Newspaper Page Text
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J. H. ESTILLi, Proprietor;
W. T. TH03IP«0i\, Kdltor.
TUESDAY, JULY 6, 1875.
tr" For Telegraphic OiapalrhtM S**o First
Page.
The Keely Motor.
The Brooklyn Argus expresses its sur
prise that in this intelligent age people
should be seeking an interest in the
Keely motor, paying of large sums of
money. The editor thinks men may,
perhaps, be excused for seeking shares in
“bigbonanzas”and “holes in the ground,”
at a distance rendering a reliance on rep.
resentation necessary, but that an interest
in the Keely motor should be command
ing 500 per cent, premium on Wall street
is not creditable to the gumption of this
nineteenth century. Mr. Keely and his
motor are in our midst, every facility
for inquiry before investment exists, and
yet, while the shares are demanding 500
per cent, premium, no man outside the
skin of the inventor knows the nature of
the motor. One asserts that it is water,
another gas, a third electricity, and still
another goes it blind on a new prin
ciple. All this, says the Argus, while
experts and intelligent men pronounce
it another thing altogether, viz: moon
shine.
Mr. Keely has not, as far as we can
discover, made a full disclosure of his
secret, though he seems to have impressed
many people with confidence in the suc
cess of his invention, whatever it is. .In
matters of invention, scientific men,
until they discover the means utilized
by the inventor, arc often at fault. The
Keely motor may be a delusion and a
fraud, but if it should turn out to be all
he claims for it, the greatest invention
of the age, it will not be the first time
that scientific men have only been con
vinced by practical demonstration. The
utilizing of steam power, electricity, il
luminating gas, and many other inven
tions which now seem so simple, were at
first regarded as utterly impeachable and
denounced as humbugs by men of sci
ence. There may be something in Keely’s
motor after all.
The South.—A Washington dispatch
says: “ It is very gratifying to record
that for the first time in the long period
of the ten years which have elapsed since
the close of the war, those who sit in
high places exhibit no disposition to stir
up political feeling against the South.
This is the first summer since 1865 that
this city has not been made the head
quarters for the dissemination all over
the country of the most malign slanders
upon the Southern people. It seems
safe to say that this unhappy business is
at last at an end. The Southern people
must have some feeling of this kind, for
all the intelligence which comes here
from that section represents the aspect
of business affairs as most hopeful.”
A Chicago woman, supposed by her
dress and appearance to be wealthy, was
caught stealing an amount of candj’
worth about ten cents in a confectionery
store. She was arrested and taken to a
police station, where she refused to tell
her name, and begged to be put ih a cell
out of sight. She was incarcerated all
night, and in the morning, still Hiding
her identity, she pleaded so piteously
to the police justice not to be exposed to
any chance of recognition, that he had
her arraigned privately. She readily paid
a fine of ten dollars, and escaped ex
posure.
Such a petty, mean transaction
throughout, would scarcely have occurred
in any city under the sun but Chicago.
ralt Business
altimore Sun,
writing from Wilmington, Del., says a
new firm in that city, Messrs. Hiker &
Co., of New York, are going extensively
into the business of preserving fruit,
peaches and berries, in their natural state
by the process of freezing. For the pur
pose of carrying on this business they
are erecting buildings which will cost
$20,000, and will have a capacity of
about 200,000 baskets, where the fruit
may be kept for any length of time. The
company have successfully experimented
in the new method of preserving fruit,
and feel justified in going into the pre
serving and importing business on a large
scale. They have a refrigerator in New
York, a short distance from Jersey City
Ferry. In the interior of this building,
surrounded on all sides by boxes of ice,
keeping the temperature constantly at
36 degrees Fahrenheit, are fruits of all
descriptions. Berries that have been
there for six weeks are perfectly preserv
ed ; oranges whioh were put in the re
frigerator three months ago, and a num
ber of hothouse peaches, which have been
in it two weeks, are excellently well pre
served and of splendid flavor.
Last year, as an experiment, Mr. Riper
shipped about fifty bushels of peaches to
London, prepared in the refrigerating
mode. The fruit arrived in good order,
and was the finest in flavor ever seen in
England. It sold at the enormous price
of $20 per dozen. This year the firm is
building a brig, fitted with all the appli
ances for freezing fruit ai*d preserving it
during a voyage to England. They are
confident of success, and say that the
fruit will not decay any sooner after its
removal from the refrigerator than would
ordinarily be the case.
The Revenues and the Estimates.—
A Washington special to the Baltimore
Sun says the internal revenue receipts
for the month of June are $8,574,908,
and for the fiscal year ending 1st inst.
$109,786,398. The Secretary of the
Treasury estimated the receipts from this
source at $105,000,000 and the Commis
sioner of Internal Revenue at $107,000,-
000. The receipts are therefore con
siderably in excess of the estimates of
both. The increase is due to the addi
tional taxes imposed by the tax and tariff
bill of last winter. The Secretary of the
Treasury estimated that the customs re
ceipts for the fiscal year ending J une 30,
1875, would be $162,000,000. The total
receipts from this source, as reported at
the close of business hours Friday,
are: in coin $156,479,132; in cur
rency $1,111,276; total $157,590,408, or
$4,409,592 less than the Secretary’s esti
mates, which, it must be borne in mind,
were made in advance of the passage of
the new tariff bill, from which so much
was expected. The receipts from this
source are also $5,466,715 less than for
the fiscal year ending June 30, 1874
These figures show most conclusively that
the estimates made of the amounts to be
realized from the new tax and tariff bill
were wide of the mark, and that so far
as the customs is concerned it has been
of no advantage. The Secretary esti
mates the customs receipts for the
ensuing fiscal year at $170,000,000, but
unless trade revives materially or new
imposts are levied, his estimates for next
year will be found more faulty than for
this.
The. North Carolina Banditti.
We thought that the Radical banditti
The. New Motor T
It is not safe to conclude with the
had been exterminated or banished from Scientific American and the vast body of
incredulous unscientific Americans that
the dark corner of the old North State
months ago. It seems, however, that we
were mistaken, as the Wilmington Star
of Saturday contains an account of the
arrest of two of the notorious Lowery
gang—the negro Applethwait and the
mulatto Henry B. Lowery. There seems
to be no doubt about the identity of Ap
plethwait. They are not so certain about
Lowery, who was arrested on Friday at
Dudley’s station, on the Wilmington and
Weldon Railroad. The Star says the
colored man arrested is supposed to be
“the real Henry Berry Lowery himself.
He was accompanied by two white women
who he claimed as his wives, and they in
turn were accompanied by one child each.
It appears that the rumor which circulated
in Goldsboro, that Henry Berry Lowery
had left there with two wives, gave rise
to a chase which ended in the capture of
the man at Dudley’s as Henry Berry.
The women manifested much affectionate
sympathy for the prisoner in his troubles
and afflictions, which were doubtless full
of terror, as an excited mob, together
with a few officers of the law, held him
in custody, and the whole county was in
an uproar.”
