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—
\iHrc fHommij jrtnrs
.1. HTKSTll.li, Proprietor. ~
Mo. 3 WH IT A li tCK STKKK'
(MORNING NEWS BUILDING)
W. T. THOMPSON, Krfltor.
FRIDAY, JUNE 9, 197(5.
Democratic Aoiniuatious iu Florida.
Our special telegram from Quincy an
nounces the nomination by the State
Democratic Convention of Florida of
Mr. George F. Drew, of Suwannee coun
ty, as a candidate for Governor, and Mr.
Noble A. Hull, of Orange county, for
Lieutenant Governor. These nomina
tions were received with enthusiastic de
light by the delegates—an enthusiasm
that will doubtless be responded to by the
honest voters of both parties. Our cor
respondent leaves us little room for com
ment. Mr. Drew is one of the most suc
cessful business men in the State. Of
unswerving integrity and of irreproach
able character, his candidacy disarms the
criticisms of even the most reckless sup
porter of either Stearns or Conover.
That he will lead the Florida Democrats
to victory, we have no doubt.
Retrenchment.—Washington dispatch
es indicate a change of sentiment in the
Senate on the subject of retrenchment
and encourage the hope that an agree
ment between the two houses may b-
arrived at by which the general curtail
ment of the expenses as determined on
by the House Committee on the appro
priation bills will be attended to. A
Washington special says : “Republican
Senators are being forced to admit tha
this reform must be carried out, for tin
revenue and customs received show that
the falling from the estimates for the cur
rent and coming fiscal years proves clearly
that the retrenchment is no greater than
is absolutely necessary. There is some
reason, therefore, for thinking that th
Republicans of the Senate will reced*.-
froin their position and make far more-
important concessions than they have
yet indicated their willingness to make.'i
Both parties are
their candidates to
much attention to
Cincinnati Gazette
too busy with
be able to pay
platforms. The
is early in the
field with a warning against any support
of the resumption act. It says “thos -
who talk about the repeal or modification
cf that measure as a step backward arc
either mistaken or they are not honest,’
and adds: “It is to be hoped, therefore,
that the Cincinnati Convention, while
resolving in favor of a return to specie
payments, will not endorse or load itself
down with the resumption act, or any
such nonsense, or accept advice from
those who know no better than to sup
pose that a plan without a process can
lead to specie payments, or that a resolu
tion of Congress to resume at a fixed time,
when there is nothing to resume with, is
an evidence of financial wisdom.”
The Cuban insurgents appear to be a:,
lively as they were three years sgo, and,
according to a report from Spanish
sources, recently attacked the town of
Ciego de Avila, but were repulsed with
the loss of thirty killed and seventy
wounded, while the Spaniards lost two
officers kilied, and three men wounded.
It must always be borne in mind that
intelligence of the military operations of
the insurgents must necessarily come
through their enemies, and that the al
lowance must be made for reports be
littling the rebellion. Certainly an in
surrection strong enough to enable its
promoters to hold one-third of the island
of Cuba for seven or eight years against
the assaults of the Spanish military
power, is not to be despised.
General Dix on the Political Situa
tion.—General John A. Dix has been in
terviewed concerning the chances of the
prominent candidates for the Presidency.
He does not regard the success of Mr.
Tilden at the St. Louis convention as the
settlement of the quarrels that divide the
Democratic party, but as the fire-brand
that will cause the discontented followers
of “Old Bill Allen” to bolt the nomina
tion and set up a candidate of their own
choice. A similar result, he predicts,
will arise out of an Allen or soft money
triumph, and the grand finale will be an
election of the President by the House of
Representatives, because of no choice
being made by the people.
The Chinese Question.—Mr. F. M.
Pixley, of San Francisco, had an inter
view with Attorney-General Taft on Tues
day morning, in which he strongly urged
tne intervention of the government in
the Chinese question, in behalf of the
citizens of San Francisco. He stated
that the people there have become so in-
censed at the constant immigration of the
lowest classes of Chinese into California
that they have formed themselves into
numerous societies to oppose it, and that
unless government aid is speedily granted
they will take the law into their own
hands. The Star says the question will
doubtless be brought before the Cabinet,
where it will receive serious consideration.
A new field of investigation has been
presented to the Committee on Expendi
tures so vast that the committee shrinks
from the labor of exploring it, and asks
that it be turned over to another com
mittee having less to do. 11 is the sub
ject of assessments on the whisky ring
made by Federal officials for electioneer
ing money. Of course, if the whisky
ring was assessed by Treasury officials for
campaign expenses, the Treasury Depart
ment must have known there was a
whisky ring; and if Mr. Bristow’s prede
cessors knew there was a whisky ring,
the next question is, why did they not
break it up ?
Blaine’s Attack on the (firmer Com
mittee.
The scene in the House of Represen-
tives on Monday last, when Hyena Blaine,
goaded to desperation by the exposure of
a long career of villainy through the
searching investigations now going on
made his rude and insolent attack on the
Clymer Committee, is described as one of
the most disgraceful exhibitions ever wit
nessed in the halls of Congress. It having
been given out that Blaine was to force
himself upon the attention of the House
under pretense of raising a question
of privilege, the galleries were packed
by the Radical Washington mob, while
hundreds of persons who had no right
there obtruded themselves on the floor.
Starting out with the subject of the in
vestigation, the speech was a brazen
attempt to vindicate himself from the
charges brought against him. He justi
fied his right to the letters which he had
purloined from the witness Mulligan,
and charged that he was being perse
cuted by “ ex-rebel soldiers,” for having
spoken against amnesty to Mr. Davis.
He denounced the committee, two
members of which were rebel “ Confeder
ates,” and defied them in their effort
to destroy his prospects at Cincinnati,and
in true buncomb style “appealed to
forty four millions of American people
for his justification.” As he warmed up
he was greeted by the Radicals not only
with the clapping of hands but also with
the loudest and wildest cheers, which the
gavel of the Speaker could not restrain.
He read the Mulligan letters with the
greatest possible dramatic effect, but
capped the climax of the dramatic and
sensational when he advanced to the Bern
ocratic side of the House, and, glaring
fiercely at Mr. Knott, charged that gentle
man with suppressing a cable dispatch
which he had received from Caldwell
exhonerating him from all complicity in
the $04,000 Union Pacific bond transac
tion. This charge was promptly and sue
eessfully met by Mr. Knott, who dealt the
would-be martyr some stunning blows.
Blaine ended his tirade by offering a reso
lution calling for the Caldwell dispatch
to be given to the House, which was not
carried. A Washington dispatch says :
“The whole scene was one which will
not soon be forgotten by any of the large
crowd that witnessed it. The older mem
bers of the House say that in all their ex
perience they never before witnessed such
a scene. They had seen members ex
pelled, Lad heard man charged with trea
son, had seen knives and other weapons
drawn, and yet they never saw any
more excitement or greater interest
manifested in the proceedings
than there was to-day. Opinions vary
according to the politics of the individual,
or their prejudicas for or against Blaine.
The latter’s friends are jubilant, and
insist that he has played the winning
card. However, the effect can be better
judged after the letters given to the pub
lic to-day are read, when people can
calmly reflect over them, and when they
will not be covered up under a dramatic
effect.”
I TELEGRAPH
THE
-TO—
HOKMJiO
NEWS.
FLORIDA STATE DEMOCRATIC
CONVENTION.
GEORGE F. DREW NOMINATED
FOR GOVERNOR,
And Noble
A. Hull for
Governor.
Lieutenant
WILD ENTHUSIASM OVER
NOMINATIONS
THE
THE DELEGATES TO ST. LOUIS UN
INSTRUCTED.
