Newspaper Page Text
glossing few*
SSTitKUT,
S( V,Ul.SG NEWS BUILDING).
SUBSCRIPTIONS.
ifs-kG
C< *DViS«.
Ml P»^' S
0» <*
JUll * a
ttea wrapper
gme •
profflP^ -
Bttt !UQe
A SQUARE
m tw MoBS :’
M»o»era'’r..
jiooper- ;: -
Other
N ai-e; ea-:^
Locai- or rci
line for esca 1
A dvert;?on-
or °”f'
elC b insertion
So centric
§freemtid. L
lertiser?.
Ho"#*
and Lr*
eale, to
celiaaei
each in;
For?
810 OO
« OO
2 00
DELIVERED BY CABRIBE OB PRE
PAID BY MAIL.
vo stopped at the axp'ration
: :ar w -bout further no*lee.
si, observe the dates an
ttvfl taper furLishoJ for any
y rc T-.'ill have their orders
VI o by remitting the amount
sired.
ADVERTISING.
: ; a ,! nuasured lines of Nonpareil
ojjv. r amenta and special notices
.re for each insertion.
n first insertion, 51 00 per
v.v itnt insertion (if inserted
) cents per square.
manor notices, 20 cento per
tker day, twice a
. u ^ e, ciiarged $1 00 per square for
m e? allowed except by special
:m1 discounts made to large &d-
L’HEAP column rates.
wanted by, or offered to, Clerics,
Teachers, Workmen, Mechanics
Porters, -Coys, Coots, «fcc.; Board
.nted or offered; Apartments and
! or to let; Houses, Stores, <fcc., for
wanted; articles, foat or found,
y anted or to rent, and mis-
,taof all kinds, ten cents a line foi
remittances
ions or advertising can be made
order, Registered Letter, or Ex
risk. All letters should be ad-
J. H. ESTILL,
Savannah, Ga.
crisi £
Affairs in Georgia,
if Village, Charlton county, Nor-
the negroes got nary vote.
•p indent, wiiting from Centreville
precinct, Charlton county, soys : Although
tbe me
on elec
were e 1
did not sell a drop of liquor
ii day, some how or another there
ral gallons on the election groundp.
Tbe
call t<
Chore
baped
cbar£'
Tbe
dea'
The ]> ’<!'! Times'# trade paper will be is*
j durii g the present week.
Rev. A. F. Campbell has declined a
, the } asiorate of the First Baptist
li at Columbus. His declination is
upon his ureinlness in his present
j at Americas.
Columbus papers having noticed the
of Father Brown, of Columbus, now
in Savaemh, he has telegraphed as follows :
“I was dead, but am slowly recovering.”
The Timtfs Columbus local says : “ The
y C w Eagle factory is built about forty feet
above the foundation.” It can’t be that such
structure should be an airy noth-
rtv feet.
nuine speckled trout is Baid to
the mountain brooks of Lumpkin
i the vicinity of Porter Springs,
auce here for the disciples of Isaac
a matei
ing for
The
abound
county,
What a
Walton
Tbe
return <
J. Ii. ESTILL, PROPRIETOR. SAVANNAH, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 10. 1370.
ESTABLISHED 1850.
walked, the amount of money she has made,
and the total weight of the articles brought
in by her. First, then, she has in that time
visited town 14,085 times, walking 70,425
miles, or a distance equal to nearly throe
times the earth’s circumference, has made a
little more than $7,000, and has carried
about 140,850 pounds, of produce. She still
makes her daily trips, and, as her health is
good, will no doubt continue to do so for
some time to come.”
'•institution, Atlanta, announces the
f Judge O. A. Lochrane from an ex
tended tour to Texas, the Indian territory
ai d Missouri. He is as rubicund as usual,
id fine bt-a'lh and spirits.
State School Commissioner Orr, in an ad
dress recently delivered at Carroiton, 6tated
that one-fifth of the white children of Geor
gia, between ten and eighteen years, could
not read ; forty-three per cent, of the white
and black could not read, and illiterates
over eighteen years were forty per cent, of
tbe population. This is food for reflection.
Old Squire Dyer, a Radical, voted several
Colquitt tickets, and said he thought Col
quitt was the independent candidate. Ho
hadn’t heard of Norcross.
Mr. Fiank Lumpkin, Cashier of the Na
tional Bank at Athens, died on the 5th inst.
Hew as the son of ex-Chief Justice Lumpkiu.
There are nearly four columns of mar
shal's sales, for non-payment of city tax,
advertised in the Atlanta Constitution. This
looks iike progress in the wrong direction.