It is rumored in Philadelphia that John
Westernett, the brother-in-law of one of
the abductors of little Charlie lioss, and
who was arrested and confined some time
since as a conspirator in the abduction,
has made an important confession as to
the abduction of the boy, which promises
well for his recovery, though it furnishes
no information as to his present where
abouts. In this connection it is worthy
of mention that it was one year on Thurs
day last since the disappearance of Charlie
Ross, since which time every expedient
has been resorted to in order to ascertain
his whereabouts.
Texan school boys, when the teacher
whips them with undue severity, don’t
trouble their parents to make complaints
before the Commissioners; they just go
home for their revolvers and shoot the
schoolmaster without making any fuss
about it. At least, that’s the way little
Master Powell managed it the other day,
and the whole school has a.liolidtty P’,^I
a new bullet-proof pedagogue Cim b* pro
cured. ** 1( !
The Patrons of Husbandry in Saline
county, Missouri, propose to start a bank
at Marshall, with a capital of $100,000.
The Missouri Farmer thinks this a good
move, as the bank will lend only to
farmers, and at a less rate of interest
than is customary there. The Farmer
thinks the high rate of interest is eating
the farmers up faster than grasshoppers
or chinch-bugs.
The authorities of Blue Earth county,
Minnesota, determined to exterminate
the grasshoppers, offered a premium for
every quart or bushel captured or slain
within their bailiwick. After some fifteen
thousand bushels had been killed and
paid for, it was discovered that fully one-
half had been brought in by residents of
adjacent counties. That put an end to
the bounty on hopper scalps.
The Jackson (Miss.) Clarion says
that during the four years of its ex
istence, Alcorn University, under its
Radical negro regime, has cost the State
the round sum of two hundred and forty
thousand dollars, and that it would have
been more economical for Mississippi to
have boarded the pupils at Fifth Avenue
Hotel, New’ York city, and sent them to
Columbia College.
The “ cold victual ” organ at Washing
ton lias been shorn of some of its antici
pated profits by the Commissioners of the
Capital, who have discovered that, in
stead of $80,000 as reported, they areliy
law permitted to pay to its proprietor
only $55,000 for advertising the list of
delinquent taxpayers in the District.
There’s many a slip ’twixt cup and lip.
Bloody-Shirt Morton aspires to the
Radical nomination for the Presidency,
and it is asserted that he has conciliated
the favor of Grant who, in the event that
no “imperative necessity” should arise
for his acceptance of a nomination for a
third term, will give the influence of his
administration to the Ohio extremist.
The strong probability is that Grant will
be able, through his office-holders, to
obtain the nomination, which is all that
is needed to make his acceptance an
“ imperative necessity.” If, however, he
should fail in this there is every reason
to believe that Morton would be his fa
vorite among the leading men of his
party for the succession. In the
Senate Morton has been best known
as the bitter foe of the South; as
as the patron of carpet-baggers like Kel
logg, Spencer, Patterson, Sawyer, Ab
bott, and that tribe; as the enemy of
reconciliation and the champion of the
worst forms of reconstruction and intol
erance. Even now, when there seems to
be a spontaneous approach on both sides
to a better understanding, and extremists
are pushed aside without respect to their
previous standing, he adheres obstinately
to his old opinions and policy.
Hon. Henry T. Blow, of St. Louis, now
one of the Commissioners appointed by
Congress to investigate the debt and con
dition of the District of Columbia, says
that up to this time $10,000,000 of float
ing debt alone has been funded by the
Commission. The bonded debt is $9,000,-
000 more. Mr. Blow thinks that the to
tal will reach $22,000,000. He says
further that “the Commissioners, in ex
amining the details of the District’s af
fairs, find stealing and corruption to an
incredible extent,” and he specified in
what some of it consists. For instance,
certificates of assessment have been is
sued against property in localities where
no work was ever done. Contracts have
been made for improvements, but not an
hour’s labor was performed. Yet the
property is assessed for the pretended
improvements, and the property owners
have been obliged to pay these assess
ments or have their property sold for
this false imposition of tax. This seems
incredible, and if there w’as not such ex
cellent authority as the President of the
Commission, it would not be believed.
But it is not a “Democratic lie,” this
time. It comes from a man who knows
whereof he speaks. The time will come
when the Washington ring robbers will
see daylight through barred windows.
Foreign Postage.—On the first instant
the new postal arrangement went into
operation, under which uniform rates of
postage will be charged on mailable mat
ter to the following countries which, with
this country, constitutes a general postal
union, as formed under the treaty of
Berne, viz : Austria, Belgium, Denmark,
Egypt* Finland, Greece, Great Britain,
German Empire. Hungary, Italy, Ma-
deria, Malta, Norway, Netherland, Por
tugal, lloumania, Russia, Spain, Servia,
Sweden, Switzerland and Turkey. The
rate on letters is five cents for each half
ounce or fraction thereof, the prepay
ment of which is optional; but if not
prepaid or insufficiently paid, ten cents
per half ounce will be charged at the point
of destination. The rate on newspapers
is two cents each, and on postal cards one
cent additional. All printed matter, mu
sic, photographs, etc., must be prepaid
at the rate of two cents for each two
ounces or fraction thereof. On and after
January 1, 1876, France will become a
member of the postal union, and the
foregoing rates of postage will be charged
on matter mailed to that country.
Alluding to the financial issue which
the Northern and Eastern bondholders
are so madly endeavoring to force into
the next Presidential canvass, the Peters
burg Index says; “We hope that the
almighty dollar will not thus be per
mitted to darken with its serrated disk
the horizon on which the sun of peace
and fraternity is rising.” To which the
Wilmington Star responds: “And we say
heartily, amen. It is the first time we
have ever prayed that our doors might
not be darkened by the shadow of the
yankee divinity. We fall back upon
King Solomon, statesman of ye ancient
times, who says there is a time for all
things. It is emphatically not the time
now for the gold men of Wall street to
force their selfish theories upo n the
South and West.”
In all of which we heartily concur.
By their rash persistence the bondholders
are only courting their fate.
Utilizing Silk Rags.—One of the
wealthiest English velvet manufacturers,
Mr. Listar, is said to have worked his
way to success by years of patient labor
in search of a way to utilize silk rags. He
began by buying up all such waste at less
than a cent a pound, and up to the year
1864 he had expended the immense sum
of over $1,300,000 in fruitless efforts to
find a process. Nothing daunted, how
ever, he continued his experiments, and
within the past ten years has discovered
a method of converting such refuse into
velvet of the finest quality. He now
carries on this industry in England, in an
establishment which employs some four
thousand workmen, and hundreds of
travelers are also employed whose sole
business is to buy silk waste, and this
they do in all parts of the globe. The
factory is said to have cost nearly three
million dollars.