APPOINTMENT OF PUESIIIK.NTIAL,
ELECTORS.
[Special Telegram to the Morning News.]
The Soaecity or Change.—Complaints
of the scarcity of change in the West are
pouring in upon members of Congress,
who are appealed to for some relief. A
dispatch says another effort will probably
be made in the House to pass the biil
for issuing in exchange for legal tenders
$10,000,000 of subsidiary silver coin.
Thus far about $7,000,000. in lieu of
fractional currency, have been issued
under the new law. After the $10,000,-
000 bill is passed, the Banking and Cur
rency Committee will push their bill for
the additional coinage of $20,000,000
more. It has been agreed on, and will be
reported to the House this week.
The Sunday Row in New Yobk —Po
lice raids on the violators of the Sunday
excise laws in New York, were continued
last Sunday, and fifty arrests were made.
The accused were all held in $100 bail,
which was promptly furnished. Rumors
were that a great raid would be made on
Gilmore’s Garden, which would be com
pelled to close. Fifteen of the bar
tenders of the garden only were arrested
and bailed.
Dom Pedro has given a firm in New
Haven, Conn., an order for ten lawn
mowiDg machines, to be taken to Brazil
as models.
Blaine is likely to be of some use to*the
country yet. He will kill the first hand-
organ man who plays “Mulligan Guards”
in his her ring.
Mulligan and Fisher’s Evidence Cor
roborated.
The Boston Transcript makes this
rather startling statement editorially:
“It is susceptible of proof, on the testi
mony of well-known gentlemen now in
Boston, that Josiah Caldwell said in their
presence in this city that he paid Mr.
Biaine for his influence in securing legis
lation favorable to the railroad enterprise
in which Mr. Caldwell was engaged.”
The Transcript gives in another part of
the same paper a conversation between
“ well-known lawyer,” whose name is
not given, and Mr. Fisher, on the cars
between Boston and Worcester, when
Mr. Fisher and Mr. Mulligan were >u
their way to Washington. Mr. Fisher
pointed to Mulligan’s green bag, and
said there was “ evidence in that bag
that would damn Blaine..’ The ac
count continues : “His companion asked
what that meant, and Mr. Fisher replied
that there was a letter in the bag from
Mr. Blaine (to Mr. Fisher), which said,
substantially, ‘I have had a great deal of
trouble at the heel of the session to get
this Little Rock and Fort Smith bill
through;’ and subsequently the writer
adds, ‘I think I deserve some compensa
tion.’ The explanation of this is, that
the original grant to the road was with a
restriction forbidding the sale of lands at
less than a certain price per acre, and the
‘great deal of trouble’ referred to was in
regard to the removal of that restriction,
which was ultimately accomplished, to
the decided advantage of the company.’
The lawyer, when waited upon, said
that this account was “substantiidly cor
rect,” though not “exactly accurate,” and
voluntarily said that Mr. Fisher made
another statement to him which was still
more damaging to Mr. Blaine.”
Blaine’s Letter Trick Exposed.
When we learned through the tele
graph that Hyena Biaine, with a melo
dramatic flourish, had read the stolen
letters to the House, we gave him credit
for a well-executed sleight-of-hand trick,
but we were not willing to believe, with
out better evidence than his own unsup
ported assertion, that the letters which
he read were the same letters, and all the
letters, which he forcibly took from Mul
ligan and afterward refused to submit to
the inspection of the investigating com
mittee. It seems that we were right in
our suspicion. A Boston dispatch to the
New York Times says: “James Mulligan,
the celebrated witness in the Blaine in
vestigation, reached Boston Monday eve
ning, and when asked what he thought of
Blaine’s statement, he answered emphati
cally: ‘He has not read all the letters,
and never will. He will keep back the
ones that would do him the most harm.’ ”
The Times styles Blaine the Beecher of
politics, and Mulligan is his Moulton—
the mutual friend. He fondly addressed
this mutual friend as “James” in a barber
shop—he dropped to his knees before
him subsequently, and besecched him to
“think of the other hearts that would
ache,” etc., if those letters were exposed.
In other words, he was on the “ragged
edge” until he got his fingers around those
fatal letters, and then he was defiant. He
was not going to swallow poison after
all. He lives, says the Nashville Ameri
can, and lies as lustily as before. Truly,
a Republican leader of force, as lo forci
ble retention of what he solemnly prom
ised to return. Truly, a Republican of
capacity—the capacity to lie without
winking.
Secretary Bristow’s War Record.—
The National Republican, administration
organ, publishes what is intended to be a
raid on Secretary Bristow's war record,
by illustrating from official documents its
brevity. The article is headed: “Secre
tary Bristow—His Complete Record
During the War—Extracts from Official
Reports—Battle of Shiloh, April, G, 1862.”
These extracts consist of three official re
ports, and simply show that while enter
ing upon the battle of Shiloh a shell ex
ploded over Lieutenant-Colonel Bristow’s
head and rendered him insensible during
the rest of the day. The Major of his
regiment writes that his hearing was im
paired and his spinal column injured.
This raid on the war record of Republi
can candidates by Republicans but il
lustrates the temper among them over the
contestants for the Cincinnati nomina
tion.
Quincy, Fla., June 8.
The State Convention re-assembled this
morning pursuant to adjournment. Ex-
Governor Walker addressed the convention
in an able and stirring speech.
THE PLATFORM.
The Platform Committee reported an ad
dress arraigning the national and State
administrations for corruption and despot
ism, which was unanimously adopted with
out debate.
RESOLUTIONS.
Resolutions were adopted asking the ser
vices of Senator Charles W. Jones and Con
gressman J. J. Finley iu securing an appro
priation for the Pensacola navy yard. A
resolution declaring the sympathy of the
Democratic snd Conservative party of
Florida for the struggling Cubans was also
adopted.
A WINNING TICKET.
The names of George F. Drew, of
Suwannee county, for Governor, and Noble
A. Hull, of Orange county, for Lieutenant-
Governor, were proposed, and they were
nominated by acclamation, amid great on
thusiasm—the delegates rising in the seats
and cheering loudly. Many congratulatory
speeches were made.
GEORGE F. DREW.
The nominations are more than satisfac
tory in every respect, and the Democrats
feel assured of victory. Mr. Drew is a gen
tleman of about fifty years of age, and a
Northern man by birth. He came Sonth
before he attained his majoiity and settled
in Columbus, in your State, where, for sev
eral years, he was associated with Hon. Jno.
G. Winter in the large iron foundry owned
by that gentleman. Mr. Drew married in
Columbus.
DURING THE WAR
Mr. Drew was engaged in the milling busi
ness near Albany, iu which capacity he min
istered to the wants of the needy and suf
fering at home, and to the necessities of the
soldiers. He was doubtless a Union man in
sentiment, but he never allowed his ideas
of the impracticability of the war to inter
fere with wuat he conceived to be his duty
to his adopted section. The disastrous
close of the Confederate struggle found him
IMPOVERISHED, BUT NOT DISPIRITED.
He came to Florida and began a new
career. He secured a steam mill on the
Jacksonville, Pensacola and Mobile Rail
road, and by his energy, industry and econ
omy has built up a town, and controls the
largest business in this State. There seems
to be no doubt that he will carry the State
by a large majority, no matter what the
tactics of the euemy, and the prospect of
such a glorious consummation adds to the
enthusiasm that Mr. Drew’s personal popu
larity has aroused.
THE CANDIDATES.
Mr. Drew will be in Tallahassee to-mor
row, where he will meet the Eastern dele
gates, and will then come on here for the
purpose of meeting the West Florida dele
gates. Mr. Hull was present at the conven
tion, and accepted, iu appropriate terms,
the nomination of Lieutenant-Governor.