The city debt of Columbus is$600,000. tbe
interest amounting to about $42,000 per an
num. New bonds have been prepared to be
used ia substitution for the bonds falling
due for the next five years. The city is in a
healthy financial condition.
Edward H. Murphy shot Jupiter Grant at
Augusta on laet Saturday. The dispute
arose about a chair. Grant is dead and
Murphy has fled.
Bud Thrash, an engineer, and Andrew
Ford, a fireman, on the W. and A. Railroad,
weu*. for each other on Saturday aftornoon.
Ford struck Thrash with a rock, and Thrash
struck Ford with a pocket knife, inflicting
five serious wounds.
“The Halter of Hymen Lassoed Three
Couple.--,” is the Atlanta way of announcing
the very interesting event of three mar
riages in that city. The casual reader
would suppose that the parties were hung
instead of married.
Vim. Hall, who escaped from his chain-
gang io Fulton county, was captured in
Chattanooga and brought back to hia labor.
One hundred packages of jelly was
shipped to Brunswick from Atlanta on Sat
urday for the benefit of the vellow fever suf
ferers.
There is, says the Atlanta Times, one fe
male printer at least in one of our newspa
per offices, and naively remarks : It is pleas
ant to pass the oflice in which she works and
peep at the window by which stands her
case. We wonder if 6he’s a good hand to
uiake pit, or if she’s the belle of the do-
minion ? We simply aek—fats all.
Augusta, notwithstanding her canal fa
cilities, can’t do without oysters and fish,
consequently the quarantine has been taken
•off oysters and fish from districts not in
fected.
A little daughter of W. D. Hudson, of Ei-
bertou, was smothered to death in a bank of
coltou seed, at his gin house last week.
She was one of the triplets born five years
as », and a sprightly, promisirg child.
The Democratic majority in ninety-two
counties is sixty thousand : forty-five conn-
ties to hear from will make the majority
eighty thousand at kait. Where bo your
.gibes now?
There is a nice little personal difficulty bc-
’•»ein the editors and proprietors of tbe Au-
gosta Constitutionalist and the editor and
proprietor-of the Ohroniclo and Sentinel,
growing out of certain language used by
*beChr uicle and Sentinel toward the editor
ana pr ; r: tors of the Constitutionalist. A
lengthy correspondence is published in Sun
day's Chronicle and Sentinel, which winds
thv fight so far as Mr. John S. Davidson
aud Mr. Wright are concerned, the former
withdraw.: g the language and the latter ex
pressing himself satisfied. How it will end
parties we cannot exactly see.
Mr. Thes. E. Gonlding, one of the volun
teer nurses from Atlanta to Brunswick, died
of the fevt-r on the 5th inst. lie was a young
Jnan of 25 or 28 years.
Mr. James Hope, one of the oldest citizens
of Augusta, died on Saturday,at the advanced
oi 70. He had been in Augusta over 50
Jears.
U ' John H. James, of Atlanta, is spoken
°f for Chairman of the Committee on Fi-
naQ ce in the next Legislature.
The apple crop in Oglethorpe county has
K-.n very fine. In some sections the tr.es
uav e broken down unier the burden of
fruit.
^J iics county deserves the Centennial
premium. There was not a Radical vote in
tbe whole county at the State election.
There was black frost and ice in Jackson
bounty on Monday, 2d inst.
Bibb, of the Madison Home Journal, has
Sphered this out : “One of the most re
markable colored women in this State re-
■idea in this county about two and a half
cUes from town. Her name is Hannah
Wiiborne. She is seventy years of age, and
a former slave of Josiah Wilborce. For
the last forty-five years she has lived at the
same place and walked to town every day,
Sundays excepted, never haviDg been sick
enough in that time to be kept away, always
returning at night. She has always brought
something to sell, eithor* fruit, vege
tables, chickens, butter or . eggs,
realizing from the sale of these
an &y erage of 50 cents a day. L9t ns see in
these forty-five years the number of times
£ho has been to town, what dig taupe she has
South Carolina Affairs.
Judge Mackey has shuck* d hia coat and
is going for the prominent Radical de-
Bpoilers.
In the northern counties of the State the
doctrine of preference obtains, and the la
borers who are true to Democratic principles
readily get two dollars per month more
wages.
Greenville is making extensive prepara,
tions for a grand fair, which commences on
the 17th instant.
It looks “sorter natTal” to see the coun
tenances of Tilden and Hendricks beaming
from the first pages of the South Carolina
Press.
