by the able AVatterson himself: “The
I Detroit Free Press tells us that the sable
I Georgia agriculturists follow the plow or
I work among the corn this hot weather
j witnoiit enough clothing on to conceal a
good sized wart. The Free Dress has
I probably forgotten the well known his-
| Rr.eal fact that the summer costume of
8 average Georgian consists of a paper
| collar and a pair of spars.”
, -^anta Constitution: There was once a
I »d D . 10 ^ ve< lin Cass county, Georgia,
l t , I ears ago. who had once been in
k, ^ Legislature, and never neglected
I oa opi>ortmii*v t/N xrk
J. H. ESTILL, PROPRIETOR.
SAVANNAH, MONDAY, JULY 13, 1874.
ESTABLISHED 1850.
W’ortuuity to emphasize the fact. He
or t a perfec ! '“Mel as to new discoveries
tw I v w scieuc es, being well satisfied
if the world should turn over the
» er would spill out of his well, and only
]>-. S jO'to steam cars by slow degrees.
. “ , tuo vi als of his contempt were
an.i ° ut u P° n the idea of a telegraph,
hv. e was won t to say that nobody need
»av f co ^ lc ' the green” over him'in that
Finally tv o 1 * heeu to the Legislature,
dav «•' i ” tato Koad was built, and one
J orkmeu began to put up telegraph
fight m front of £ is aid to
thont.i Wlre - tlis exultant neighbors
and » i t J iej h«<l him on that occasion,
ana tak«l. “Weil, old fellow, what do
cornnii'i 01 telegraphs now?” He was
I self rat "h ei1 game. Drawing liim-
>neu. 1 Incb ta ^* e r’ he said,. “Gentle-
fiswR: a , . ' ras t n the Legislature I
sij,, rati ' s _ sil ’i ect my very attentive con-
that it h said then, os I say now,
iBm l UC 1 for letters and -small bun-
never'-' * W1 “ “ewer take a cotton bale,
[ • Boswell, our usu-
I a kve r . ue t8hl)or, was thrown into
ProtWi, Vehement on the 3d instant,
10 a&»<, • ■y® Jealous husband attempting
h - k wife ‘ C ‘ W - Fraser,
month. . • Simon Fraser, about six
I "to ha,] h’ 0 - married his brother’s widow,
I her tori'. returned from Texas, where
I “rieral ti.? husband died, leaving her
I hup', Q “®ud dollars. After the mar-
I threat.,.',,,• Fraser more than once
I ilia wif« f t l( - hfe of Mis. Emily Fraser,
I ° n ly con,„ 0r reastms a jealous mind could
I picion. no? U P w h° u frenzied with sus-
fnhiipnvnn t'mrriage of course was an
I to ns to'v, 6 '. "Its. Fraser is represented
I ltd ail ‘I 'I't'te a lady in every respect,
I tf'is tint,, acow her disbeheve the rea-
I % auii t’ r °m]>ted the hnsband to way-
inrred his wife. The deed oo-
I o’dock a n 'w lust ’ betwpen 10 and 11
| horn Jf r ' 0 : jbt 8 - Fraser was returning
I ^othe, K store, in company with
I was heard^hn m he , ° lear report of a
I forliug «i,™„ ,, 6 hlack smoke was seen
I the road „„, bushes on the side of
f fro “ lbs F oF “I am shot. 1 ”
erowd to tt-.n Btar iled andsmnmoned a
|'*«uld-be The ambushed
Vi ‘h ^uirrd?w U “ d , a ?hot-gun, loaded
hot, and his aim was true.
but the result not fatal, for upon exami
nation it was discovered that while thirty-
two shot had passed through her dress,
only two had taken effect, and they in
the posterior part of file thigh. Dr.
Anderson^ brother-in-law of the lady, un
successfully attempted to extract the shot,
but we hope the wound will not prove
serious. The said G. W. Frazer was ar
rested, and had a preliminary trial before
J. T. Tally, J. P., and Esquire Powers,
and was held to bail in the sum of
$3,000, and failing to give the required
security, he was brought to this place on
last Saturday and lodged in jail to await
trial at the next term of Cobb Superior
Court. His brother, James O. Frazer,
was' also arrested as accessory to the
attempted murder, haying loaned the gun
that was used, but for want of sufficient
evidence and owing to a deficiency in the
warrant, he was discharged from custody.
Washington (Wilkes county) corres
pondence Atlanta Herald: Washington
enjoys the distinction of being the home
of General Robert Toombs, the most re
markable citizen of Georgia. He (has a
large and luxurious dwelling with twenty
or thirty acres of highly cultivated
grounds. Everything shows the splendid
administrative capacity of the man and
his princely spirit. The grounds and
garden are in perfect order. He has
every variety of fruit. He raises vegeta
bles enough to supply the town. He
keeps two carriages. He does everything
on a large scale. He ean command the
wealth of the county. He is a first-class
financier, with large ideas and yet keen
sagacity and thorough system. Take him
all in all, Gen. Toombs is as princely a
character as I ever met. He is loyal in all
his traits. There are one or two inci
dents of him, strikingly characterestic,
that have never been in print, that
are curiously interesting. When the
Confederate Government met at Mont
gomery there was no money. The
new administration had to have quarters
to do business in. None of the officers
had any money convenient. General
Toombs, then acting as Secretary of State,
had some cotton, and gave bis individual
obligation for about $20,000 for rent and
other expenses of the new nation. By
some fatality and inattention the various
Confederate Secretaries of the Treasury
failed to pay the debt, and when the war
ended the paper of General Toombs, to
his astonishment, was still out for the
liability. Few men would have re
sponded to such a claim. He paid the
amount in gold in full, refusing to
oven use currency, and thus he stands
to-day the creditor of the defunct gov
ernment for $20,000, paid after the
war was over. An honor so punctilious is
rare, especially in these degenerate times.
