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taaw
$hc pnrs
J. H. ESTLJLL, Proprietor.
W. T. THOMPSON, Editor.
MONDAY, JULY 5, 1S76.
The Amebican Eagle Soars.—Inspired,
no doubt, by the approach of the glorious
anniversary of American liberty, the
editor of the New Orleans Times wrote
this preliminary to a brief notice of that
important event, the victory of the Ameri
can team, so-called, in the recent shoot
ing match in Ireland. Save the Times -.
“To be sure the eagle of our country
soars high this day, and it is very proper
for the eagle to do so. But he does not
rush sunward with blood streaming from
his beak and hair in his talons, emblems
of bloody victory. Ah no ! ’Tis simply
a happy and peaceful eagle wantoning in
the upper ether with blue ribbons and
prize cups dangling about, with star
spangled banners and trophies galore.”
The Boston Tost has no faith in the
existence of a large political body of inde
pendents. It says: “In opposing the
Administration party, the Democrats
seek to do it in the most effective man
ner, and to that end to win over the
confidence and support of a majority of
the people by the manner of their oppo
sition. Last year’s results demonstrated
what it was possible to do in this direc
tion. They were not the work of ‘inde
pendent voters’ as a class,but of the people
themselves, breaking away from the or
ganization that had forfeited all further
confidence, and allying themselves with
those who upheld and v defended well
known Democratic principles.”
The California Democrats seem to have
embodied in their platform all that oould
be desired in the way of pledges of re
form in local government. As far as we
can observe, they promise everything to
which the independent party is pledged,
besides expressing opinions on the greater
questions which must come before the
nation for settlement, and for which the
people of California must be getting
ready now. For every argument in favor
of the independent part}', ten can be
urged in behalf of Democracy. The
guerrilla in politics has no place this
year.
Value of Imports.—The Bureau of
Statistics reports the specie value of im
ports into the United States for eleven
months ending May 31, amounted to
$490,444,2*28, and the foreign exports,
currency value, $475,558,496. Foreign
exports, specie value, $14,616,103. As
compared with the same period last 3’ear
there has been a falling off in imports of
$56,104,289, and of exports in currency
value there has been a falling off of $160,-
475,722, and of exports, specie value, a
decrease of $7,204,309.
It is now asserted in the Washington
dispatches that the whiskey suits are
likely to come to naught owing to mis
management on the part of persons in
trusted with the prosecution. No names
are mentioned, but it would hardly be
supposed that, under such circumstances,
the officers who have, through incapacity
or neglect, failed to recover the taxes due
the government would be retained for
further service in a line of business for
which their inaptness is so glaringly ap
parent.
A Veteran in* the Pulpit.—Father
Boehm, the oldest living Methodist cler
gyman, preached his centennial sermon
in New York on Sunday. He was born
in Philadelphia, June 8, 1775, and began
to preach in 1800 as a traveling clergy
man! At the conclusion of the sermon
Bishop Janes addressed the audience, al
luding to Father Boehm's remarkable
mental and physical preservation, and
passing an eloquent eulogy upon his
life and labors.
The third term organa hate to give up
their love. Mr. Wendell Phillips’s letter
receives its only praise from them. Thus
the kitchen instrument at Washington
thinks Mr. Phillips “sometimes strikes a
responsive chord in the hearts of the
loyal people of the country,” and the
Pittsburg Gazette takes occasion to re
mark that “Grant with hard money is
letter than a new man with paper cur
rency.”
If greenbacks are “rag money,” as the
Republican party press calls them, what
are the National Bank notes, which are
redeemable in greenbacks ? What are
the government bonds, which have the
security of the greenbacks—no more and
mo less ? Vet we never hear the bonds or
the National Bank money called rags.
Why is this thus? •
Taxation of Liquor.—The constita^
tionality of the State law of Michigan,
passed by the last Legislature, in relation
to the taxation of liquor, is about to be
tested -under an injunction from the
Superior Court of the State restraining
the collection of said tax.
iW~ For Telegraphic Dispatches Siee First
Pane.
Projectiles and Armor.—In that race
for supremacy between shot and armor,
which has been going on for twelve years,
aud which appears like the instructive
preparation for an expected event, the
advantages thus far are on the side of the
projectiles. In some recent experiments
made at Berlin, four of Krupp’s rifled
breech-loading guns, arranged to give a
converging fire, shattered a target com
posed of iron plate twenty inches thick.
The guns had a charge of eighty-five
pounds of prismatic powder each, with
cubic projectiles, and were fired simulta
neously by electric ignition. Of course
battle firing is a very different thing from
target practice; but all the latest experi
ments in Prussia and England go to show
that in the wars of the future, the best
guns and not the best armor will insure
victory.
The Case of Sam Bard.—A Washing
ton dispatch says: “The Attorney Gen
eral has decided that technically Mr. Sam
Bard’s letter to the President was not a
letter of resignation, but adds that any
honorable gentlemen would so consider
it. The President has therefore signed
the papers suspending Mr. Bard from
office as Postmaster at Atlanta, with or
ders to Mr. Conley to take possession of
the office.”
By this action Sam has lost his offi c«
but has been indirectly recognized by the
President as an “honorable gentleman.”
That was a great stretch of presumption
on the part of Grant, and one that will
not be appreciated by his unanimous
friend Sam, who no doubt thinks with
Jack Falstaff—honor be d—d.
The first district of Ohio pays some
iuternal revenue tax. During the fiscal
year ending June 30, 1874, that district
paid $7,439,952 46. For the year ending
June 30, 1875, we paid $8,055,517 72.
Perhaps, says the Enquirer, some dis
trict in the United States can beat that?
The New York Assessors report that
the increase of the aggregate Fahiation of
real personal property in that State
over the previous assessment is only a
little less than two hundred million dol
lars. This seems almost incredible.
The Revenue Raid on Smokers.
Notwithstanding the fact that the
taxes on tobacco and the duty and taxes
i on cigars amounted, during the last fiscal
! year, to almost $40,000,000, it is neverthe
less now sought to annoy, if not oppress,
i this industry with the most ridiculous
thing ever heard of, in the shape of a
stamp on every cigar. Against this un
justifiable outrage, so much worse than
the British stamp act against which our
ancestors rebelled one hundred years ago,
the principal cigar manufacturers aud im
porters of New York have addressed a
remonstrance to the Commissioner of
Internal Revenue, in which they insist
that “it can ODly be a disastrous experi
ment and entirely unnecessary, as the
taxes on cigars are being collected as
closely as any taxes that are collectable.