Company F, 18th Regiment, U. S. Infan
try, are quartered in Abbeville, and the citi
zens have been favorably impressed. Capt.
Lloyd and Lieutenants Barhardt and Paul
are the commissioned officers.
Winchester Arnold, from the effects of a
stab from a knife in the hands of Lewis
Greene, a Radical, who assaulted him for
his political principles, died at Greerwood,
Abbeville county, on the 29th ultimo.
Mr. Jno. Moore, of New Market, Abbeville
county, lost his mill and gin house by fire
on Saturday. The fire was incendiary. No
insurance.
The cold snap creates in the gastronomic
region of the average Radical negro an
appetite for hog meat, and hog stealing in
South Carolina is on the increase.
Laurens county is all right. It is the
home of Hon. W. D. Simpson, the Demo
cratic candidate for Lieutenaut-Go^ernor,
and will give the Democratic ticket a rous
ing vote.
Beaufort county has eight colored to every
white vote, says the Port R jyal Commercial.
The same papev says that Cbamberlain
“will carry a majority of the better elements
of his party on an advancing platform of re
form.” Observation leads us to concludo
that the party has no better elements.
The Aiken Herald is a new Democratic
paper in Aiken couuty. J. St. Julian Yates,
a young lawyer of Charleston, is editor.
May Gary has presented the “Dark Cor
ner” Edgefield Club, 150 banners and ban
nerets, which we trust will be planted victo
riously at the coming election.
There was a heavy big white killing frost
throughout Edgefield on the 2J inst.
In Lancaster county, on Thursday last,
Richard Garduer cut ami fatally wounded
John Phillips. Liquor wa3 the cause.
Company L, Second United States Artil
lery, is stationed at Lancaster Court House.
Lieutenants M. Crawford and E. D. Hoyle
are the commissioned officers, and are both
West Pointers and high toned gentlemen.
J. S. Blackman, of Lancaster, has three
additional responsibilities to meat—one boy
and two girls, weighing six pounds each.
The oflice of the Assistant United States
Treasurer at Charleston was closed on Sat
urday last in accordance with orders re
ceive! from Washington.
W. E. Roso has hoisted a Hampton and
Tildea flag over his hotel in Columbia. We
shall know where to get a square meal when
we visit the capital.
Gen. Hampton announced from the stand
at Cheraw that he had good authority for
saying that there was only one white man
in Chesterfield county that would vote the
Radical ticket in November.
At the Yorkville Superior Court Judgo
Mackey said that his attention had been
called to the recent order of Attorney-Gen
eral Taft, which he characterized as the
most formidable and audacious act of po
litical intimidation at present within the
knowledge of the court; and said that the
Judge of a court who would permit the pro
visions of that order to be enforced in his
circuit would bo false to his duty.
Judge Wiggin is waggin the Court of
General Sessions at Beaufort, but as there
is no money to pay jurors, etc., it will soon
adjourn. This is an “advancing platform
of reform.”
Tho Treasurer of Beaufort county, one
“Wheeler,” one of the “better elements” of
the Radical party, has been indicted by
special presentment of the grand jury for
malfeasance in office.
There is six thousand five hundred dollars
in the Darlington county treasury, some
thing that has not occurred before under
the present government. The credit is due
to the County Commissioners.
Chief Justice Moses advocates the election
of Hampton.
A few days ago a number of boys living
at Palmetto, children of Captain Edwards
and W. E. James, contrived an engine after
the following method: They took a five
gallon tin oil can, filled it with water, drove
a corn cob securely in the mouth, made a
small hole in the side, to which they attach
ed a whistle, then fixed a furnace and cased
the can in brick. All ready, they built a fire,
and pretty soon the little whistle gave signs
of life. The boys were delighted; the whistle
blowed, and pleasure ran high. Not one
thought of “too much steam” or a blow up.
The whistle blowed, but the steam increased
until tbo “little burdened gem” could stand
it no longer, and with a loud roar tore things
to atoms. One of the brave band was badly
scalded and suffered intensely. Tbe rest
escaped unhnrt. The cause of the explosion,
says one of tho little fellows, with a know
ing smile, “she had on about five pounds
too much steam.”
The negro Radicals of South Carolina
don’t quite understand ’boat dat “posse”
bisnesa, but when it comes to de “possum,”
dey are dar.
The big gun that became famous in his
tory as the “Swamp ADgel” during the siege
of Charleston has lately been sold for old
iron in Trenton, N. J.
BY TELE 11
—TO-
TIIE MORNING NEWS.
Noon Telegrams.
