Newspaper Page Text
....*10 00
•in—;; 600
pXitelds 2 OO
ra AUVANCE -
stopped at the expira-
isl P 1 ! 10 • , , for without farther notice.
l^S^o'--' hedateSOnthCir
rsH^ „.„ hin!r the paper famished for any
r.*°*
wishing the
than one ye 31
will have their order*
remitting the amount
«tt® aft V° t,r '
^rl^on discontinued unless by
left at the office.
To Advertisers.
vBE is ten measured lines of Nonpareil
A ... \jjW5.
[ tbe* 0 ®^ no per square; each eubse-
jrwstinee. ' j^raxl every day), 15 cent*
jentia* 311 ® 1
„ mserted txery other day, tvriee a
^ wft charged $1 00 per square for
rhit^^TJjnnje with contract advertisers.
will have a favorable place
Aiitcrc- • })Ul 1)0 promise of continuous
articular place'can be given, as
UbSa?® , .—■**--
iser? rav^
r .it have cqnal opportunities.
Thf »I«rninc
circlanoH
!•
>ewfi has the largest city
of any paper pub-
AJBirs in Georffla.
jjnhert A. Alston, of the Atlanta
r ar has announced himself a candi-
' f 0 r Congress, subject to the action
f tie nominating convention. If CoL
receives the nomination he will
jston
rf
social equality
Freeman out of
f0 ttou factories of Columbus run
niO cotton spindles and 2,200 woolen
’(alios, flI11 l consume about 8,000 bales
cotton annually.
iog usta is holding her nose and brag-
orer an onion that weighs two
»,uids and two ounces.
Joe brown is Fresident and Sharp and
|nic)r Ilulburt Superintendent of the
nlj coal mine opened and operated in
eorgia. The Company own seven
idosand acres of coal land.
It was reported in the newspapers re-
sni ]y that one Win. J. White made a
equality speech at Greensboro,
’his White emphatically denies,
griffin is still feeling around for a cot-
iu factory.
llr. George II. Kingland, one of the
a „ st printers in the State, and for many
ars foreman of the Milledgevillc Re
tsler, is dead.
A tame bear at large in Americus on
tndnv afternoon caused the thermometer
rise several degrees.
jlr. I,. Carrington was fifty years old on
y 7th. and on that occasion his friends
i Milledgevillc gave him a sort of coun
ty banquet Carrington is good enough
have a banquet
tendered him every
ay in the year.
hut we should never have
J. H. ESTILL, PROPRIETOR.
SAVANNAH, THURSDAY, JULY 16, 1874.
ESTABLISHED 1850.
holes may be found to the Treasury when
a willin’ Bar kiss is on the inside. We
submit the report in that silence which
its enormity renders eloquent:
EXPENDITURES EXECUTIVE DEPARTMENT.*
Items. Smith.!
Incidental expenses $ 1,050 00
Expiessage 482 38
Telegraphing 553 50
Postage 1,850 41
Stationery 1,889 91
Travelg expenses of Agfa 1,076 30
$ 30,472
10,095 38
2.347 46
6,303 99
4,589 20
8^78 52
$ 67,185 42
300,350 03
_ $ 6,902 59
Rewards offered if all
paid 12,950 00
$ 19,852 69 $857,635 45
nf both ndTniTii«trflKrm«
alike. On both, postage and ‘stationery
furnished all the offices, except the State Treasur
er’s, is partly included.
t Prom Jan. 12,1872, to Jan. 1, 1874, except re
wards, to July 14,1874. [Our reporter has only
examined so fur.]
t Prom July 4, 1868, to Jan. 12*1874.
BY TELEGRAPH
—TO—
THE MORNING NEWS.
Noon Telegrams.
THE GREAT CHICAGO FIRE
A Partial Estimate of the Losses.
THE FLAMES UNDER
CONTROL.
COMPLETE
Bismarck and His Would-Be Assassin.
STIRKINti DP TJHE BONAPARTISTS
IN FRANCE.
handing of the New Atlantic Cable.
^peeled that he is fifty years old.
Col. Sum Bailey, of Griilln, was thrown
om Iris iiorw the other day and seri-
dsly bruised.
A brace of nice young Atlanta men had
ficlit over a beer-laden Cyprian the
rthcr '-lay.
A stalwart Atlanta negro caught a Fed-
■al soldier in his house the other day
niler very suspicious circumstances. The
,Idler ran, and the negro pursued him,
rins a pistol as lie went. Coming up
ritli the soldier the negro shot him
(nigh the head. The wounded man is
lying at the point of death, and the negro
in jail.
man named Blackburn, hviug near
me, attempted to murder a Mr. Win-
y the other day with a billet of wood.
Columbus Enquirer: A' merchant of
ifambns. who has just visited the
tewart county plantation of CoL Wm.
Shepherd, reports there are 1,250
s of laud under cultivation—750 in
;tcn and 500 in corn. In one patch of
acrestke cotton is neek high, and
takes a ladder to reach to the top of
com. The crop is clear of grass,
, altogether, is in splendid condition,
i success is owing in a great part to
work. Jlr. Helms, his overseer, is
netted to be one of the best managers
the country. The corn is safe, and
;tke caterpillar, the cotton will be
the best of the season.
Darien Gazette: On Thursday night
i ball was given by the colored peo-
of this city at Alike Mahoney’s bar-
Charles Grant and Peter Solo-
,' colored, were present, and
b Gta "'l accused Peter Solomon of
eg kin. 'a "UJW. and told him he
Msec him ab>‘ the ^ a ‘
hall ended x oter Solom° n start-
tome in company w.' * col ° re , d
' mi and a colored man, was °”
"1 by the said Grant; an<ty
a point near the old v. ^
Grant asked for satisfaction, sa_,
Solomon had called him a puppy,
irnon denied the charge and started
* Weapon lie was struck by Grant.
0E °n returned the blow, and attempt-
,.^ bpt was prevented by Grant,
Nio drew his knife aud began the work
if murder. Solomon at that time drew
5 iho, and inflicted several wounds
his adversary, which proved fatal,
as we go to press, is lying dead
the old Court House, where, it is
ne was killed in the rencontre. The
ijsaan attending Peter Solomon, so
understand, says he cannot live.