The adoption of such a stamp would create
the most radical changes imaginable
in the manufacture as w*ell as the import
ation of cigars, and its involving at some
fixed date the stamping of all cigars then
on hand would be ruinous besides im
practicable. Again, it is a patented
s amp, involving a royalty, to be paid
either by the government or the cigar
manufacturers and importers, and an
other very considerable additional ex
pense in its application. Furthermore,
the consumer would either be compelled
to smoke the paper stamp, injuring very
seriously the flavor of the cigar, or be
required to remove the stamp, and there
by either damage the wrapper or destroy
the cigar.”
So much for the manufacturers and deal
ers. But the Nashville Union points out
some of the insufferable annoyances to
which the smoker of the weed would be
subjected by the enforcement of the new
government regulation. Revenue spies,
says the Union, would be dogging his
steps at every turn, and wanting to know
where he bought “that unstamped cigar;”
no chance for a quiet reverie, because
that miserable strip of paper happens to
be missing; in fact, all the pleasure and
romance that have ever been associated
with man’s truest solace, a genuine Ha
vana. would be utterly dissipated by the
greed of a hard-run government.
If the government founded by the pa
triots and heroes of ’76—which in the
opinion of some people has been slightly
changed by “reconstruction”—really de
signs to put in operation this latest, mean
est, most diabolical invention of the Rad
ical tax fiend, it should have postponed
doing so until after the celebration of the
Fourth of July. Such an outrage, such
aggravation of the infamous “stamp act,”
is apt to make one contrast the evils
against which our rebel fathers fought
with the blessings which we now enjoy
“ under the best government the world
ever saw.”
The July Divideuds.
The New York Bulletin gives a state
ment showing the amounts of dividends
and interest payable in that city in the
month of July. It appears that the sum
to be in this way disbursed upon the sev
eral classes of securities is es follows :
Governments $27,188,441
States 1,563,573
Banks *2,527,t>75
Railroads 13,117,957
Insurance Companies 158,500
Miscellaneous 1,883,613
Total $46,439,959
To this should be added, says the
Bulletin, the interest payable to the
savings banks, the amount of which can
not be exactly ascertained at present.
The amount disbursed by these institu
tions last July was $4,927,000 by the
New York banks and $1,284,000 by those
of Brooklyn, making a total of $6,211,-
000. Assuming the amounts paid to de
positors to be this year about the same
this would carry up the total interest and
dividend payments to about $52,500,000,
which is exactly the sum shown by our
compilation of last year. The better half
of this sum is due from the Government,
and the remainder is distributed chiefly
among various classes or corporations.
Of the total disbursements, about one-
third is due to foreign holders of our se
curities, which will immediately become
an important item in the condition of
our foreign exchanges, coming, as it does,
almost concurrently with the return of
about $20,000,000 of five-twenties from
Europe for redemption on account of the
Finking fund. The present firmness of
the exchange market is due to these influ
ences; and although it is likely that a
certain amount of securities may be sent
to Europe, yet it seems that we may have
to send out some further important
amounts of specie to meet these special
requirements of the exchanges.
The recent decision of Judge Blodgett,
in the United States District Court at
Chicago, affirming the validity of certain
town bonds issued in aid of the Dixon,
Peoria and Hannibal Railroad, the de
cision of the State Supreme Court to the
contrary notwithstanding, administers a
smart rap to the municipalities contesting
their obligations. One of the points
made was that the bonds had a trifle over
twenty years 1o run, when the limit im-
posed by the act was twenty years
Judge Blodgett says : “I do not think i£
would be sound commercial morality to
allow parties to escape the liability which
they have themselves assumed upon so
technical an excuse and objection as this.”
The list of dividends and interest pay
ments payable at Boston during the pres
ent month shows a considerable falling
off m railroad and manufacturing divi
dends, a fact due not only to a reduction
of earnings, but also to the liquidation of
floating debts, to which purpose a con
siderable amount of the surplus earnings
have been appropriated. The total
amount of payments due at Boston dur
ing the month amounts to $9,889,540,
against $9,117,378 the same time last
year, and $10,130,093 in 1873. Of the
total payments $7,303,900 is on account
of government, State, city and railway
bond interest, $l,726,56f on account of
railroad, $533,600 on account of manu
facturing companies, and $325,470 for
miscellaneous dividends.
The Carlo-Alfonsist war in Spain is
assuming new and sterner features. The
Carlist cause has so far been largely sup
ported by forced levies upon the friends
of Alfonso’s government, and to stop
this, reprisals of a very stringent quality
have been resorted to. It is now orflered
that every member of a Carlist Junta and
all families having a member in the Pre
tender’s army shall be expelled from
Spain, and their property confiscated
to indemnify the losses of Alfonso’s
adherents. This measure, though severe,
seems eminently righteous—it simply
taxes Carlists for the support of Carlism—
and it will doubtless considerably enliven
the langonr of a Spanish struggle.
The Philadelphia Chronicle is gratified
to learn that “ an eminent Boston physi
cian/’ who, during the war, was so ex
tremely loyal that he would Qot permit
his patent respirators to be sold at the
South because they might stop the growth
of tubercles in rebellious lungs, distin
guished himself at the late centennial
celebration by rushing out into the street
to shake hands with ex-Confederate
soldier#. In grateful recognition of this
respirating fofgiyenesa, Jet us breathe
freely and rejoioe that the cduntry is
safe.
A Proper Resentment.
The Washington Republican in a recent
editorial intimates that a decided un
pleasantness is brewing between Messrs.
Bristow, Jewell and Pierrepont on the
one side, and Delano, Robeson and
Belknap on the other. The growing
popularity of the three new Cabinet
Ministers has excited the envy of their
veteran associates, which, joined to the
uncomfortable association of being held
in perpetual and unfavorable comparison
is anything but soothing to the old
stagers. The Republican, in an article
which arouses the ire of the Chicago
Tribune, says :
“No one will deny to a careful and con
scientious official all of the honor he de
serves for the reforms he may legitimately
establish, but a careful and conscientious
official will avoid as far as possible any
effort to build up a reputation at the ex
pense of others, and to the injury of his
party. No two men do business alike,
and while new brooms proverbially sweep
clean, it must be remembered that all the
virtue and independence of the party are
not possessed by recently-appointed offi
cials.”
This moves the Chicago Tribune to the
following impatient observations:
“The jealousy aroused in certain of
ficial circles by the popularity of Messrs.
Bristow, Jewell and Pierrepont, who
have been active and efficient in their en
deavors to purify the public service, has
not lost in force by the lapse of time, but
is daily becoming more indecent. The
sneers, which were at first covert, are
now open and undisguised, and the pros
pect is that before long the Delano-Wil
liams gang will openly proclaim their
hostility to these interlopers who are
honestly administering the offices which
they hold.”