But one even more remarkable case of his
ready and unique financiering occurred
since Gov. Smith has been in the chair of
State, and in which the whole State was
helped. Some $300,000 of interest on
the State debt fell due in the middle of
the first year of Gov. Smith’s administra
tion, and every effort to raise the money
was a failure. The banks were tight up,
and there was no money in the Treasury.
Gov. Smith laid the matter before Gen.
Toombs and invoked bis help. Gen.
Toombs promptly responded by raising
tbe money on his own personal exertions,
and loaning it to the State at 7 per cent,
interest He, on his own personal secu
rity, obtained from several friends good
bonds enough, with what he had of his
own, to pledge as collateral for the
amount, and raised it in New York. The
incident is remarkable alike as showing
his infinite resources and his patriotic
liberality. It is a strange coincidence that
the lot upon which Gen. Toombs lives
was occupied by his two Congressional
predecessors. He has been living in his
house for 38 years. He owns a large
tract of land that was given to his revolu
tionary ancestor by the government as a
reward for his valor in the revolution. It
has never passed out of the family.
BYTELEOMPH
THE MORNING NEWS.
Noon Telegrams.
THE FRENCH POLITICAL SITUA
TION.
YYhat President MacHahon Requires
of the Assembly.
ERIE OIL WORKS IN A RLA9TF.
ANOTHER CASE OF GENUINE ASIATIC
CHOLERA.
Vice-President Wilson to Res ion.
AFFAIRS IN FRANCE.
Paris, July 11.—The Committee of
Thirty on the constitutional bills held an
The Minister
important sitting to-day.
of -the Interior appeared 'a
Attempted Outrage on a Lady in
Prince George’s County, Md.—On Fri
day last an outrage was attempted on a
lady near Silver Hill, a post office station
on the road from Good Hope Hill to Sur-
ratsville, by a negro named George Dor
sey alias Joe Williams. The lady, who
lives near Silver Springs, had occasion to
go to a spring near by, and this negro
offered to accompany her. She declined,
but afterwards permitted him to carry
the vessel containing the water, he being
trusted servant. At the spring, when
the bucket was filled and handed him to
carry, he said, “put it on my head.” She
complied, and while she was raising the
bucket to his head he caught and tried to
throw her to the ground. A tussle com-
‘meuced, and she, suspecting his inten
tion, commenced screaming at the top of
her voice, and resisted successfully until
persons at the house hearing her cries ran
to her rescue, and the negro decamped
suddenly to the woods, since which noth
ing hns been seen of him. A reward of
$200 for his apprehension has been
offered by Mr. John T. Naylor, living in
that vicinity. The lady, in defence of
herself, tore the clsthing of the villain,
as portions of it were found at the spring,
consisting of half of his vest, in the
pocket of which was found an old silver
watch and brass chain, with other arti
cles sufficient to identify him. A descrip
tion of the scoundrel has been sent to the
authorities in the neighboring counties
and detectives of Washington. George
Dorsey alias Joe Williams is about five
feet six inches in height,.fall face, slight
side Jwiskers, of dark gmgerbread color,
supposed to be about thirty years of age,
and when last seen had on a dark cloth
hat, striped pantaloons and dark shirt.
The Pope Expelled from the Free
Masons.—At the semi-annual meeting of
the Grand Lodge of Masons, Scottish
Rite of the Orient of Palermo, Italy, on
the. 27th of March last, Pope Pius IX w
expelled from the Order. The decree of
expulsion was published in the official
Masonic paper at Cologne, Germany, and
is preceded by tli6 minutes of the Lodge
in which he was initiated, and is as fol
lows :
‘A man named Tffastni Ferretti, who
received the baptism of Free Masonry,
and solemnly pledged his love and fellow
ship, and who afterwards was crowned
Pope and King, under the title of Pio
Nono, has now cursed his former brethren
and excommunicated all members of the
Order of Free Masons. Therefore, said
Mastai Ferretti is herewith, by decree of
the Grand Lodge of the Orient, Palermo,
expelled from the Order for perjury.”
The charges against him were first pre
ferred at his Lodge at Palermo, in 1865,
and notification and copy thereof sent to
him, with a request to attend the Lodge
for the purpose of answering the same.
To this he made no reply, and, for divers
reasons, the charges were not pressed
until he urged the Bishops of Brazil to
act aggressively toward the Free Masons.
Then they were pressed, and, after a
•egular trial, a decree of expulsion was
entered and published, the same being
signed by' Victor Emmanuel, King of
Italy, and Grand Master of the Orient of
Italy.—Voice of Masonry.
All Sense of Virtue Gone.—A letter
giving an account of the celebration of
St. John’s Day in Puerto Principe, Cabo,
says the insurrection is fast finishing
what once existed of virtue. It has worn
down to threads the flimsy texture of
social virtue, and, except among a few of
the best educated and most refined peo
ple, there is little attempt at even a show
of feminino delicacy and modesty. Bands
of young rollicking fellows will stop
under the long grated windows and bal
conies and sing the rudest songs with the
most indecorous allusions, and women
and girls will flock to the windows and
laugh at and enjoy it.
oratory was
'and presented
the views of the government. He said
the government would accept a bill drawn
up by the committee which provides for
the Continuance of the title of the Presi
dent of the Republic; for the creation of
a second Chamber, and for the organiza
tion of a personal Septennate to termi
nate with the expiration of MacMahcn’s
seven years’ term, or sooner, in case of
his resignation or death; but it was de
sirable that certain provisions, which re
quired immediate action, should be em
bodied in a separate measure for speedier
passage by the Assembly, and the Minis
ter specified them as follows :
1. Deputies should be elected for sepa
rate Arrondissements instead of Depart
ments, for it was necessary to keep in
mind the possibility of a dissolution of
the Assembly.