PRESIDENTIAL ELECTORS FOB THE STATE-AT-
LABGE.
The following named Presidential elec
tors for the State-at-large were chosen: J.
E. Youge, of Escambia county, and Wilkin
son Call, of Duval county, with William
Curry, of Monroe County, and B. F. Wend-
land, of Madison county, as alternates.
DELEGATES TO ST. LOUIS.
Nineteen delegates were elected to repre
sent the State in the St. Louis Convention.
They go uninstructed.
HOMEWARD BOUND.
The East Florida delegates left by special
train this evening.
RENEWING APPROPRIATIONS.
Washington, June 8.—The post office
appropriation bill, as reported hy the
Senate Committee on Appropriations, is
amended in the following important parti
culars: The committee strike ont all the
legislative provisions of the HonBe, which
provide for a readjustment of Postmasters’
salaries, for new rates of mail service, com
pensation of railroads, and for changes in
the existing law relative to third class mail
matter. The appropriations are increased
as follows:
For compensation of Postmasters, from
$6,800,000 to $7,500,000; for inland mail trans
portation, from $15,600,000 to $17,500,000; for
pay of letter-carriers, from $1,800,000 to
$2,000,000; for pay of railway post office
clerks, from $1,125,000 to $1,300,000; for pay
of route agents, from $945,000 to $1,000,000;
for special agents, from $110,000 to $150,000;
for transportation of foreign mails, from
$220,000 to $250,000; for advertising,
from $25,000 ,o $40,000; for miscellaneous
items, from $50,000 to $100,000. The com
mittee entirely strike out the House appro
priation of $850,00.) for official postage
stamps for the use of the Post Office Depart
ment. The House proviso, that stamped
envelopes and newspaper wrappers shall
not be sold at less than their average cost,
including clerk hire and other expenses con
nected therewith, is retained.
the judiciary rill, .
Washington, June 8.—The judiciary bill,
which passed the Senate to-day, provides
that an injunction issued in auy Circuit
Court sbaU be binding in every judicial
circuit. It shall be do bar to action on the
part of the proprietor or owner of an origi
nal manuscript or play, that snch plav has
been printed, provided it was not published
before plaintiff became proprietor. The act
does not apply to any case, unless the same
shall have been issued within seven years
from the first publication or performance.
NATIONAL MEDICAL ASSOCIATION.
Philadelphia, June 8.—In the Medical
Association the roil of delegates was read,
and upon reaching the name of Sarah Hack
ett Stevens, a resolution to refer to the
Judicial Committee that and all such names
was tabled by a large majority. The com
mittee to report upon the subject jf
bovine and animal vaccination, as com
pared with the usual arm to arm practice,
was appointed.
A FORGER.
Philadelphia, Jane 7.—In the U. S.
Court Charles Worms was found gnilty of
forging the signature of Secretary Chand
ler to a contract with the Interior Depart
ment for furnishing Indian supplies. Sen
tence was not passed.
THE CODE.
Denver, Colorado, June 7 A duel was
fought at River Bend., Col., to-day by
Alfred D. Jessup, Jr., and a man named
Davis, who were respectively armed with a
Winchester rifle ami Colt’s navy pistol.
Jessup was killed at the second exchange of
shots.
THE INDIANS.
Council Bluffs, Juno 8.—Advices from
Julesburg, Col., slate that the Sioux Indians
raided on the herders of George Kielin, of
this city, and killed three of them. Four
teen men are in pursuit.
dead.
Springfield, Mass., June 8.—President
William A. Stearns, of Amherst College,
died of paralysis of the heart this evening.
The Newspaper l’EST.--The Utica, New
York, Observer makes a prediction that
twenty years hence there will be fewer
newspapers in the’ State of New York
than there are to-day. “The doctrine of
the ‘ survival of the fittest ’ will be ap
plied, and those that withstand the test
will show constant and marked signs of
improvement. The few wiil take the
place of the many, and there will be no
organs.” By this is probably meant no
organs of individuals or parties. The
Springfield (Mass.) Republican remarks
that it is essential to “the survival of the
fittest” that there shall be a “fittest,” and
that next to that, as an element in the
growth toward the better if not the com
pleter era in journalism, is a public
recognition of the desirability of a few
good papers rather than many poor ones
and a prompt gravitation toward the
best in subscriptions and advertising.
One good newspaper may have a larger
circulation than a dozen poor ones com
bined. It is quality, not quantity, that is
wanted.
THE FLORIDA DEMOCRATS.
Convention of the First Congressional
District.
[Special Telegram to the Morning News.;
Quincy, Fla., June 8.
The convention of the First Congressional
District met here to-day, and by acclama
tion nominated
B. H. M. DAVIDSON,
of Gadsden county, for Congress. Colonel
Davidson accepted the nomination in an elo
quent speech.
DISTRICT ELECTOR.
Judge R. B. Hilton, of Leon county, was
chosen Presidential Elector for the district,
with H. L. Mitchell, of Hillsborough coun
ty, as alternate.
EXECUTIVE COMMITTEES. .
Both the State and District Conventions
appointed efficient Executive Committees.
A MURDERER CONVICTED.
Investigation of the Suicide of Mrs.
Smith by the Grand Jury.
LSpecial Telegram to the Morning News.]
Beaufort, S. C., June 8.
convicted.
John Snipe, who mnrdcred Gen. Howard
near Grahamville last April, was convicted
to-day of murder in the first degree. His
confederates are now on trial.
THE SUICIDE.
The graijt j nry report that Mrs. Smith
fired the snot which killed her.
The Springfield Republican is prompt
to pronounce Mr. Blaine guilty. It say£:
“These distressing revelations point
clearly to facts we have long feared, to
results we have for some time appre
hended. Mr. Blaine and his friends will
not readily yield his character or his po
sition still; but he is certain, sooner or
later, to pass into the retirement that has
overtaken, within these last few years,
other of our distinguished public men.
who, in haste to be rich, have trifled with
their public reputations, and compro
mised the integrity of their public ac
tions. And it will not be many days be
fore it will be apparent to everybody that
his nomination at Cincinnati is an impos
sibility. The slates for the Republican
National Convention may begin to bo re
constructed at once.” That is in the
Republican's solemn vein; this is its hu
morous touch : “ ‘Mulligan Guards’ is
rather too light and frivolous a tune for a
political funeral; eh, Mr. Blaine ?”
Grant’s New Minister to Austria.
Out on the Pacific coast they do not
seem to have the highest opinion in the
world of Lieut. Beale, whom President
Grant nominated the other day for
Minister to Austria. The San Francisco
Bulletin says that “if his memory is not
fragrant, it is at least strong in the minds
of old citizens,” and gives this summary
of his career:
After distinguishing himself in the
Mexican war, he was appointed Indian
Agent at Tejon, where he “managed to
make way with a large sum of govern
ment money, the defense beiDg that he
had so expended it in behalf of the gov
ernment that the latter was the gaiuer,
although subsequent facts indicated that
Beale had profited largely by some of the
transactions.” He “held the appointment
of Surveyor General of Calforniafrom 1861
to 1863,” and was removed for “having
made an official report abounding iu
gross errors and iu wild nud misohievons
suggestions.” "Never before or since
has there been so scandalous an adminis
tration of the affairs of that office.
“Beale, without capital of his own,
having the key to the situation by virtue
of his office, was enabled to acquire
ranches containing in all more than two
hundred thousand acres. "He determined
the locution and quality of his own laud.
The Bulletin conclude : “We do not
care to till up this outline. A Minister
to one of the most tnhghtened courts in
Europe ought to bo a different man from
Beale, whose nomination, to say the
least, was not fit to be made. That is
the conviction of the best citizens hi re,
ar.d that would be the general judgment
of the country were B ale’s official ante
cedents thoroughly luid open to public
scrutiny.”