Commenting on the little onpleasant-
ness in the Radical wigwam, the St. Louis
Republican delivers itself thusly : “Noth
ing grieves us so much as the spectacle of
the failure of brethren to dwell together
in unity ; and when we are compelled to
note such a distressing failure we at once
seek out the causes of disagreement with
a view to mediation, and to see if we can
not suggest some plan of reconciliation.
Carefully surveying this particular case,
we are firmly convinced that the fault is
all on the side of ‘these interlopers,’ and
that the Chicago Tribune hits upon the
head of their offending when it speaks
of them as ‘honestly administering the
offices which they hold.’ We would like
to know what business any fellow has to
“honestly administer” the duties of a
cabinet office under the present regime.
What is to become of the great army of
patriots in Washington, who live off the
country which they saved, if all the
straw bids and all the claim-jobs and all
the ring contracts are cut off ? How is a
Republican form of government to be
guaranteed to the insurrectionary States
of the South if the accounts of
judicial districts are inquired into
before they are paid ? In short how
is the Republican party going to
manage to preserve the country which it
has saved, unless it is permitted to steal
the money which experience has demon
strated is required for its salvation ? On
this issue we are with the old-timers, most
decidedly, and fomenst the “interlopers’
without qualification. This thing of run
ning in two or three honest men for the
few remaining months of an eight years
administration, to take the curse off nearly
seven years of thievery, is not only thin;
it is diaphanous, and we are glad that the
old-timers have the perception to see and
the spirit to resent the fraud. We have
often heard that there is honor among a
certain class of industrial people; and we
presume it is this sense of honor which
impels the old-timers in the Cabinet to
resent the transparent imposition of this
thing of locking up the vaults after the
cash has disappeared and then heralding
the feat to the pensive public as “great
reforms ” at the hands of the Republican
party. We would suggest as a basis of
reconciliation that the “interlopers”
abandon their impertinent scheme and
fall gracefully in with the old order of
things. Then everything in Washington
will be serene.
Lying aud Perjury Somewhere.
Dr. McCosh, President of Princeton
College, preached the baccalaureate ser
mon on Sunday, June 27th. His subject
was the “Royal Law of Love.” It is
evident from a portion of his remarks,
that he has no sympathy with the new
fangled religion of.“gush” and “slob
ber,” such as has been developed by the
Beecher-Tilton controversy and trial.
The reverend doctor's rebuke was admin
istered in this way: There was a ten
dency in our day to let down doctrines
and exalt charity. It was “broad
church” in England, and the “ religion
of humanity” in this country. It w««
a profound saying by one of the brothers
of Hare, that “ to form a correct
judgment concerning the Jendency
of any doctrine, we should rather look
at the forms it bears in the disciples
than in the teacher; for he only made
it, they are made by it.” We may now
see the kind of characters that are
made in this school of love and human
ity. There was first a turning away
from the old doctrine, and this had
been followed by a turning away from
the old morality. I}r. McCosh begged
that it might be understood that
he had no reference to any one individual,
and that he entered on no doubtful or
disputed points. The feeling of many
was, “ O, my soul, come not thou into
their secret; into their assembly, mine
honor, be not tbou united.” Notwith
standing all the efforts to suppress the
“secret,” awful disclosures have been
made. We see how perilous it is to begin
to tamper with the most sacred of all
earthly relations. It looks as if the gen
eration now springing up among us
need to know what sort of “assem
bly ”* or society Las been formed
among us, what kind of men aro seeking
to guide opinion in the public press, even
to the so-called religious press—men who
keep no Sabbath, but work on it as on
other days, who go to no place of wor
ship, who are supposed to be capable of
teaching others while they have aban
doned the religion which is the basis of
ethics, and ridicule the holy doctrine
which they know condemns them. Love
cannot excuse lying, whether to shelter
the persons themselves or others ; and in
contradictory statements there must be
lying, and in contradictory oaths there
must be perjury.
OKEEFEENOKEE.
Something About the Georgia Line.
/
ME. ABSALOM H. CHAPPELL.
Obanoe Co., tl.A., Jane 1J4, 1875.
Editor Morning New. :
My attention has been called to an ar
ticle headed “The Okeefeenokee Survey,”
copied from the Thomasville Enterprise,
and seemingly indorsed by you, as it is
placed in your editorial columns.
Permit me to point out several errors
He Think. “The Fourth” Ought to be
Observed as a Day of “Fasting and
Prayer Wants no Reconciliation.
by mure
Columbus, Ga., .June 30, 1875.
Messrs. H. V. M. Miller, George HiUyer,
Marcus A. Bell, Committee, Etc. .**
Gentlemen—I have the honor to ac
knowledge yours of the 11th inst., in
viting me, in behalf of the citizens of
Atlanta, to co-operate with them in per-
contained in that article, in reference to iu celebrating the nine-
, c cuv-o ty-nmth anniversary of American mde-
the boundary line between Georgia and
Florida.
The instructions to the surveyors, in
1859, based upon the agreement between
the States, required the old precautionary
line of the United States (the McNeil
line) io be re-surveyed and re-marked only
in the event that it should prove to be a
straight line, from the mouth of Flint
river to Mound B, known as El-
licott’s Mound, on the south margin of
the Okeefeenokee swamp. This McNeil
line was found to be incorrect, as will be
evident to every intelligent man when
informed that it is what navigators call a
rhumb line, cutting the meridians at a
constant angle. It curves towards the
equator—that is, into Florida territory.
Professor Orr very properly united with
the undersigned, in accordance with the
instructions and the agreement between
the States, in rejecting the McNeil line,
and in “establishing a direct lineii be
tween the adopted termini.
But before proceeding with the work a
paper was drawn up by the surveyors,
at Chattahoochee, addressed to the
Legislatures of Florida and Georgia,
then in session, stating that they were
-about to survey a direct line from the
mouth of Flint river towards Mound B,
and asking that such line should be
adopted, if it should not “miss or depart
from Mound B more than a quarter of a
mile, north or south.” This would avoid
the necessity, and the heavy expense, of
first running a guide or trial line, as the
surveyors were confident that the line
would fall within the named limit; and,
in point of fact, when juu, did actually
“miss or depart from” the centre of
Mound B only twenty-eight feet.
The suggestion was approved by both
Legislatures, and the line “about to be
surveyed by G. J. Orr on the part of
Georgia, and B. F. Whitner, on
the part of Florida,” they declared
should be the boundary line between
Georgia and Florida, provided it should
not “ miss or depart from ” mound B
more than a quarter of a mile; and pro
vided further, that it should be approved
by the respective surveyors. The condi
tions were fully complied with', mounds
were erected every mile where practica
ble, and the line became the boundary
between the two Siates.