2. In the creation of a second chamber
the government especially wished that
the President should be empowered to
nominate a considerable proportion of its
members.
3. The government insists that power
be given to the President: to dissolve the
lower chamber; but as the manner of the
appointment of members of the upper
house is not decided upon, it can not say
whether power should be exercised with
or without the co-operation of the latter.
Fourton, m. conclusion, remarked that
the government was not desirous of in
terfering with the duty of the Assembly
in framing a constitution, but merely
pointed out what it considered essential
points. Full expressions would be givi
to its opinions in debate when the subject
came before the Assembly.
The Legitimists are irritated by the
President’s message and have resolved to
oppose the personal Septennate.
terrible conflagration.
New Yore, July 11.—The fire which
broke out in Wehawkin last night was in
the Erie oil works. It was caused by a
stroke of lightning, which struck one of
the tanks containing 15,000 barrels of oil
during a heavy thunder storm. The
•flames spread rapidly and one tank after
another took fire until five, each contain
ing 15,000 barrels, and another contain
ing 20,000, were soon burning fiercely.
Several smaller tanks, containing in all
125,000 barrels, also took fire about mid
night, and it is thought others would
follow. The inaccessibility of the wi
and the fact that the fire lias
steadily since the commencement, makes it
impossible to give more definite particu
lars. The actual loss could not be ascer
tained, as the fire is likely to burn all day,
but it is estimated at $600,000. These
works are probably the largest oil works
in tbe United States, all the oil coming
over the Erie Road being stored there.
The light from the fire illuminated New
York most of the night. One hundred
and twenty-five men will be thrown out
of employment? About on e year ago the
same works were struck by lightning and
one of the tanks was ignite d, but it was
extinguished with but slight loss.
WASHINGTON NEWS ANI> NOTES.
Washington, July 11.—The National
Republican learns from a leading Repub
lican Senator, who has had a recent con.
versation with Vice President Wilson,
that Wilson’s resignation of that office
will shortly be made public. 411 health
being the cause of this unexpected and
extraordinary step.
The Tax-Payers’ Association of this
District have adopted a plan of organiza
tion which provides for the appoin tment
of a committee of seventy to guard their
interests generally, and to prosecute in
the criminal and civil courts such officers
of the late District Government as have
acted Ulegally in collection and expendi
tures of money, and for otiker acts per
formed by them irrespective of the laws.
NORFOLK COTTON EXCHANGE.
Norfolk, July 11. — Representatives
from nearly all of the cotton-dealing firms
of Norfolk and Portsmouth, met last
evening at the counting rooms of Baker,
Neal & Shepard, and completed a perma
nent organization to be known as the
Norfolk andPortsmouth Cotton Exchange.
The by-laws and rules of| the Augusta
Exchange were adopted with some slight
modification. The following named of
ficers were elected to service for the
•ear: President, W. W. Gwarth-
ee President, Major W. J.
Baker; Treasurer, Kidor Biggs; Directors,
[New Orleans Bulletin, July i.j
THE WHITE LEAGUE.
The Crescent
City White
' Platform.
coming yea
mey; Vie
English House of
or Morris, an Irish
A curious sample of Irish
recently given in the Engl
Commons. One Major Morris,
Home Ruler,” having made some state
ment, the accuracy of which was ques
tioned, exclaimed If the honorable
gentlemen chooses to challenge me, we
can retire. Here there were roars of
laughter, upon which the speaker added:
“I mean if ho challenges my accuracy,
we can retire to tli6 library and I (rill
show him ho is
W. D. Reynolds, J. R. Ricks^ jno. James,
C. W. Grandy, Geo. W. Arp.
ASIATIC CHOLERA.
Louisville, July 11.—Patrick Foley
died here yesterday of wliat the attendant
physicians say was Asiatic cholera, after
eight hours’ sicknuss. He died in the
same house in which the epidemic of 1851
broke out.
DROWNED.
New York, July 11.—Two brothers
named William and Peter Kerns, aged 6
and 9 years respectively, were drowned
while bathing in a pond in Brooklyn yes-
terday.
[New Orleans Bulletin, TthJ
NEGROES IN THE PUBLIC SCHOOLS
A Black Boy Murders on Innocent White
Scholar—Civil Riffbts with a Venseance.
On the 13th of May last a difficulty oc
curred between two school boys attending ercised here or
the Robertson public school, corner of
Robertson and Bienville streets, which,
at the time, was simply looked upon .by
parties interested as one of those little
misunderstandings which frequently oc
cur between boys. The sequel, however,
is a sad one in the extreme, resulting in
no less than death and murder.
It seems that on the day specified above,
a white boy named Leon Loustean, aged
nine years and half, at the hour of recrea
tion, 12 o’clock, shouldered his small can
containing his luncheon, and proceeded
with his customary precision to the spa
cious yard or play ground, there to leis
urely enjoy his midday repast. He was a
youth much liked by his schoolmates.
Of gentle disposition and regular hab
its he commanded the respect of all who
knew him. Almost as quickly as he had
settled himself on the ground he was ap
proached by one Joe Boxell, a one-legged
negro youth of thirteen summers. The
negro, in an insolent tone of voice, re
quested a portion of his luncheon. The
request was refused, however, the white
youth remarking that ho hardly had
sufficient to satisfy the cravings of na
ture. This so incensed Boxell that he
proceeded to administer, with one of his
crutches, severe blows about the face and
body of Loustean.
In an insensible condition the white
youth was picked up and conveyed home.
Since the 13th of May he has been laid
up in bed, and on Saturday last, the 4th
inst., he died from the effects of the ne
gro youth’s brutality.
A San Francisco painter attempted
suicide by fixing his putty knife in a wall
and then butting liis head against it.
His skull, however, proved to be too
thick to bo thus penetrated, and he was
taken into custody.
The very largest political
this year took place last night at
Hall, in response to the call of the Cres
cent City White. League.
