810 00
eoo
tfrcttt 2 00
EATABLE m autahce.
- mail are stopped at the expdre-
I “rtie paid for without further noUce.
! please observe the dates on their
Ifotl)
Ln>f aT
tpP crs * the taper furnished for any
one year will have their orders
■per?' 1115
Sy attend^ to by remitting the amount
f IM eT«aSSpikra discontinued unless by
W° dtT 1,-ft at the office,
sitire orf T(> AdT . crt uers.
t 3<2 nAKE is ten measured lines of Nonpareil
the ‘j, 00 per square; each subae-
(if inserted every day), 75 cents
r ^rtion, $ . 0.>per_ square;
' £ insertion f ”
' T dements inserted ezrry other day, twice a
partisans ^ chargc a $1 00 per square for
Lucres" 11
E> baa ^ oa de with contract advertisers.
I , ,««mcnt3 will have a favorable place
I - inserted, but no promise of continuous
in a particular place can be given, as
ro3?t havc <K ‘ nid °PP° rtnnltle,L
I TIip
l-h.-tl
fcoiigP
V„r..ins News bn. the largest city
„ail circulation of any paper pub-
fin van unit.
.ossifliiPl Nominees of the Demo
cratic Party.
I „• , nAtniZ-lfl-IAN IIARTRIDGK.
nwn>(-WILLIAM E. SMITH.
'Srt-pnib.fr. cook.
Lrirt-HENBY R. HARRIS.
B.V "-MILTON A. CANDLER.
I S Wtnrt-TAMES H- BLODNT.
S lMrict-W. H. DABNEY.
V'^wrwt-ALEX. H. STEPHENS.
^Xrt-GARNETTMCMIIXAN.
! '^Election on tlie first Tuesday in No-
lembcr. _
Affairs iii Georma.
Atlanta is baying match games of bil-
■ ‘ rJs tt ’lien the champion is announced
j sllft u request him to go over to Eaton-
B ailJ fan out Col. J. Nathan Leonard,
If that burg. For the truth of what we
Lwo cheerfully refer the reader to Rev.
|l H. Coates.
Air Abe Dudney was stabbed and kill-
ng man named Jamas Thorn-
The affair was the
J. H. E STILL, PROPRIETOR.
SAVANNAH, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 23, 1874.
ESTABLISHED 1850.
Id by a youu;
Ion on Saturday last.
•esult of a quarrel over a chew of to-
of the Columbus En-
iSCCO.
Jlajor Calhoun
minr, has been doing valuable campaign
■ork for the Alabama Democrats.
The editor of the Montezuma Weekly,
when be is bored by visitors, locks them
[in and goes oiI after a 6 lass of butter "
lilk.
Miss Howard, of Bartow, one of Geor
gs noblest daughters, has on exhibition
it the State Fair a bale of lucerne, the
ilauting, cultivation and gathering of
rbich were under her personal super-
vision.
A ne^ro incendiary in the Macon
county jail is reported to be insane.
An Atlanta man left a shot-gun at the
lguard-hou.se the other night as a sort of
urity for the appearance of his mother,
rho had been arrested. Desiring to go
mnting the next morning he carried the
)ld lady down, turned her over to the
[authorities, and proudly marched off with
[his gun.
A colored horse-thief reposes in Thomas-
Ivillo jail.
Specimen Atlanta paragraph: “Among
jtlie visitors to the Fair is Mrs. J., the
(beautiful Augusta belle, that was so popu-
ilar last spring in our Atlanta society.”
A little son of Mr. John Stack, of
Thomasville, was seriously injured the
.other day by the explosion of a bottle of
powder.
Cnpt. G. W. Howard* of Bartow, has
potatoes raised on land that cost him
twenty-five cents an acre. The net prof
its of the crop amounted to ninety-seven
1 dollars an acre.
Little Johnny Hopkins, of Thomas
ville.. who accidentally shot himself some
time ago, is dead.
The firm of Miss Kittie Walters &
Brother, of Montezuma, is composed of
Miss Kittie herself and a brother who
lost his eyesight in the Confederate war.
The negroes of Thomas county con
tributed eighty dollars to Fred Atkinson,
colored, for the purpose of enabling him
io contest the recent election. Fred
pocketed the money and left for parts
unknown.
Griffin is feeling her way to a narrow
gauge road to Indian Spring. This idea
is a good one.
The Griffin New*, of Wednesday, says
on Tuesday morning, as the down train
from Atlanta was passing Mr. Joseph H.
Johnson’s farm, about 2 o’clock, the en
gineer discovered a fire in that locality.
He blowed liis whistle fearfully, and
*aked up Mr. Johnson’s overseer, who
discovered the gin house and b^m on
fire. The overseer hastened to the place
and found the whole buildmg enveloped
in flames. It was a large rough building
near the centre of Mr. Johnson’s farm,
and located about two miles from the
court house, on the left of the 1L & W.
E. E. as you go South. The overseer
arrived too late to do any good. The
Sre was in full progress, and very soon
five thousand dollars worth of Mr. John
son’s property was completely destroyed,
consisting of over twenty bales of cotton,
mostly in the seed, and-three bales pack
ed, together with a first-rate gin and new
In the difficulty Mr. William Smith, Sr..
Postmaster at Mulbery Grove, a well
known and respected citizen, was mor
tally shot by his son William Smith, Jr.
The weapbn used was a pistol. The ball
entered above the left eye, came out be
hind the ear, fracturing the skull, and
causing a wound from which death may
ensue at any moment It is said that
domestic troubles gave rise to the diffi
culty; that the father had married a
second wife; that she and Smith’s daugh
ters by his first wife did not get alon<>
well; that Smith had attempted to drive
these daughters from home, and that,
while, engaged in this attempt, the son
had interfered with the above fatal re
sults. The wounded man was not dead
yesterday morning, but was thought to
be in a dying condition. Dr. Bruce and
other medical men giving it as their
opinion that he could not possibly live.
Our informant states that the son. who
has thus stained his hands in the blood
of his father, had hitherto borne a good
reputation, and that the sympathies of
the community are with him. He had
not been arrested, but is still in the
neighborhood, ready to give himself up
to the officers of the law. The unfortu
nate affair has created great excitement
in that usually quiet and law-abiding
neighborhood. Our knowledge of the
circumstances connected with this awful
affair is too limited to justify an expres
sion as to the young man’s guilt. That
must be left with the courts. We will
say, however, that wo can conceive of
but few circumstances or conditions that
would justify a son in taking the life of
his own father.
THE GREAT EARTHQUAKE.