Even without this later action of the
Legislatures in 1859, the line must have
become the boundary, as it was surveyed
in accordance with the agreement previ
ously entered into by Florida and Geor
gia. For all practical purposes, it was a
direct line between the adopted termini—
the mouth of Flint river and Mound B—
as no sane commissioners or surveyors
would think of correcting back, through
out a line one hundred and sixty miles
long, an error of only twenty-eight feet,
or about two inches to the mile.
The lasff sentence of the article is
rather mysterious. I quote : “ Now that
it has been shown that a mistake of over
seventeen miles was made, falling that
much short of reaching Endicott’s (* Elli-
cott’s’) Mound in surveying the eastern
line of the Appling purchase, that this
error was wholly unknown to Com
missioners Orr and Whitner,” etc.
Verily, such error of “over seventeen
miles” was, and is, and ever will be,
“ unknown to Commissioners Orr and
Whitner.” for no such error exists.
I do not know where the “Eastern line
of the Appling purchase” is. But Elli-
cott and Minor had only two mounds
raised—Mound A on the St. Mary’s, op
posite or nearly opposite the month of
Cedar Creek, and Mound B on the south
side of Okeefeenokee swamp. I do not
remember the precise distance between
these mounds— it is, however, some fifteen
or twenty miles—but I have a lively recol
lection, during the hottest weather I ever
experienced, (July, 1854,) in conjunction
with the Georgia Commission (Messrs*.
Allen and Butts) of running a traverse
from Mound A to Mound B. Perhaps
this mound A is the one referred to in
the allusion to the “Eastern line of the
Appling purchase.” Ellicott and Minor
could not conveniently ascend the
river farther than this point
with the boats necessary for trans
porting the instruments with which to
determine latitude and longitude. And
when the latitude and longitude were as-,
certained, the spot was perpetuated by
raising a mound, called Mound A. The
American and Spanish Cdnfmissioners
then proceeded to search for “the head
or source of the St. Mary’s river”—that is
to say, the eastern terminus, by treat}*,
of the dividing line to be surveyed be
tween the United States and the Spanish
possessions. After determining to their
satisfaction the “head or source” of the
river, they then raised Mound B, not at
such terminus, but as a permanent monu
ment to perpetuate said “head or source
of the St. Mary’s,” which was declared to
be two miles northeast of Mound B, in
the swamp, where a rnouDd could not be
made or would not endure.
This point, two miles northeast from
Mound B, Florida contended for
settled by the treaty; and from this point
a line was surveyed in 1854 by a commis
sion from Florida and Georgia, (the un
dersigned being a member of it,) in ac
cordance with an interlocutory decree of
the Supreme Court of the United States.
Florida, anxious for a settlement of
this vexed question of boundar3 r , after
wards yielded what she considered her
just claim, and with Georgia adopted
Mound B, H miles south of the line sur
veyed in 1854.
If the writer of the article will consult
Ellicott’8 journal and maps, and carefully
examine the action of his own State
Legislature bearing upon this question of
boundary, he will find that there has been
no mistake of “over seventeen miles
made,” but that the line as established
by Messrs. Orr and Whitner is in strict
accordance with the agreement between
Florida and Georgia, and that no case is
presented “for Jreopening the question
of boundary for equitable settlement.”
B. F. Whitner.
pendence
The Fourth of July anniversaries we
all know, gentlemen, have lately under
gone a great change in their character
and the feelings they are calculated to
inspire. They have been now, for a se
ries of years, suggestive to all thought
ful, patriotic minds, especially in the
South, far more of sentiments of
sadness and humiliation than of pride
and gratulation. Our country is not
yet a hundred years old, and what ship
wreck. nevertheless, do we not behold of
the glorious work of our ancestors ? We
have lost the liberties and the precious
constitutional rights and security they
bequeathed to us, and which they fondly
hoped would be perpetuated, as a blessed
heritage, to their remotest posterity.
But, whatever may have been our faults
or misfortunes, relative to the sublime
boon we received at their hands
aud have so lamentably let fall
from our own, never let us be guilty
of the impiety of not only remember
ing and honoring what they dared, did
and suffered—and that, too. much less
for themselves than for us. Never let us
become so degenerate as not to love,
study and strive to keep alive, if we can
not worthily imitate their example and
principles. And certainly there is no
more fitting day for such study than the
Fourth of July—a da3* rendered forever il
lustrious by the magnanimity and heroism
of which our revolutionary statesmen were
capable. The impositions against which
they and their constituencies, from that
mom ent sovereign, rebelled, were trifling
in magnitude, and were in no danger of
waxing heavy in their day; but seeing in
them the germs of future despotism,
they nobl3* resolved to crush them
at once, nor allow them a chance
to develop aud ripen into the bitter fruits
of practical slavery for their children.
I take it for granted that you do not
propose, on Monday next, to glorify, in
the old-fashioned, self-lauding, self-ex
alting way* our deliverance during the
last century from the mild, maternal
British yoke—just as if nothing had hap
pened within the last dozen years, mak
ing such a course no longer compatible
with good taste or with our dignit3* aud
self-respect—just as if we were unconsci
ous of the staring fact that we had, within
that period, come under another yoke in
finitely worse than the one we threw off
ninety-nine years ago—a yoke the most
galling and ignominious that the world
ever knew, fastened upon us after the
peaceful surrender of our arms and our
giving the amplest pledges of loyalty, by
the ruthless hands of fraternal conquerors.
So long as that vile*yoke is upon our
necks, so long as we have enjoined upon
us a constitution and a government re
modeled in hatred, and the aim of which is
to make us the slaves of our former negro
slaves and of the Northern miscreants
who use them and their votes as the easy
means of misruling, despoiling, oppress
ing, and debasing us, let the Fourth of
July, if commemorated at all in the South,
be kept as a season of patriotic mourning
and indignation. Ah! How* can the gener
ous, even among our enemies, help hav
ing their festivities dashed on that day
when they think of South Carolina, Mis
sissippi and Louisiana, and the harrow
ing spectacle of negro and carpet-bag
lawlessness, misrule and ruin they are at
this moment uhnappily presenting; when
they think also of the scenes whicn, until
very iecently^, were long rampant in Ar
kansas and Alabama—from the like of
which Georgia and some other Southern
States had, indeed, an earlier deliver
ance, but from which they are never safe
enough to be free from anxiety, when
ever it shall suit the Federal administra
tion and its vermin to resolve to carry
thdu- elections.