*2} correspondence Augusta Chron-
Hie granger organization is more
J ^‘reading over the counties of
i-and Sou them Georgia than any-
» over knew. It even* now works
Ruaifies almost every hill and in al-
every dale. They are indeed a har-
, ° us brotherhood, and if anything
3 J 3 yet occurred to mar the harmony
^tyi have not heard of it. I
HfiGtKK. ^ forever move on
tipfii not make some po-
i-j tejiet a test of membership.
elect to so far forget the
R2 ti * hlch H formed and drag
-o ,wT cess I )001 of politics, it will
idlLV^y «» ~se. It
. vo , nf ^. t>oen the chief means of
Ljjtj. ’ n - 1zlD ^ the whole system of
’ ?- 1 m Georgia and many years’
Ynhrw- before it. The matter
t to *h' °f religion, should he
ml*. 6 ^ nsci ouce.s of each and every
j, *» ^ery once in a while you see
iw that mau suggested as the
Suppose you
.J, the "Mason’s candidate,” the
asts candidate,” the “Catholic’s
g ’ or any other organization
P ?! itieal purely, it
- “reflection upon the body. The
ssvri H ? sba udry should take pre-
s r^lirj • Care steer clear of all this.
PP B OBfiti| C * anS i W ^ ^eir level best to
^^fortem rder_make “
A re Porter of this
j rL'.i 011 some figures yester-
Sanj, ? ® h °wed up in sharp light the
i Sb* mf:r<jn , ce ' J< -t'veen the expenses
... uuilor the administration of
jC compared with Gov, Smith’s
“mount on which Gov.
scoju.1 • , Executive machinery
fSrgy how terribly reckles
: 0IiC ‘j’' but to the figures. We
lr “War^ epa ?] t 'll en , t ~ t5lat of Pur 30 ” 8
’ - Bullock offered as rewards
»u, i eruninale or criminals at
“k-ris a “ m §301,300; all of
- e I«id fJII , °, ut sure about $28,000.
°i less u, nr “uvertising these rewards
Ie “tr.fi rf , r ^'‘ f100,000, Bjg o#ered
r °1 ill nr^ ar< 5? of §“,000 each, and
'ofs? 6 °5 Crsd ei 8 b ty-five
"»®Oo. nnch, and nmeteen of
v - Conley offered rewards
Gk)v. Smith has
m _ n §10,000. On the pardon
1 fronwi 11 111 ^ €rcs tt n S facts may be
ilg r, the records: Pardoning of
* m ’ Gov -Bnger,
46 ** ^ ; Gov * Conley, 5C;
" Persons only 20
““““nient for r? 1 eonnnutations to
DtUei r, llf e; 5 respites; 2 fines
l* Para 0 ^J daced - luBullook’s
^^'“iowho^ nt
THE GREAT CONFLAGRATION.
Chicago, July 15, 2:30 a. m. — The
limits of the fire are as follows: On Clark
street, No. 535, which is about Twelfth
street on the south, and abont Polk street
on the north. On Dearborn street the
southern limit is near Twelfth street, and
the Northern limit on Polk street. On
Wabash avenue, Harmon Court forms the
southern boundary, the northern limit
being between Jackson and Van JBnren
streets. On State street the southern
limit is Harmon Court, the line extending
on the north nearly to Jackson street.
Third and Fourth avenues are burned
nearly through the whole length. The fire
burned a number of houses on Michigan
avenue, but has not damaged that street to
any great extent. Some twenty blocks are
burned. The loss is variously estimated,
but cannot be given with accuracy. It
will not be less than four millions
and probably will not be over six millions.
This is covered by abont two-fifths in
surance, which is divided among numer
ous companies. Since the great fire, the
companies have been very careful not to
take large risks in one locality. Tne fol
lowing are the largest losses: The Jewish
Synagogue, $30,000; Friend’s Chapel,
$15,000; the Adelphi Theatre, $75,000;
St. James Hotel and furniture, $150,000;
the Post Office, $50,000; the First Bap
tist Church, $100,000; the Church of the
Messiah. $25,000; Olivet Baptist Church,
(colored,) $40,000.
A number of serious casuultiesjare re
ported and several persons were doubt
less lost in the flames. The fire is now
completely under control, and no further
anxiety is felt for the safety of property
on the north side of the city.
bismaeck’s assassin.
London, July 15, 5:30 a. m.—A Times
special from Berlin says that Kuhlmann,
who attempted Bismarck’s life, is con.
sidered a mere took He confesses that
he was acting in concert with others.
Hanthaler. the priest arrested for connec
tion with the plot, belongs to the village
of Walchsee, in the Austrian TyroL He
checked Bismarck’s horses by stepping in
front at the critical moment.
The Berlin press declare that the at
tempted assassination proves the neces
sity of repressing ultramontane teach
ings.
Paris, July 14.—Some Paris journals
affect to consider the attempt on Bis
marck’s life a plot concocted by the Ger
man police.
Kissengen, July 14.—It has been as
certnined that Kuhlmann was in Berlin
for a fortnight at Whitsuntide, for the
purpose of assassinating Prince Bismarck.
AFFAIRS IN FRANCE.
Paris, July 14.—The Assembly to-day
rejected the proposal which was support
ed by Magne, Minister of Finance, to in-
-sase the salt tax. The majority against
c ‘ '^vemment was 106. Rouher at.
the g. speak during the debate, bnt
tempted t. jjy Ieft
was hooted -qjgathw into the doings
A further mvee. Propaganda, ro
of the Bonapartist - , jj; JJatejens,
suited in compromising --w jo'feel
The Imperialists are begirn. --uneBsee,
uneasy as the investigation pre^ -om-
The Minister of Justice has not yet«.
mcnced legal proceedings against the im
plicated parties, expecting additional dis
coveries.
The Resignation of Magne, after to
day’s vote, is considered certain.
a forgery.
London, July 15, 5:30 a. m.—A Naas
special dispatch from Vienna explains
that the police circular describing the
person suspected of a design against the
life of Emperor Francis Joseph, was a
forgery, the author of which has been
arrested.
THE NEW CABLE.
Portsmouth, July 15.—The shore end
of the telegraph cable was successfully
landed from the steamer Ambassador at
Bye Beach at three o’clock this morning.
THE ATLANTIC CABLE.
London, July 15.—The Atlantic cable
hud in 18C6 was successfully repaired yes
terday afternoon, and is now in perfect
working order.
The Effect of Boss Shepherd’s KuLe.
—The $1,300,000 appropriated to settle
District claims will not begin to cover
tha sums claimed. Interest will be paid
on the recognized bonds and the labor,
bnt after these are all paid contractors,
agents, producers, and others will make
large demands, and at least very many of
these claims are founded upon equity.-
The Commission is already besieged for
payment of what is dne, and scores ore
arriving daily to get pay for stone, freight
and other work and material which have
gone to make up the $16,000,000 which
Boss Shepherd contrived to spend in about
A Democratic Senate.