Another Fearful Calamity in Central
America—Severn! Towns Sained— 1 Two
Hundred Lives Cost—A River of Sfnd
Descending; from the Mountains—Aid
for the Victims.
horse
power and cotton press. In the
kttn portion of the gin-house were seven
fioe mules aud horses, one hundred loads
°f rough forage, a considerable amount
°f corn and oats, and other valuable pro-
perty connected with such au establish-
men t. The destruction of the live stock
vas most deplorable, and the wails of
tie dying animals distressing. A yoke
of oxen were fastened to some saplings
c ' ar the building, and were rending the
c ' r with their frightful bellowings, when
fke overseer arrived. He speedily re
leased these terrified beasts, but nlnn!
for the poor horses in the middle of the
aidth"? * JU: ' <bn =’ human power could
A ar !' A “Eey Mirror : The negroes have
r toleration for opposition from their
wn color, and have as little notion of
p™ °- political liberty as the tribes in
it; al At " oa - A case m point - verifies
s assertion. Bill Smith, colored, a
“apUst preacher over at Butler, voted the
Democratic ticket in the late
Pi/,i,i? A supporting Rutherford and
, . ln 8 with all his might—saying
wil!h!' T tbe w hite people that ho was
--a 11 o to a 'd them in electing honest
..o competent men to make laws to
nf «, ru f“ cla6Se8 alike. Smith is pastor
nvo-* c kurch at Butler, and has been for
villa;™ 0 y ears - O* 1 Saturday night some
tW? 0U3 scoun drels set fire to a new house
bumi ’ 3 -^ a3 buil ding hear the town, and
afw i l * t0 tba S T0und - Sunday, night
sinrirT 6 throu ?h preaching, and was
.“R closing hymn, somebody
rii>,« nl / rKe i ron ball, weighing five or
his at bim 1Q the pulpit, missing
niriiio^ °, nl y a few feet- That same
the 1 lbe cburob building was leveled to
lhm£f 0und by , tbe inoendiary’s torch.
Hut 5 s are C0min 6 to a pretty pass in
Landaulet Williams onght
teeirt 0 v f , ew troops over there to pro-
hian.wkProperty of a colored
hbrioT- 0 1128 tbe manliness to exeroise
The »k-I Te franchise jnst as he chooses,
man •”t es should stand by this colored
b«at’f • j, sbow that they are his
the „„ n , 6 ’ an( f “d h™ in ferretting ont
and h!? >et ri ltors °f this damnable deed,
bring them to punishment.
ca Enquirer : Parties who
m on the North and South Railroad
ce W a J, e8t f r<5a 7 morning, brought the
be rr „ ^ a borrid deed of blood at Mul-
- *>ro_ve, Harris county, on Monday
” the chief actors in the sad
a no less sacred relation to
that of father and son.
Panama, October 10.
A Guatemala paper says of the earth
quake of September 3:
The losses suffered in the departments
are calculated to be from §200,000 to
$250,000, including farming houses, ma
chinery, and some thousands of yards of
storehouses in which cochineal was buried
under the ruins of roof and wall. The
number of victims cannot be exactly de
cided, because many dead bodies re
mained buried under tho stream of mud
which descended from the Cerro del
Tigre. In Atigua alone thirty persons
perished, the greater part being women
and children. It is calculated that twen
ty-five bodies were buried in the other
towns, and a hundred more or less bruised
and wounded.
The town of Dnenos is entirely ruined,
with its church, cabildo, parochial edifice
and private houses. A short distance
from Duenos, and near a coffee farm of
Zinza, in a place called La Estancia,
there was an extraordinary promontory
of mud, which had descended from tho
heights of the Cerro del Tigre. The
promontory had in some places a depth
of one hundred feet, and was formed by
those eruptions of mud which geologists
call saigas, aud which generally is not a
good sign for the bordering countries.
The eruption which produced this pro
montory consisted of cold mud, which,
although very compact, carried in its
current enormous masses of stones and
trees, whose trunks measured eight and
ten inches in diameter. The government
has ordered supplies of flour from Sal
vador and California. A subscription is
being raised in Guatemala for those
families that have suffered by the last
earthquake. The departments of Saca-
tepequez, Chimaltenango and others have
suffered considerably.
The El Progreso of Guatemala of the
Gth ult., gives the following additional
items about the earthquake: “A telegram
to the government from Antigua, dated
the 4th ult., says the consequences of the
earthquake last night ore very serious.
There were fourteen deaths in Antigua,
five in Duenos, five in Jocotenango, and
one in San Pedro. The town of Duenos
is entirely rained, Alotenango and Ciudad
Vieja, very much damaged. The city of
Amatitian has also suffered considerable,
but there were no robberies or loss of
lives.”
A telegram to the government from
Minister Samayoa, dated in Antigun,
Septemher 4, says: “The President has
gone through all the city; found twenty-
six victims, mostly women, who lived in
some old ruins. ”
In Patzicia more damago was done,
and one hundred deaths are reported."
Another dispatch from Antigua, dated
the 5th ult., said: “The President has
returned from Dnenos; (he church and
cabildo had suffered most, and the farm
houses in the neighborhood. The native
huts had remained intact. Two rivers,
which descended from tho volcano, over
flowed their beds and carried away some
hnts, with about twenty victims.”
At Chimaltenango, on tho Gth ult., the
President telegraphed for medicines and
surgical aid. The people of this place
were in a state of consternation at the
effects of the earthquake. The Villa de
Zaragoza, Patizizea and Istapa will bo
rained completely. Provisions were for
warded with all the aid possible. The
victims, this last telegram said, might be
200, more or less.
An Evening with a Celebeated Lady. —
These glimpses of suburban and villa life
in England were happily contrasted by
an evening among the literary men and
artistes at the residence of Mrs. Dion
Boncicault, Regent street. London. Two
continents remember Agne3 Robertson,
“the diamond star of the stage,” her
graceful beauty, gentle humor, and
musical tones- And when I was first in
vited to meet her, after so many years, I
was prepared for those changes of time
proved in gray hairs and matronly avoir
dupois. But I found the beautiful girl
ripened into the lovely woman; the
mother of five children, graceful as Mrs.
•Dion Boncicault was when she made great
capitals ring with praise of her gifts of
mind and person. There was not a trace
of the actress. Nothing could be more
natural. A lady in everything, con
siderate, well-posted, and perfectly at
home, she was like one who had been
reared in private life and had never known
the dangerous applause of the theatre.