A luckless Louisville lawyer comes into
court with the story that a feloniously
discriRuinating rat had knawed just the
signatures, and nothing more, from a
large number of promissory notes which
he had put in a drawer, and of which he
had forgotten the makers, and wants to
know what can be done to relieve him of
the difficulty.
The Chicago Tribune, in view of the
maudlin sentiment prevailing in Boston,
in regard to letting murderers loose, re
marks that it is “difficult to realize" that
anybody should live long enough in that
city to die so natural a death as that
caused by starvation.
A worthy country parson once preached
a labored sermon on the beneficence of
Providence in causing large rivers to usu
ally flow past important towns.
The Indians, it seems, have closed the
contract with the government by which
they agree to give up the right of hunt
ing in that part of Nebraska which lies
south of the Niobrara river, for $25,000.
Some of the chiefs, it will be remembered,
were anxious to get bold of the green
backs before they left Washington, but
were disappointed, because the officers
of the Indian Bureau preferred that
they should go home and consult their
people about the transaction first.
Having signed the contract, they send
word to Washington that they will have
the money spent for them as follows:
Horses, $ll,600;_cows, $9,000; wagons,
$2,300; harness, $2,100, Evidently, here
is an opportunity for a nice little specu
lation. If the Indians could personally
inspect the stock before it is purchased,
they probably would get the worth of
their money, since they are good judges
of horse flesh. But under the present
system of furnishing such supplies, if
they do not receive for their money a lot
of worn out hacks and aged cows, it will
be because contractors and Indian agents
have changed their spots.
The “now party” in Baltimore politics
held a meeting Thursday night, and the
American says of it: “Know Nothing
ism with trimmings seem to be the prin
ciples of the organisation, one of whose
objects is avowed to be to prevent Catho
lics from holding office. ”
The Augusta Constitutionalist is of the
opinion that Beecher D evidently thinks
he has a paid-up policy in Heaven. He
may swim in a sea of filth, but his soul,
according to his own statement, is clad
in a sort of Paul Boynton life-preserver.
Mr. Beecher began by being worshiped
by his congregation. He now worships
himself. Some of the papers congratu
late the world that the end of the trial
will be the end of the Gospel of Gush.
Not a bit of it. Gush and Slush will
abound in the Brooklyn tabernacle so
long as Beecher lives, Shearman weeps,
4 white-souled Elizabeth’ wipes her eyes
on the newspapers, and Claflin waxes fat
upon ‘ crooked ’ silk sales. Some day
Dagon will have a great fall, but until
that time the sensual idol will be gar
landed with roses and adored by his fol
lowers. ”
there is nothing in Keely’s new
motor—but fraud. He was the most in
different of smatterers who, when a young
enthusiast named Morse went lecturing
through the country to very indifferent
audiences about his new motor, elec
tricity, could not prove that the tele
graph was in the first place impious
and in the second impossible. It may
be—we do not say that it is so—that
Keely has found something worth
looking after. He is about to apply
his invention, the Eastern papers say, to
propelling a train between Camden and
Jersey City. His secret has not yet been
authoritatively made known, but it is
said to be the expansive power of carbonic
acid gas. At 32 degrees Fahrenheit car
bonic acid is liquid under a pressure of
36 atmospheres. It can be solidified by
being placed under greater pressure in a
freezing mixture. From this solid pro
ceeds a vapor with the most amazing ex
pansive properties. This subject has been
investigated by a correspondent of the Sa
vannah News, who gives the following
table:
At five degrees Fahrenheit the pressure in
pounds per square inch is 372.
At ten degrees Fahrenheit the pressnre in
pounds per square inch is 403.
At twenty degrees Fahrenheit the pressure in
pounds per square inch is 460.
At thirty degrees Fahrenheit the pressure in
pounds per square inch is 560.
At forty degrees Fahrenheit the pressure in
pounds per square inch is 697.
At forty-five degrees Fahrenheit the pressure in
ponnds per square inch is 10S0.
The solidification of carbonic acid gas
was first achieved by Thilorier, in Paris.
The strength of the gas may be judged
from the fact that a cast-iron apparatus
of enormous strength burst during one
of his experiments, killing an attendant.
The bursting of sodawater fountains,
which sometimes happen, is an instance
of the wonderful power of this gas.
The mysterious casualty in Boston a few
weeks ago, in which a large tenement
building, the first floor of which was oc
cupied by a drug store, was blown to
atoms with great loss of life, leaving no
trace of the source of mischief, was be
yond doubt an illustration of what Kee
ly’s motor can do if left to itself. The
reservoir of carbonic acid gas exploded.
Here is a power fai beyond that of steam.
Is it certain that nothing can be done to
make it manageable ? The chemistries say
that the tension given off by the vapor
from the solidified gas is higher than that
from auy other known substance. They
differ, apparently, with the correspondent
of the Savannah News, quoted above, in
that they say that the tension of the
vapor is developed by lowering instead of
raising the temperature, as usual with
other gases. Here is the power beyond
a doubt; has Keely harnessed it? We
catch a resemblance in the description of
his machine to the apparatus used by
Thilorier. A fine hair tube plays a
prominent part in the Keely machine.
Thilorier discovered that, if he allowed
the liquid gas to escape through
a small tube into a brass box, an
evaporation followed so powerful that
it solidified the rest of the gas.
This solid is the seat of the expansive
power that the gas displays. Carbonic
acid gas is very cheap; it can be made
out of marble and vinegar; it can easily
be liquified; and liquified, will freeze
itself; frozen, it can be made to produce
a vapor “stronger than that from any
other known substance.” If Mr. Keely
has not found out how to domesticate
this creature, some other inventor will be
likely to do it before long.—Chicago Tri
bunt.
If Grant sticks closely to some of his
friends, some of them in turn stick
closely to him. Amongst these devoted
ones is Mr. Cmsar C. Antoine, a gentle
man of the colored persuasion, and Lieu
tenant Governor of Louisiana, who has
not hesitated to declare that he and his
race in the South would be pleased to
have Grant for six terms, if he wanted
them. The Philadelphia Chronicle thinks
if this declaration should reach Grant’s
ears, the interpretion put upon the Harry
White letter will be incontinently ignored,
and those who thought him out of the
Presidential race, will find him booted
and spurred, and ready to ride with the
best of them alL
Among the graduates at the commence
ment of the Columbian University, Dis
trict of Columbia, last week, was Moung
Edwin, a Karen, from Burmah, who now
goes to a theological seminary to prepare
himself more fully for the work of
preaching the Gospel to his countrymen.
Though subjected to all the inconvenien
ces of acquiring knowledge from text
books written in a language with which
he had scarcely any acquaintance before
he came to our shores, he has, neverthe
less, stood side by side with the first
students of his class, and has even gained
two prizes in most difficult departments
of study—in the Greek language, and in
mathematics.
BY TUUPII
-TO -
THE MORNING NEWS,
llidnigfft Teles rams.
THE PATRONS OF HUSBANDRY.
A PROJECT FOR COMMERCIAL
CO-OPERATION.