The meeting was not only large but
dignified, at the same time enthusiastic.
Each one present seemed to recognize the
necessities of the hour, and there was
one resolve to meet them.
Col F. N. Ogden brought the League
to order and presided.
The Crescent City Democratic Club,
by, resolution, was invited to attend the
meeting of the League and participate in
its proceedings, and a committee of three
was appointed to make known the action
of the meeting.
The committee retired, and in a short
time returned with the Crescent City
Club. Their entrance was greeted with
cheers.
Captain Hodgson then read a resolu
tion, adopted by the Crescent City Qnb
before its adjournment sine die, tender
ing to the White League their parapher
nalia, Ac., used in the campaign of 1872.
The following platform was sumitted by
President Ogden for the approval of the
Club:
PLATFORM OF THE O. C. W. LEAGUE.
The Crescent City Democratic Club of
1868, having changed its name to that of
“Crescent City White League,” has
thought that an explanation was due alike
to its retired members and to the people
of New Orleans of the motives of a change
so seriously and so sadly suggestive. It
may be stated that the elements of per
sonal character and of general purpose in
the Club have undergone no change since
its origin.. Our members with but few
losses or accessions are the same as for
many years past, and we feel 'ourselves
animated as ever by the same earnest de
termination to strive in the task of prac
tical politics to establish and maintain
such government in the State and city as
shall guard the liberties of the citizen, his
business, and the accumulations of his
industry. Our fellow-citizens will permit
us to recall with a just pride our strenu
ous and persistent efforts in this behalf,
though they have again and again been
prostrated by the fatal intrusion of a high
hand whose violence was stronger than
our rights. All our struggles had been
hitherto conducted under the ancient ban
ner of Democracy, to which we shall ever
look for guidance in all national contests.
But we are now fast drifting to a conflict,
bounded by the limits of the State, and
which the men of Louisiana alone must
settle, if justice and fair play shall rule
and not Federal violence.
It is a conflict not involving a single
issue upon which an honest Republican
can possibly differ as such from an honest
Democrat; a conflict the decision of which
we would confidently and glady remit to
the votes of the very Radicals of New
England, nay, to any body of civilized
men in the world, for it is a conflict be
tween virtue and depravity, between en
lightenment and thick ignorance,
between civilization and -barbarism—a
barbarism artificially stimulated and held
up by the perverted authority of the most
civilized nation in the world. A civiliza
tion whose cry, not for help against
threatened destruction, but for mere fair
play in maintaining itself is answered
from Washington by insults and a blow.
In this dire emergency the national
Democracy is powerless to afford relief.
The national Republican party, absorbed
in its dream of future domination, and
quarreling over present schemes of fi
nance, has forgotten that there is such
an outlying province as Louisiana, which
it might rescue from perdition and dis
grace, for the sake of the good name of
the national commonwealth. Need we
draw a picture of our utter desolation ?
Need we point on the one hand to our de
vastated fields, our waning commerce,
our idle workshops, our decreasing popu-
latiou, our increasing taxes, our panper
multitudes, pensioners on alien charity,
and, on the other hand, to the orgies of
the miserable wretches forced upon us as
rulers by the horrible alliance between
negro ignorance and the cunning of
Washington bureaucracy, rulers grown
rich amidst general distress, and revelling
in the proceeds of taxes wrung from
gasping people,, rulers painfully main
tained by national bayonets in positions
reeking with dishonor and felony, and
from which there would need be but one
wild hour of unrestrained anger to hurl
them forever?
Need we repeat the old story of brutal
violence stalking at midnight in the drag
gled shrond of judicial authority, and
under the shadow of the Federal power,
enthroning an execrable oligarchy of the
most ignorant and profligate negroes,
leagued with the most dangerous class of
rapacious whites, the very scum of so
ciety ? America has rung with the echo
of these wrongs, and we have heard even
those who have made it a system to hate
ns, raise their voices in denunciation of
the wrong-doers, and yet not a hand has
been lifted to deliver us from their
pressions. With our hands on our
and appealing to God, we and the whole
white people of Louisiana can declare
that we are in no way responsible for the
intolerable evils of misgovernment under
which the State is perishing. From the
time that the right of suffrage was, as we
believed, and as we still believe, accorded
too hastily to a race in tbe infancy of
freedom, we firmly resolved that it was
our duty, and a wise expediency, to ac
cept the policy of the reconstruction laws
in their full scope. We endeavored at
once to address ourselves to the intelli
gence of the negro, to explain to him
that slavery having been forever abol
ished he, as a citizen, possessing all the
rights of white citizens, had
interests and the same duties as white
men. Our orators and our press plied
him with the obvious reasoning on these
subjects. We invited him to our meet
ings, we called him to our platforms, we
placed some of them on our tickets.
Election after election they tumed'a deaf
ear to us; treated all our advances with
distrust and suspicion; unhesitatingly
followed the leadership of men whom
the; knew to be unworthy and dishonest,
and with scarcely an exception invariably
voted .like a body of trained soldiers
obeying the word of command.
e still hoped that time and experience
would give them discretion in the exercise
of a precious right, which they never ex-
r elsewhere except as a gift
from our race. We thought that a right
which they owed to the white race would
not be persistently used by them to ac
complish the ruin of white men. In this
hope we have been most grievously dis
appointed. The negro has proved him
self as destitute of common
of common sense. Instead of” improving
in his capacity to make an intelligent and
"otic use of the ballot, we do not hes-
to affirm that he is to-day less quali
fied for the duties of self-government
than he was seven years ago. In the be
ginning we are willing to believe that he
was guided by a childish faith in the bad
men who arrogated to themselves the
control of his vote. But though he has
long since lost that faith; though the
barefaced rascalities of those men ore now
known to bim; though be denounces them
as liars and thieves, he still retains them
in positions of power and trust for the
avowed purpose of breaking down the in
dustry of the State, wasting it by exorbi
tant taxation, and finally driving its white
inhabitants to other States. Any one who
lias been to their meetings or overheard
their private conversations knows that
they dream of the gradual exodus of the
whites, which will leave Louisiana to
their exclusive control like another Hayti
The increasing spirit of caste, founded on
the most absurd inversion of the relations
of race, shows itself in every form.