That rare charm which makes a lovely
woman more lovelv without ornament is
bars The tact that makes everybody
happy and at ease is an inborn quality,
invaluable in the artiste, because never
taught in the discipline of the drama.
All her children were present—Eva, her
eldest daughter, and Dion, her eldest son,
at the dinner, and the next daughter, aud
the next son, and the baby at the recep
tion afterward. The English song cf
their mother, and the French chanson of
the second boy delighted everybody; and
when the last of the five, the little
Boncicault, kissed ns all “good night,” it
was a picture for Meissonier alone to
paint.—Col. Forney's Letter in the Phila
delphia Press. ‘
The New York Commercial Advertiser
is delighted with the speech of Mr. Bufler
the other night, when he said “the war
is not yet ended.” “In that Stagnant
sentence,” says the Commercial, he
cave the keynote of the campaign. He
judges that a sham peace which allows
the murder of men in every State of the
Sonth on account of their principles.
This is the truth that the E; six statesman
has dared to utter. His fearless bugle-
blast is worth ten thousand men for the
Republican ticket in Massachusetts.”
Without presuming to doubt the accuracy
of this statement, we venture to suggest
that the value of Mr Butler’s “fearless
bugle-blast” has usually been computed
by the thousand ^lars, instead of the
thousand men. He charged Kellogg
$3,000 for his “fearless bugle-blast, but
only got $1,000 and nobody knows how
many thousand dollars Oakes Ames and
Jayne and Sanborn paid for his fearless
bugle-blast.” It is one of the most ex
pensive bugle-blasts the country has ever
produced.—N. Y. Tribune.
Wisconsin has begun raising cotton.
The first bale ever grown in that State
was recently on exhibition in Janesi llle.
HIE MORNING NEWS.
i\oon Telegrams.
general banks nominated for
CONGRESS.
A LOCOMOTIVE MANUFACTORY
TROUBLE.
IN
A Larne Strike of Coopers Anticipated.
NEW YOEK NOTES.
New Toee, October 22.—The Grant
Locomotive Works are troubled about
their inability to fill the Russian contract
for fifty locomotives, and work is sus
pended. The liabilities are a quarter of
a million. A large surplus is claimed,
but is not available, and the future of
the company depends upon the leniency
of the Russian Government.
The boss coopers will discharge em
ployes who adhere to the Cooper’s Union.
A prolonged fight between tho bosses and
coopers is apprehended. Five thousand
wookmen are involved in the lock-out.
NATHANIEL NOMINATED.
Boston, October 22.—A meeting at
Bunker Hill, composed of two thousand
persons, nominated N. P. Banks for Con
gress. He advocated a better execution
of the laws and the cultivation of abetter
sentiment at the South.
LONDON NOTES.
London, October 22.—A sailor in the
riggifg of tho Chusan was rescued. The
brig C. White is wrecked off the Isle of
Wight. Four persons were drowned.
THE
CONSTITUTIONAL
VERSY.
C0NTR0-
A Lfiler from Mr. George Tlcknor Curll*.
To the Editor of the Herald :
It seems to me that in your ad hominem,
appeal to me to recognize the authority
of Mr. Webster as opposed to the views I
have taken of the Louisiana case, you do
not go far enough in discriminating this
case from that of tho Rhode Island gov
ernment about which Mr. Webster was
speaking. No one questions the genera]
principle that when the President is ap
plied to to protect a Slate government
against domestic violence he is bound to
regard “the existing government” as en
titled to make the application; and cer
tainly I have not questioned that the Kel
logg government was the existing govern
ment, and as such entitled to move the
President’s consideration of its title to be
regarded as tho lawful government. But
suppose that the Rhode Island case
had been the reverse of what it
was. Suppose that tho President,
using his power unlawfully, had been
instrumental in making the Dorr
government the existing government, by
active and forcible measures assisting in
its inception aud in its attainment of de
facto power, can you imagine that Mr.
Webster would have considered it the
duty of the President, in case Mr. Dorr
had applied to him to be protected under
the Constitution, to include that case
within the general principle of recogniz
ing and maintaining the existing govem-
.ment ? I cannot imagine it. I suppose
he would have said just what his language
in another part of his argument implies,
and what is true in all cases of an appli
cation under the Constitution. “These
constitutional and legal provisions,” he
said, “make it the indispensable duty of
the President to decide, in cases of com
motion, what is the rightful government
of the State. He cannot avoid such de
cision.” That is to say, he receives an
application from an existing government,
and having received it, he must decide
whether it is tho lawful government.
In the nctual Rhode Island case the
application was made by the old
or “charter” government,which was “the
existing government” of which Mr. Web
ster spoke. The President, aiding by
Mr. Webster’s advice,decided that this gov
ernment was the rightful one, and “could
not possibly have decided otherwise.”
Why? Because the Dorr government had
not been created by the people under any
sanction given by the existing govern
ment to proceedings for changing the
constitution of the State—a mode of
action indispensable to the validity of
such a change. But if the proceedings
which gave rise to the Dorr government
had been promoted and aided by the
President, it had become thereby the
existing government, and had as such
applied to the President to be maintained
in possession, the same -‘indispensable
duty” of deciding what was “the rightful
government” would have required the
President to ignore it.
Yon remark that “ Mr. Curtis thinks
that the President is bound to find that a
threatened government has a perfect title
before he can interpose.” This is not
quite a correct view of what I maintain
ed. My position was and is, that when
an application is njade. to the President
by an existing State government, and he
knows that it originally became the ac
tual government by his own unlawful in
terference, he is not at liberty to treat it
as the rightful government, and thus en
force his own wrong. I am reluctant to
trespass again upon your columns, but I
do not wish to be misunderstood.
Geoege Ticknoe Cubtis.
New York, Oct. 17, 1874.
A TYPHOON.
An American Middy’s Experience Daring
the late Gale at Nagasaki—Graphic De
scription of the Gale.
Robbed of $100,000—A Doubtful
Stoky.—New York, October 18.—The
room of Luther Bryant, anqjft man, who
was arrested a few days ago on the charge
of buying revenue and postage stamps
from boys who stole them from employ
ers, was broken into while Bryant was in
the Tombs, and being informed of it by
the Chief of Police this morning, Biyant
said there were vouchers and money in
the room to the amount of $100,000,
which he left. Bryant was discharged,
in order to assist in regaining his -prop
erty—$70,000 in $30 gold pieces, which
were each marked by a small hole
punched in the head of the
Goddess of Liberty, and a gold watch,
made by Appleton* Tracy Manufacturing
Company, numbered 803, and other valu
able jewelry; also one thousand dollars in
mutilated currency, twelve thousand
dollars in legal tender notes, and seven
hundred dollars in new fifty and ten cent
stamps. Bryant has offered a reward of
five thousand dollars for the recovery of
the property. Bryant’s story is some
what doubted in police circles.