Tfte great appalling danger, gentlemen,
is that process, already begun, of a
gradual 9*£tling down into permanent
bad goveruinent, and of the country’s
acquiescence under it, will not be ar
rested, but will continue to go on urlil it
reaches a depth from \yhich there never
can be nor will be reaction or resurrec
tion. History is full of such's^sts. That
depth will most assuredly have been
reached whenever the South, the' great
victim and sufferer under the present
state of things, shall become base enough
to be reconciled to her wrongs and the
fate they inflict.
I have the honor to be most respect
fully your obedient servant aud fellow
citizen, A. H. Chappell.
THE
—TQ—
MORNING
NEWS.
Hidnight Telegrams.
COMMERCIAL CO-OPERATION.
The Patrons of Husbandry and the
English Co-Operators.
A MOFEMEXT TO UNITE THE TWO
BODIES.
The American Riflemen in Dublin.
THE PATRONS OF HUSBANDRY.
Washington, July 4.—The Executive
Committee of the National Grange yes
terday determined to send three of their
number—Messrs. Shanland, of Iowa,
Chase, of New Hampshire, and Jones, of
Arkansas—to represent the Patrons of
Husbandry in the Cotton States Conven
tion, which meets in Raleigh, N. C., on
the 13th inst.
The committee have spent considerable
time in receiving and considering the
proposition of the English Co-operatives
for a union for commercial purposes,
of the two bodies. The Co-operators are
represented by Hon. Thos. D. Worrold,
of Manchester, England, who is the man
aging director of the company, which is
proposed as the bond of union. It ap
pears that the British Co-operative soci
eties are not a secret body, hence it will
be impossible, under existing circum
stances, to unite with the Patrons ; but
this difficulty has been met by the
formation of a Trading Com pan 3*
having the indorsement and sup
port of the United Co-operative
Lodges in England, and fully organized
under the English laws. The proposi
tions are to have two branches of the
society, one in England and the other in
the United States. The Board in each
country is to have the absolute control
of the fund subscribed therein, and all to
be used for the purpose of international
exchange of commodities. The capital
is twenty-five millions of dollars. All
transactions are to be for cash or its
equivalent. The British Co-operators
number five hundred thousand members,
have over one thousand stores, some fifty
or sixty cotton spinning mills, about
twenty flouring mills, an agricultural and
horticultural society, and a number of
manufactories, and, of course, consume a
large quantity of American products.
The funds subscribed by the English
branch of the company will be
employed in the purchase of ships, the
erection of warehouses, and the manufac
ture of such articles as are in constant
demand among the Patrons of Husbandry.
These ships will bring the goods to New
Orleans or other Southern ports, and to
Eastern ports, if necessary, and they de
sire the Patrons to employ their portion
of capital in conveying American staples
and products to meet these ships, and
thus to make the necessary exchange in
the most direct and simple manner.
The co-operators have a large surplus
capital which is constantly on the in
crease, and which they think can be
profitably employed in this trade, while
each branch of the company* will have
control of its own affairs. The two
boards will form a council who will by
joint action decide what branches of
business will be engaged in, and
define the method of conduct
ing the same. An American
will be sent to Liverpool to watch the
interests of the Grange branch of the
company, and the English Board will
havo a like representative in New Or
leans, while the general supervision will
be in the hands of a managing director,
alread3* elected, and who, though an
Englishman born, lias been twenty-three
years in America. The proposition is
regarded with great favor, and it is ex
pected the sub-committee of the National
Grange, to which the whole matter has
been referred, will report on Monday.
THE AMERICAN RIFLEMEN.
Dublin, July 4.—Several of the Ameri
can riflemen dined to-day at the residence
of Mr. Milner, of the Irish team, and
others at the residence of Mr. Water-
house. The affairs were private and in
formal. The usual sentiments were pro
posed by the host, “the most honored,”
and “the day we celebrate.” The Ameri
can team have been invited to a banquet
in Edinburgh. They will soon visit that
city, stopping at Belfast and Glasgow on
their way.
ihu’ AtU’rrtiscmfnts.
DeWitt,
Morgan
& Co.
DRESS AND FANCY GOODS
£xrursums.
—AT—
GREAT REDUCTION!
B lack iron grenadines, worth $1 25,
for $1.
PRINTED MUSLINS, 15c; former price, 35c.
COLORED GRENADINES at 15c; former
price 40c.
WHITE VIC* LAWNS, 40 inches wide, 19c;
very cheap. V
Bargains in WHITE GOODS.
SUMMER SILKS at 85c—redneed .
FRENCH PERCALES, 15 and 20c.
BLACK GRENADINES, 25c.
BLACK CREPE MARETZ, reduced price.
Case fine 4-4 SHIRTINGS at 10c.
IRISH LINENS at 37>£c—very cheap.
300 yards CAMBRIC EDGINGS at 10 and
12>$c—very cheap.
1 case LADIES* WHITE HOSE at 12#c.
GENTS’LINEN HEMMED h’DKF’S at 2ftc,
worth 40c.
jy5-tf DpWlTT, MORGAN & CO.
A3 li BANKS’
SCALES
5
/,
i
ct
!
I i, „• «3sb
FAIRBANKS
is* T A- >'i>A It I>.
Also, Miles’ Alarm Cash Drawer,
Coffee ami Drag Mills, Letter Presses, Ac., Ac.
PRINCIPAL SCALE WAREHOUSES.
FAIBBAXKS A CO., 311 Broadway, 5. Y;
FAIRBANKS & CO., 166 Baltimore st., Balt.
FAIRBANKS & CO., 53 Camp street, N. Orleans.
FAIRBANKS & CO., 93 Main st., Buffalo, N. Y.
FAIRBANKS & CO., 338 Broadway, Albany, N Y.
FAIRBANKS «fc CO., 403 S’. Paul's st. Montreal.
FAIRBANKS & CO., 34 King William st., Lon
don. Eng.
FAIRBANKS, BROWN & CO., 2 Milk st., Bos
ton, Mass.
FAIRBANKS & EWING, Masonic Hall, Philada.
FAIRBANKS, MORSE A CO., Ill Lake st., Chi
cago.
FAIRBANKS. MORSE & CO., 139 Walnut st.,
Cincinnati, O.
FAIRBANKS, MORSE Jb CO., 1S2 Superior st.,
C- eve land, O.
FA IRBANKS, MORSE & CO., 4S Wood st., Pitts
burg.
FAIRBANKS, MORSE & CO., 5th and Main st.,
Louisville.
FAIRBANKS & CO., 302 and 304 Washington
avenue. St. Louis.
FAIRBANKS & HUTCHINSON, San Francisco.
For sale by leading Hardware Dealers.
jy5-M,W,F&w3m.