The Executive Com wit tee Favor the
Movement.
“THE GALORIOUS,” AND SO FOURTH.
Mil.
STEPHENS SPEAKS
ATLANTA.
A PIECE IN
(Jreat EiithuHianu] and Music by the Band.
Radical Thunder at the Public Ex
pense.—A Washington dispatch says a
number of clerks in the War Department
have been employed for some time
searching the records of the Confederate
War Department, and preparing therefrom
a detailed military history of all tR| jn-
gressmen elected from -tthern
States who served in tt Confederate
army. The muster rolls of the various
regiments in w’hich any of these Con
federate officers served were examined to
find the number of engagements in
which they participated, and in like man
ner all the reports were gone through
with for the same purpose. This work
was done by order of the Secretary of
War at the request of the editor of
Grant’s organ. The object is to use it
as a campaign document.
The New York World of the 28th ult.
says: “In relation to W. S. King, of
Minnesota, that he will be expelled from
the Fourty-fourth Congress, and 1 there
is some prospect that subsequent legal
processes may send him to jail for per
jury/ If the World had read its ex
changes carefully it would have learne4
from the Times that the grand jury of
the District of Columbia had found an
indictment against King for perjury, in
swearing that be had never received any
money from the Pacific Mail lobby,
whereas it was proven that he did get
$175,000. He is under heavy bonds to
appear at the next term of the District
Criminal Court and be tried. If the
World will read this journal regularly it
will acquire much valuable Information
in process of time.
One of the flagrant outrages commit
ted by the majority at the last session of
the Legislature of Mississippi was the
passage of a bill which the Massachusetts
milk-sop, Ames, approved, virtually over
turning the charter of the city of Vicks
burg, and vesting in an executive ap
pointee the functions which the people
had conferred upon the Mayor. Fortu
nately for the outraged people of Vicks
burg, the Supreme Court has decided the
law unconstitutional, and fyas re-estab
lished that officer in the exercise of his
legitimate authority.
The. habit of sending indecent and
scurrilous postal cards through the mails
is about as dirty and degrading a practice
as can be indulged, and very properly the
laws make it a serious offense, the fine
being not less than $100, nor more than
$5,000, or imprisonment not less than
one year nor more than ten years. A
party was last week arrested in Baltimore
for sending a number of scurrilous cards
through the mails, calling the person ad
dressed a “first class runaway, thief and
beat,” “a petty swindler,” “a first class
villain,” “dirty dog,” “worthless scoun
drel,” etc. The party arrested was held
in $1,500 bail to answer the charge.
“A Great Religious War.”—In a
private letter from England to a gentle
man in New York, the World learns that
Mr. Gladstone everywhere, in private and
in public, expresses his earnest convic
tion that England and Europe are on the
brink of “a great religious war,” and
that “his bitterness against the Catholics
can only be imperfectly appreciated from
his written and published words.” A
“ roligious war” is simply a misnomer—
a masquerade of Satan in the guise of an
angel of light.
The Kansas Farmer makes a sugges
tion that Granges might get up a correct
report of their localities as to climate,
soil, capacity for wintering stock, general
healthfulness, &c., «tc. By this means,
the Farmer thinks, the outrages perpe
trated upon the people of the country to
secure immigration, concerning the pos
sibilities of climate, soil, <kc., could be
prevented.
Brutal Outrage in Missouri.—St.
Louis, June 30.—In the country, about
nine miles from this city, on Monday af
ternoon, while Miss Eliza Chamberlain,
nineteen years old, was going from her
father’s house, on horseback, to a neigh
bor’s, she was pulled from her horse by a
burly negro. All her clothing was strip
ped from her, and she was most fiendishly
outraged and otherwise cruelly treated.
She fainted and lay in the road more than
an hour, when she revived and dragged
herself to a neighbor’s house, about a
mile distant, where she went into spasms,
and her life was for a time despaired of.
The police and oitizens were in active
search of the negro yesterday, and one
answering to the description given by
Miss Chamberlain was arrested here last
night. People in the neighborhood of
the outrage are intensely excited, and
swear that they will hang the monster if
caught.
An extraordinary mania has arisen
among the inhabitants of a number of
villages in Western Prussia. They have
firmly made up their minds that their
IJmperor has lost 10,000 Prussian child
ren at cards with the Sultan, and that a
large number of Turks are, in conse
quence, to be sent among them to kidnap
their children on their way from school.
The school teachers are supposed to be
privy to this infamous plot, and are un
derstood to have five thalers promised
them for every child abducted. There
have bee#scenes of tumult and violence
in consequence, ani much difficulty is
experienced in allaying the excitement
If there has been any more denser ignor
ance than this since the deluge, there is,
at any rate, no historical evidence of it.
—jV. T. Sun.
THE GALORIOUS, AND SO FOURTH.
Philadelphia, July 5 —It is estimated
that one hundred and fifty thousand peo
ple participated in the ceremonies and
amusements in and around the centennial
building. A balloon with Miss Ihling
Wise, a niece of Prof. Wise, only on
board, collapsed. The lady fell to the
ground and was seriously injured.
Atlanta, July 5.—The celebration of
the Fourth of July here to-day called
together the largest meeting since the
war. Citizens and soldiers all participa
ted. Governor Smith presided. Hon.
A. H. Stephens was the orator of the
day and made a speech two hours long.
The Declaration of Independence was
his theme. He reviewed the causes lead
ing to American freedom. He desired to
attend the grand celebration had
Philadelphia July 4 th, 1789, and
asked are these small matters to bring
forth on this occasion. [Here the tele
grapher has matters mixed.—Editor.]
Far from it. They are the deep foot
prints of truth impressed on our earlier
history, fixing the character of our sys
tem of institutions, which assertion can
never obliterate, argument can never re
move, time can never erase, and which
wars can never destroy. They stick to
the very firmaments of the primitive
rocks of our political formation, and only
have to be dug up and shown with
their unerring inscriptions to utter-
ly refute all false theories to the
contrary. This is the time and occasion
to exhibit at least a few of them. We
should ever discriminate between princi
ples of government and the acts of its
administration. Entire devotion to the
one is not at all inconsistent with stern
opposition to the other. This is a cen
tennial period. The grand demonstra
tions in honor of the hundredth anniver
sary of the destruction of the tea at Bos
ton and Baltimore, and the battles of
Concord, Lexington, Bunker Hill and the
Mecklenburg declaration, which hav«
brought the different sections into more
harmonious accord, are but a prelude to
the celebration of the anniversary of this
declaration which is to come off next
year in Philadelphia.*. The question is
mooted whether we shall be represented
in that celebration ? In reply, I say with
all the emphasis I can command, yes.
What more fitting occasion could be
planned for the gathering of people to
consider the nature of their institutions
and contemplate their workings in the
past, especially when administered on the
principles on which they were founded ?