It is proposed to start in New York a
new association, to be called the Com
missionaire Company. It is the purpose
of this company to hire out what, for
want of a better term, may. be called
“handy men,” or, in the phrase of the
oompanies, “ Commissionaires.” > The
Commissionaire, as we gather from the
New York Times, is intended to be a sort
of Jack-of-all-work. He will clean cloth
ing, collect bills, secure seats for the the
atre, escort ladies to and from entertain
ments in a proper evening dress, carry
yonr child, move your piano, and attend
your lady when'making calls," shopping,
etc., acting as “lackey,” delivering visit
ing cards, protecting her by umbrella
from the sun and storm, or falling on a
slippery day. On all such occasions he
will appear in elegant servant’s livery,
imported from Paris and Vienna. Surely
the Commissionaire is a remarkable man.
What if he should elope with yonr
daughter?
A recent number of a clerical paper,
published in Naples, says: “The miar-
cle of St. Jannarins is going on favora
bly. Yesterday, after eighteen minutes
prayer, the blood liquefied, as it did tho
day before, after having been exposed
twenty-three minutes. The faithful are
flocking into the diocese in great num
bers, and their belief in our holy religion
is by no means diminished by the rav
ings of a Satanic sect.”
The following extract from a letter,
written by Midshipman M. A. Shnfeldt,
of Hartford, to his father, Captain R. W.
Shnfeldt, now stationed at Annapolis,
descriptive of the terrific typhoon which
swept over the harbor of Nagasaki last
August, will be found of interest:
I have lots of news—first and foremost
comes the great typhoon which swept
over this city about two weeks ago, the
strongest one, according to the Nagasaki
Gazette, and in the mind of th9 “oldest
inhabitant,” that this coast has seen for
seventy yeans. If you remember how
completely land-locked this harbor is,
what good holding-ground, Ac., you can
better imagine the force of the gale. We
(the Hartford) were anchored in about
the middle of the bay, with both bowers
down and forty-five fathoms of chain on
one and thirty on the other.
The bay was crowded with vessels of
all descriptions—merchantmen, steamers,
and besides the Ashuelot, Kearsarge and
Saco, the old Japanese iron-clad Azuma
Khan (the old Stonewall), and three Eng
lish gun-boats. At dusk it was overcast
and foggy, with strong puffs of wind, tho
barometer falling rapidly. I was stand
ing on the forecastle about S p. m., and
then it began to increase, and I could
hear anchors begin to let go and chains
veered all over the harbor. I ran below
and took a look at the barometer—29.11
falling rapidly; at nine o’clock, 28.G7, and
the wind howling and shrieking. Our
top-gallant masts were on deck and every
thing snug aloft. About three bells we
veered to sixty fathoms on both chains,
and brought up on both anchors with £
sharp tug which started them both out
of the mud, and the ship dragged about
two lengths, then let go the starboard
sheet and dragged in about ten seconds
more, when we fetched up on the sheet,
which brought the ship up and swung on
for an instant,
bboadside to the wind,
when, after a fearful careen, she slowly
righted and swung “head to.” Ten
minutes after, with barometer at 28.31,
the wind blowing so hard that it was ut
terly impossible to 'walk forward, except
to crawl on your belly, something white
flashed by, and away went our loretop.
gallant sail, saying “good by” to the
yard as neat as could be, the latter being
at the time lashed in the rigging; and
then, with guns of distress firing all over
the harbor, an immense black object
loomed up on our port bow and came
down rapidly upon ns, when the Admiral
rushed to the port on the half deck and
sang out to stand by to veer on all chains,
and to let go the starboard sheet. Down
came the immense steamer with three
anchors down and going ahead with her
engines full speed, still passing ns stem
foremost at the rate o:; about five knots
an hour. I was standing aft, when
heard Captain Dekraft say, “Admiral,
she'll foul us ! she’ll foul us!" A sudden,
powerful puff of wind, and the gallant
old Hartford brought up sharp on her
starboard anchors and swung slightly but
rapidly to starboard, causing the dragging
steamer to sheer our quarter and carry
away the gig. She was soon lost in
THE PITCHY DABK.VESS.
A few minutes after the .Saco went by
us steaming all her might and four an
chors down, yet steadily drag/?ing on the
rocks. Then the Kearsarge' began to
send off all kinds of fire-works, and we
saw (he Ashuelot and a German brig
which was athwart her hawser go drift
ing off. About eleven o’clock the force
of the wind w-is something terrific—
utterly impossible to describe. At seven
bells the barometer was 28.13. The howl-
ing of the gale was so fearful that it was
impossible to hear a yell in your very
ear, and the rain came down like knife-
blades. We heard the snapping of the'
masts of an immense Danish merchant
man, anchored a little off our starboard
bow, where she evidently had parted her
chains. She went by ns liko a flash: then
two immense junks came tearing down
on us, and, striking our taught cables,
were blown high and dry on them, as it
were, which caused ns to surge ahead,
when the poor devils sank with their liv
ing cargoes. Only one came over our
bow, with head bleeding, and he sought
protection. AVe were now under full
head of steam, and slowly dragging. At
twelve, with the barometer at 23.10, it
fell almost calm for about two minutes;
then, with a yell like
TEN THOUSAND DEMONS,
it came out in exactly the opposite direc
tion, and then blowing aQ the time just
as hard, followed the compass right
around. The Saco went by us again, and
the immense fleet of junks went crashing
and sinking all over the harbor. Through
the almost impenetrable gloom I conld
make out the Stonewall close aboard by
the flash of her minute guns. Our ship
rolled in the mountain-locked harbor of
Nagasaki os heavily as in a he.svy ocean
swell. Abcnt half-past one a. m. the
barometer jumped from 28.13. to 28.47
and began rapidly to rise. I could not
help but wonder at the great power this
little instrument had to relieve human
anxiety. The Admiral’s face of dnil care
immediately brightened, and in fact all
felt as if an immense weight was lifted,
for many thought if our anchors held we
might be
BUN DOWN AND FOUNDEBED.
The typhoon rapidly abated, and soon
“all hands” had gone below to catch a
little rest during the few remaining hours.
The morning broke clear and calm, but
with wreck and destruction on every side.