The next House of Representatives is
conceded to the Democrats. So complete
ly have the patrons of the Administration
abandoned all pretensions to the control
of the popular body after the 4th of March
next that Butler did not hesitate to speak
of it openly in his last speech. A Demo-'
cralic House of Representatives is the
logical sequ ence of the great political
revolution that is sweeping over the land.
But the Senate responds more slowly to
the changes in the political atmosphere.
Its members being chosen for terms three
times as long as those of the Representa
tives, will often keep it in opposition to
the popular will three and four years after
that will has been expressed at the polls.
The Republicans were dominant in most
of the States up to the time of the re-elec
tion of General Grant in 1872; the South
ern States particularly, by means of re
construction laws, by disfranchisement of
political opponents, and by the use of
Gatling gnus and the bayonet being kept
under the control of the Administration.
All of these States having Republican
Legislatures, elected Republican Senators
for terms in many cases extending beyond
the present time. It is for this reason
that the country generally is under the
impression that the Senate is in the hands
of the Republicans for several years to
come, and that no matter how great the
changes may be in popular sentiment it
is useless at present to expect anything
better.
That this impression is erroneous a
critical examination of the present com
position of the Senate will readily show.
Not only is it possible that the Republi
can majority, large as it is, can be over
thrown, but it is even probable that there
will be an opposition majority in that
body after the 4th of March next. At
any rate the chances are so favorable that
the Democracy need but make well di
rected exertions to secure the result.
The Senate is composed of 74 members.
Of these the terms of 26 expire on the
4th of March next. The terms of the
other 48 have two or four years longer to
rnm The following is a list of the Sena
tors holding over, politically classified:
Opposition.
Bogy,
Coop
Goldthwaite,
Gordon.
Hamilton. Texas,
Johustou,
Kelly,
McCreery,«
Merrimou,
Norwood,
Saulsbury,
Republicans.
Alcorn.
Allison,
AntBony,
Bontwell,
Cameron,
Clayton,
Colliding,
Conover,
Crogin,
Dorsey,
Ferry, Connecticut,
Feiry, Michigan,
Frelinghnysen,
Hitchcock,
Howe,
Ingalls,
Jones,
Logan,
Mitchell,
Morrill, Maine,
Morrill, Vermont,
Morton,
Oglesby,
Patterson,
Sargeant,
Sherman,
Spencer,
Wadleigh,
, West,
I Windom,
I Wright.—31.
There is one vacancy among the hold
over Senators—the seat belonging to Lou
isiana, for which General McMillan and
Pinchback were the contestants. The
Senate during the late session declared
that neither of the contestants was en
titled to it, therefore the Legislature to
be chosen at the election next November
will fill the vacancy.
The whole number of Senators being
74, it will be necessary for the opposition
to have 38 in order to control the Senate.
The opposition start with 15. and the fol
lowing 6 opposition Senators, whose
terms are to begin with March 4, 1875,
have already been chosen:
California Newton Booth.
Connecticut William W. Eaton.
Kansas James E. Harvey.
Maryland..,, W. Pinkney Whyte.
Ohio Allen G. Thurman.
Virginia... Robert S. Withers.
Messrs. Booth and Harvey, though not
Democrats, were elected as anti-Republi
cans by combinations between Democrats
and Independents.
The Legislatures of the following five
States will also elect Senators, whose term
will begin March 4, 1875, and these Sen
ators are morally certain to be Democrats:
Delaware In place of Mr. Bayard.
Missouri In place of Mr. Schurz.
Tennessee In place of Mr. Brownlow.
Texas In place of Mr. Flanagan.
West Virginia.In place of Mr. Boreman.
The Opposition m the Senate after the
4th of March next are sure, therefore, of
26 Senators. To secure a majority of that
body they must gain twelve more from
the following States, whose Legislatures
gyp yet to elect:
Florida ,..In place of Mr. Gilbert.
Indiana.;........In place of Mr. Pratt.
Louisiana To fill vacancy.
Maine In place of Mr. Hamlin.
Massachusetts. In place of Mr. Washburn.
Michigan,,,,.. .In place of Mr. Chandler.
Minnesota In place of Mr. Ramsey.
Nevada...... ...In place of Mr. Stewart.
New Jersey In place of Mr. Stockton.
New York.......In place of Mr. Fenton.
Pennsylvania.. .In place of Mr. Scott.
Yermont...In place af Mr. Edmunds.
Wisconsin. In place Pf Mr. Carpenter.
Mississippi and Rhode Island are not
’*4 is the last list, as the first State
incluu. Branch K. Brace, a
has alreauj $nd the second will
negro, to the &. wijes jts Legislature
elect a Republican
reassembles. • « ejection of
In the other States, if the -uidfi, the
the past year can be taken as a g. - tj, e
opposition stand as a good chance a»
Republicans, with one exception—Ver
mont. Under any circumstances, how-
the contest will be close, and the
majority on either side in the Senate nar
rowed down to a very few votes. In the
Senate at present the Republican majority
is twenty-five. Of this majority are three
who cannot be counted as thick-and-thin
Republicans, and who in a closely divided
Senate would be likely to vote often with
the opposition. These are Messrs. Al
corn, of Mississippi; Ferry, of Connecti
cut; and Robertson, of. South .Carolina.
Unless the Administration can keep these
Senators in the traces, it is pretty certain
to be in a minority in the Senate after
the 4th of next March.
It was probably in anticipation of tne
approaching closeness of parties in the
Senate that the hills to admit Colorado
and New Mexico as States were intro
duced by the Republicans in the present
Senate. Bnt help from these quarters is
uncertain, for Colorado was carried by
the Democrats in the legislative elections
last year, and there is a Democratic ma
jority in both branches of the present
Territorial Legislature.
Whatever the political complexion of
the Senate may be during the last two
years of President Grant’s term, it is op-
three one-half years. The District 03 anything in the future of politics
certificates have advanced from about ^ that a Democratic Senate will sup-
rx/M-f n. Democratic President from, the
thirty-eight »u<l forty cents to fifty-eight
and fifty-nine cents, and all these certifi
cates were given out for work done on
the. roads and avenues. A work that
should have lasted ten. years was put
through in one-third of the time and at
enormous cost, and the cases of suffering
on the part of those who hold certificates
of indebtedness and other evidences of
debt are not only large in number, put
involve cases of very great hardship and ,
distress. The Commissioners are im
plored to give these parties at least a
prompt hearing, and, as far as possible,
redress. _
A lively sensation has been created
among the bon ton of Washington in
consequence of the marriage^ of Presley
J. Jenkins, son of Rear Admiral Jenkina
of the navy, to one of the ballet girls of
the Theatre Comique, named Franke
Christie. Admiral Jenkins has been sent
for, and it is presumed that efforts will
he to unmarry young man who
is a minor.