Their incessant demands for offices from
the State, city and Federal Governments,
for which they are unfit, and to which
they have no title other than the color of
their skin; the development in their con
ventions of a spirit of proscription
against white Radicals and even against
honorable Republicans who fought in the
Northern armies for their liberation;
their increasing arrogance, which seems
to know no bounds; their increasing dis
honesty, which they regard
manly virtue; their contemptuous scorn
of all tho rights of the white man, which
they dare trespass upon. All these signs
warn ns that the calamity which we had
long apprehended is now imminent, and
that we must be prepared for all its conse
quences. Disregarding all minor ques
tions of principle or policy, and having
solely in view the maintenance of our
hereditary civilization and Christianity,
menaced by a stupid Africanization, we
appeal to the men of our race, of what
ever language or nationality, to unite
with ns against that supreme danger. A
league of the whites is the inevitable
result of that formidable, oath-bound and
blindly-obedient league of the blacks,
which, under the command of the most
cunning' and unscrupulous negroes of the
State, may at any moment plunge ns into
a war of races—a conflict in which
resolved that we and ours shall not be
the victims.
Indeed, it is with some hope that
timely and proclaimed union of the whites
as a race, and their efficient preparation
for any emergency, may arrest the threat
ened horrors of a social war and teach
the blacks to beware of. further insolence
and aggression, that we call upon the
men of our race to leave in abeyance all
lesser considerations, to forget all differ
ences of opinions and all prejudices of
the past, and with no object in -view but
the common good of both races, to unite
with us in .an earnest effort to re-establish
a white man’s government in the city
and the State. Were the negro willing to
listen to the voice of reason, we could
demonstrate, even to his understanding,
that the predominance of our race in gov
ernment is indispensable to his well
being. ' We could show him that in every
Southern State ruled by the whites his
rights to life, liberty, and the purest of
happiness are more firmly secured than
they are under the black domination in
Louisiana. We could show him that the
negro’s right to vote, to labor, to a secure
tenure of the profits of his industry, are
far better guaranteed by the white rulers
of Virginia than by black rulers of Lou
isiana; that in Georgia and in Texas
every jot and little of his legal and con
stitutional franchises—his Hfe, bis immu
nity from wrong and oppression of every
kind—are far better guarded than in
those States in which the race is in the
ascendancy.
We would show him that where the
white man rules, the negro is peaceful
and happy; that where the negro rules,
the negro is starved and oppressed; that
where our race bears sway, his race is
mentally, morally, and materially pro
gressing ; that where his race governs,
there is increasing ignorance, distress,
and brutaHty. But it is worse than idle
to reason with those people. They have
become maddened by the hatred and con
ceit of race, and it has become our duty
to save them and to save ourselves from
the fatal probabilities of their stupid ex
travagance and reckless vanity, by array
ing ourselves in the name of white civil
ization, resuming that just and legitimate
superiority in the administration of our
State affairs to which we are entitled by
superior responsibility, superior numbers,
and superior intelligence; and while we
declare it is our purpose and fixed deter
mination not to interfere in any manner
with the legal rights of the colored race,
or any other race, we are determined to
maintain our own legal rights by all the
means that may become necessary for
that purpose, and to preserve them at all
hazards.
The platform was adopted with enthu
siasm and unanimously. After which the
League completed its organization by the
adoption of .a constitution and by-laws,
and the election of permanent officers.
After which the meeting adjourned.
[St Louis Republican.]
Grant, Kemper, and the Third Term.
The Virginia Conservative press has
harrassed Gov. Kemper into writing a
letter on the subject of a third term, and
kindled matters which, we think, events
will prove had better been left unwritten.
The third-term suggestion presents a
strange and delicate question, which the
country hardly knows how to receive.
There is no precedent for a third term,
and there are two negative precedents
against it. The proposition, therefore,
is novel and somewhat bewildering; and
the fact that the first pubUc man who
comes forward to mmition and discuss it,
and declare himself conditionally in favor
of it, should be the ex-Confederate
Governor of a Southern State, may
have the very contrary effect to that
which Gov. Kemper intended. He ex
presses himself in bold, frank and well-
chosen words, and .he evidently thinks
that his: letter will strengthen the third
term chances of President Grant by in
ducing the Southern leaders to take the
same view of the subject that he takes.
But it might have occurred to Governor
Kemper that this is the best way in the
world to defeat the object he is striving
for; that to make the third term accepta
ble at the South is to make it offensive at
the North; that to attach the South to
the future fortunes of Grant is to array
the North against both, and thus pro
voke for his section another defeat.
President Grant’s strength is a very
unstable fact to count on. He seems
powerful at the present, beyond doubt,
because he stands alone in the field, and
there is no antagonist hardy enough to
confront him. But public opinion con
cerning Him is in that critical condition
in which it cannot be relied on. What
it is to-day is no indication of what it
may be two years, or even one year hence.
It had better be left to itself. In dne
time it will come to a decision on the
third term question, and from the con
fused signs that show themselves at
present, that decision is as likely to be
against it as for it. If the North shall
decide against Grant—and such a thing is
far from being impossible—it would be
unfortunate for the South that it de
cided for him. If the Southern lead
ers accept Grant for .a third term,
as Govenor Kemper does, with a
protest against the propriety of third-
terms in general, it will be as a
means of deliverance from a condition
which is regarded as worse, than any thing
that could result from a third term. But
if the enterprise should fail, the South
ern States would find that instead of de
livering themselves, they had only pro
voked further proscription. If the
Presidential contest of 1876 is to be be
tween President Grant, supported by the
train-bands of the Republican party, on
one side, and somebody else, supported
by a determined, aroused and compact
popular sentiment in the North, on the
other, it would be far better for the
Southern whites to be found on the latter
side than on the former—for they would
in that case be the sharers in an inevita
ble victory, and would have a right to
claim their reward.