Another Big Railroad Job.—One of
the most preposterous bills yet intro
duced in Congress during the present sea.
sion is the Senate bill, presented by Mr.
Cregin, of New Hampshire, authorizing
the National Railway Company to build a
railroad between the cities of Washing
ton and New York, and providing that the
United States Government shall subscribe
for “at least one half of the amount of
stock taken by private parties,” the total
capital stock being fixed at the sum of
$10,000,000. The name of William H.
Kemble, of Pennsylvania, which appears
as one of the incorporators of the com
pany, is, says the New York Sun, strik
ingly suggestive of “addition, division
and silence,” and of the peculiar system
of operations employed by the politicians
who rally under those watchwords. The
associations connected with Bill Kemble’s
name may commend the bill to the favor
able consideration of the body which
confirmed the nomination of the noto
rious Billings for Judge of a United
States Court, but there should be
no doubt cf the House making short
work of the job, if it ever comes before
it for consideration.
Excursions.
ppt Sales.
-Hew ^rtitmisements.
NEW ADDITIONS.
Call
Before Purchasing
YOUIi
Boots and Shoes!
I*. II. MALLETTE, AGENT,
139 1-2 Broughton Street,
INVITES THE ATTENTION OF PURCHAS
ERS TO HIS STOCK IN
HOOTS AS 1> SHOO
Excursion to Tybee
FOR THE BENEFIT OF THE
Lutheran Chureh Building Fund !
MONDAY, JUNE 12, 1876.
COMMITTEE.
GEOKGK B. CLAHK, Chairman.
John B. i*aiiton ‘hahi.k.- E. Stanton.
John Dehut. .1. K. Boh ’Iiekt.
P. Linuknstiu tii. John Allen.
W. H. .Spann. H. W. Hkddick.
Ticket* can tie hud f'oui either of the above
committee ami at the store n| John Derst, 92
Broughton street. Limited number of ticket* to
be sold. Parlien drslring them had better apply
early.
Si earner CAB ME will leave wharf foot of
Drayton street at 7 h o'clock a. m. je8-2t
THIS FXCliUNION SEASON
Ol’KNKIL
Kxrursioiis on WrdnrMla)* and
City Marshal’s Male.
CITY MARSHAL’S OFFICE, 1
Savannah. June 3,1876./
U NDER resolution of the City Council of Sa
vannah, and by virtue of city tax execu-
Mantra
prop. rty> wit: . _ “ ' W. * ^oIb^S’i^|i°£
octl()-tf or this o£ce, s “ ; -\hi-08
(4^
Saturdays
ISLK OF HOPE AXI) MONTGOMERY.
THE BOAT RACE, ADVERTISED
SATURDAY, IS INDEFINITELY
POSTPONED.
FOR
I^XCURSION TICKETS good ou WEDNES-
Xli DAY, SATURDAY and SUNDAY only over
the Savannah, Mddaway and Seaboard Railroad
will hcreatter be issued at the fo lowing prices: To
Isle of Hope, adults 30 cents; children 20 cents.
To Montgomery, adults 50 cents: children 30
cents. A stiiug band will accompany the
train on Saturday. G. S. HA1NE J ,
je$-2t Superintendent.
goats and £Uoc$.
JULIUS SPAM
B EGS to announce to his friends and the pub
lic in general, that he has adopted the system
©f offering a large portion of his EXTENSIVE
STOCK OF
BOOTS
I L 8omh°Hrw n |“ind\vh l i t ,av' 0on la -t,
serteH If* ££=
SS V leu ft
==—_ ’
ti >ns in my hands. I have levied on and will selL
under direction of a special committee of Coun- TV -lane r.r, —=
cil, on the FIRST TUESDAY IN JULY/be- j A. SACK * mse11 * '“’re m
i tween the legal hours of sale, before the 6ourt “ 1 ™ fnl - Apply
Honse door in the city of Savannah, county of “LI Kilts fo-ll
t batham, and State of Georgia, the following 1 JO "ANTED— ~—
•opi rty, to wit:
Lot No 25. South Oelethorpe ward, east side of
Lumber ai d west of Fahrn streets; levied on as
the prop rty of the estate of John W Anderson.
Lots Nos 47 and4S, Gue ward; levied on as the
property of Wm B *daras, trustee.
Lots Nos 23 and 2-*, White ward, fronting on
Dufly street; levied on as the property of Mrs
Jane Bryan.
Improvements on the western two thirds of
lot No 37, Ch thani ward; levied on as the prop
erty of N B Brown, trustee. lut . ra)1 JPJ*i J
Improvements on rhe southern one-half of lot KING, with ball. Thu fir.’i ilr M ,f aGoi b n s i e
No 6L Jones ward; levied on as the property of at 12C Bay street and—nav
John Bryan, colored. ment. P“.v tor this advm* *
Lot No 2 and improvements, Percival ward, ■■■
Holland ty thing; levied on as the property of Mrs
Sarah M Black.
Lot No 14 and improvements, White ward;
levied on as the property of D W C Bscon.
Northern one-half of lot No 5 and improve
ments; levied on as the property of Thomas
Bateson.
Lo s Nos 45, 46, 47 and 4-% Wylly ward; 1 vied
on as the property of Wm G Bulloch, trustee for
Mrs Jane D Colburn.
Nor hern one- alf of lot No 4 and improve
ments, Middle Oglethorpe ward; levied on as the
property of W B Courtenay.
Improvements ou the southern one-half of lot
No 29 Liberty ward; levied on as the property of
the estate of Carl K Craft.
Improvements on lot No 23, Warren ward;
levied on as the property of the estate of James
i oyle.
Western one-half of lot No 7 and improve
ments, Anson ward, third tything; levied on as
the property of Peter Done’.an.
Lot No 9 and improvements, Eartow ward;
levied on as the property of Mrs Catherine Djn-
ovan.
Three quarters of lot No 2S ai d improvements,
North Oglethorpe ward; levied on as the propeity
of J B SppsteiD, trustee.
Improvements on the southern one-h i’f of lot
N«; 24, Columbia ward; levied on as the property
of L J B Fairchild.
So. 1M Liberty ‘fctS***
tS?sS“
P two■ s ori“‘^in' 1I b
street, npnr u , tuI - <n Lit: , ’
Apply t0
)e9-Jt
rent
‘P W - Apply „
street, near West Broad
CUy Trensnrer’s office to SILCOLWjio*^
T 0 «F T ’ h Pleasant, fuadsh(dhOmr~--
A per month, or two gentlmJ?
nished with a room and S?* J’ 1 '
month each. Call at'w at pa
Sonth Broad. « naherahun (tr ,,. » •
je8-3t
I 0 RK>T, until October 1st nt iv
A a onck house on Jom > street- „„ per “°=tli 1
sonth front. Apply at this office’ a: d * 4| er;
UioR RENT, ROOM8talSUT---^H5il
r ,ng lately occupied by u J M “‘'
ply to JOHN R. JOHNSON, nt^ 00 ’ A P-
eep‘25tf • 'Air Treasurer,
—AND-
F OR KENT, STORE TiTww.-rT;
1j4 Julian and No. 151 Bryan
DO rented low. Apply to JAMES s " n' *3
Congress street. s - -11. VA, i 4 ,
r<OK KENT, the PREmSETFt" ^
1 A nnlv at tk. Af :. 1,1
nov2Mt y St thC Mornin S office)
BAY yp
SHOES
FOR SALE AND INSPECTION ON
Cheap Counters,
And where they will find every lot marked in
PLAIN FIGURES,
?ry OrOOilS.