A Maine rogue has "been selling kegs
supposed to hold ten .gallons of liquor
each. A pint of rum was sealed up in
side each of the kegs an d so placed that,
taking out a small coxik, the purchaser
could test the liquor, but while there
a pint of liquor .there wore nine
\ f water separated
port a Democratic President
4th of March, 1877. Of the fifteen Re
publican Senators whose terms expire at
that date six represent - States which are
already Democratic, and rax more States
which are sure to be carried by the Dem
ocrats at the forthcoming elections. The
revolution of the Senate, therefore—_
which to the minds of the majority of
people is an event of the near future.—
Rem York World.
Dwellings in Cities.—Inspired by the
coming centennial Philadelphians are
become quite figurative. Mr. Brewster,
in his oration on the Fourth, at the lay
ing of the comer stone of the new _city
Vi nil said there is no city in the world of
like deinensions, and * population with
Philadelphia. In the trifling matter of
dwelling-houses, for instance, it exceeds
New York by 60,000, Baltimore by 83,000.
Boston by 94,000, Cincinnati by 99,000,
and Chicago by 79,000. At the begin
ning of 1873 Philadelphia had 134.™
buUdings of all kinds, of which 124,302
wore dwellings.
Here is the pithiest sermon ever preach
ed : “Our ingress into life is nake< and
bare; our progress through life is trouble
and care ; our egress out of it we know not
where; but doing well here, we shall do.
well there ; I could not tell more by
Mr. and Mrs. Tilton.
A correspondent of a Northern paper
writes: Millions of our countrymen, says
the correspondent, have seen Theodore,
yet to gratify those of your readers who
have not. I may Observe that he is a 1*11,
well-built and large-boned man, with just
the least perception of a stoop, and phys
ically a success. His face is a study—a
luxury—the essence of intellect and intel
ligence. It is not large below the fore-,
head. Together they present a hand
some, pleasing, irresistible contour. I
do not wonder that feminine hearts swell
and break beneath his beaming counte
nance. His smile is as witching as a
woman’s, and his laugh hearty and sym
pathetic. What distinguishes him in
general appearance is a wealth of blonde
hair hanging in clustering profusion over
his shoulders. Now, he is not far from
forty years of age, and in the prime of
intellectual and physical vigor. I do not
know that I ever had a talk with
Tilton, “between the sherry and
champagne,” a la Watterson, bnt
I recollect s very entertaining
lunch we had together one morn
ing, when I was charmed with his
sparkling conversation between the
Scotch ale and the oysters. Tilton is a
a strictly temperate man, but not a teeto-
teller. Greeley had an abiding love for
his “boy Theodore,” as he often spoke of
him. When Greeley went to Boston, July
4, 1872, Tilton accompanied the party.
At midnight’s calm and holy hour on that
night, long after Greeley was in his state
room and asleep, the press demons pro
ceeded to explore the nether depths of
the ill-fated sound steamer Metis, in
search of the bar. Somewhat to our sur
prise we stumbled on Brother Tilton and
another gentleman, interviewing a bottle
of Scotch ale for a “night-cap.” He is
neither improved with or depressed with
out his occasional glass of ale. A shadow
seemed hovering over Tilton, notwith
standing his effervescing and grandly re
cuperative nature. When the campaign
closed disastrously, (he strongly sup
ported Greeley), Theodore Tilton was a
sorrowful man. Other afflictions than
political defeat weighed upon his heart
There was an impending doom. I did
not meet nim again for weeks.
......
On a chill December daylong after the
campaign was over and poor Greeley and
the wife of his bosom were laid away
tinder the sod in Greenwood, I had oc
casion to comply with a standing written
invitation to call and see Theodore Til
ton at his cottage home, 174 Livingston
street, just off Fulton avenue, Brooklyn.
I fonncFNc. 174|to be a neat but unpreten
tious wooden cottage, with an unusually
wide front, two stories high, and a sug
gesting comfort and a gcod degree of
elegance. My ring of the door-bell was
answered.by a female servant with ahide-
ous face. In view of all that had fallen
on my ear, involuntarily the wicked
thought came, somehow, coupling Mrs.
Tilton’s domestic diplomacy with that
repulsive countenance. Whether Theo
dore could find occasion to exercise equal
defensive powers as against his better
half, I did not know. Admitted to the
sitting room, adjoining the parlor and at
the rear of the hall, I found the hand
some hero of the greatest scandal of our
time slippered and gowned, and lazily
lounging on a • sofa before a cozy grate
fire. He accosted me cordially and famil
iarly, and smiling pointed to a chair near
him, saying: “Pardon my laziness, I
am fatigued by overwork and came home
early to lounge about in this free and
easy manner.”
Business soon dispatched, our conver
sation drifted to Greeley and his wife,
and concomitant matters. He gave a lu
dicrous description pf his first acquaint^
ance with Mrs. Greeley; how he went to
Chappaqua to fill a lecture engagement
made for another; how he pleased Mis.
Greeley so well that ever after until death
she was one of his warmest friends.
As Theodore Tilton lay stretched on his
sofa, I sat fronting his face. 'Lifting my
eyes above his grand, poetic head. I could
not avoid perceiving an exquisite portrait
on canvas, gracing the walL Again and
again my eyes fell upon it. Something
peculiarly charming, and fascinating, and
tender hung about it. Musingly I thought
the artist himself was a most imaginative
genius and consummate creator, or, if an
actual instead of fancy subject, his most
symmetrical head, intellect and poetry
predominating; a wealth of silken brown
hair, soft and soulful eyes of richest
hazel; a face of exquisite sweetness and
tenderness, and ripe with culture and
character; a mouth carved by the gods
and lips full; warm and suggesting ro
bustness of modest passion; a chin indi
cating a gentle firmness and abundant
will; a shapely neck and graceful should
ers, and a finely developed bust—all har
mony, all beauty, all the vigor and ten
derness of young life and fascination.
The witching eyes seemed to brighten
when looked into; a very smile so sweet
as to thrill me appeared upon that face
when I involuntarily fixed my gaze upon
it. Contemplating that portrait, so
strange a feeling came over me that I
heedlessly trespassed upon propriety; and
before I was aware of it I said to Mr.