The people of the South cannot, it is
true, avoid an intense interest in the next
Presidential election; hut tboir
position for the present, and up to-
time when the issue in it abail be thor
oughly defined; is one of attendant neu
trality. The third term dispute should
be left entirely to the North, or rather to
the Republican party. Whether the
party leaders will dare to declare against
the project, or whether the formal an
nouncement of the project would arouse
the whole party agamst it, and thus over
whelm it, are questions which it is impos
sible to determine in the present undevel
oped condition of Northern opinion. It
is a fact of some significance, however,
that while the third term sugges
tion seems to have made a rather
favorable impression in the South, it is
received with suspicions silence at the
North. That, in this crude and unde
termined condition, Gov. Kemper should
publicly declare in favor of it, must, in
any intelligent view of the subject, be re
garded as a mistake, If the third term is
not a mere chimera, but a maturely de
termined enterprise, there is no telling
HUNTING A “GROUND-HOG.’’
hotels anfl gcstnitranfcs.
The Milford correspondent of the Sun
sketches this adventure of George Taylor,
of the New York City Press Association,
and Ed. Cahill, of 17 Park Row, who
came to that place on Saturday last to fish
for trout. They were joined by Ed.
Quick and Bnb Wells, two professional
rod swingers. On Monday they started
for Dingman township to cast the fly.
On the way Taylor tried his twenty-five
dollar revolver on every chipmonk he
saw. Pretty soon Cahill shouted, “Blazes!
see that ground-hog! Let him have it,
Taylor!”
“He’s a beauty!” said Wells, and Quick
cried, “Sweet Christmas! bnt ain’t he j
fat?”
The animal was jogging along leisurely
across a field. Taylor acted upon Cahill’s
suggestion and got out of the wagon to
shoot it. In his hurry he forgot to pnt
down his fisb pole and carried it in his
hand. In bis other hand was bis revol
ver, ready cocked. He gave chase to the
ground hog. His companions sat watch
ing him from the wagon, waiting to see
him kill the animal It was a pretty one,
all over white and black spots. Taylor
was bound to have its hide. When he
got within shooting distance he stepped
in a big hole and down he went. His
fish pole ran about a foot in the ground
and broke off. His pistol went off and
blew the whole roof out of a brand new
straw hat he had purchased for the occa
sion.
He was soon on his feet again, but the
grohnd-hog had got clear to the other
side of the field, and sat by the side of a
hole, evidently waiting for the anxious
sportsman. Taylor caught up to within
a few feet of his game and raised up to
fire. The ground-hog suddenly turned
his white toil toward Taylor and disap
peared in his hole. Taylor that instant
knew he hadn’t brought enough Florida
water with him from the city. He knew
he hadn’t struck a mint patch, nor yet a
bed of roses. He felt that it wasn’t good
to be there, and he wanted to go home.
In short, it came across him that the
boys had played a skunk off on bim for
a ground hog. He returned to the wagon,
and, remarking that the
too quick for him, got in. Ed.
put his handkerchief to his nose. Ed.
Quick said be guessed he’d get out and
walk away. Bub Wells thought he would
too. Cahill said he promised to bring his
wife some elecampane root, and as that
was a good place to find it, he’d get out
and look for some. Taylor wouldn’t ride
alone, and made up his mind to walk with
the rest. Cahill couldn’t find any elecam-
root, and got back into the wagon.
Wells got tired and jumped in
again. Taylor then thought he would ride
for awhile. The boys began to think the
joke was as much on them as it was on
Taylor.
When they got to the creek Taylor ob
jected to going in the woods for fear he
might get lost. Cahill told him to keep
half a mile to the westward of them, and
they’d be sure to know where to find him
Taylor fished Spring Brook. The tront
wouldn’t bite. They come to the surface
and looked at his fly; bnt as soon as they
got their noses out of water they dove
down and rubbed them in the gravel
Taylor got disgusted, and went to find his
comrades. He came up to them near
mother Jagger’s, where they had stopped
for dinner. Cahill took Taylor aside and
said: “Say, Taylor, we want to get
something to eat here. You mustn’t go
in with us or you’ll kill the whole thing.
Weil eat first, then you come in. See ? “
Taylor was hungry, and had to submit.
Mother Jagger got the boys up a nice
dinner. They ate it • at their leisure.
Taylor sat on a log abant a hundred yards
from the house and whistled “Bury me
under the violets.” The boys finished
their meal and went out. They told
Taylor to go get his dinner. He entered
Mother Jagger’s kitchen and sat down to
the table. The old lady began to sniff,
and kicking the old hound that lay by the
stove, ejaculated:
“Git out, Ring! I’ll kill that infernal
critter yit. He’s allers huntin’ skunks! "
Ring “got out.” Mrs. Jagger poured
Taylor’s coffee. Then she sniffed again,
and looked under the table and on the
floor. Taylor fell to eating. » Mother
Jogger took down her horn spectacles
and put them on. She sniffed and looked
earnestly at Taylor. Then she squeezed
her nose together with her fingers and
said:
“Drat be, bister, ef it aid’t you! Just
help yers'elf; help yerself to eddythig you
!” And Mrs. Jagger sought the out
side of the house.
The party fished all day. They got back
to Milford about tea time. The piazza at
Dimmick’s was full of ladies. They all
rushed out to see the trout. One by one
they went back remarking. how balm-
laden the zephyrs were that evening.
Taylor’s wife said, “Oh, aren’t
beauties? But what makes them
so, George?”