THE TROUBLES 15 THE EAST.
What Austria Desires as to the Con
ference.
DRAWING TROOPS FOR CUBA.
LARUE FIRE IN CLEVELAND, OHIO,
Miscellaneous News and Notes.
Exciting .Ekonautic Tbip.—We copy
the following telegram from the Bridge
port papers. Mr. Thomas went up from
Bridgeport between rine and ten o'clock
on Tuesday. He lost his hat at the start
and performed the whole trip bareheaded.
His dispatch tells the story of the voyage:
Boston, October 4.—About five o’clock
last evening, after laboring for several
miles to make a landing and save my
balloon, I was thrown from the basket
into some pine timber, in Rockland, Ply
mouth county. Mass. The brittle limbs
broke when I struck them, but they eased
my fall considerably; and I landed upon
the ground with only loss cf clothing.
Could I h3V6 had some assistance, I think
I could have saved my ballooD, but when
last seen it was at a great height over
the Atlantic, headed for Europe, (see
ing the ocean before me, I determined to
land in a valley which I saw and where
I thought the wind must be light. I got
out my anchor, which caught in a stone
wall and parted in an instant. The wind
was now blowing a gale, and I determined
to wreck the balloon in order to save it.
Having no rip-line or collapse-cord, I
dashed into the edge of the timber wUh
the hope of making a rent, but being
new and of very sUoug arterial, the bal
loon only rebounded and plnngea turpugh
the top of the timber at “K reat 8 P e f;
Some idea of the wind may be had from
the fact that I travelled the last fifty
miles of my trip in sixty minutes. \V hile
dragging through the timber, ^he basket
was several times turned bottom up
which lost me my ballast, thus counter
acting all my efforts at the valve, Mr.
Thos. P. Hinkham, living near by, came
to my assistance, and to him and his
family I am indebted for kiitd care.
lours, etc., D. S. Thomas.
THE EASTEEN TROUBLES.
Lo>’d:>>*, October 9.—Austria desires that
the confereu .-o sha 1 consist of ambassadors
representing all the signatory powers. Italy
and France consent. Germany’s answer is
awaited. The Porto’s objection to a formal
armistice is that it would virtually accord
to Servia belligerent rights.
It is reported that ex-Sultan Mnrad is
dying.
Russian emigration to Servia continues at
the rato of seven thousand to eight thou
sand per week.
Military preparations in Russia continue.
It is stated that Bismarck endorses An-
drassy’s refusal of joint occupation, resolved
upon in higher quarters.
London,October9.—A dispatch from Ragn-
sa to tho Reuter Telegram company says: On
Saturday night tho Montenegrins having
received reinforcements of 2 500 men, at
tacked Mobktar Pasha and compelled him to
retreat. It ia stated that 850 Turks were
killed, while the Montenegrin loss in killed
and wounded was but 115. The opposing
forces are now confronting each other on a
iino extending eight miles.
A dispatch from De'igrad to the Daily
News cays General Tchernayeff has de
manded that alt Servians between the ages
of eighteen to fifty years be called out in
anticipation of tbe renewal of hostilities in
the spring.
A Reuter dispatch from Paris says that
according to positive information re
ceived there no power has, up to tho
present, formally proposed a conference.
Though there is generally a more hope
ful feeling, everything is, at present, in
suspense, and tho newspapers are filled
with nothing but vague and contradictory
surmises pending the Porto’s definite an
swer to tho proposals of tho powers, which
is anxiously awaited.
Bucharest, October 9.—The Prince of
Roumauia has ordered both the standing
army and the reserves to aesemble for
manoeuvres.
HEAVY FIRE IN CLEVELAND, OHIO.
Cleveland, October 9.—A fire broke out
early this morning in the elevator of Otis &
York, on River street. The building and
contents were entirely destroyed. The build
ing occupied by the Michigan Ceutral Steam
boat Line, Railroad Hotel, and several frame
buildings occupied by saloons, were also
burned. Tbo origin of tbe fire is un
known. Lins—Otis & York, on build
ings, $75,000, insured about $35,000; loss
of Michigan Ceutral Line on build-
iug $25,000, contents $15,000—uninsured.
Loss on the other buildings and contents
about $20,000. Tho Co-operative Stove Com
pany also lose $4,000 on stoves stored in tbo
elevator, on which there was no insurance.
During the progress of th6 tire on River
street fire broke out in tho Second Presby
terian Church, on Superior street, between
Erie street and the public square, which
was almost entirely destroyed. The loss is
about $70,000, and is insured. It is sup
posed the church caught from sparks from
the elevator fire.