—AT-
Startlingly Low Trices!
Which I shall sell from this day on until further
notice, as follows:
MEN’S PEGGED BOOTS at $2 a pair.
BOYS’ KIP PEGGED BOOTS, at $! 50 a pair.
GENTS' HAND-SEWED BOOTS, at $5 00 and
$6 a pair.
GENTs’ HAN L'-SEW ED GAITERS, at $3 50 and
$4 50 a pair.
MEN’S CALF BROGAN- 3 , at $1 00.
M EN’S OXFORD and STRAP SHOES, at $1 00.
YOUTHS’ BOOTS at $1.
LADIES’ SERGE BALMORALS at 9flc.
LADIES' SERGE CONGRESS GAITERS at $1.
CHILDREN’S PHILADELPHIA DOUBLE
TIES, 7 to 10?, at 75c.
LADIES’ FANCY KID SLIPPERS, at 75c.
CHILDREN’S PHILADELPHIA SILVEE
TIPPED SHOES at fl.
INFANTS’ BALMORALS at 25c.
An assorted lot of. CHILDREN’S SHOES at
75c.
LADIdS’ RUBBERS at 50c.
GENTS’ RUBBERS at 75c.
Our entire stock of BOOTS at and below cost.
All of which I am determined to sell at the
above prices, and which must be sold. Call coon
and get your bargains.
JULIUS SPANIER,
mySO-tf
149 CONGRESS STREET.
^utnmfr &c$ort5i.
GOOD BARGAINS SECURED lO ALL
—IN—
L ADIES’ CONGRRSS BOOTS at low prices.
Ladies’ LACE SERGE BOOTS from $1 and
upward.
Ladies’ KID CALF and GOAT BOOTS very
Ladies’ PEGGED, CALF and GOAT SHOES, all
Ftyles.
Misses’ KID and SERGE SLIPPERS, splendid
bargains.
Misses’ KID FOXED BOOTS, cheap.
Misses’ SERGE, CALF and GOAT BOOTS, low
prices.
Misses’ PEGGED, CALF, GOAT and BUFF
BALMORALS.
Children’s and Infants’ SHOES in great variety.
Boys’CONGRESS GAITERS and BALMORALS.
Gentlemen’s hand-sewed and machine-sewed
CALF BOOTS.
Two cases CAVALRY BOOTS, |5 per pair, very
cheap.
Gentlemen s CALF PRINCE ALBERTS, OX
FORD TIES, and other stales.
Boys’ STRAW HATS at 35 cents, worth $1 00.
je9-lt
SAIL LINE.
Jacob Thompson Vindicated.—A Wash
ington special to the Baltimore Gazette
says:
Ex-Congressman Charles Case, who was
a Republican member of the Thirty-sixth
Congress and one of the members of the
committee which investigated the charges
against Jacob Thompson, Secretary of
the Interior at the time $870,000 of In
dian trust fund bonds were abstracted
from the Interior Department, to-day-
addressed a long letter to Mr. Thompson,
fully detailing his recollection of the
investigation, and asserting that there
was no equivocation or reservation ou his
part or that of Roscoe Conkling, the
other Republican member of the commit
tee, in giving the chairman the fullest
authority to relieve Mr. Thompson of any
complicity, knowledge or connection with
the transaction. As yet Zach Chandler
has not replied to Mr. Thompson’s letter.
Hts attention has been respectfully called
to the Congressional report.
Midnight Telegrams.
CALDWELL’S CROOKED
GRAM.
TELE-
The British American Extradition
Controversy.
RENEWING APPROPRIATIONS)
JDUCKO BY THE HOUSE.
A Oead-Lorlt Likely to Result.
UE-
THE “CBOOKED” TELEGBAM.
Washington, Juuo 8.—The following is
the telegram received by Mr. Knott :
London, June 6.—To the Chairman of the
House Jwliciary Committee, Washington :
Have just read in tho New York papers
Scott’s evidence about our bond transaction
and can fully corroborate it. 1 never gave
Blaine any Fort Smith Railroad bonds, di
rectly or otherwise. I have three (3) for
eign railway contracts on my hands, which
make it impossible to leave without great
pecuniary loss, or would gladly voluntarily
come homo and so testify. Can make affi
davit to this effect and mail if desired.
Josiah Caldwell.
THE EXTBADITION BUSINESS.
London, June 8.—Tho British Foreign
Office has published the correspondence
relative to the extradition treaty between
Great Britain and the United States. From
this it appears that Mr. Hoffman, the Amer-
can Charge d’Affaires, in conversation with
Lord Derby on May 25, snggeBted a settle
ment of the difficulty 'ey the negotiation of
an article additional to th6 treaty of 1842.
Lord Derby wrote to Mr. Hoffman, saying
the government was ready to meet this sug
gestion immediately, and inclosed the draft
of an article providing that persons extra
dited shall not be tried for another offenBe.
FATAL BOILEB EXPLOSION.
Augusta, June 8.—The boiler of the steam
saw mill belonging to Perkins Sr. Co., ex-
K ' ' id this morning at Lawton, Georgia,
g Thomas Wallace and Joseph Homes
and wounding Henry Sexton.
The Tell-Tale Telegbams.—A Wash
ington dispatch says the Naval and Real Es-
I ate Pool Committees have received a large
number of telegrams from New Y’ork, se
lected from the lot sold by tho Atlantic
and Pacific line. The important ones are
in cipher, and probably beyond the com
mittee’s power to interpret. Secretary
Robeson and the Cattells are shown to be
on the friendliest terms, and the dis
patches between Secretary Richardson
and the Cookes are also indicative of the
high esteem in which the Buchu bankers
were held. A deputy sergeant-at-arms
is carefully examining the fifteen hundred
pounds of waste paper, selecting such as
the committee have indicated may en
lighten their investigations.
For Darien, Doboy and Union Island.
W ILL dispatch schooDer ANNA SIMS from
Charleston wharf, foot of West Broad
street, for above ports on SATURDAY, 10th
instant, a‘ 4 p. m. Freight for Darien and Do
boy twenty five per cent, less than steamer rates.
Union Island sam as steamer rates.
je9-2t F. M. MYRELL, Agent.
Respondentia Wanted.
A BOUT £3,000 sterling on 1,607 BALES COT
TON, part cargo of Dutch bark Fritz,
lately condemned and sold at Brunswick, Oa.
Said cotton will be shipped hence to Havre by
the AI Norwegian bark Embla, Captain Larsen.
All bids must be handed into oar office before
the 15th instant.
IIOLST, FULLARTON & CO.,
je9-Ct Agents.
DOGS CLIPPED.
J OHN COUNTS, the celebrated horse clipper,
is now prepared to CLIP DOGS of any
kind. He charges bnt $!. He can always be
found at the Germania engine house, on Con
gress street. je9-lt
Anotheb Radical Rogue Come to
Gbief.—Ex-Minister Orth is under fire
that comes from his own ranks. The
Evansville Journal insists, in view of his
failure to “explain,” in his recent speech,
that his name “be removed from the head
of the Republican State ticket, and that
of some man substituted in his place of
whom it cannot be said that he has ever
used a position conferred upon him by
the people to pnt money in his purse.”
Mr. Orth came home at the wrong time.
DR. BUTTS’
DISPENSARY}
Thirty years experieuoc in the treatment of Sexual and
Chrome Diseases of b«*th sexes.
Dr. fU TTS' .ifarria^e (snide.
A Physiological View of Marriage
for the married and those contemplating
marriage, ou the mysteries of reproduct
ion and the secret infirmities oM-outh,
manhood and womanlxvxl An illustrated book ot2Gopages,
for private reading, which should be kept under lock and
key. Sent under seal forfiOcts.