George paid : “The creek in which they
were caught is strongly impregnated
with—ahem!—with hemlock, which gives
them a peculiar pungent flavor, but it is
destroyed by cooking. Cooking knocks
it.”
Strangers who visit Milford hereafter
may see a mound in the Dimmick hotel
garden. Beneath it is a suit of clothes.
It belonged to George Taylor.
jDetroit Free Press.
BRESUM’S
European House
156,158, 160 & 162
RRYAN STREET,
SAVANNAH, GA.
T HE Proprietor, having completed the ne
sary additions and improvements, can
offer to his enests all the comforts to be obtained
at other Hotels at less than
HALF THE EXPENSE
A RESTAIMT
ON THE
EUROPEAN PLAN
Has been added, where guests can
AT ALL HOURS
Order whatever can be obtained In tbe market.
what political modifications and shifting
of party lines—what desperate efforts for
victory and defeat, and wliat exhaustive
bids for Southern help, it may lead to.
It were better for the South to wait and
watch, and not to give its decision until
its decision can have the greatest possible
effect.
The Ohio Miners.—Columbus, O., July
8.—A force of sixty-five colored mpn and
twenty white guards left the Straitsville
mines to-day. The train was met at
Straitsville by a turbulent crowd of abont
one hundred and fifty striking miners,
with their wives and children. Private
Secretary Putnam made a speech to the
crowd and requested them to obey the
laws and disperse as they were on private
property. The crowd refused to disperse
until assured that a box of arms on the
train were not there by State authority and
should not be unloaded. "Thecrowd then
persed, bnt in no good humor. Mothers
held. chilHrftn in their nrmg, pointing out
the negroes to them as those who had
come to rob them of their bread, and,
after four telegrams from Secretary Put
nam, the Sheriff and posse of the county
have promised to go to Straitsville to
morrow. A special force has been sworn
in by the authorities to preserve order.
Dispatches received here to-night state
that this afternoon some of the strikers
got drunk, and were firing pistols in the
vicinity of the colored men’s quarters.
Radicalism Encourages All the Vices.
A Washington dispatch says : A negro
who had been guilty of three successive
attempts at rape upon a poor but entirely
respectable white woman, was appre
hended and brought before the same ju
dicial luminary of the District who is to
issue bis warrant to arrest the editor of
the New York Sun, who subjected him to
the nominal punishment of three months’
imprisonment. This miM treatment ~hn«
already had its effect here upon other
negroes. A young lady of
beanty, connected with the best families
of Maryland and the District, was seized
the other day by a negro ruffian near the
city and barely escaped being outraged
by the timely arrival of other persons.
Gerritt Smith mildly proposes to abol
ish West Point in order to secure justice
to colored Cadet Smith: To say nothing
of the violent absurdity of this latest
most radical radicalisms of Gerritt, we
would have thought that he might have
remembered better the Irish woman’s in
structions to the nurse: “Throw out the
waiter but hould on to the babbie.”
's case, of course the fondling,
tub, water and all must go through the
window, else what wonld he do with the
colored member of the house of Smith?—
Nashville Banner.
A Polecat having three full-sized bodies
and heads, but with only eight legs, was
killed last week near Franksville, Wis.
The eats were connected by a fleshy
ligature, about four inches long, three
inches wide and two inches thick. The
middle cat had no legs at all and was
entirely supported by the outside cats:
The centre cat was a male and the out
side csts females.
* _• ; /"T*. "*
ROOMS, WITH BOARD,
$1 50 PER DAY.
Determined to be
Outdone by None,
All I ask is a TRIAL, confident that complete
satisfaction will be given.
JOHN BRESNAN,
PROPRIETOR.
feb!9-t£
iatotittfl.
PAINTING!
Murphy & Clark,
98 Bryan street, between Drayton and
Abercom Streets,
SAVANNAH, GA.
HOUSE, SHIP, STEAMBOAT, SIHIt 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 Gcorg_a,
South Carolina and Florida, 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.
rand other ^ABNISHESi_
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, BRO:
GREASE.
Machinery OILS, and
STEP LADDERS.
Skylight and Bonders*
Skylight and Builders’LADDERS.
A select stock of GOLD and PLAIN PAPER
HANGINGS.
desiring work and material in our line
veil to give us a call before going eise-
would do well t
PLAIN AND ORNAMENTAL
SIGN WORK
BUILDERS LADDERS, SKYLIGHT LAD
DERS, STEP-LADDERS, the lightest and Strong-
Sold only by
ap25-tf
MURPHY & CLARK.
Petition for Incorporation.
S TATE OF GEORGIA—Chatham COuhtt.—
To the Superior Court of Chatham County:
The petition of E. C. Anderson, C. A. Ni
Wm. M. Wadiey, E. Lovell, F. Blair, Jos. K
Brown, Geo. W. Adair, Alfred Austell, A. XL Col-
uitt. J. H. M. Clinch, and their associates, all of
lie State of Georgia, respectfully sheweth, that
they desire to be incorporated under the name
and style of the “Georgia Land and Immigration
“ with its principal place of business in
The object of said corporation is to
_nd assist immigration into the State
Georgia from foreign countries and nther
States, and to promote settlements on
Georgia; with the right to purchase, 1
s v s,K^rs§'te. or -* erwise ■“
& Co.,
NO. 11 REYNOLDS’ SQUARE,
(Fomeriy
SAVAXXAH, GA.
ade on all accessible points, and
r remitted for In New York Exchange at
Merchants National Bank
SAVANNAH.
S TERLING BILLS on the City 1
demand or sight, good in aD pi
for sale in sums of £5 and u
S. OLIN
jun25-Th&M4w
iotircs.
Bottles—Special Notice.