FROM SPAIN.
London, October 9.—The Times dispatch
from Barcelona says: General Martinez
Campos has not yet accepted the Captain
Generalship of Cuba, but General Jovellar
will be recalled anyway.
New York, October *9.—A special to the
Herald fio-n Madrid, says tbe draft is pro
ceeding. Twenty-four thousand soldiers for
Cuba were drawn yesterday without distur
bance, and these men will soon follow the
16,000 already on their way. Gen. Martinez
Campos goes’out to Cuba as Ccmmander-in-
Chiof of the Spanish army, which is to
crush the insurrection. And.further,General
Jovellar is to contiuue Captain General.
LARGE FIRE IN PINE BLUFF, ARK.
Memphis, Tenn., October 9.—A private
telegram from Pine Bluff, Arkansas, says
the fire there last night consumed three
business blocks.
BURNED.
London, October 9.—The new wharf, with
flour and rice mills at Ratherbithe. was
burned on Saturday. Loss $450,000.
DEAD.
London, October 9.—Sir John Young, Gov-
ernor-Goueral of Canada from 1868 to 1872,
is dead.
CAMERON.
Washington, October 9.—Cameron left
Chicago hitherwards last night.
RUTHERFORD !?. IIAYES.
Ah lie in Described by One of Ills Ohio
Neighbors.
[ From a Speech by Gen. A. S. Piatt at Maca-
cheek, Ohio, Sept. 1S.J
AVho is this great man who is to reform
his own party by shaking off the rogues
who handicap it, the very men who bring
him forward and laud his excellence?
"Well, my friends, there is not much
known'jand the little is not encouraging.
We, of Ohio,know him to be an amiable,
inoffensive gentleman, belonging to a class
from which we select executors, guar
dians, and sometimes county commis
sioner?. [Laughter] He never obtained
an office that was not thrust upon him ;
he never held an office in which he got
beyond its merest routine. He came out
of the late war with a record that one has
to seaach for to find—a good soldier
enough, but not the plumed Henery of
Navarre his fnends now claim. He came
from Congress without the utterance of a
sentence, the introduction of a single
measure, while his votes are the votes of
a trained partisan helping the party cn in
all its erroneous legislation, extravagance
and fraud. He is a good man, of course
he is, for he lacks enough force of char
acter to be bad. He is one of those mas
culine negatives created by a wise Provi
dence to fill churches and lead pious wo
men and children from the sinful ways of
earth to the happiness of heaven. We
thank God for the masculine negatives,
but we do not select them to throttle cor
ruption in its strong places, yea, verily,
in our own household.
If elected President, Mr. Hayes will
make James G. Blaine Secretary of State.
He tendered that distinguished Congres
sional railroad broker the place in a tele
gram ten minutes after nomination. He
will make O. P. Morton, or a creature of
that corrupt man, Secretary of the Treas
ury. He will call Simon Cameron, or a
son of Simon, to his Cabinet, and so se
lecting his advisers continue the corrup
tion. He will make a model of an inau
gural address, and his annual messages
will be good enough for a republication
by the Y oung Men’s Christian Association.
But his party will pay no more attention
to his advice than it has to the same sort
of political exhortations from President
Grant. Like the man who nailed the
Lord’s prayer to the head of his bed and
rapping with his knuckles every night,
cryed out, “them’s my sentiments, Lord,”
these gentlemen will continue to their
iniquity all the same. [Laughter and
applause.]
This cry of reform is as hollow and
false as the pretended claim to resump
tion. Had there bpen any honest intent
on the part of these leaders, there was a
man before the Cincinnati Convention
who, if nominated, would have controlled
the sympathy and commanded the sup
port of the people. I refer to the late
Secretary of the Treasury, Mr. Bristow.
A coarse, able, acid a brave man, he saw
liib opportunity and took up reform as a
lawyer takes a £ase, or a surgeon a can
cer. He trac* corruption, as many
others did, to . xir-sill of the White
House, but. unlike others, he boldly en
tered, and, while indicting the President’s
confidential friends and boon companions,
yaa the first to make the soldier Presi
dent tremble. Rut the convention of
reformers would not touoh the reformer.
They preferred the mild Hayes, and,
possessing him, they are happy.
Tho Campaign in Florida.