Tilton:
“What a charming painting yon have
above your head.”
He turned and looked with a tender
smile. “Why,” said he, “that is a por
trait of Mrs. Tilton. Wait a moment. I
will call her. I desire that you shall
meet her.”
And Mr. Tilton briskly passed to an
adjoining room, whence, shortly thereaf
ter, he returned, bringing on his arm the
original pf the portrait on the walL
Mrs. Tjlton is of medium height, per-
'ectly, voluptuously developed, modest,
. -**y vivacious, with beautiful eyes,
and a ‘so", charming voice She is in
the prime oflifJ. enjoys goal health, (at
least looked as thou^ She did,) and her
manners are most winning. My visit to
Mr Tilton’s was not prolonged.
The world has learned to bearno malice
toward Mark Antony for his fall before
Cleopatra. Some time it may be equally
generous with Beecher's fall before lovely
Mrs. Tillon.
Bin McKenna, of Grafton, New York,
got up early the other morning. He was
nervons and ugly. He took his revolver
from a drawer, cleaned it carefully, and
loaded every chamber. He said he was
impressed that he should shoot somebody
before night. He didn’t know why he
felt so, exactly, but that was the way he
felt, although he had no idea whom he
was going to shoot. After breakfast he
sauntered around with a fierce scowl on
his face. He was moody and reserved,
bnt to a confidential friend he showed his
revolver, and said he had a strong pre
sentiment that he would shoot somebody
before night. The rmnor spread that
McKenna was bad that day, and social in
tercourse with him was circumspectly in
offensive. Many, times his hand wan
dered to his pistol pocket, and toyed with
the handle of the deadly weapon. These
movements caused uneasiness among
those who noticed them, and because they
remembered his impression that he would
shoot somebody before night. Finally
Bill McKenna went home, and began to
undress for bed. He took the revolver
from his pocket, sad said he was so glad
that he hadn’t shot anybody after alL He
pulled the hammer back to a full cock,
and was going to take out the cylinder to
clean it His band unwittingly touched
the trigger. Bang went a change, and up
went a bullet into his shoulder. After the
ball hod been extracted, McKenna said he
hn/l felt all day as though he was going
to shoot somebody.
The following from the police reports
of the St. Louis Dispatch is good enough
for any one: “John Long has developed
a very singular habit for standing near
the entrance to fine hotels and acting the
‘I board here’ with a tooth-pick. Bis
general appearance was not calculated to
adorn the front of the hotel or impress
strangers with a favorable opinion of the
same. He looked a little like attenuated
hunger and want in thjn clothes. An al
teration from the original plan which had
been made in one of his ears gave a singu
lar look to his head, which was not of a
very level cast. He tried very hard to
show his visible means, but failed, and
he was booked for a seat in the wagon.”
A REMEDY FOR SNAKE BITES.
A Physician’s Ordeal—Careful Experi
ments Upon Himself in Case of Snake
Bite—Iodine ns a Remedy.
The following is a copy of a private let
ter addressed by a Texas physician to a
Mr. E. H. Cushing, a citizen of Houston,
and formerly editor and proprietor of the
Telegraph of that city, by which paper
the letter has been made public. In re
producing it, the New Orleans Times says:
“The letter is from the veteran Dr. Ash-
bel Smith, one of the oldest and most dis
tinguished citizens of Texas, a thorough
physician and accomplished scholar and
gentleman, who has served Texas while a
Republic, and then as a State, in various
public and honorable offices, with talent
and distinction. Having had the pleasure
of knowing Dr. Smith intimately, we can
vouch for it that this letter was not writ
ten for publication, and that the whole
trying .ordeal—in which his life
hung suspended in the balance tor
hours—took place just as he des
cribes it. The (combination of the
cool courage of the old soldier—for such
he is—with the higher moral courage of
the veteran physician and clear-headed,
intelligent seeker- after scientific facts
beneficial to the profession, is so striking
ly shown in this letter that we give it en
tire. Dr. Smith’s discovery, from his
own personal experience, of the efficacy
of iodine in poison from a snake bite, will,
of course, be duly noted by physicians.”
The following is the letter:
Evergreen, Habbis County,)
June 24, 1874. j
E. H. Cushing, Esq'.:
My Dear Sib—I can’t walk, bnt with
help, have hobbled to the table. If I im
prove reasonably in hobbling by Friday
night, I shall be at my post, in your city,
on Saturday. My lameness would de
serve but the shortest mention but for
some facte connected with the cause,
which may, perhaps, be of interest to
others in similar circumstances.
Abont dark Saturday last, as I was
walking np the hill from the bay shore, I
felt a heavy scuffling about one of my
legs, and at the same instant the bites of
sharp teeth. Reaching the house, I saw
by the light three several little wounds,
with blood exuding from them on my
leg, three inches above the ankle. There
were two punctures to each wound, made
by the two fangs of the snake that had
bit me. Swelling had already com
menced—less than five minutes from the
biting. Still I determined to do nothing,
for awhile at least, in order to observe the
effects of the poison unmodified by treat
ment. The swelling increased rapidly,
and in fifteen minutes more the pain had
become excruciating, and I could not bear
any weight on the leg. I was obliged
now to lie down.
I now took, in a wine-glass of water, a
half teaspoonful of saturated tincture of
iodine. About fifteen minutes afterwards
I repeated the iodine—about twenty-
drops. A short time after, perhaps fifteen
or twenty minutes, a third dose of iodine
—fifteen drops—in twenty-five or thirty
minutes after, the fourth. The length
of these several invervals is conjectural.
I had the orifices of the wounds several
times touched with the tincture of iodine,
and the leg, which was now swollen from
the ankle to the knee, was painted with
iodine.
The pain was excruciating, but by 10:30
or 11 o’clock—two and a half or three
hours after the bite—had abated sensi
bly. About 1:30 in the morning I fell
asleep, and awoke at sunrise with com
plete stiffness and superficial soreness of
the limb on touch, now swollen to double
its former .size, but with no pain worth
mentioning.; Nor have I since had suf
fering further than complete disease of
the leg till this morning, and being
obliged to have jt at all times elevated.
The foot participated in the swelling, and
if the leg hung down it became (and in
deed still does) in a few minutes perfectly
livid.
The interest of the matter in question
lies in the use, the efficacy of iodine as a
remedy for venomous bites. Nothing
else than iodine was used; no spirits, no
hartshorn, not the least possible thing in
the world, internally or externally, except .
iodine and one small drink of water.