J DO hereby caution all persons against buying,
selling, giving away, or in any manner de
priving me of bottles bearing my name. Parties
receiving those bottles with soda water, etc., do
so only oc conditions that they return them when
empty. Such parties have no right to sell or give
away. Junk Dealers and others are can-
' * ' * these bottles
out inducements to children or negroes to bring
doing they em
them to them, as by so _ . „
theft, and are amenable as receivers of stolen
goods, knowing the same to be stolen.
Parties haring stray bottles about taeir premises
will be remunerated for their trouble if they will
notify me or return them to the Manufactory, 110
“roughtoh street. JOHN RYAN,
Sole Proprietor Excelsior Bottling Works.
Established 1803.
WiU Not Close.
THE
SCREYEN HOUSE
Will remain open this summer, and solicits the
patronage of those visiting Savannah- Families
and others wishing to board permanently during
— make advantr *
It. BRADI
mayl9-tf
& SON,
Proprietors.
Commi&sioB ^rrcltants.
JOHN W. ANDERSON’S SONS
COTTON FACTORS
AND GENERAL
Commission Merchants,
i
Gullett’s Improved Saw Gin,
AND
Ilcncry’s Improved McCarthy Gin,
Cor. Bryan and Drayton 8ta»
SAYANNAH, GA.
l Consignments.
octld&wly
JOS. HULL. I B. H. BURKETT. | VI.' H. BURKETT.
JOS. HULL & CO.,
(Successors to Cohen & Hull)
FACTORS AND COMMISSION
MERCHANTS,
CG Bay Street, Savannah, Ga.
jmiS4-tf
gfoticts.
ASSIGNEE’S
Notice of Appointment.
TN the District Court of the United States for
JL the Southern District of Georgia—In Bank
ruptcy. In the matter of William Davis, Bankrupt.
To whom it may concern: The undersigned,
John G. S. Patterson, of Blackshear,. Pierce
county, Ga- hereby gives notice of his appoint
ment as assignee of. the estate of William Davis,
of Blacksheor, in the county of Pierce, in said
District, and who was, to wit, on the 7th day of
A. D. 1874, adjudged bankrupt upon the
of himself, by Isaac Beckett,-Esquire,
• in Bankruptcy.
at Blackshear, the 25th day of June, A. D.
JOHN G. S. PATTERSON,
1874.
jon29-1awM3
Assignee.
Assignees’ Notice of Appoint
ment.
F the District Court of the United States for
the Southern District of Georgia, in Bank
ruptcy.—In*the matter of A. M. Happoldt, Bank-
ra ^o whom it may concern:—The undersigned
hereby gives notice of his appointment as As
signee of the Estate of A. M. Happoldt. of Sa
vannah, in the County of Chatham, in said Dis
trict, and who was. to wit, on the 4th day of
ed Bankrupt, upon the
■ iaac Beckett, Esq.,
trict,
May, A. D. 1874,
petition of hims
teds ter in
Dated at
1874.
s 22d day of June, A. D.
J. LAWTON WHATLEY,
HARPER’S PATENT FLY TRAP.
an.
Hi . _ _
a® a «
At Wholesale and Retail at the Crockery Store
of BOLSHAW & SILVA.
Sttater (SwUvs, &t.
for twenty years, with the privilege of renewing
the same at the end of that time. Said corpora
tion to be allowed to organize and exercise ail the
powers conferred upon it by its charter, and such
as are necessary to effect the objects contempla
ted. whenever there shall be a bona fide cash sub
scription to Its stock of fifty thousand dollars
and ten per cent, of the same shall have been paid
in. The stockholders shall have the right to
make such rales and by-laws as will tend to pro
mote the objects contemplated, and to secure the
good government of the company, and to elect
annually a President and such a Board of Direc
tors, not exceeding nine in number, as may be
fixed by the by-laws. And your petitioners will
verpray, etc.
JACKSON, LAWTON dp BASINGER,
Attorneys for Petitioners.
A true extract from the minutes. -
Wm. J. Clements, Clerk S. C. C. C.
jun24-W4w
Petition for Incorporation.
< TATE OF GEORGIA,
S To the Superior Court of
The petition of the und
they and their successors
Effinghi
of safd <
am County.-
county:
1 sheweth that
to be incorpo
rated under the name and style of the EVAN
GELICAL LUTHERAN SYNOD OF GEORGIA
and adjacent States. The object of your petition
ers is to protect said Synod from intrusion and
interruption, for which purpose your petitioners
prav th*; passim? of an order conferring upon
and their successors the privileges
fonrth Section of an Act of eighteen hundred
forty-three, entitled an Act to point out the
jner of creating certain corporations, and to
define their rights and privileges. This May 12th,
1874.
BENJAMIN GBOVENSTINE,
JOHN D. GROOVER,
GEORGE N. NICHOLS,
DR. J. P. TAYLOR,
GEORGE ADDY.
my30-Flm
Seasonable Goods.
Water Coolers,
A large lot, very low;
Ice Cream Freezers,
White Mountain, Five Minute, and other kinds;
Ice Chests,
Very low, to dose out Stock;
Hip and Sponge Bath Tubs;
Feather Dusters;
Picnic Baskets;
Butter Clmrns.
Call and examine my'large Stock of
House Furnishing Goods.
COMM AC It HOPKINS,
ap23-tf No. 1
MAGAZINES
L ESLIE’S Lady Magazine for July,
Godey’s Lady’s Book
Peterson’s Lady’s Book
Demorest’s Monthly ** “
Young Ladies’ Journal “
Le Bon Ton “ “
Popular Science Monthly
Southern Magazine
. Batterick's Metropolitan
The Eclectic Magazine
The Galaxy
Harper’s Monthly
“ ...so
iker for June, 1S74...75
Catholic World
and
London
of the
of price and 4 cents for postage.
yon SALE AT
E STILL’S
NEWS DEPOT,
Comer of Bull st. and Bay st. lane.
juu25-tf
MB