The mast heads of dozens of junks were
visible sticking ont of the water all around
ns. On the right hand rocky shore were
piled five large steamships, the majority
of them blown completely ont of their
element, high and dry, with masts and
sails in inextricable confusion. The ma
jority of the merchantmen had lost all
their masts and spars. One of the largest
foundered at her anchors; others total
wrecks and piled in every imaginable way
on the rocks; the shores lined with broken
junks and sampans, and the water
COVERED WITH HEAD BODIES
and debris of every kind. The Stone
wall had parted both her chains and gone
ashore "and filled with a large hole in her
side. Ashore the destruction was awful.
The solid stone “bund” was tom to
pieces, and the rocks and stones, weigh
ing on an average half a ton apiece,
thrown across the street and into the
gardens of the houses facing. All the
latter were down, including the Gover
nor’s new palace. The streets were
filled with timber, beams, bricks, tiles,
broken limbs of trees, and the whole city
anting on every side wreck, deso-
m and death. The Japs themselves
were driven nearly wild, and go around
now with the longest faces in the world.
Poor fellows, they deserve all the pity
imaginable.
Eighty junks were sunk in this harbor
alone, and in all 850 dead bodies were
picked np. We (that is, the fleet) came
out all right. We lost our launch, dingy
and first cutter—steam launch pretty'
well knocked. The Ashuelot lost her
head booms. The Saco and Kearsarge
are all right. The sudden changing of
the wind undoubtedly saved the two
latter vessels. Such was the great
typhoon, and now rumors of floods,
wrecks and destruction of property reach
us eveiy day. Nothing for the last
seventy years has equalled it. I do not
want to see such another.
“Do you know why you are like the
third term ?” said Susan Jane to her
brother, who lingered to talk with her
Adolphus after the old folks had retired.
“No , I don’t." “Well," replied his sac
charine sister, “it’s because you are oue
too many.”
Brick vaults and safes are now manu
factured so that any attempt to reach
their interior breaks sundry bottles filled
with sulphuric acid into powdered carbo
nate of lime. This produces instantane
ously carbonic gas enough to suffocate a
regiment of burglars.
The Trbnblc and Its Remedy.
American society is suffering a change.
The period of steady habits has gone by
and the age of hifalutin is at hand. The
chief characteristics of the times are an
overestimate of money and an underesti
mate of character. Rough gold has little
value, while highly burnished gilt is great
ly prized. The men are overstimulated
by a huge business without capital, and,
after forty, walk on the ragged edge of
apoplexy, while the women are overstimu
lated in the imagination by a corrupt
literature which has lowered the moral
tone of the whole community.
Everywhere there exists an insatiable
appetite for mere sensationalism. Even
science and religion must startle in order
to attract attention. Plain English does
not satisfy any more than old-fashioned
morality. The old adage -which tells ns
it is better to live in a wooden house and
•have plenty than to live in a brick house
and be pinched, has been turned upside
down and the preference given to the
brown stone and constant dons.
It is pitiful to see science in the parti
colored pantaloons of the general folly;
but the scientist of the day, instead of
confining himself to his legitimate sphere,
must needs bring the battering ram of
his newly discovered facts to bear against
the oaken door of the Church, and pound
away until a crowd gathers to see what
will come of it all. If he narrows his
labors to glacial theories, or to theories of
evolution, he lives amid the applause of
the few and dies unknelled, uncoffined and
unknown. To escape this terrible fate he
saddles the hobby horse of induction and
rides rough shod over the faiths and con
victions of centuries, sending dismay into
the camp of the unlearned and inviting
everybody to assemble quickly to witness
the explosion and the general conflagra
tion. Of all men onr scientists shonld
carefully confine themselves to their sev
eral departments of research. It
ligious creeds -of the people. The i
school of scientists, however, seems
termined to leave the theologi
nothing to do, bnt assumes the right
judge not only the facts of the phys
but the faiths of the spiritual world.
creeping into the pulpit,
desires to be popular, and
sit<(amount of shrewdness
laugh at his pisturesque gymnastics.
BUSINESS HOUSES JS SA.YA.KSUl.
Artistic.
At Photographs, go to Wulsok’s, 143 Broughton.
For Ferrotypes, go to Wilsom’s, 21 Bull st.
Stereoscopic Views of Savannah and Bonaventnre,
. J. N. Wilsox.
Apothecary and Druggist.
L. C. Strong, 67 Bull, cor. Perry-st. lane.
Architect, Engineer and Contractor.
Augustus Schwaab, 135# Bay street.
Attorneys at Law.
J. R. Hines, 135# Bay street. Collections, fic.
Branch Freight Office,
A. & G. Railroad, 21# Bun st, Jxo. L. ItotnmLAT,
Gen. Freight Agent; R R Bren, Special Ag’t.
Butter, Cheese and Lard House.
S. B. Good all, 141 Bay street.
Bottling Worts.
J. Rtan, 110 and 112 Broughton, established 1S52.
Bakers.
We. Campbell, 34 Bryan, cor. Price Street.
Jas. L. Murphy, 72 Bryan and 176 Bronghton st
Bread, Cake and !’!<• Bakery.
Wm. Rosenthal, cor. Bay and West Broad, and
Whitaker and York fits.
Buggies and Wagons Built and Repaired.
Wm. W. Gnann, liberty st., near West Broad.
Cabinetmaker, Upholsterer, Ac.
J. F. Glationy, 122 Stdte Street.
Wm. Scheming, opposite Marshall House.
Clothing, Wholesale and Retail.
Hexdt, Jaudon & Co., 135 Broughton Street.
China, Glass and Crockery. —
Geo. W. Allen, 192 Bronghton st.
Thos. West, 187 Broughton street.
LAND SALE
—OF—
21 3,526 ACRES.
F THE CIRCUI T COURT, Fourth Judicial
Circuit of Florida—In Chancery.
Louis J. Fleming and Green H. Hunter, Trus
tees of the .Florida, Atlantic and Gulf Central
Railroad Company, vs. The Florida, Atlantic and
Gnlf Central Railroad Company, ct aL
Postponement of Sale to Monday, No
vember 2d.
By virtue of tho authority vested in me as
Special Master in Chancery in said cause, I will
oner, at public sale, to the highest bidder, at the
Court House door, in the city of Jacksonville,
Florida, on MONDAY, THE SECOND <«) DAY
OF NOVEMBER NEXT, and from day to day
thereafter, until the sale be completed, the lands
known as the
Free Lands of the Florida, Atlantic and
Gnlf Central Railroad Company,
bein;
the
'about 213,526 acres, lying on both sid-s of
.. - tJlcksonvift
extending from J
He to Lake
City, consisting principally of the a ternate or
odd sections within six (6) miles on each side of
said Road, together with certain lots in the city of
Jacksonville. Said lands will be sold by the legal
subdivisions, in pa-cels to suit purchasers, for the
benefit of the holders of the Second Mortgage or
Free Lofad Bonds of said Company.