TO KENT,
T HE STORE under St. Andrew’s
Hall, corner of Jefferson and {“*
Broughton streets, running through to
the lane. Can be divided into three stores.
Also, the HALL and THIRD FLOOR. Posses
sion given 1st October. Apply to
jy5-l DAVID R. DILLON.
for
TYBEE ISLAND.
MOM»\V JULY 5.
T W O TRIp S ,
STEAMER
reliance,
Captain Nick King,
(Under Private Charter;,
W ILL leave wharf, foot of D.ayton street..
9 a. x. and 3p.x. ' o ai
Leaving the Island, cn return trip, at 7 p v
Refreshments on board. * **
Fare for the round trip. FIFTY CENT*-
BRAIN ARD & ROBERTSON
jy3-2t Comm;: -e.
H0! FOR TYBEE.
SUXDAY EXIT 11S10XS.
THE STEAMER
LIZZIE BAKER
Captain La Rose, 9
W ILL leave Padelford’s wliarf EVERY srx
DAYMOKMXU, a. 10 o'clock, for TV BEK
laiaiND. Returning steamer will leav. Tv * *
wharf at 5 p. m., sharp. ■ °
SO LiqrOR SOLD OS BOARD.
Fare for round trip, FIFTY CENTS • L.
and staterooms extra. Tickets maf. per. i
aj oflice tjefore going on board.
je31-tl A. L. RICHARDSON, Agent.
yirasurf Resorts.
THE GREAT
Pleasure Resort
OF SAVANNAH:
ONE OF THE MOST* ATTRACTIVE PLa- s
TO VISIT DURING THE I IF. AT Eli
SEASON IS
ISLE OF HOPE:
11/ HERE BUCKINGHAM has made ample
ff provision for the COM FOR l and PLE\S-
URE of all. Visitors can now enjoy DELIGHT
FUL SALT BATHING, by taking tL*.*
at., 3:25 1*. m., or 5:10 p. m. trai ns. SPLENDID
BATH HOUSES, for ladies and gentlemen, with
in a few yards of<he terminus.
PLEASANT ROOMS can be obtained forth-
season.
The DANCING PLATFORM, extending over
the water seventy feet, covered and provided with
seats, is CONSIDERED THE FINEST iu the
country.
Every accessory to PLEASURE AND EN
JOYMENT may be found at Isle of Hope, and
Mr. Buckingham, proprietor of the refreshment
establishment, is determined that A
shall be pleased. jc29-lm
HOUSE TO KENT.
A SMALL HOUSE, pleasantly located, west
of the Park. Kent, $30 per month. Pos
session given immediately. Address C. A. H.,
Key Box 105 P. O J>’5-1
Home School at Croton on Hudson.
M RS. M. C. BARLOW, having several chil
dren of her own to educate, will receive
into her family a limited number of pupils, who
will share equally every advantage with her own.
Every means will be adopted for their mental,
moral and physical development. Pupils can re
main the entire year. jy5-M, W<fcF2m
NOTICE.
^,^LL parties are cautioned against trailing for
pa „
CHECK NO 155 ($3S S5). drawn .July 2, on
Southern Bank State of Georgia, signed Muir &
Duckworth, to order of -M oran & Reilly, as pay
ment for same has been stopped.
jy5- MORAN & REILLY.
In 1870 New York city had a popula
tion of 942,292, and a municipal debt of
$122,860,780. In 1871 London had a
population of 3,266,987, and a city debt
of $25,918,000. These figures are im
posing. The city and county debts of
the whole Union are estimated to be to
day $835,000,000; but as this estimate
is only for those having one million and
over of liabilities, the total mav be set
down at a thousand million. Add the
State and national debts and there results
a heavy load for posterity.
There is no reason, says the Cincinnati
Enquirer, to suppose that the State of
Ohio will this year reverse her verdicts
at the polls in 1873 and 1874. The same
causes which produced those results are
in operation still. The people meant
something when they changed % State
that had been giving forty thousand Re
publican majority into over twenty thou
sand Democratic. That meant that they
were deWrinined to have a change in our
national affairs. That change has not
yet been had, and it cannot be until the
Presidential election. In the meantime,
the electors will keep on voting just as
they have been doing for the last two
years. Businesses dull. Labor is unem
ployed and unrequited. Money is scarce.
The times are oppressive to all but the
rich. Thjngs, in the opinion of the
voters, can’t be worse. They may be
made better. To have elected Governor
Allen in 1873, and thirteen Democratic
Congressmen out of twenty, in 1874, and
then to slide back into the Republican
ranks before the members of CoDgress
take their seats, is not a reasonable sup
position. The popular dose to the ad
ministration at Washington this fall will,
therefore, be a repetition of the dose of
the two previous years.
Senator Norwood and the Fourth of
July.
In answer to the Committee on Celebra
tion of the lourth of July in Atlanta, re
questing his participation, Senator Nor
wood says:
Savannah, Ga., June 28, 1875.
Gents: Your invitation to me to join
with the citizens of Atlanta in celebrating
the 99th anniversary of the Declaration of
American Independence, in July next, has
been received.
I regret to say th^t engagements which
I can neither break nor defer, will deprive
me of the pleasure of being with you.
I do not desire or intend to inflict on
3*ou a lengthy communication, but I beg
to express my regret, arising from a
knowledge of the desire on the part of
some good citizens of Georgia, to have
us abandon the custom of celebrating
that day. If our liberties have not been
lost, it is eminently proper to keep alive
all the memories of events and acts by
which they were established. If our lib
erties have been lost, we as Georgians
have the proud consciousness that the sin
lies not at our door, or the door of the
South, and that the3 T must be restored, if
ever, by the South; because a people
who voluntarily destroy their constitu
tional liberty and enslave themselves can
never recover that heritage. If it has
been lost, and as it is worthy of every
sacrifice to be regained, every patriot
should labor for its redemption. And
one of the means appointed is to revive
in the hearts of all Americans the love of
freedom, by bringing before them the
heroism of our Revolutionary Fathers,
that their sons may catch their glowing
inspiration. To this end no day can equal
the Fourth of July.
With the expression of my thanks for
your invitation, I remain
Your obedient servant
and fellow citizen,
T. M. Norwood.
The Republicans are being organised
throughout the State of Ohio into a secret
society, known as the Patriotic Sons of
Amerioa, Its cardinal principles are ex
clusion from office of all foreign-born
citizens and all who are Catholics in re
ligion. Negroes are eligible under its
constitution, but white European Protes-
tants and native American Catholics are
put under the ban of exclusion.