Mikes'ville, Columbia co., Fla., >
October 5, 187C.>
The Radical party, through tho devilish
ingenuity of unprincipled strikers, men
as devoid of the commonest decency as
tbe devil of old, with the arts of Machia-
velism inherent to their nature, have suc
ceeded, by playing upon the credulity of
the colored voter, in forcing them to be
pliant tools in the manipulation of the
reins of government in the interest of the
leaders, and to such an extent that they
could steal without the fear of detection
to deter them ; but in this county, I am
glad to know that their hold upon the
negro has very sensibly been broken, and
the negro is becoming sufficient of a free
man, after ten years trial of Radical rule,
to become independent enough to attend
the meetings of Conservative clubs, and
earnestly listen to the deliberations of
their true friends.
The people of Columbia county have
for a long time been under the shadow of
despair caused by the imbecility and cor
ruption of Radical government, and
under the gloom of this seeming eternal
night the only rays of light or hope that
have fallen to cheer them in their terrible
despair, have been tho utterances of that
sterling old grand expositor of true Dem
ocratic-Republican doctrine,the Savannah
News, aided and assisted by its younger
brother, the Jacksonville Press. The
Press, though young in age, and as yet
but a stripling in body, has in the present
canvass proved itself a very giant in the
cause of true reform, and entitled to the
substantial aid of a grateful people.
Now, the skies are brighter and the pros
pects more than good for an eternal bury
ing of the carcass of Radicalism, not
only in this county but in the State.
The differences among our people in
this county have been healed, and to-day
they stand shoulder to shoulder, cheerful
and buoyant of hope that on the setting
of the sun on Tuesday, the 7th day of
November next, the last spade full of
dirt will have been thrown upon the cor
rupt Radical coffin, whilst the night
winds will bear upon its wave- the glad
refrain of a people free and disenthralled
of the Radical yoke.
The Lrge and magnificent concourse
of people assembled here on the 19th of
September, was the first visible sigu of
the intense interest taken by the people
in the election, and the meeting that day
was productive of great and lasting good.
It was an assemblage of freemen, calmly
deliberating upon the inexorable
necessities of the hour, the freeing of
our State from the grasp of greedy
cormorants wbo ara now feast
ing on tho vitals of our people. The day
past away pleasantly, and as an indication
of the silent though intense determina
tion of the people, not a single intoxi
cated person could be seen, nor was there
occasion for a single arrest, but all was
harmony, peace and quiet.
After the speeches of that day the ne
groes became more open in the holding
of their meetings, their eyes had com
menced to see the glimmering of the rot
tenness of our Radical masters, and they
would quietly invite the Hon. F. McLeod
to address them on the political issues cf
the day,and from that time until yesterday,
fully half his entire time has been takeu
up in talking to and counselling with
them.
On yesterday the Radicals were to have
had a “Rousement Mass Meeting,’’ but it
was a most signal failure ; and, after Col.
McLeod had spoken, it became rather
mixed to an outsider as to whether it was
a Radical or Democratic meeting. The
Radical leaders were the most wilted ob
jects imaginable under tho direct fire of
McLeod’s hot shot. I have often pictured
to myself the anxiety of tho first Napol
leon for the arrival of Grouchy: but I im
agine his anxiety was naught in compari
son to the anxiety of these Radical leader-
for the arrival of night, in order tbas
under its darkness they might cont
ceal the tremors of their disgracefu-
defeat in their own household. The fact
of the business is just this: The Radical
mass meeting partook of the nature of a
boomerang, and ended virtually in a
Democratic victory. A few* more such
Radical “rousement” meetings and a com
plete and sweeping victory is ours.
I forgot to mention that Col. Gibbes,
of Quincy, Fla., gave the Rads some
heavy blows also—he and McLeod being
courteously allowed to discuss Ite issues
of the hour. But I opine the result of
yesterday’s meeting will cause them to be
more chary in tho future of meeting
Democratic speakers. Observer.
A Monster Balloon.
M. Giffard has devised the construc
tion of a balloon for 1878 which will far
surpass any effort hitherto made in this
direction. This new balloon will be
formed of a resisting material, solid, ab
solutely impermeable to hydrogen gas,
manufactured of alternate sheets of linen
and caoutchouc, protected externally by
several layers of varnish, and coated with
white paint to diminish the effects of the
sun’s rays. This balloon will have a ca
pacity of nearly 710,000 cubic feet, and
will form an immense sphere, the greatest
ever constructed, the diameter of which
will not be less than 112 feet. When
moored to the ground the balloon will
form a monumental dome 1G0 feet high,
exceeding by 15 feet the height of the
Arc deTriomplie. Tbe balloon itself will
weigh 8,800 pounds, and to join the
pieces together of which it is composed
will take nearly four miles of sewing,
with 22 miles of thread. The car of the
balloon will form a gallery 50 feet
in circumference. A circular space
in the centre of 10 feet in
diameter will be reserved; in the
centre of this space the cable, a powerful
rope 10 inches in circumference, will be
joined to the upper circle by means of an
apparatus which will constantly indicate
the ascending power of tho balloon.