Mr. Stepens closed : “With all honor,
now’ and forever, to the men who, by
their deeds in the council chambers and
on the battle fields, achieved our inde
pendence. a like honor now and forever
to the principles upon which that inde
pendence was founded.” Mr. Stephens
was frequently applauded for hispatriotic
sentiments.
Richmond, Va., July 5.—The Fourth
was celebrated here to-day by a more
general suspension of business than there
has been on any similar occasion since
1860. No general military display was
had, but several companies, both white
and black, paraded and spent the day in
festivities. Numerous civic excursions
and picnics were largely^ attended
and almost everybody seemed to have
devoted the day to enjoyment. Noth
ing worthy of special note occurred.
the patrons of husbandry.
Washington, July 5.—The Executive
Committee of the National Grange held
another meeting to-day and adopted the
report of the sub-committee, to whom
had been referred the subject of inter
national exchange between the co-opera
tive societies of Great Britain and the
Patrons of Husbandry of the United
States. The report is as follows:
First. That they had been impressed
with the earnest desire of our subordinate
granges and members of every section
of the Union for active co-operation in
business enterprises, as expressed by
efforts in this direction, and by appeals
to this Executive Committee for a syste
matic and uniform plan for such organiza
tion, and with our obligation to mature
aud submit such a plan for adoption.
Second. That we would willingly and
cordially grasp the band offered to us by
our brethren across the Atlantic, and
pledge to them our readiness to co-oper
ate with them in all laudable efforts to
secure for productive industry its just re
ward, to restore honest dealing in all
commercial transactions, and to advance
the moral, intellectual aud material inter
ests of the masses of the people.
Third. That having examined the de
tails of the plan of the co-operative soci
eties of Great Britain as presented by
their deputation to us, popularly known
as the Rochdale plan, and its wonderful
success, we heartily recommend it to the
careful consideration of our State and
subordinate granges, and to the members
of our order, aud advise such action on
the part of the executive committees of
the several States as may be necessary to
the organization aud operation of such
co-oporative association within our order.
Fourth. That to this end we recom
mend the appointment of a committee to
secure from the Hon. Thomas D. Wor-
rall, of the English deputation, now
present, such rules and regulations,
articles of association, pamphlets and
other writings as may be deemed neces
sary to place the desired information in
this connection before the members of
our order, and that said committee be
authorized to have printed so much of
said information, and in such amount as
they may deem advisable, to be dis
tributed to the Executive Committees of
the State Granges with circular letters,
communicating the action of this Execu
tive Committee herein and such other in
structions as may be desired.
How German Americans are Regarded
in Germany. - -Mr. Philip Sehack, for
merly a resident and extensive property
holder in the Eastern District of Brook
lyn, is now a resident of Bavaria, where
he has purchased a handsome estate.
During the late Franco-German war Mr.
Schaok held the commission of Captain
in the Prussian army. Writing to a friend
recently, he says among other things :
“ They may possibly say that Schack
forgets his adopted land. It is not so.
There is no day in which I do not re
member America and my American
friends. I intended to write from time
to time, but circumstances (alluding to
the death of his daughter) oppressed me
so much that I had no heart to do so.
Germany is becoming distasteful to me—
all except the little spot where rests our
beloved child. German Americans are
not fully respected in Germany. The
ideas entertained of us are not flattering,
particularly in the case of any of us who
can live independent. They seem to
think that one can only become so by
cheating and stealing. No one imagines
that a man, after twenty years of toil,
can become rich. The clouds of war have
disappeared, but the army are exercising
with the Krupp cannon and the new
breech-loaders, and are very expert with
them. I wish my old company, the Jef
ferson Horse Guards, and the Twenty-
eighth and Thirty-second regiments
could only see them. The vineyards are
looking well. Fruit generally, however,
does not produce well. The tobacco
planters are busy, but the want of rain
felt. ”
i&tw
^xfB&iaas.
Southern Harvests.—The Nashville
Banner thus speaks of the progress of
harvesting grain in that and other sections
of the South:
“Yesterday was the greatest day yet
for harvesting, and every farmer in Ten
nessee took advantage of it. Acres upon
acres of wheat were cut and shocked,
is believed that within the next ten day:
nearly if not the entire crop of the State
will have been harvested and gathered
into the granaries for shipment. Instead
of importing grain from the North and
Northwest, we will export it. Last year*
corn is now being taken into Atlanta by
the farmers of that locality, a thing not
known to happen there since the war.
Cotton and corn are growing luxuriantly,
and heavy crops are anticipated.”
Already efferings of new wheat
Nashville are heavy * with sales at $1 00
(ad 10 per bushel. New barley is also
appearing, and sales are made at 90 cents.
It is stated that requisitions for cars at
stations on the Nashville and Decatur
Railroad, for the purpose of moving
grain, are unusually liberal, and the
prospects on that road are represented to
be the best known for ten years.
Are We to Have an Indian War to
Enrich the Grant Family ?—The aid
and comfort given by President Grant to
the efforts to dishonor the national name
by violating faith with the Sioux and
compelling them to give up their country
to the whites, in disregard of treaty
stipulations, find explanation in the
rumor, generally accepted as true, that
Lis hopeful son Fred is interested with
the ring of land grabbers, wvho hope to
make money out of the country’s dis
honor. The , people have often had oc
casion to adn.ire the enterprise of the
President in finding opportunities for
enriching his kindred, even of the
remotest degree of consanguinity, at
the public expense; and a man
who would do what he has
done for second cousins and brothers-
in-law, would naturally strain a point to
benefit his oldest son and heir apparent.
Besides, it should be remembered what
sacrifices the piomising youth has made
in being supported at West Point, for
several years, making the tour of Europe
at the public expense, and accepting
rapid promotion without doing a day’s
service with his regiment, as the army
regulations required he should do. With
such claims upon the public, it would
certainly be the height of ingratitude for
anybody to interfere with the consumma
tion of Fred’s speculative projects, even
if they should entail an act of gross in
justice to the Indians, and perhaps a
savage warfare between the outraged red
men and the whites.—A". Y. Sun.
The eighty-one-ton gun in course of
manufacture at the Royal Gun Factories,
the Royal Arsenal, Woolwich,
rapidly approaching completion. The
bore is being rifled at the boring mills in
the department, and the only other pro
cess required to finish the gun in the
rough is the shrinking on of the trunnion
rings. Considering that the eighty-one-
ton gun is more than twice the size of
any gun yet made, it is worth}’ of remark
that the work has been performed with
out the slightest hitch or accident.
gry ©nods.
BeWitt, Morgan & Co.
DRESS AND FANCY GOODS
-AT-
GREAT REDUCTION!
A NEW FACTOR X.
Atlanta, Ga., July 5.—To-day the
ground was broken for the Atlanta oot-
ton factory. An immense crowd was
present. Hon. Alex. H. Stephens and
other prominent citizens made short ad
dresses, after which the President of the
company, H. I. Kimball, formally broke
the ground, amid great enthusiasm.
the carlist war.