JAMES M. BAKER,
o^t22-10 Special Master.
NOTICE.
OFFICE OF )
Receiver of Macon <& Brunswick R. B. V
Macon, Ga_, October 6, 1874. )
F I accordance with an order issued from the
Executive Department of this State, published
herewith, will be sold on the FIRST TUESDAY
IN DECEMBER NEXT, between the hours of
ten o’clock a. m. aud four o'clock p. m., at the
Depot of the Mace aii>* Brunswick Railroad
Company, in the e:r. ui -i. ."icon. Bibb county,
Cast Off Clothing Boaght and Sold, to*MATO^AND^BnfolSOTCK^SATT-UnAP]
At cor. Whitaker and York sts. Best price given, extending from the city of Macon to Brunswick
*- “'“on county, Georgia—a distance of one
keep up their interest.
things aforetime held sacred.
Sober-minded
but while looking upon the
strong tide of public opinion.
The trouble begins with American edit-
cation ami homes. School girls who shook
confine their attention to short clothe!
unduly heating the imagination.
theories are absorbed into the
tho ebb.
a razor, is giving way to a certain way
wardness and recklessness, the logical re
sult of which will be ill-assorted mar-
riages, domestic unhappiness and a crop
of divorces twenty years from date. All
and girls in their teens.
venient pawns, occupying a position in
the background, and nevor appeariu
less called for.
Every one knows that this political,
not backward in illustrating the conse
quences of general corruption. There
is an inevitable logic in the life of a peo
ple, as in the life of an individual. We
must get down on the hardpan of hon
orable manhood and pure womanhood, or
we shall meet the fate which has over
taken nations that were stronger than we
are. This sickly sentimentalism in reli-
gion, and this social namby pambyism
must be exercised by a decent literature
and by a pulpit that dares to be honest
and simple, before onr girlx will make
good wives or our boys hoi o.-able mer
chants.—N. Y. Herald.
A Gallant Fight With Indians.
- Chicago, October 12.
The commissioners appointed to inves
tigate the circumstances of the killing of
young Broke Arm and three other Osages
on Medicine Lodge Creek, Kansas, by a
body of (unauthorized) militia, have de
clared the killing entirely unprovoked
and unjustifiable, and an act for which
the tribe J innst be compensated. This
sustains fully the view taken by the World
at the time of the commission of the
outrage.
The official dispatches from Gen. Miles
jive full particulars of the fight on the
Washita, September 12-13, between a
j >arty of six soldiers bearing dispatches
from McClellan to Camp Supply and 125
Kiowos and Comanches. The World has
already contained a mention of the fight,
in which part of its mail from its corres
pondent with Miles was captured by the
savages; but the display of gallantry by
the handful of soldiers warrants a more
detailed notice. The party was in charge
of Sergeant Z. L.Woodhall, and consisted
of privates Peter Bath, John Harrington
and GeorgeyW. Smith, Fifth Cavalry, and
Amos Chapman and William Dixon. At
6 a. m. they were surrounded and all
wounded af the first fire; Smith mortally,
Bath and Dixon slightly, the other three
severely.
While the others kept off the enemy,
one man dng a trench with his knife and
hands, into which all huddled, Smith,
though mortally wounded, sitting upright
with the rest, lest the Indians should
know how the party was weakened. Un
der a cold and pelting rain, without food
and with nothing to drink save the rain
water, with which, as it collected in the
trench, mingled their own blood, they
held out till aid reached them thirty-six
hours after. Till dark of the first day
they were constantly underfire with a foe
twenty-five times their number, atarange
so short that frequently they had to use
their revolvers. They retained in these
throughout one cartridge each, having
resolved to commit suicide shonld they
he overpowered. After fighting for thir.
teen hours tho Indians retired, with ten
or twelve killed. Private Smith died a
few hours afterwards. General Miles
closes his official report as follows:
“The simple recital of their deeds, and
the mention of the odds against which
they fought; how the wounded defended
the dying, and the dying aided the
wounded by exposure to fresh wounds
after the power of action was gone—
these alone present a scene of cool
courage, heroism and self-sacrifice which
duty, as well as inclination, prompts us
to recognize, but which we cannot fitly
honor.”—H. Y. World.
1 Cheap John.
l - J. A. Smith, 176 Bronghton st.
Carpenters and Builders.
C. S. Gay, corner Charlton and Tatnall streets.
. Gilbert Butler, Master Builder, cor. Perry and
v Barnard st.
John Ward, corner President and Barnard sts.
s W. D. Sturtevant, cor. Liberty & Whitaker sts.
° Crackers and Candy.
^ J. EL A. Welle, No. 200 Bay street.
B. H. Tatem, Druggist, Cor. Whitaker and
^ Liberty Sts., Proprietor Tatem’s Verbena Cologne.
r Dye Works,
" Charles E. Oehi er, 212 Broughton Street
>- Dentists.
, Dr. H. J. Roy all, 129# Congress st.
^ Dry Goods.
3 J. Cohen, 152 Broughton st., is selling at cost.
Dry Goods, Notions, Hats and Straw Goods.
8 Orff, Watkins & Co., 125 and 127 Congress st.
g Doors, Sash, Blinds, Ar.
H. P. Bickford, 169 and 171 Bay st.
s G. H. Remshart, and agent for Fairbanks* Scales.
Dry Goods.
* Rogers, Dasher A Co., cor. Brough’n & Whitk’r.
f Dress Making.
5 Mrs. E. Aitken, 122 State street.
^ Exclusive Dealers In Boots, Shoes and Hats.
Brunner & Faxon, 141 Congress st.
Engraving, Stencil Cutting, Ac.
W. W. Smith A Bro., No. 2S Drayton Street.
For l ine Family Supplies go to
’ J. B. Sexton, No. 110# Broughton, near Bull st.
Fresh Fish of all kinds and Oysters.
L. Savarese & Bro., No. 3 Jefferson street.
For Gent’s Furnishing Coods, go to
J. A. Santina, 136 Broughton Street.
Fire, Marine and Life.
R. U. Footman & Co., Insurance Agency.
Fire end Marine Insurance.
New Orleans Isa Co, J. T. Thomas, Agt, lQgjlay.
a Fresh Fish and Oysters.