This aerial machine will be held to the
earth by eight cables, attached to iron
rings fixed securely in masonry, and will
be suspended above a vast conical basin.
The car will be reached by two moveable
gangways, and from forty to fifty persons
will be taken on board at each ascent.
The cable will descend to the bottom of
the conical basin, and by means of a se
cure system of wheels will be carried
along a tunnel to be worked by an engine
of 200 horse power. This cable will be
1,730 feet in length. The captive balloon
will be placed in the centre of a circular
inclosure, 333 feet in diameter. It will
tower above the beautiful gardens, and
will form the most elevated dome in the
Champ de Mar3. With this ballooD it will
be possible to raise more than 200,000
visitors 1,000 feet above the earth during
the continuance of the Exhibition. They
may eontemplate from that height, sur
passing that of eleven Aros do Tnomphe,
the fine tableau of the city of Paris and
its surroundings. M. Giffard proposes to
construct this enormous machine entirely
at hi3 ovfrn expense. It will cost several
hundred thousand francs.
A very popular but blind Count lives in
the Champs Elysees. Being witty and
musical, his society is much sought after.
He left Paris three months ago, and on
his return called on a fashionable Mar-
choiness who was preparing to go to a
fancy ball. She begged to be excused,
but, as he had an important message to
deliver, he was shown in, and, being
blind, was asked to take a chair in her
boudoir. Gossip ensued, and during all
the time the Marchoiness, assisted by her
maid, executed the mysteries of her toi
let. W’hen ready to descend to her carri
age, the Count stated he had been absent
in London, had undergone a successful
operation for cataract, and could now see
as well as the Marchoiness. The latter
shrieked, and jumped into her carriage
without even an au revoir to her unwel-
oome visitor.
CHARLES FRANCIS ADAMS
TILDEN AND REFORM.
FOR
Another Noble Letter from the yiaasachn-
wettn S- ntenman.
sjtrinfl ^HaclnufS.
Mansfield. Ohio, Oct. 1.—The follow
ing letter from Charles Francis Adams
was received by the democratic Com- |
mittee here in response to au invitation
to speak in this city:
Quincy, Sept. 27, 1876.—Dear Sib: I
have to acknowledge the reception of
your very flattering letter inviting me to
address my fellow citizens of the State of
Ohio on the present state of the political
affairs of the couDtry. It is now a long
w’Lile siuce I have attempted such a
thing, and in the condition of my physi
cal powers, especially of my voice, I
must plead to be excused from under
taking the service. The question before
us seems to resolves it self into this:
Whether a genuine reform of the evils
that have been brought on the country
under the Republican administration of
the last eight years is to be expected by
continuing the same influence in power,
or whether it would not be wiser to make
a complete change and intrust the prose
cution of reform to a new and fresh set
of men The disclosures of the last few
years distinctly prove that the whole ex
isting organization has been honeycomb
ed with corruption, which not even the
most earnest efforts of the honest men of
the Republican party have been effectual
to check. It is plain that the confidence
of the majority is not withdrawn from
those men who have been the most deep
ly compromised by their own conduct be
fore the world, and that it has not been
placed in those who appear to have been
the most strenuous and efficient agents
in a policy of reform. I have not a
word to say in derogation of Mr. Hayes,
but it seems to me at least very singular
that in a fearful crisis like this a person
should have been selected who has thus
far had no record on this subject, and
that not one individual who had really
committed himself by his previous course
to the policy of reform should have been
seriously supported. The meagre vote
given to Mr. Bristow in the Convention
appears to have embraced all the true en
thusiasm sincerely working for that one
great object.
On the other hand, the action of the
convention at St. Louis shows a wholly
different spirit. Not satisfied with mak
ing much the strongest declaration of the
principles on which they propose to pro
ceed, they went on d rectly to nominate,
by a large majority, a man who by his
energetic and vigorous prosecution of a
difficult and dangerous task of reform in
his own State, had given the strongest
pledges to the country, not simply of his
will but of his power to meet emergencies
of all sorts. No wonder that all the fero
city of the wolves and tigers who fed
upon the offal of the public crib should
be vented on him. Their passion only
goes to prove the justice of their fears.