Former experience had given me con
fidence in iodine by its use with others.
I was determined to give it a fair showing
in my own case. Tin aided and unobstructed
by any other mediation. I have attached
the greater interest to this case because,
though one is seldom a safe judge inhisown
case, the present bite has been by long
odds the severest snake bite I ever knew.
If left to itself it would, in my opinion,
have been fatal in a very few hours.
That the snake was a vety large one 1
knew from his heavy ocufflmg about my
legs, and, I may odd, from the depth to
which I felt his fangs enter. My instan
taneous suspicion, from the weight and
severity of the biting, was that my as
sailant was a wildcat, or some such ani-
maL The excruciating pain felt subse
quently, as before mentioned, seemed to
me. like the ferocious cramps of the
muscles in malignant cholera, except that
they were not in any degree spasmodic.
There were other circumstances, symp
toms which I should detailwere I writing
to a physician, but they would only still
further bore you. To set forth truly the
efficacy of iodine must excuse my length.
I do not know what kind of snake it was,
but suspect it to have been a rattier
snake. Very truly yourq,
Asbbel Smith.
national vegetable, Mr. Justice Banyon
said, “Which would yon rather do, marry
the lady and take her mother to live with
you, or pay two hundred down ?” Au
gustus answered firmly, “I will pay two
hundred dollars.” Whereupon the worthy
and enlightened magistrate delivered the
following judgment; “Allow me to shake
hands with you. I envy your firmness.
There was a period in the life of this
court, Mr. Behrens, when it was in cir
cumstances somewhat similar to your
own. If it had had the moral courage
which you possess it would have saved
about twenty-five years of misery and un
happiness.
“The alternative was presented to this
court whether it would marry a young
lady and her mother, or whether it would
pay one hundred and twenty-five dollars
in gold. This court was poor at that
time. It was earning an unsatisfactory
living at the restaurant business. It
yielded. It took the young woman and
mother-in-law, and kept the one hundred
and twenty-five dollars. For a quarter
of a century this court regretted its hasty
action. It is glad to meet a man who
cherishes happiness more than he does
money. The order of the court is that
the defendant stand discharged, and that
the complainant, who has been. trying to
bring a man into slavery to a mother-in-
law, be fined ten dollars and costs.”
[Atlanta Herald of Tuesday.]
WAS IT KU-KLUX ?
A Little Rough Work Id the Wood*.
About three weeks ago a Mr. H. T.
Stanton, living near Covington, was
robbed of abont $10,000 in gold. The
circumstances were these:
He and his family had left the house-
and gone visiting. They remained away
about six hours, and' when they returned
found that the house had been robbed of
$10,000 in gold. There was very tittle
clue to the thief, and the loss of the
money was bemoaned as permanent.
Shortly afterwards, suspicion fell upon a
negro in the neighborhood, who was said
to be worthless, and who, it was said,
trip PASSED BY THE DESERTED HOUSE
about the time the robbery must have
been committed.
The suspicion grew stronger and
stronger, receiving slight points of con
firmation all the time. At length, Mr.
"W. T. Patrick, bailiff, had a warrant is
sued for this negro, and determined to
arrest him. He carried with him Messrs.
H. T. Stanton (the robbed, man), Elisha
Elliott, Isaac Stanton and George Brooks.
The party surrounded the negro’s house
and arrested, him. _
As they were proceeding through the
woods they were accosted and halted by
fifteen or twenty disguised men, who
BOSE LIKE PHANTOMS OUT OF THE GROUND.
These men demanded that the prisoner
be given to them. Mr. Patrick refused.
The demand was repeated and again re
fused. One of the disguised men then
caught hold of the negro and attempted
to arrest him out of Patrick’s grasp.
Patrick held on to him, and was assisted
by Elliott. The disguised men in a body
then laid hands on the darkey (who was
near about frightened to death) and made
off with him. Messrs. Patrick and Elliott
held on to their prisoner until they were
dragged some fifty yards, and Patrick’s
coat and shirt torn off in the scuff
They then yielded him to the attacking
crowd, who hurried him into a neighbor
ing thicket.
Patrick and his party were warned on
pain of death not to follow, and a guard
of disguised men were placed between
them and the thicket.
They heard
SCREAMS AND MOANS ISSUING FROM THE
THICKET,
and conjectured rightly that the suspect
ed thief was being terribly whipped.
After beating him almost to death, the
disguised band melted into the darkness,
and was seen no more.
This is the story as told ns by Mr. El
liott and Mr. Womack, the attorney of the
prisoners.
These men were then arrested at the
instance of Simon Hardeman, a negro in
the county, and arraigned before Com
missioner Smith for violation of the law;
as accessories to the whipping. There
was also omitted a Mr. W. C. Wnght,
who was arrested as being one of the
party who did the whipping. The evi
dence against him is that the negro
swears that he heard one of the disguised
party say, “Clem, that will do! Don’t
whip him any more!”
“Clem” being a nick-name by which
Mr. Wright is called, it is said he was the
man addressed.
THE BOND AND THE TRIAL.
These parties, after examination before
Judge Smith, were bound over in bonds
of $300 to appear to-day for trial Messrs.
Hillyer & Bro., and CoL Womack, of
Covington, represent the defense.
The trial will be quite interesting, and
will be called this morning at Commis
sioner Smith’s room.
gry CSoofls.
FOOD FOR CUSTOMERS
AND
Dead Poison to High Prices.
$30,000 WORTH
OF FIRST CLASS
DRY ROODS
PURCHASED AT THE
Late Anction Sales in New York.
&
A Court Which Knew Herself.
A fanny affair in a court of law lately
came off at Chicago. One Amelia Don-
nerschlog brought suit against Augustus
Behrens, who had promised to marry her,
but failed to keep his word. The lady
demanded only two hundred dollars in
damages; not an exorbitant price for her
disappointment in being obliged to re
tain so cumbrous a name as Donner-
schlog. The shit came to trial before
Mr. Justice Banyon, and Mr. Behrens,
not denying the principal facte alleged
against him, excused himself by saying
“.at Amelia insisted as a condition of the
marriage that her mother should keep
house for the young couple, and this
Augustas could pot consent to. “I told
her,” said he, “that I loved her deeply,
and was ready to marry her, bnt did not
wish to marry her mother also, who was
a woman of lordly and unpleasant habits,
and masted on feeding me too much on
cabbage, a vegetable I always disliked.”
After this frank avowal of his purpose
the
«mi his un-Teutonic distate for the The petition of' E. C. Anderson^ C. A. Nnttinc,
“ ~ Wm. M. Wadlcy, B. Lovell, F. Blair, Joe. £
WILL OPEN THE FOLLOWING
NEW GOODS
ON MONDAY.