Hudson & Sullivan, 156 Bay street.
1 Furniture.
J. Lindsay, 190 Brought on st.
For Fine Groceries and Liquors,
Go to John Lyons’, cor. Broughton and Whitaker.
Fancy Groceries.
Branch A Cooper, cor. Broughton and Barnard.
Florist and lee Cream Gardens.
G. Noble, comer of Bull and Macon streets.
Fine Groceries, Wine, Fruits, Ac.
V. S. Studer, cor. Abercom st. and Perry bL lane
General Insurance and Beal Estate Agent.
C. G. Falligant‘104 Bay Street.
Groceries and Country Supplies.
Blitch A Miller, 1SS Congress and 183 St.Julian.
Hardware, Iron and Steel.
Weeds A Cornwell, 173 and 175 Bronghton st
Harness, Saddles, Trunks, Belting, Ac.
N. B. Knapp, Market Square.
House and Sign Painter.
Wm. P. McKenna, 136 St Julian street
Archibald Gilmore, 4 Whitaker st
Hardware, Stores, Tinware, Ac.
Cormack Hopkins, 167 Bronghton st
Hair Goods.
Miss C. Abbott, 18# Drayton Street
Hats, Caps, Straw Goods, Satchels, Ac.
Chas. H. Brown, 137 Congress st
Hides, Wool, Wax, JLc.
M. Y. Hendebson, 180 Bay st.
Importers and Jobbers of Crockery.
Bolshaw A Silva, 152 St Julian and 149 Bryan st
Kerosene, Illuminating Oils, Lamps, Ac. .
C. Ko Osgood, 31 Whitaker street
Livery and Boarding Stable.
Luke Carson, cor. Broughton and Abercom sts.
Millinery, Dry and Fancy Goods.
Mrs. Sarah Strauss, 159# Congress st
Manufacturer of Cigars and Dealer in Tobacco.
J. V. Barbee, 85 Bay Street
Manufacturer and Dealer in Pitch Pine Lumber.
Jno. J. McDonough, cor. East Broad A Charlton.
Machinists and BoQer Makers.
P. J. Bulger, Bay st, near Habersham.
Machinists, Boiler Makers and Founders.
Monahan, Parry A Co., cor. Bay and Randolph.
Monuments and Grave Stones.
Robt. D. Walker, York st, op. Trinity Church.
Newspapers, Periodicals and Books.
Wm. Estill, Jr., Bull Street comer of Bay lane.
Pianos Tuned and Repaired.
Turner A Bro., 124 State Street
Plumbing, On .and Steam Fitting.
Chabees K Wakzxuld, 122 Bryan Street.
P. B.&F. Y. Mabtebs, 3034Whit’r,het Bro. & State.
Photographer. j
J. G. Steiger, cor. St Julian and Whitaker Sts.
Picture Frames, Xouldlngs, Glass, 4c.
D. B. Toaonreos, Agent, 128 Bronghton street.
Paper, Stationery and Paper Bags.
EnzrwzLL Ss Nichols, 129 Bay street.
Peruvian Guano Agency.
HjG. Lat, Agent Consignees, Kelly’s Block.
Paints, 00s, Sash, Blinds, Ac.
Jons Olives, 3 Whitaker st.
Produce Commission Xerelant.
Cat & Kxelleb, 173 Bryan st., Market square.
Gzoboe S. Hebbebt, 1 and 2 City Market.
Sewing Machines.
Sixqeb MAsnTACXEBiso Co., 172 Bronghton St.
Wheelzb & Wusos Mr’a Co., W. B. Cleves. Agt. «
Second-Hand Furniture (Bought and Sold).
C. Rollandin, 66 Broughton, cor. Lincoln. .1
The Cheap Dry Goods Store,
John Y. Dixon A Co., 132 Broughton Street.
Tin Ware, Tin Hoofing, Gutters, Etc. J5
Tnos. J. Halt, 1S5 Congress street.
Tailor and Draper.
Sajtbel Polfus, No. T Drayton street.
Tea, Coffee and Spice Store. I
Habbt Bcbss, 139 Bronghton street.
Wholesale and Retail Druggists.
Lawrence A Weichselbaum, Market Square.
G. M. Heidt A Co., 21 Whitaker st.
J os. A. Polhill, cor. S. A E. Brd, A Ch’n A Ab’n. C
Watches, Clocks and Jewelry. °
A. Iu DS3BOUILLONS, 21 Bull st p.
Wines, Liquors and Cigars.
Wm. Hone, 154 Congress st. -
T. J. Dunbar A Co., 131 Bay Street. 1
James McGrath A Co., 175 Bay Street. /
Watches, Jewelry, Ac.—Watches Repaired. ^
TwrtM Lbbpwsthvth, 22 Jefferson *t
ml about five miles of
rty of said company,
superstructure, right of wa>,
lock, depots, freight and
s shops, carpenter shops,
‘ s and msteri-
J0HI ]
COLUMBUS, GEOBGIA,
Real Estate Agent and Broker
Refer, by permission, to Merchants and 3
ics Bank.
Banking, Exchange,
AND
Collection Office
E. C. Anderson, Jr., & Co.,
NO. 11 REYNOLDS’ SQUARE.
(Formerly Planters’ Bank,)
SAYAXXin, GA.
DEPOSITS received subject to Check at S’ght,
and Interest allowed by agreement.
Gold, Stocks, Bands, and Foreign and Domestic
Exchange banght and sold.
CoGcct-ons made on an accessible points, and
promptly remitted for In New York Exchange at
No commissions charged cm Collections made In
the cRy.
Merchants' Cash Boxes, and other Valuables, re
ceived on special deposit (and deposited in the large
Fire Proof Vaults of the Banking Rouse) subject
to owners’ orders, at any sad all times during bank
ing hours.
Exchange an Atlanta and Augusta in stuns ti
suit purchasers. iunltf
JAMES HUNTER,
DEALER IN
Coin, Securities & Exchange,
No. HO Bryan Street,
(Geoigla Historical Society Bunding).
Also, the following property of said company,
’* *" cels of land Nos. 2,3 and 4*
and No*. 124,126,127,144,
and 157, in District Twenty*
Also, a certain tract or parcel of land In the
ity of Brunswick, known as the wharf property
f the Macon and Brunswick Railroad Company.
Also, one-half (undivided) of lots Nos. 3 and 4
f block 37, in the city of Macon, known in the
reality as the Guard-House property.
Also, city lots Nos. 1, 2, and a portion of No. 3,
a square No. 55 in the city of Macon.