Madrid, July 5.—General Jorellar has
thrown four hundred shells into Coata-
yeiga. He is expecting reinforcements of
heavy artillery. The Carlists are unwill
ing to risk a second engagement, and
General Dorregaray, with their main body,
has withdrawn in the direction of Gambel.
DEAD.
. Hartford, July 5.—Rev. Robert G.
Yermilye, I). 1)., for many years Profes
sor at Hartford, is dead.
A Large Embezzlement in Philadel
phia.—A bill has been filed in the Phila
delphia Court of Common Pleas enjoin
ing the Second and Seventh National
Banks from paying to one Alexander
Ervin certain sums of money deposited
to his credit. The preliminary injunc
tion has been granted. This bill sets
forth that Alexander Ervin was the confi
dential clerk for Henry G. Moms, the
bankrupt proprietor of the Southwark
Iron Foundery, and that while acting as
such clerk he drew from the capital
about $80,000 in the past four years.
The bill also sets forth that Ervin de
posited considerable Bums of money be
longing to Morris, in the banks named,
in his own name and to his own credit.
The bill further alleges that with the
amounts paid him for settlement of
notes, whioh do not by the banks’ books
appear to have been settled, he ig in-
debted to the establishment to the amount
of §142,000. The President of the
Seventh National Bank, however, states
that the only amount deposited in that
bank to Ervin’s credit is §32.
B lack iron grenadines, worth *i 25,
for $1.
PRINTED MUSLINS, I5c; former price, 35c.
COLORED GRENADINES at 15c; former
price 40c.
WHITE VIC. LAWNS, 40 inches wide, 13c;
▼cry choap.
Bargains in WHITE GOODS.
SUMMER SILKS at 8 r c—reduced .
FRENCH PERCALES, 15 and 20c.
BLACK GRENADINES, 25c.
BLACK CREPE MARETZ, reduced price.
Case fine 4-4 SHIRTINGS at 10c.
IRISH LINENS at 37)tfc—very cheap.
300 yards CAMBRIC EDGINGS at 10 and
12Xc—very cheap.
1 ca*e LADIES’ WHITE HOSE at 12^c.
GENTS’LINEN HEMMED B’DKF’S at 25c,
worth 40c.
jy5-tf DeVVITT, MORGAN «fc CO.
Gray,
No. 147 Broughton Street.
GREAT REDUCTIONS
FINE DRESS GOODS!
B LACK GRENADINES at 25 cents, redneed
irom 50; elegant black striped IRON
GRENADINES at 65 cents, reduced from $1;
rich black plaid IRON GRENADINES {-u-
perior goods and most fashionable styles) at $1,
redneed from $1 50: very rich black BROCADE
SILK GRENADINES at $1, reduced from$l 50;
a Une of handsome COLORED DRESS G'JODS
at 15 cents, reduced irom 50, 40 aud 85 cents.
GRAY, O’BRIEN & CO..
NO. 147 BROUGHTON STREET.
Bargains in White Goods.
W HITE FRENCH WELTS at 12# cents;
white lace satin striped PKJULS at 25
cents, worth 50; plain white VICTORIA LAWNS
at 25 cents, worth 40; white stripe i VICTORIA
LAWNS at 25 cents, worth 50; fine NAINSOOKS
at 25 cents, worth 50; white LINEN LAWNS,
yard wide, at 25 pents, worth 40,
GRAY, O’BRIEN & CO.,
NO. 14-7 BROUGHTON STREET.
Bargains in Housekeeping Goods.
H eavy linen dowlas toweling, 30
inches wide, at 20 cents, worth 45; white
HUCKABaCK TOWELS, all linen, 40 inches
long, at $2 50 per doz.; Heavy LINEN TOWELS,
unbleached, at 10 cents each; brown DAMASK
TABLE LINEN at 50 cents, worth 75; whit-.s
DAMASK TABLE LINENS at 60 cents, worth
90; full Unes of LINEN NAJ’-KINiJ wad DOY
LIES at low pricej,
GRAY, O’BRIEN & CO.,
NO. 147 BROUGHTON STREET.
L ADIES’ FINE BALBRIGGAN HOSE, extrr,
long, at $3 50 per dozen; Ladies’ fine H, S.
HANDKERCHIEFS at $2 50 .>er dozen; Genl
men’s f^ne LINEN HANDKERCHIEFS, at from
$3 to $4 per dozen, worth from $5 to $6 50* grew
EXCURSION TO TYBEE
U NDER tile aosptces of TRINITY M. E.
CHURCH CHOIR, for the benefit of Organ
Fund.
STEAMER RELIANCE
will leave foot of Abercom street THIS (Tues
day) AFTERNOON, at 2 o’clock, for Tybee, re
maining about two hours.
Refreshments on board.
Fare for the trip. FIFTY CENTS. Tickets
tobe had at the boat. je6-l
VALUABLE PACKAGES
R emaining in the office of the southern
EXPRESS COMPANY, unclaimed, July 3,
1875:
Bryan, Miss D., 1 package. "
Burrell, J. H., 1 package-
Collins, W., 1 package.
Duncan, Johnson & Co., 1 package.
Gibson, Dinah, 1 package.
Griffin, W. B., 1 package.
Milis, Mrs. E.. 1 package.
Oestericher, M. A., 1 package.
Postell. John, 1 package.
Reed, Giles, 1 package.
Kalin, .T. A., 1 package.
Wiun, J. '.V . 1 p.tck'i^e.
Woods, Miss Ju ia, I package.
jy6-tf F. i*. TUN ISON, Agent.
“kind words.”
S. BOYKIN, KDlTOIt.
A SPLENDIDLY ILLUSTRATED
SUNDAY SCHOOL PAPER.
T>UBLIS3ED under the auspices of the Board
X of Domestic Missions of the Southern Bap
tist Convention.
Weekly, siDgle copy, $1 10; clubs of ten or
more, each 63c. Semi-Monthly, single copy,
75c.; clubs of ten or more, 33c. each. Monthly,
single copy, 50c.; clubs of ten or more, each 16c.
The above prices include postage, which must be
prepaid by the publishers.
Every Sabbath School in the South ought to
have the paper.
Address all letters containing remittances to
“KIND WORDS,”
Macon, Ga.
Send for specimen copies. jy6-lw
GRAND EXCURSION
—TO—
AUOUSTA.
T he literary and benevolent
CIETY OF ST. VINCENT DE PAUL ™
give an excursion to Augusta on SATURTliv
July 10,1375, for thebenea- of the new Callieri..
Trains will leave the Central Railroad depot «’
p. m., precisely, returning from Augusta
lowing evening at 9:30 p. m. Ticket.-. f ri ;
round trip, $2, to be had of the lollewing i ,
mittee: K Lon >-
C. F. Wbeel.5, Chairman.
M. O’Brien, E. A. 1 affittean, K. E. Roe
F. G. Ryan, A. J. Malonev, J. O’Driar
M. Murtagh, John King, Jno. DeMi ' ri
H. A. Dumas, T. J. Barrett, J. M . 5*Tno£'.
” F. Mcl rohan. "TM-da
^iiin
Hotel and C mmittee.