1 An PIECES bcantilnl SASH HIBBONS, at
lUv 50, 60, 65, 75, and $1 per yard.
25 pieces very rich Black *Gros Grain SASH
RIBBON, at $1 per yard.
25 pieces rich Watered Black SASH RIBBON,
extia wide, at $1, $125, $l 50—good value for
double the amount.
500 pieces GROS GRAIN RIBBONS, all colors
and widths, at 15, 20, 25, and 30 cents—worth
doable.
ICO dozen Ladies’ Silk and Crape DECHENE
NECKTIES, at 50 cents—some of them have
cost heretofore as high as $9 per dozen.
500 SUN UMBRELLAS, large sizes, at 33>£ cents
less than manufacturing prices.
50 pieces JAPANESE POPLINS, at 20 cents per
yard, worth 30 to 35 cents.
30 pieces Lisle Thread DRESS GOODS, at 10
cents iter yard.
SO pieces WHITE LINEN, slightly damaged by
water, in lengths of 16 to 18 yards.
20 pieces PILLOW CASE LINEN, very heavy
and wide.
500 pieces HAMBURG EDGINGS and INSERT'
1NGS, at 12^, 15,2i>, and 25 cents per yard.
2C pieces Colored SHIRTING LINEN, figured
and stripes, at 35 cents per yard—worth 60
cents.
20 gross of Cashmere Boquet, Omnibus, Glyce
rine. Floating Bath TOILET SOAP, at manu
facturers’ prices.
10 dozen GENTS’PLAID NAINSOOK UNDER
VESTS, at 90 cents each.
20 dozen GAUZE UNDERVESTS, at 50 cents
and upwards.
20 dozen GENTS’ WHITE LINEN DRESS
SHIRTS* from $1.80 upwards.
50 dozen CORSETS, new styles and beautiful
goods, at 60, 65, $1, $1.25, $1.50, $2, and $2JS0.
julyl3-tf GRAY, O’BRIEN & CO.
fmwpflwiflon gaticcjs.
Petition for Incorpoi ation.
S TATE OF. GEORGIA—Chatham Courtt.—
To the Superior Court of Chatham County;
Geo. W.'Adair, Alfred Austell, A. H. Coi-
I. H. It. Clinch, and their ussodates, all of
the State of Georgia, respectfully sheweth, that
they desire to he incorporated under the name
and style of the “Georcia Land and Immigration
Company,” with its principal place of business in
Savannah. The object of said corporation is to
encourage and assist immigration into the State
of Georgia from foreign countries and other
States, and to promote settlements op lands in
Geoigia; with the right to onrehase, bold, im
prove, use, and convey, or otherwise dispose of,
real and personal estate. The ^capital stock of
the right of increasing it to any amount not ex
ceeding one million of dollars. ' Subscriptions to
stock to be made payable in cash, or lands at a
fair cash valuation, and the charter to continue
for twenty years, with the privilege of renewing
the same at the end of that time. Said corpora
tion to be allowed to organize and exercise all the
power* conferred upon I: by it* charter, andsnch
as are necessary to effect the objects contempla
ted, whenever there shall he a bona fide cash sub
scription to its stock of fifty thousand dollars,
and ten per cent, of the same shall have been paid
in. The stockholder* shall have the right to
make such rales and by-laws as win tend to pro
mote the objects contemplated, and to secure the
good government of this company, and to elect
annually a President and such a Board of Direc
tors, not exceeding nine in number, as may be
by the by-laws, And
.etc.
will
evor LAWTON & BASINGER,
Attorneys for Petitioners.
A true extract from the minntes.
Wx. J. CuncEXTS, Clerk S. C. C. C.
jon24-\V4w
m$ev §c*r.
A youthful wedding lately took place
at Gouldtown, Michigan, the groom
being thirteen and the bride twelve. A
wedding serenade was proposed by bis
fellow-citizens, but as the bridegroom
mentioned shooting and said nothing
about beer, the ceremony was omitted.
drifts and Restaurants.
BRESNAN’S
European House
156,158, 160 & 162
BRYAN STREET,
SAVANNAH, GA.
having completed the necee-
, . j and improvements, can now
offer to his guests all the comforts to be obtained
at other Hotels at less than
HALF THE EXPENSE!
Collection Office
E. C. Anderson, Jr., & Co.,
NO. 11 REYNOLDS’ SQUARE,
(Formerly Planters’ Bank,)
SAVANNAH, GA.
DEPOSITS received subject to Check at Sv
and Interest allowed by agreement.
Gold, Stocks, Bonds, and Foreign and Dome?
Collections made on all accessible points, and
promptly remitted for in New York Exchange al
current rates.
No commissions charged on Collections made in
the city.
Merchants’ Cash Boxes, and Other-Valuable**, re
ceived on special deposit (and deposited in the 1 \rge
Fire Proof Vaults of the Banking House) subject
to owners’orders, at any and all times during bank
ing hours.
Exchange on Atlanta and Augusta in sums to
suit purchasers.
Merchants National Bank
SAVASKAH.
S TERLING BELLS on the City 1
demand or sight, good in all pf
A RESTAURANT
ON THE
Bank, London,
_ demand or sight, good in all parte of Enrol-',
for in sums of ■£& and upwards, by this Bank.
S. OLtN TALLEY, Cashier.
jnn25-Th&M4w
®0unaiS^iou-Pfrcbunts.
B. H. AOTXBSON.
GEO. V. AKDEBbON.
EUROPEAN PLAN
Has been added, where guests can
AT ALL HOURS
Order whatever can be obtained in the market.
BOOMS, WITH BOARD,
$1 50 PER DAY.
Determined to be
Outdone by None,
All I ask is a TRIAL, confident that complete
satisfaction will be given.
JOHN BRESNAN,
PROPRIETOR.
feb!9-tf
Minting.
PAINTING!
Murphy & Clark,
98 Bryan street, between Drayton and
Abereom Streets,
SAVANNAH, GA.
HOUSE, SHIP, STEAMBOAT, SION AMD
Ornam’tal Painters,
GILDING,
GRAINING,
MARBLING,
GLAZING
AND
Paper Hanging.
We arc prepared to offer estimate* for every de
scription of Fainting in any part of Georgji.
South Carolina and Florida, ana guarantee satis
faction in the execution of onr work.
We keep always in store a select stock of the
following articles:
PURE ENGLISH B. B. LEAD.