Also, a tract or parcel of land in said city of
[aeon, there known as ‘*Camp Oglethorpe,”
lining ten acres, more or less.
Also, city lots Nos. 1 and 7, in block No. 7, in
., Georgia, and four hundred
orty shares of stock in the Southern and
tic Telegraph Company, certificate 1009.
The foregoing property will be offered for
ish.
E. A. FLHVVKLLBN,
Receiver of Macon and Brunswick Railroad.
EXECUTIVE DEPARTMENT,)
State op Georgia, V
Atlanta, September 30, 1874.J
XAS, by virtue of the authority gfr
s second section of an act entitled “An
’ approved December 3, 1866,
... frailraadc....
ag the same in the bands of an agent f
, to be held, managed, and the * *~
in accordance with the j
after the seizure of all the property of raid
>anv as aforesaid, the Governor “shall sell
said road and its equipments, and other
aty belonging to said company, in such man-
nd at such time as in his judgment may .best
;rve the interest of all concernedi” and hav-
operty of the company seized under said order
: sold at an early day; it is, therefore.
Ordered, That all of the property seized
' nowin the possession of Edward
, Superintendent of Public Works a*.**
of the property of the Macon and
c Railroad Company under said order,
bidder, at public outcry, at
~ and Brunswick RnUrrm/i
Ordered, That the said Edward A. Flcwellen,
arity all the property to be sold as aforesaid,
publish the aarne in such public pyxpft 1 ** in
State and in the city of New Yorkaain his
tive Department, at the Capitol, in Atlanta,
the day and year above written.
JAMBS M. SMITH, Governor.
By the Governor.
J. W. Wabken, Secretary Executive Dep’t.
oct9-F6t
FOR SALE.
335 ACRES
OF THE
est Garden Lands in Ghat-
ham County,
7 EARLY adjoining the C. R. R. Lands, above
I Canal, with a front of 650 yards on Savan-
h Tjlvpr, nnrj Mmepn AntpnttA T^nud, ind ljtf
miles from the SavannahMhrket House, with
‘ .ring an avenue of 30
from Augusta Road
er, and also a road to Savannah cry way of
: on Canal foot of Bryan street,
s land is high and a good portion of it in a
itate of cultivation, and is well adapted to
ilture of Early Vegetables, Melons, &c^ Ac.
all laid out in lots from 5 to 10 acres, for
First-Class STEAM SAW MILL, 35 feet
taw 25.000 feet of lumber per >
f at Mill on Savannah River of 375ft
y, with a
' j.wilh
:ptb of 18 feet of water on saidfront sufficient
load three vessels at a time, and a boom
able of holding three minion feet of timber,
ny part or the whole of the above can be pur-
McLEOD & BRO., 200 Bay street,
S. OUN TALLEY,
Cashier Merchants* National Bank.
WALLACE CUMMING, Banker.
GEO. G. WILSON, 190 Congress street.
L. Exley, on the premises, will show
l to purchase, and
t lots.
For Sale Low. -
BUNCHES CHOICE RED BANANAS*
100 Bbla. CHOICE APPLES.
100 Bbls. Early Rose tad Peach Blow POTA
TOES.
50 Bbls. ONIONS.
L T. WHITCOMBS SON, Agmt,
ct22-t! 141 Bay street.
- FOB SALE,
C. S. GAY,
Corner Charlton and Tattnall Sts.
£6ip ©arpcjrtrriofl.
AND
lTTOS ST., SAVA53UH, Ga.
rAS facilities for doing all work with dispetch.
SPRUCE SPARS and LIVE OAK TIMBER
t for the SOUTHERN WRECKING
to contract for Raising
of any size. Has on
and Primping
hand for hire
EL 7. WTLUNE,
Professional and Business Men
|R anybody else,
size, color, or
OANS NEGOTIATED. Advances made on
I in my hands for raleat
Estate bought and sold on
current rates,
commission.
Mr, H. J. THOMASSON wifi take charge of
the Real Estate branch of my business, ana wiG
give his personal attention to the leasing of bouses
and collection of rents. sepl-tf
HENRY BRYAN,
113 Bay Street,
General Broker & Auctioneer.
STOCKS, BONDS AND REAL ESTATE
BOUGHT OR SOLD
AT PRIVATE OR PUBLIC SALE.
W UNDERWRITERS’ or CARGO SALES
will receive careful attention. octlO-tf
ALFRED L. HARTRIDGE,
SECURITY
EXCHANGE BROKER,
No 8 Battersby Building,
SAVANNAH,
octl5-Gm
GA.
and gitfanrante.
BRESNAN’S
European Douse
156,158,160 & 162
BRYAN STREET,
SAVANNAH, GA.
Proprietor, having completed thesecet*
y additions and improvements, now
to his guests all the comforts to be obtained
it other Hotels at less than
HALF THE EXPENSE!
A RESTAIIAIT
ON THE
.EUROPEAN PLAN
Has been added, where guests ran
AT ALL HOURS
Order whatever can be obtained in the market.
BOOHS, WITH BOARD,
$1 50 PER DAY.
Determined to be
Outdone by None,
AH I ask is a TRIAL, confident that complete
satisfaction win be given.
JOHN BRESNAN,
PROPRIETOR.
feb!9-tf
DANCING ACADEMY.
AT ADAM L. LOUIS Will open her DANCING
1VJL ACADEMY at the Masonic Temple, corner
of Liberty and Whitaker streets, the latter part
of November, with all the newQnadrilis, Waltzes
and Fancy Dances. For particular?, call at Dr.
TAT-EM’S DRUG STORE. Masonic Temple.
Due notice will be given of the day of opening
Oct21—W,F Jb^rI6w
ttedical Colleger Georgia
AUGUSTA. ^
The Medical Department
OF THE
UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA.
UN will commence
on the 2d day of November.
£S—3Iatricu!ation, $5; Full Course of Lec
tures, $50; Practical Anatomy.; —
Beneficiaries admitted rn a— 15
on the terms stated in the o
L. A. DUGAS, M. D. t L.L.D., 1
oct3-F3w
St. Clement’s Hall,
(NEAR BALTMOKE.)
. J. AVERY SHEPHERD, D. D..
Head Master, Eliicolt Ciiv, Md.
Refer to Hon Senator Norwood, Gen.
E. Johnston, Messrs. R. Bradley & Son.
jtdyUS-M,W&Ftf
Boarding and Hay School
gin at 9 a. m., Oct. 1st, when a
present. New scholars will
when teachers will class them.