A PRIVATE MEDICAL TREATISE on all diseases
of a Private Nature in both sexes, the abuses and dis-
ordersotthe sexual system, and the means of cure, 150 pages
With engravings, sent under seal tor25 cts.
MEDICAL ADVICE on Sexual and Chronic Diseases,
Seminal Weakness, Catarrh, Cancer, Runturv, the Opium
Habit, &c., a 60 page work sent under seal for 10 cts. All
tlxree books containing 460 pages and everything worth
knowing on the subject, sent securely sealed on re
ceipt of 60 cts. Address, Dr. Butts’ Dispensary,
No.12 N. 8th st.. St. Louis. Mo. [Established 18I7.J
je9 d&wlm
INDIAN SPRING S
McIntosh House.
T HE SEASON at this famous resort has be
gun, and this well known Hou e isopen.
Superior facilities for comfort and pleasure of
guests are guaranteed. Its iarge Afsembiy Room
w’ill be enlivened by a
String Orchestra and Dancing
RATES OF BOARD—Per day, $2; per week,
$12; per mouth, $35.
Excursion Railroad rates for visitors.
je8-lm B. W. COLLIER, Proprietor.
SWEET SPKINGS,
MONROE COUNTY, WEST VIRGINIA.
T HIS old and delightful SUMMER RESORT
wili be open for the accommodation of visi
tors on the FIFTEENTH OF JUNE. No estab
lishment is its superior in point of comfort or
elegance of its appointments. Since last season
it has been repainted and renovated throughout,
and is now in perfect condition.
Charges—Per day, $3 0u; per week, $ 7 50; per
month, $60. Children under 10 years and color
ed servants, half price.
Parties or families desiring to make arrange
ments lor the season, will please address as
above, Capt. J. Ii. FREEMAN,
my30-lm Superintendent.
Western one-half of lot No 7 and improvements,
Derby ward, Frederick Tything; levied on as the
property of Mrs Add S Fairchild.
Lot No 17 and improvements, O’Neil ward;
levied on as the property of the estate of Joseph
E FalLgant.
Lots Nos 29, 30 and 32, Atlantic ward; levied
on as the property of Thomas M Forman, trus
tee.
Improvements on lot No 34, Walton ward;
levied on as the property of the estate of James
Fraser.
Improvements on lot No 10, Calhoun ward;
levied on as the property of J H Graybill.
Improvements on part of lot No 2S, Gilmerville I i'l vi 4 \r |» — z==:::::::::: ==
ward; levied on as the property of Prince Green, U DIUlN A r Ilk
colored. | K V U.
Lot No 8 and improvements, Heathcote ward,
XaHoche tything; levied on as the property of
Mrs E A Goodwin and children.
Western one-half of Lot “W” and improve
ments, Anson ward. First tything; levied on as
the property of Mad C Gradot.
Improvements ou lot No 24, Franklin ward;
levied on as the property of William Greene.
Improvements on the norrhern one-half of lot
No *5, Columbia ward; levied on as the property
of Mrs Margaret Gammon.
Western one-baif of lot No 6 and improve
ments, Davis ward; levied on as the property of
Charles H. Hernandez, colored.
Western one-half of lot and improvements,
letter B. Middle Oglethorpe ward; levied on as
the property of J P Kendy, agent, colored.
Lot No 7 and improvements, Curry town ward;
levied on as the property of the estate of Mrs S
1 E MelL
Improvements on part of lot No 1, Crawford
Ward, east; levied ou as the property of Bar
nard Monahan.
Improvement 4 on western one-' alf of lot No
26, Liberty ward; levied on as the property ot
Mrs SH Myers.
Lot No 77, White ward; levied on as the pro
perly of A G McArthur.
Improvements on lot No 8. Franklin ward;
levied on as the property of McKee & Bennett.
Lot No 5 u .nd improvements, Crawford ward,
east; levied on as the property of A McCred-
mond.
Lot No 44 and improvement', Davis ward;
levied on as the property of Mrs. Mary A McCred-
mond.
Improvements on lot No 25, Franklin ward;
levied on as the property of the estate of James
McIntyre.
Lots letters A, B and C, Gue ward; levied on
as the property of Thomas M Norwood.
Improvement* on lot No 4, Derby ward, Wil
mington tything; levied on as the property of
the estate of J J O’Byrne, and sold at the risk of
the former purchaser.
Lot No 5 and improvements, Anson ward,
Fir>t tything; levied on as the property of the es
tate ot David O'Connor.
Improvements on lot No 31, Franklin ward; le
vied on as the pioperty of Daniel Oliver.
East part of lot No 23, Wylly ward; levied on
as the property of J W Pollock.
Improvements on lot No 18 Pulaski ward; ev-
ied on as the property of the estate of Mrs
Carol ne Palmes.
Lot letter “B” and improvements, North
Og ethorpe ward; levied on as the property ol
the estate of Patrick Price.
Lot No 11 and improvement 3 , Curry town
ward; levied on as the property of Henry Rog-
gen>tein.
Eastern one-half of lot No 3 and improve
ments, Davis ward; levied on as the property of
E L Segur.
Northeastern one-quarter lot No 10 and im
provements, Decker ward, Heathcote tything;
levied on as the property of A C N Smets.
One-half of lot letter “C,” Lee ward; levied on
as the property of Harriet Thompson, colored.
Lot No 37 and improvements. Liberty ward;
levied on as the property of Mrs II J Wayne.
Improvements on lot No 3, Chatham ward;
levieu on as the property of Christopher White.
Lots Nos CJ and 62, Whi'e ward; levied on as
the property of Thomas W White.
Improvements on the eastern one-half of lot
No 15, Minis ward; levied on as the property of
Moses Wilkinson, colored.
Improvements on lot No 1, Columbia ward;
levied on as the property of H F Willink.
Improvements on southe rn one-half of lot No
25, Columbia ward; leviei on as the property of J
N Wilson.
Two-thirds of lot No 2 and improvements, Rey- 14 4 74T/ T U ^ 4 \F
nolds ward, second tything; levied on as the I f l\ Ul I 2 || I I IT 1
property of Mrs Sarah G Winter. I ^
Purchasers paying for titli s and stamps.
GEORGE W. STILES,
je3-lm City Marshal.
Great deductions f
BLACK GKEN.ADLN as, bilk and Woo'
reduced from 50c. w ‘’ &t
BLACK CAMEL’S HAIRGRENADttE at-
reduced from $1 00. L ’ at ,oC »
BLACK BAREGE DELAINES at 60c m ^
from 7fc. c ’ re °aced
BLACK SATIN STRIPED GRENATitm-c
50c. reduced from 75e. «
BLACJ£ LIBESS SILKS at $3 00, reduced from
BLACK^UKESS SILKS at $2 00, reduced from
BLACK DRESS SILKS at $, 7 5 . reduced from
STEEL GREY TRIMMING SILKS at $125
duced from $1 50. 1 re *
BLACK and WHITE PLAID SILKS at SOc. ns
duced from $1 0o. ^
SOLII from L $l 1 2 5 UKKSS SILKS11 $1:0 -
SdJDCOLCK^DRESS &ILX at $1 25, reduce
SNOW FLAKE PLAID DRESS GOODS at st
and 30c, reduced from 40c. “ ^
SEWiNGSILKGKENADINEat $1 00, reduced
50 pieces CHECKED NAINSOOKS, fromanc
tlou, at 25c, worth 50r. ’
\ 50 pieces VICTORIA LAWN, from auct'on at
26c, worth 40c. ’
10 pieces 4-4 HEAVY WHITE LINEN at 50c wr
yard, great bargain. ^
10 pieces 4-4 WHITE LINEN, slightly wet at
37Xc, worth 60c. S e ’ “
10 pieces 4-4 WHITE ORGANDIE at 40c, worth
lu-4 and il-4 LINEN SHEETINGS, at a ereat re-
duction.