A Candid Confession.—The Albany
Express, a lea4ing >rew York Republican
journal, says: “The Republican party
never could have been successful if it
had, at the time of its organisation
8toppe4 tQ inquire too closely after the
antecedents of those who attached them
selves to it.”
Of course not. The worse the ante
cedents the better the Radical. -The
Forty Thieves were no doubt organized
on the same liberal principles.
The Secretary of the Treasury con
tinues to steadily reduce the fractional
currency outstanding, the decrease for
the last month being $1,500,000.
Dean Stanley, at the annual banquet of
the New-paper Press Fund in London,
said bo sometimes thought what a word
“?eader” was if they really dived into its
meaning. There are some chapters in
the Koran called the “terrific Suras,’ be
cause, it is said, the prophet’s hair turned
white in a single night while he was
composing them. Ho thought the “ter
rific Suras” of our rnodorn journals must
be the leaders composed in th« dead of
night on some heart-stirring event with
results which might shako the nation.
What responsibility, what labor could be
greater than that ? It seemed to to
be one of the n;cst unattainable, unap
proachable pieces of human workman
ship that could be conceived. Speaking
for a moment of himself, when he thought
what an effort it cost him to write even a
single letter, anonymous or otherwise, to
oue of our great journals, addressing
himself to the whole reading public of
England, he could not reflect how incal
culably greater must be the effort of those
effusions of which he had just spoken.
The laler reports from the inundated
regions of France show the devastation
to have been appalling. One account
places the losses at sixty millions of dol
lars—an almost incredible figure—while
the damage in two cities has been esti
mated at twenty-four millions. The loss
of life at Toulouse alone is put at two
thousand, though it is impossible to make
anything like a correct estimate. The
valley of the Garonne, where the flood
took place, is one of the most fertile and
populous in France. The population is
nearly half a million, and fully 100,000
persons are rendered homeless and are
dependent upon charit3 T . The calamity
has created a profound feeling of
s}’inpathy throughout Europe, and sub
scriptions for the sufferers are pouring in
from all quarters.
CITY COURTSHERIFF’S SALK
TTNDER and by virtue of an execution issued
VJ out of the City Court of Savannah, in favor
of James Fenruson against Thomas Britt and
Cosman & -Britt, I have levied upon all that
northern half of island known as Burntpot, in
Chatham county, State of Georgia, cortaining
twenty (20) acres, more or less.
And I will sell the same on the FIRST TUES
DAY IN AUGUST NEXT, before the Court
House door, in said county, between the legal
hours of sale. Levied on as the property of
Thomas Britt, to satisfy said execution.
Terms cash. Purchaser paying for titles.
ROBT K. HABERSHAM,
jy5-M4t Sheriff C. Ct.
6rormcs and Provisions.
Champion A Freeman,
NO. 94 BK.YAK STREET,
WHOLESALE DEALERS IS
CHOICE FAMILY
GROCERIES AM) UO't OKS.
ARK OFFERING FULL XJXES OP
Flour, Hacuu, Fish,
Sugar, Coffee, Kice,
Soap, Starcli, Candles,
Potatoes, Apples, Onions,
Canned Goods, Pickles,'
Preserves, Nuts, Crackers, Jtc.
SELECT WHISKY.
tSaitroad iilotirf.s.
S., 8. & 8. RAILROAD.
SPECIAL SCHEDULE FOB
THE REGATTA.
O N MONDAY, the 5tu instant, the trains on
thi ' •*'
this road will run as follow?:’
The Floods in France.—The story of
the great floods in France is rendered
more terrible by every successive account.
One report states that more than a bun
dred thousand people have been made
homeless and destitute by this swift and
wide-spreading calamity. 'throughout
Frauce great efforts are being made to
help the sufferers, and all Europe will
probably share in the good work. In
regard to the late disasters, it is perhaps
some consolation that the overflow of
river banks, as illustrated by the Nile and
the Mississippi, is usually succeeded by
seasons of extraordinary fertility. If
this should prove to be the case with the
great freshets in France and Bohemia, it
may at least prove the prevention of fu
ture famine there.
OUTW’RIi. I
LEAVE
savax’ah
6:25 a. m.
s:55 A. M.
10:25 r. m
12:10 r. 3i
1:25 p. 3i.
3:25 p. 3i.
4:55 P. 31.
0:20 P. M.
7:55 p. 3i.
LEAVE
MONTGOMERY
LEAVE
ISLE OP HOPE
7:40 A. M.J
12:10 p.
6:50 p. 3i.
8:10 a. m.
9:42 a. m
11:07 a. 3*.
12:48 p. M.
2:14 p. m.
4:09 p. m.
5:37 p. m .
7:05 p. m.
S:53 p. M.
ARRIVE
3 A VAN’aH
S:37 a. m.
10:09 a. m.
11:34 a. m.
I:i5p. 3c.
2:41 p. m.
4:36 p. 31.
6:05 p. m.
7:35 p. m.
9:20 p. x.
Passengers for Montgomery will trike trains
leaving Anderson street at 6:25 a. m., 10:25 a. m.,
3:25 r. m., snd 7:55 p. m.
Passengers from Montgomery to Isle of Hope
will take trains leaving Montgomery at 7:40 a. m.
and 12:10 p. m., and return on train leaving Isle
of Hope at 7:23 p. m.
Last connecting street cars leave the Bay
twenty-five minutes before departure of trains.
This schedule supersedes the regular schedule
for this day only.
G. S. HAINES,
jy3-2t Superintendent.
Professional (Tartls,
The Nashville Union calls the attention
of its readers to the faot that while Ten
nessee bonds are selling down in the
forties, those of Georgia, a State which
was in the hands of the carpet-baggers
long after our emancipation, are quoted
as stroug in Wall street,recent sales having
been made at 100J.
By order of the Prussian Government
the German language is to be made
phonetic in its spelling, and Professor
Kaumer, of Erlangen, is now at work
eliminating superfluous letters and pre
paring a series of rules which will be
adopted in the public schools.
The Evansville (Ind.) Courier, one of
the staunchest backers of Gov. Hen
dricks for the Presidency, says: “If he
refuses to stand upon the Ohio platform,
he may as well look away from his owu
State for support .u the cor.yentlon. The
man who repudiates the honor of the
peopl^, or (jays a word against the integ
rity of their indorsement, may as well
place his hopes for advancement on that
world whose streets are paved with gold
—the world’s money—for he cannot have
it here,”
He was a Quaker, lean, solemn and hun
gry looking. He stepped into, a restau
rant to dio-L Bread, meat, vegetables
anu a pie were placed before him. Before
he reached the pie his appetite was satis
fied. “How much am I to pay thee,” he
said to the waiter. “Fifty cents, sir,”
said the waiter. He looked sadly at the
untouched pie and hesitated. “Will the
prioe be the same if I eat the pie." he
asked. “Yes, sir,” said the waiter, “it is
fifty cents for the dinner.” Then the
Quaker sat do.w;n again, and disposed of
that pio, because he preferred to make
his stomach suffer rather than that hir
conscience should ever after accuse F ,,,,
of not getting hiu money’s worth
DR. L. A. EALLIGANT,
(Formerly Associate Partner of the late Dr ,1. M.