ATLANTIC and all other brands of LEADS.
OILS, VARNISHES, FDTTY, BRUSHES.
Furniture, Demar and other VARNISHES pnt
np in quart, pint and half pint bottles, ready for
GROUND and ENAMELED GLASS.
STAINED and PLAIN of various colors.
Double and 'single thick French, English and
American GLASS.
GOLD LEAF, BRONZE, Glaziers’ DIAMONDS.
Machinery OILS, and Axle GREASE.
STEP LADDERS,
Skylight and Builders’ LADDERS.
A select stock of GOLD and PLAIN PAPER
HANGINGS.
Persons desiring work and material, in our line,
would do well to give ns a call before going else
where.
PLAIN AND ORNAMENTAL
SIGN WORK
Executed with neatness and dispatch.
BUILDERS LADDERS, SKYLIGHT LAD
DERS, STEP-LADDERS, the lightest and strong
est ever invented. Sold only by
apKMf
MURPHY & CLARK.
1 §006$.
New Church Music Book
FOR 1874—1875.
THE LEADER!
By H. li. I’alyzi: and L. O. Exzbsoy,
the most sncccsafnl Church Music Bookmakers
of the day, will be ready in August, and will con
tain the usual Singing School Coarse and a large
araonnt of new and choice music for Choirs, Con
ventions and Singing Classes. Specimen pages
now ready, and will be mailed, post-free, on ap
plication. Price, $1.38, or $12.00 per dozen.
The Emerson New Method
FOR REED ORGAKS,
By L. O. Emcreon and W. S. B.'Matthews.
$2.00. One of the newest and very best of the
New Methods.
GUIDE IN THE AST OF SINGING,
By Geo. L. Osgood.
$4.00. New and very superior book for Voice
Training.
Richtpr’s Manual off Harmony
Translated from the Eighth German Edition, by
J. C. D. Parker.
Price $2.00. Prepared expressly for lhe Leipaic
V and is a
Conservatory,
Grammar of c
OLIV
CHAf
july4-W,SAwtf
complete and reliable
CO., 1
H. DITSON & CO.,
711 Broadway, N. Y.
§or$e$.
FAST HORSES!!
Cincinnati Lager Beer,
TN Kegs, from C. Windisch, Mnlilhanser *
JL Ilro.V Brewery. In Bottles, from Shailer &
Gerke’s Brewery. The best Lager made.
Fur sale by the undersigned, Agent for Sa
vannah, at Wholesale and Retail.
HENRY SANDERS,
Cor. South Broad and Jefferson Streets.
Ubia-ly
I HAVE JUST RECEIVED A NUMBER OF
Fast Road Horses,
to which I would Invite the attention of those who
arc in want of good Teams.
J. JP- FOX,
Stables, West Broad Street, opposite State.
dec30-Lf
JOHN W. ANDERSON’S SONS
COTTON FACTORS
AND GENERAL
Commission Merchants,
AGENTS TOR
Gullev^ 8 Improved Saw Gin,
ajh>
Ucnery’s Improved McCarthy Gin,
. CW.Bryaaa.'" 1D ™to n9 “”
SAVANNA^*. 6A *
Liberal advances made on .’ Vtujignmenta.
octld&wly
JOS. IIUIaL. i K. H. BURKETT. | WE. H. BURKETT.
JOS. HULL & CO.,
(Successors to Cohen & Hull)
FACTORS AND COMMISSION
MERCHANTS,
GG Bay Street, Savannah, Ga.-
jnn24-tf
SIMMONS'
REGULATOR
The Favorite Home Remedy.
This unrivalled Medicine is warranted not to
contain a single particle of Mercury, or any in
jurious mineral substance, but is
PURELY VEGETABLE,
containing those Southern Roots and Herbs,
which an all-wise Providence has placed in
countries where liver diseases most prevail. It
will cure all Diseases caused by Derangement of
the liver and Bowels.
Simmons’ liver Regulator, or Medicine
Is eminently a Family Medicine; and by being
kept ready for immediate resort will save many
an hour of suffering aud many a dollar in time
and doctors’bills.
After over Forty Years’ trial it is still receivin'
the most unqualified testimonials to its virtnes'
from persons of the highest character and re-
tty. Eminent physicians commend it as
Effectual Specific
FOR DYSPEPSIA OB INDIGESMOX.
Armed with this ANTIDOTE, all dimates and
langes of water and food may be faced without
fear. As a Remedv in MALARIOUS FEVERS,
BOWEL COMPLAINTS, RESTLESSNESS
JAUNDICE, NAUSEA,'
IT HAS JiO EQUAIa.
It is the Cheapest, Purest and Best Family
Medicine in the World.
Is manufactured only by
J> H. ZE1LI.V & CO ,
Macon, Chu, and Philadelphia
Price $1 00. Sold by all Druggists.
junlp-W&wly
HM*0UJ Cotton Witz.
OFFICE
American Cotton Tie Co.
New Orleans, La., June 24,1874.
ce to Dealers and Buyers of Cotton Tir^.
, certain parties are now making
offering Pieced Arrow and Open Slot
Ties fpr sale without authority or license from
this Company, all persons are hereby cautioned
not to purchase Arrow or other Open Slot CmiO!
Ties, .except from our duly authorized agent-
who will be kept fully supplied with n**w nm
Pierced Ties. Our attorneys are instructed r-
bring suit against all persons violating our patent
titles. AMERICAN COTTON TIE CO.
R. W. Rayse & Co., General Agents.
THE CELEBRATED
ARROW TIES
„ f WIIX BE SOLD %
In lots under 500bundles ...8c. 9 n>. net.
In lots of 500 bundles Sc. 915- 2>; off.
In Jots of 1,000 bandies and over. Sc. 9 3b. c off.
Pieced. 2c. y fi>. under new Ties.
HOPKINS & WOOD,
BATES & COMER.
jun20-2m Agents at Smcnah.
,#y SriTitf.
muonn patent fly trap.
At Wholesale and Retail at the Crockery Store
of BOLSHAW & SILVA. my42-tl
<TUc Reason HrUy.
WHY?
W HY IS IT that Printing can be done to t u-
utmost satisfaction of the customer at the
MORNING NEWS JOB OFFICE? Because Hu-
Office incomplete in the way of material—t*ix pou er
E es, types in quantity and every needed variety,
ng at all times an extensive *tock of j
g a wefl-equJpjjed Bindery, empl
workmen—thus having allauu the be
we are enabled to turn out SUPERIOR
and to do so IN THE SHORTEST TIME poambte