5-4 ana 6-4 PILLOW CASE LINENS, at a great
reduction.
50 pieces PLAIN WHITE NAINSOOK (with
manufacturers’ imperfections', at 15c per
yard, worth from 3u to 40c perfect.
! 4-4 BROWN LlNrlN for Suit.-.
LINEN BATISTE, for Ladies’ Suits, k at 90’and
25c per yard.
! 20 pieces^ Dot ed and Brocaded SWISS MUS-
100 doz SILK WINDSOR TIES
from 35 and 40c.
| 50 doz Gentlemen’s Hemmed Linen HANDKER
CHIEFS, at $2 50 per dozen, reduced from
$3 00.
: Ladies’ BALBRIGGAN IIOSE, Clocked Seami,
at £4 50 per doz, reduced from $6 00, and
at $6 00 per dozen, reduced from $7 50.
Ladies’ Extra Long LISLE THREAD HOSE at
50c per pair, reduced from 75c.
1 Children’s and Ladies’ UNDERCLOTHING.
Ladies’ LINEN TRAVELING SUITa, ULSTERS
and DUSTERS.
100 Children’s LINEN GABRIELS, at 75c, re
duced from $1 00.
50 Boys’ KNICKERBOCKER SUITS (Linen), at
$1 50, reduced from $2 00.
10 dozen Standard Yoke WHITE DRESS
SHIRTS (finished and ready for wear), at
$1 50 each, reduced from $2 u0 and il 25.
BLACK ALPACAS, our own importation.at 37#,
45 and 50c.
These Alpacas, made expressly for us,we import
direct from England. They are unsurpassed
for richness of lustre, strength of fabric ana du
rability of color. Haring been made under our
I own directions, we can confidently recommend
them to our customers. je5-tf
■> at 25c, redaced
SUMMER BOARD.
Salt Water Bathing.
I AM PREPARED to furnish BOARD AT
WHITE BLUFF, including nice rooms and
bathing house pririlege-*, with dinner in the city
at Planters* Hotel and conveyances between the
city and the salts.
Kates of board very reasonable.
Those who desire moderate and comfortable
accommodations for the summer should call
on me. A. E. CARR,
myl6-lm Proprietor Planters’ Hotel.
Porter Springs,
LUMPKIN COUNTY, GEORGIA.
T HREE thousand feet above the sea level, will
open to visitors June lrt. Accommodations
much improved since last season in capacity and
comfort. Tenpin alley,billiard table, bathrooms,
Ac., frt-e to guests of Porter Springs Hotel, and
open to none others. Daily mail both ways
Terms, $2 00 per day; $10 00 per week; $30 00 per
month. For pamphlet, giving particulars, ad-
press PORTER SPRINGS COMPANY, Proprie
tors, Porter Spripgs P. O. via Dahlonega, Ga.
myl5-lm
In vindicating himself before Congress,
Mr. Blaine said: “Whenever conceal
ment is desirable, avoidance is advisable ;
and I do not know any better test to
apply to the honor and fairness of a busi
ness transaction.” In his letter to Fisher
about the Northern Pacific interest, Mr.
Blaine said: “Of course, in conferring
with others keep my name quiet, men
tioning it to no one, unless to Mr. Cald
well.”
Spain is sending seven thousand more
troops to Cuba. This insurrection has
now lasted nearly eight years, and is
about as near its end as it was at the end
of its first three months. Spain is now,
however, released from her Carlist war
fare, and can attend single-handed to her
recalcitrant colonists. But the climate j
El fl QDl J| (ft P An illuFtratei work 275
EY| llnflllilvP P :i .“ • * private counsclur
■VIHill ■■ to the married and mar-
- m B pn m riageable on the mysteries
Km IU t of the sexual system, its abus.-s,
lllllllP cts., latest discoveries in tho
El I Km ■■ science of reproduction; how to
b* truly happy in th married relation. Male and female,
young ana middle aged should read and preserve it; it
contains information, which no one can afford to be with
out ; on how to preserve the health, and complexion, and
give to faded cheeks the freshness of youtu; the best and
ouly true Marriage Guide in the world. Price 50 cents
by Mail. The anthi
mail on
DT.A.C
je9-d«Swlm
MADDIJinC
mHnniHUC BKsarsSE
cm fin nmn Mfsaissra
dJjuliij 10i
.... , , ™ m Sexual system, how to cure
all kind of Diseases, with hundreds of valuable receipts,
who should marry .the impediments to marriage, their na
ture and cure. Treats on all Diseases, fully explaining their
causes, symptoms and moans to cure: it is the only really
scientific work of the kind ever published, and is complete
in every respect. Sent securel v sealed on receipt ot 50 cts.
Address, Dr. C. A. Bohannan, 619 North iilth street.
8t. Louis, Mo. Established in 1»37.
je9-d*fewlm
Hum and paebitwy.
J. W. TKNAN,
Engineer and Machinist,
CANAL ST., NEAR WE8T BROAD.
—ALL KINDS OP—
Machine, Boiler & Blacksmith Work
PROMPTLY EXECUTED.
AGEXT FOR KNOWLES’S STEAK PUMPS,
The most perfect independent steal i pump in
use. Parties in want of a superior
RICJ3 THItESHEK
Would do well to examine those of my make.
One always up complete for Inspection.
my29-tf
The WHITE SULPHUR SPRING, at
SHARON SPRINGS, New York, is particu
larly efficacious in Rheumatic Complaints,
Sciatica, Gout, Neuralgia, Paralysis, Cutaneous
Diseases, Urinary Difficulties, Indigestion and
Biliary Derangements. New brick Bath
Houses, finished in hard woods, and containing
92 rooms with Slate Tubs, are now open. Send
for circular. John H. Gardner & Son, Prop f.
Hotels.—Pavilion, John H. Gardner & Son.
United States, J. J. Anthony & Son.
Mansion House, Hubbs «fc Mereness.
Union Hall, David Wood.
Boarding Ileuses.—J. Swift’s, M. Sticht’s.
je5-M,W&F,30t
Hot and Warm Springs
MADISON COUNTY, N. C.
T HIS Diace will be opened for the reception of
visitors on the FIFTEENTH OF MAY.
These springs are situated on the banks of the
French Broad river, in the very midst of the
highest range of mountains east of the Missis
sippi river. Rates cf board, $40 per month; $12 50
per week; $2 per day. For lull information,
send for pamphlets and circulars.
WARM SPRINGS COMPANY,
my 11-1 m Proprietors.
fitting.
JOHN NICOLSON,
Gas & Steam Fitter
Plumber and dealer iu tiaa Fixtures,
DRAYTON STREET,
SECOND DOOR ABOVE BROUGHTON.
Houses fitted with Gas and Water, with tli ifct
‘ ^ '“njirovements, at the shortest notice.
latest imj
■nev25f
WM. M. McFALL,
Practical Plumber and bias Fitter,
No. 46 Whitaker tetre#t t
SAVANNAH, GEOROIA.
Bath Tubs, Water Closets, Chandeliers and Otf
Fixtures of every description constantly on Land
Jobbing done at the shortest notice,
lebi-tf
aad iusiauraciis.
Postponed City Harshal’sHale.