Schley.)
O FFICE. 158 State street, near Barnard,
(formerly JJr. Schley’s Office). Office hours:
to 10 a. m., rto 3, and S to 10 e. m. Residence
southwest corner of Bull aud Andersoi streets.
Savannah, Ga Consultation hours at Anderson
street office* 7 to 8 a. m., and 3 to 4 f. m. Special
attention given to Midwifery and di-eases of
women and children. ^ jy3-3m
^or £alr.
Planting and Feed Peas.
^ UOICE LOT CLAY, MIXED, SPECKLED,
CROWDER and BLACK PEAS,
For saie by
L. T. WHITCOMB S SON,
^‘ 2 -*** t41 Bay street. Savannah.
Glass Rattles. "
50 G pta°tf Foroiale by* 08
WlLDF.lt A CO.
Wo are sole agents for this celebrated brand,
recommended by the medical fraternity as a pure
article. ' je2Uf
JOH\ LYONS,
A gent for cantrell & c<»« hranis .
IMPORTED BELFAST GINGER AJ.E.
and for the manufactures o* the Baltimore Pearl
Hominy Co., keeps always on hand a larse ,
supply.
Fresh shipment of CHAMPAGNE jast re
ceived and for sale at reduced prices.
my20-2am(5&20)tf
SaaSrrs and ^rtilsrrs.
JAMES IIl VniK,
BROKER,
DKALER IN
Coin, Securities & Exchange,
No. 1IO Bryan Street,
(Geoigia Historical Society Building).
I OANS NEGOTIATED. Aurance? mad* oa
J securities placed in my hands for sale at
Real EetaW 'booght and acid oo
'iaree of
and will
current rates,
commission.
Mr. H. J. THOMASSON will take chai
the Real Estate branch of my business, ar
give his personal attention to the leasing of house*
and collection of rents. sepl-tf
dumber, &c.
VEGETABLE BOX
HEADS AND SLATS.
PLASTERING LATHS:
SHINGLES and PICKETS
Also a full stock of
FLOORING, CEILING,
—AN
building lumber
of all kinds, for sale cheap at
BACON’S PLANING Nil/A, I
or k I
Corner of Liberty and East Broad etrvcJr
Office No. 76 Bay street.
ap23-tf D, C. BJt cOS.
JSabit (fsrmQe'j,.
Eastern Hard Brick.
2 ft ft ft ft E k\ S T ERN Uard ***** Brick, suiPv.
Av.yui/ ble for paving purposes. ^
For sale by
WIUIRF - „„
Baby Carriages!
AJNTOTHEB EOt|
OF THOSE STYLISH
CAXRpy TOPS!
At the Crockery Store of
JA ,S. S. SIIA A|
mh31- f j
Bcmorals.
Eastern E
K A A BALES Prinv
for sale in ►'
my24-tf
iay.
rn Hay, in store 'a2ii
WILDER & C€>.
FO
White r
xi, SALE,
ine and Black W'alnut
Then he wont home and shori*
w$rds died and his epitaph re&' , aS
Of hungwr he died p' Qt .
Neither from gunsh' . ’
But his belly be * nstpd •
Too long,
.y after-
At a festival at a reformatory institu
tion in New Yor recently, a gentleman
said of the o* jre G f intoxicating drinks :
“ I overcame the appeTite by a receipt
given lp.e by old Dr. Hatfield, one"of those
good old physicians who do .not have a
percentage with a neighboring druggist.
When I called on him he said: ‘ Now that
you have the moral courage, I’ll tell you
the tonic which I have used with effect
among my friends for twenty years.’ I
expected, of course, some nasty medi
cine stuff; but no, he prescribed an
orange every morning a half hour before
breakfast. ‘Take that, and you will
want neither liquor nor medicine. ’ I have
done so regularly, and find that liquor
has become repulsive. The taste of the
orange is in the saliva of the tongue, and
it would be as well to mix water and oil
as rum with my taste.”
—ALSO—
°° rr NTER TOPS CONSTANTLY OS HAND,
C. S. GAY,
sepft-ly Corner Charlton and Tattnall Sts.
Atlrcrtisuifl ^flrncy.
B. H. RICHARDSON^ Co.,
Publishers’ Agents
—FOR—
City and Country Advertising*
MORNING NEWS BUII-I>ING,
111 BAY STREET, SAVANNAH, GA.
A DVERTISEMENTS inserted in any* journals
in Georgia, Florida and elsewhere, at pub
lishers’ LOWEST RATES.
Particular care taken in the selection of adver
tising mediums.
Address
B. H. RICHARDSON & CO.,
Ill Bay street. Savannah.
je30-d&wtf
(JXO O A day* at home. Terms free.
$0 H Address G. STINSON A CO„
Portland, Me. ruytS-dJtwly
H°
removal.
OWELL * DENMARK, ATTOKNE>8 I
DAW, next to the southeast corner of " ■ ^
ker, on BAT street, over Boehm, i : '
A Co.
KF3IOVAL OF LAW OlT'Gtj
—OF—
A. 1*. ADAMS.
T he UNDERSIGNED has remove.:
Office to No. 99 BAY STREET (Com* |
cial Range).
jelS-F.M&W.lm A.
Notice of Removal.
, p. ADANS.
nAVE removed my Law Office to No. W|
street, Commercial Range. jhvX
je!6-:m S. YATES na ^
I
Saiioring.
SAMIFL POLF18
TAILOR AND DRAPER’
No. 7 Drayton St., Savanna 11
Georgia,
I NVITES the attention of his formerpahtj 1 ^
the public in
of French and
:nerai to his new selected I
glish Cloths,
teat. «tvips of roods,
Vestings, all the latest styles of goods, - -. t
the season, which will be made up jo wj ^
most approved styles of fashion, ah i
ranted as represented. m J
So Sent.
FOR RENT,
T HAT large and commodious residence >
ing west on Pulaski 8t l im r, e \!’ et 'L^ern i- -
and Charlton streets, with all the
provements, either furnished or nnr ■
Possession given Immediately, or 1st - |
BLUN * DK* 81 *
jel5-lm
l given i
Apply to