M. McCarthy, M.
Tickets at ML i. Quinan’e. Fernanda? p,,
otei and C mmittee. je2I,2S,30jy«;7 i , ,"tj
HO! FOR TYBEE.
SUNDAY EXCURSIONS.
THE STEAMER
LIZZIE BAKER
Captain LaRose, 9
W ILL leave Padelford’a wharf EVERY srv
DAY MORNING, at lOo clock, for TYBEE
ISLAND. Return mg steamer will lea.. Ti'
wharf at 5 p m., sharp. - ™
NO LIRl'OR SOLD ON BOARD.
Fare for round trip, FIFTY CENTS-
and staterooms extra. Tickets must be nun i“
a) office before going on board.
je2i-tt ~ A, 1- RICHARDSON. Agent
ytca.surf ilrsorts.
THE GHEAT
Pleasure Resort
OF SAVANNAH:
NEW YORK BOARDING.
Ai
SMALL private family have four large
Rooms to rent, with or without Board.
House is located on very high ground.
Southerners visiting New York will find first-
class accommodations. Transient Boarders ac
commodated.
For lull particulars, address Mrs. W. A. WELL
MAN, 483 Fifth avenue, New York. jy6-2
RAFFJLE. ~
T HE YAWL BOAT and SAIL of Mrs. BUNT
will be raffled at ED. MCVEIGH’S, No. 81
Bay street, on WEDNESDAY’ EVENING NEXT,
at 8 o’clock A few more chant es left.
jyG-2 Mrs. C D. HUNT.
FOIt SALK,
TWO SHARES of SAVANNAH SAVINGS
X AND LOAN COMPANY, par value one
hundred dollars per share. Will be sold at a dis
count. Apply to E. P. TUNISON,
jy6-6t Agent Southern Express Co.
CHATHAM SHERIFF’S SALE.
E 'NDER and by virtue of a mortgage fi. fa.
issued out of the Honorable the Superior
Court of Chatham County, iu favor of the People’s
Mutual Loan Association against Lawrence Doyle
and Winnetord Ann Doyle, I have levied upon
the following described property, to-wit:
All that trac t or parcel of land and premises,
situate, lying and being in tbe city of Savannah,
county of Chatham and State of Georgia, and
known on the map or plan of said city as the
eastern portion of lot number thirty-two (No. 32)
Choctaw ward (formerly Montmoliinville), eaid
eastern portion containing fifty feet front on
Walker street, and a rectangular depth north
wards to lot number thirty-one, and hounded on
the north by lot number thirty-one, on the east
by an unnamed street, on the south by said
Walker street, and on the west by the western
portion of eaid lot number thirty-two, said east
ern portion of said lot number thirty-two being the
property of Lawrence Doyle and Winneford Ann
Doyle, and described in a certain indenture of
mortgage dujy executed by said Lawrence Doyle
and Winneford Ann Doyle on the 18th day of
January, 1S73, to the People’s Mutual Loan Asso
ciation.
And I will sell the said described property be
fore the Court nouse door of Chatham county,
iu the city of Savannah, on the FIRST TUES
DAY IN AUGUST, 1875, between the legal hours
of sale, to satisfy said mortgage fi. fa.
Terms cash. Purchasers paying for titles.
JOHN T. RON AN.
jy6,13,20,27,au3 Sheriff < hatham county, Ga.
ONE OF THE MOST ATTRACTIVE pi »,
TO VISIT DUKINO THE IIKATE1)
SEASON IS
ISLE OE
’yy-HERE
HOPE!
BUCKINGHAM has made amDle
provision for the COMFORT and PLEAS
URE of all. Visitors can now enjov DELIGHT
FUL SALT BATHING, by taking the ;tr.-js .
m., 3:25 i*. h., or 5:10 r. x. trains. SPLLND1I)
BATH HOUSES, for ladies and gentlemen with,
in a few yards of the terminus.
PLEASANT ROOMS can be obtaiced for the
season.
The DANCING PLATFOKM, extending over
the water seventy feet, covered and provided with
seats, is CONSIDERED THE FINEST in the
country.
Every accessory to PLEASUhE AND EN-
JOY'MENT may be found at Isle of Dope, and
Mr. Buckingham, proprietor of the refreshment
establishment, is determined that all vigimr*
shall be pleased. jetS-im
CHATHAM SHERIFF’S SALE.
and by virtue of a fi. fa. issued out c*
the Honorable the Superior Court of Me*
In tosh Connty, in favor of Edwin A. Castellaw*
as administrator on the estate of James W. Cas-
tellaw, deceased, against Robert Lachlison, as
executor of the will ot John F. Guilmartin, de
ceased, I have levied upon the following described
property, to-wit :
Lot number ten Anson ward, and improve
ments, consisting of a two-story wooden dwelling
bouse and improvements, bounded east by Lin
coln street, west by lot number nine (9), south by
State street, and north by a lane. Also that cer
tain tract of land on the White Bluff road, about
three (3) miles from Savannah, and known as
farm lot number five (5) Third tything. Anson
ward, in the township of Savannah, containing
fifty-two (52) acres, more or lese, and bounded as
follows: On the north by farm lot number one (1)
of said tything and ward (UeKenne’s land), on
the east by White Bluff road, south by farm lot
number seven (7)—McFarland's land—and west
by trust lot ir. said tything, the property of the
estate of Guilmartin.
And I will offer the above described property at
public outcry, before the Court House coor in the
city of Savannah, county of Chatham and State
of Georg a, on the FIRST TUESDAY’ IN AU
GUST, 1>75, du ing the legal hours of sale.
Terms cash. Purchasers paying for titles.
JtiilN RON AN,
jyG-Tutd Sheriff Chatham County, Ga.
CHATHAM SHERIFF'S SALE.
TTNDER and by virtue of a morigage fi. fa.
K issued out of the Honorable the superior
Court o: Chatham County, in favor of Richard D.
Arnold vs. Joanna M. Cass, executor, «&c., 1 have
levied upon the following described property,
to-wit:
That of the eastern half of all that lot of land
situate, lying and being in the city of Savannah,
county and State aforesaid, and known aud dis
tinguished In the plan of said city by the number
ten (IU) Tyrconnell tything, DerUy ward, with the
buildings and improvements on the said eastern
half of said lot, beiDg the property of the es
tate of Joun Casa, deceased, described and
conveyed in a certain indenture of mortgage
bearing the date of the twenty-seventh (27th) day
of June, 1873.
And I will sell the said described property on
the FIRST TUESDAY IN AUGUST, 1875, be
fore the Conrt Hou^edoor of Chatham county, in
the city of Savannah, during the legal hours of
sale, to satis iy said mortgage fi. fa.