CITY MARSHAL’S OFFICE,\
Savannah, June 7th, 1576. J
U NDER RESOLUTION of the City Council oi
Savannah, and by virtue of City Tax fix**
cntioLs in my hands, I have levied on, and 1
selL under direction of a Special Committee Ci
Council, on THE FIRST TUESDAY JN
JULY, 187G, between the legal hours cl
■ale, before the Court House door m the city
Savannah, county of Chatham and State ol Geu»
gia, the ioilowing property, to-wit:
Improvements on Lot No 6 Calhoun war^.
levied on as the property of the estate o
Augustus Bonaud.
Lot No 15 and improvement# Elliott ware
levied ou as the property of Gngie Bourqmn
Improvements on Lot No70 Lloyd ward; ievic
ou as the property of John G Bnfier.
Lots Nos 23 and.24 and im.-*'.von:cats Jasjiei
ward; levied on as the property / brands Cham
pion, trustee.
Improvements on western % of Lot No 55 Gas
ton ward; levied on as the prooerty of T P Elkin
Lot No 62 ana improvements i;iown ward-
levied on as the property of Wm v- oodfiey
Improvements on Lots Nos 40 and 41 WaltOL
ward; levied on as the property of J F Gowen.
Improvements on Lota Nos 31, 32 and 33
Walton ward; levied on as tha property of Mr>
M R Guerard.
Lot No 23 and improvements, Gilmerville
levied on as the property of the eetate ol A flar
mon.
Eastern one-hall ol Lot No 4 Cathbert ward,
fifth section; levied on as the property ol K t
Harmon.
Improvements on Lot No M ^.',isy:n ware
levied on as the property of William Jioae.
Lot No 51 Garden Lot east; icv.^ on as tne
property of James A LaRoche.
Lot No 17 and improvements, Gilmerville; lev
ied on as the property of FS Lathrop.
Improvements on the western one-third of Let
No 3 Wesley ward; levied on as the properly oi
A K Mallette. ^ y
Eastern one-half of Lot No 3 and improve
ments, Screven ward; levied on as the prODcnv
of Eli Mallette. V y
\\ estem one-half of Lot No 3 and improve
ments, Screven ward; levied on as the proper! y
of Mrs Catherine Mallette.
Improvements on the middle one-third of Let
No 3 Wesley ward; levied on as the property cl
Miss Eoline Mallette.
Improvements on the eastern one-half of Lc
No 25 Calhoun ward; levied on as the property
of C C Millar.
Lot No 37 and improvements, Middle Ogle
thorpe ward; levied ou as the property ol Jame*
B Read and R J Nunn.
| Lot No 40 and improvements, Middle Og.e-
thorpe ward* levied on as tne property oi Sirs
James B Read.
Improvements on Lot No 24 Walton ward;
levied on as the property of Miss Kate Roberta.
Lot No 3 and improvements Jones ward; jcviee
on as the property of Dwight L Roberts, triiftee
Lots Nos 2 and 3, Garden Lot west, front ict
taeyard tract; levied on as the property of Jamet
H Roberts.
Improvements on Lot No 16 Tronp ward; leviec
on as the property of the estate of Mrs M j
Roberts and children.
Improvement on Lot No 7 Walton ward; levies
on as the property of the estate of Mrs M J
Roberts and children.
Improvements on Lot No 2, wharf lot, trus
tee’s garden; levied on as the property of Jame*
Ryan.
Lot No 14 and improvements, Cuthbert ware,
seventh section; levied on as the property of Ji.o
A Sullivan, trustee.
Lot No 7 and improvements. Cuthbert wart,
seventh section; levied on as the property cf W
D Sullivan.
Improvements on Lot No 40 Lloyd ward; levied
on as the property of W B Sturtevant, trustee.
Improvements on Lots Nos 6, 7 and S Elbert
ward; levied on as the property of the estate ct
Mrs Margaret Telfair.
Lot No 20, Galiie ward, and improvements;
levied on as the property of Henry G Ward,
trustee.
Improvements on Lot No 44 Stephens ward
levied on as the property of Mrs A F Wayne.
Purchasers paying for titles and stamps.
GEORGE W. STILES,
je7-tf City Marshal.
City Marshal’s Sale.
OFFICE CITY MARSHAL, >
Savahnah, June 7th, 1876.J
U NDER RESOLUTION of the City Council a
Savannah, and by virtue of city tax execu
tions in my hands, I have levied on and will set,
under direction of a special committee of Com
cil, on the FIRST TUESDAY IN JULY. 1S76,
between the legal hours ol sale, before the Conn
House door in the city of Savannah, county oi
Chatham, and State of Georgia, the following
property, to wit :
141 BROUGHTON STREET.
P REVIOUS to removal to Lovell’s new bnild-
ing, I propose to close my entire stock of
Staple and Fancy Dry Goods
at prices that cannot fail to command the atten
tion of purchn 8 eis.
I desire to call special attention to this fact, as
the advantages ottered will be recognized upon
an examination of the Stock to be offered.
Special bargains in
Gent’s Furnishing Goods
On application, samples will be sent to those
living at a distance.
TERMS POSITIVELY CASH.
m/22-lm
$2,000
Ladies’ Underwear
M ADE of the best CAMBRICS and, UNKS.
for less than cost of material to make tneiu.
They are newly mede and full sizes.
MILLINERY GOODS,
Trimmed Hats and Bonnets.
CHEAPER THAN’ EVER BEFORE.
STRAW GOODS i
fine PARASOLS, very cheap.
TIES, BOWS, Jet JEWELRY, Fine Dress
FANS and COMBS, a great variety.
Ladies, call and examine the stock
H. C. HOUSTON,
je5-;f 32 BULL STREET^
affood, ptmbrr, &r.
PLANING
Lumber and Wood Yard
COR. LIBERTY AND EAST BROAD STREETS
ALBERT 8. BACON A CO- {
K EEP constantly on hand a £nl|
PLANED and P.OUGII LLMBER. i ^
’S. PLASTERING LATHS, MOULD" _
PINE and POPLAR alwiys on hand.
OAK, UGHTWOOD, PINE and KIN D^
on hand. „ —
(gtlucatumal.
Professional and Business Men
recaicuram colonists, out me climate i ^ ttybod , else, snppUed with Cuds of any
is their best ally, and Spanish troops go I siee, color, or quality, printed In ooearaar _
to Cuba only to die. l coion ' Jxom S^am nw, job omen ‘
PLANTERS’ HOTEL Improvements on Lot No. U Currytowii ward;
X X * J1W UU 1 fjlJ ) levied on as the property of J. V. Connerat.
Cor. of Barnard & Bryan Sts.,
A. E. GARB, Proprietor.
ROOMS LARGE AND AIRY! CONVEYANCES
AT STEAMERS AND RAILROADS!
R EGULAR BOARD for the summer, without
room, $20: and with room, $25 per month.
Twenty-five desirable ROOMS at $6 00 to $10 00
per month.
SPECIAL ATTENTION GIVEN TO GET
TING UP SUPPERS FOR PRIVATE PARTIES,
BALLS, PICNICS, EXCURSIONS, ETC.
■Jtl-tf
Lot No. 8 and improvements, South Oglethon*
ward; levied on as the property o£ Mrs. Mary M
Marshall.
Lot No. 10 and improvements, Reynolds waul,
third tything; levied on as the property ol Jame.
J. Waring.
Purchasers paying for titles and stamps.
GEORGE W. STILES,
ie7-tf city Marshak
Wrapping Paper.
17VOB SALE, OLD NEW8PAFSES, SUITABLE
r^forwr^iptng {.pet, at Fifty C—«i p» to-
Lots for Lease.^
-bs, which he wffi "fe*
rpHE undersigned»nd
KSVJ !*y«nnijSi ft,*.
termsrApply «l« Bay
t of Bxtix. estate A.