Terms cash. Pm chasers paying for titles.
JOHN T. HONAN,
jy6-Tutd Sheriff Chatham County, Ga.
(BrormfS aud ^rorisions.
Champion k Freeman,
SO. 94 BRYAii STREET,
WHOLESALE HEALERS
CHOICE FAMILY
IX
GROCERIES AND LIQUORS,
ARE OFFERING FULL UNES OF
Flour, ISacon, Fish,
Sugar, Coftee, Hire,
Soap, Starch, Candles,
Potatoes, Apples, Onions,
Canned Goods, Pickles,
Preserves, Ants, Crackers, Arc.
“B” SELECT WHISKY.
We are sole aeents for this celebrated brand,
recommended by the medical frateruitv m, n i nre
article. '
35aukrrs anti Srofcrrs.
JAMES HlYTER,
BROKER,
DEALER IN
Coin, Securities & Exchange,
No. HO Bryan Street,
(Geoigia Historical Society Building).
L OANS NEGOTIATED. Advances BiaJe on
securities placed in my handr. ior sale at
current rates. Real Estate boughi and sold on
commission.
Mr. H. J. THOMASSON will take charge of
the Real Estate branch of my business, and will
give his personal attention to the leasing of bouses
and collection of rents. ®epl-tf
Saby <i’amat|fs.
Baby Carriages!
ANOTHER LOT
OF THOSE STYLISH ‘
CAAOPY TOPS!
At the Crockery Store of
JAS. S. SIIA A.
CHATHAM SHERIFF'S SALE.
TNDER and by virtue of a mort
L y NDEH and by virtue of a mortgage
J issued out of the Honorable the Si
fi. fa.
Saperior
Court of Chatham county, in favor of John M.
Tison vs. Jesse R. Dean, I have levied u]»on the
following described property to-wit:
All the undivided one-half part of that certain
lot or tract of land situate, lying and being in the
State of Georgia, county of Chatham and city of
Savannah, known and designated as lot number
four (4) Wilmington tj thing, Derby ward, with
the appurtenances, the property of Jesse R.
Dean.
And I will offer the said described property
at public outcry, before the Court House door of
Chatham county, in the city of Savannah, during
the legal hours of sale, on the FIRST TUES
DAY IN AUGUST, 1875, to satisfy said mortgage
. fa.
Terms cash. Put chasers paying for titles.
JOHN T. KONAN,
jy6-Tutd Sheriff C. Co., Ga.
CITY COURT SHERIFF'S SALE.
TNDER and by virtue of a fi. fa. issued out
_/ of the Honorable the City Court of -Savan-
ah, Ga., in favor of Kessler & Brother vs. John
O’Mahoney, I have levied upon all the stock in
trade, consisting of Boots, Shoes, Saddlery. Ac..
Ac., contained in the store No. 4C West Broad
street, occupied by the defendant, and pointed
out by the same as his property.
And I will sell the above stated property to sat
isfy the said fi. fa., before the Court House door,
lin this city of Savannah, county of Chatham.
State of Georgia, on TUESDAY. THE THIRD
i(3d) DAY OF AUGUST, 1S75.
Terms cash; purchaser paying for titles.
ROBT R. HABERSHAM,
iy6-Tutd Sheriff C. C.
Advertising ^genru.
B. H. RICHARDSON & Co.,
Publishers’ Agents
—FOR—
City and Country Advertising,
MORNING NEWS BUILDING,
111 BAY STREET, SAVANNAH, GA.
A DVERTISEMENTS inserted in any journals
k Y in Georgia, Florida and elsewhere, at pub
lishers’ LOWEST HATES.
Part icular care taken in the selection of adver
tising mediums.
Address
B. II. RICHARDSON & CO.,
Ill Bay street, Savannah.
je30-d&wtf
DKERCHIEFS at $2 50 per duzen; Gentle-
s f}ne LINEN HANDKERCHIT
to $4 per doaen, worth from $5 to «r. urum
bargains in SAMI RIBBONS’ LADIES’ SUITS
at a great reduction; LACK SHAWLS and
SACQUES at a great reduction.
GRAY, O’BRIEN A CO,
NO. 147 BROUGHTON STREET.
6 1-4 CENTS.
C ALICOES at cents, formerly sold at 10
and 12% cents; LISLE THREAD DRESS
GOODS at 6% cents, formerly sold at 12% and
15; PLAID POPLINS at 6% cents, formerly sold
at 12% and 15; yard wide brown sheeting at 6^
cents, formerly sold at 9 $enfs, fe21 -_tf
£lg arap$.
Removals.
REMO VA L.
JJOWELL & DENMARK, ATTORNEYS AT
LAW, next to the southeast corner of Whita
ker, on BAY’ street, over Boehm, Bendheim.
«fc Co. jy*-i w ’
Notice of Removal.
I HAVE removed my Law Office to No. 8*7
street. Commercial Range.
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S. YATES LEVY.
Rfirard.
$25 Reward
YiyiLL BE PAID by the undersigned for proof
▼ ▼ to convict any person of unlawfully ap
propriating to their own use, or in aoy manner
willfully destroying or depriving me of BOTTLES
BEA KIN(r MY NA M E, blown in the glaw. The
loss of Bottles, of late, is more than I can, in
justice to myself, snbmit to. I neither sell nor
give them away. No other person has a ri<;ht to j
do so. I only sell the contents—the Bottles are |
to be returned to me when empty. Those are tbe
only conditions upon which i" supply my Soda
Water, Ginger Ale, etc.
JOHN RYAN,
je21-tf 110 and 112 Broughton =:reet.
Shingles.
KEYSTONE
SHINGLE COMPANY.
A re now
SHINGLES.
all grades of CYFBjg
•rders filled at short Loace
for shipping. „
The trade supplied at low prices at Mni
Canal, near C. IC R. Bridge, foot of William 31 '
mylO-tf KING, THOMAS & tO.
iThfrmomftfr.S.
THERMO MET EKS!
FOR SALE
jyl-tf
O. BUTLEB <V CO.’S.
So Rent.
HARPER’S PATENT
FLY TRAP»
Still Triumphant.
WHOLESALE AND RETAIL,
—AT THE—
CROCKERY HOUSE
T. IT. BOLSHAW.
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FOK KENT,
'HAT large and commodious residence trt : -
ing west on Pulaski square. Detween m
and Charlton streets, with all the tnod^rai,
rovements, either furnished or nnfB*n_
ossession given immediately, or 1st >ovem
Apply to
jel5-lm
BLUN A DEMEKE-
Notices.
NOTICE.
A LL parties interested are hereby eotined ^
I have been appointed Assignee of the_.
of James T. Humphries, an
Halcyoxcilz, Ga., June 23, 1875.
je29-Tu3t
T HIRTY days after ^ te T . a Trnnk »hd^
tents, the property of J. ) ’
sold at auction to satisfy claim
jelS-lm For JtaTl. T. Whitcomb.