The very fact of their violence should be,
in the minds of calm observers, the most
convincing proof of the wisdom of the
choice. Mr. Tilden is not called upon to
promise what he will do in certain con
tingencies. What ho has done is a bet
ter pledge than all the epithets in the
dictionaries. Another strong reason in
my mind for preferring Mr. Tilden in
this emergency is that a new and clear
policy toward the Southern States mav
be inaugurated, free from all the obsta'-
cles hitherto raised by a class of tho pub
lic men of the North, who live by ingra
tiating themselves with every element
remaining among the evil passions raised
during the war. So long as this course
is tolerated there will be no real harmony
between the sections. This is a favor
able moment for stamping this spirit of
malignity under our feet, by selecting a
man whose well-known firmness and im
partiality may reinstate mutual confi-
cence and ultimately restore unity to the
whole people. We need this much in the
present low condition of our pecuniary
affiiirs. We need it more to fortify the
view of our position by foreign nations.
In short, the time has come for the in
auguration of a wholly new and vigorous
policy by a thoroughly competent and
experienced man. That man, I hope and
believe, will be found in Samuel J. Til
den. I remain very truly yours,
Charles Francis Adams.
THE HARRISON TRAGEDY.
.His* Ulore’s Terrible Combat with a 31a-
niac.
[Cincinnati Enquirer, October 5 ]
In the early part of the summer Harri
son began to visit at Major More’s of tener
than usual, and it was soon suspected
that he had designs on Miss More. Har
rison had received no encouragement,
and was never by word or look given to
understand that his feelings were recipro
cated or that his attentions were agree
able. He had conceived an idea that
Miss More’s father was his bitter enemy,
and when that gentleman was home he
rarely came to the house. List Monday
morning Major More came up to Cincin
nati and Covington. Monday night, and
in faet nearly all day Monday, HarrisoD,
availing himself of the Major’s absence,
hung around the old More homestead.
During the day he obtained an intimation
that Major More would bo home Monday
evening, and it was during that evening
that his hellish ambition was first devel
oped.
He slipped into the sitting-room un
announced, found Mary there, and, it is
supposed, made some proposition of mar
riage to her, which she rejected. He had
been in there but a moment, however,
when he began yelling: “I’m crazy !
I’m crazy!’’ whisked out a formidable
jack-knife with a blade as thick as a razor,
and dashed at his victim. His first lunge
resulted in a ghastly wound in the breast,
just to the left of the breast bone. He
struck again for the heart, and another
wound was made in the left breast, and
stiil again a third wound spurted blood
from just over the heart. Then he
lunged again, this time for his victim’s
throat, and a bloody slit down the left
temple was all he accomplished; then
again, and a wound in the left cheek was
made. By this time Mary caught the
knife-blade in her hand, but her assassin
drew it through, and the hamf, with every
finger wounded, was helpless. Again,
with uplifted blade, he sprang for her
throat, only to plunge his ugly weapon
into her left arm, which she raised for de
fense, and still again and again until five
gaping wounds were bleeding in her arm,
and still the demon followed,
Harrison walked deliberately out of the
house and towards his own home. Ar
riving there he told his boys that he had
killed Mary More—“She wouldn’t marry
me, and I killed her”—and that he was
now going to kill himself. He then took
Lis own rifle in his hands as if to shoot
himself, when his son Pike seized it. A
struggle ensued, but Pike, discovering
that his rifle, too, had no cap, ceased
struggling. Harrison made the discov
erv, or pretended to, about the same
time, dropped the rifle, and with the same
yell, “I’m crazy ! I’m crazy ?” ran to the
cisiern and jumped in. The cistern con
tained only about four feet of water, and
the supposition ie that Harrison knew it,
for had he been bent on suicide the Ohio
river would have answered every purpose,
aEd that was only a few rods ^way. He
floundered around in the oistern a few
minutes keeping up his cry of “I’m
crazy,” until his sons fished him out; then
he made a dive for a small medicine chest
in the house, saying he was going to poi
son himself, but when our porter left last
evening he was still alive and trying to
devise some other means of self destruc
tion.
The room in which th© deadly scuffia
occurred was still as it was left in the
morning, and presented a horrible appear
ance. The matting on the floor was
stained with blotohes of blood, and the
door where the fieroest struggle had occurr
ed was all stained over with the crimson
ilued, as were the doors in William
More’s room. From the sitting-room
clear across the kitchen the struggling
woman’s course could be traced in blood,
The Crowning Victory!
The Singer Always Mil!
Read the Special Dispatch from the Centennial Exhibition to the Sew York Sun:
“PHILADELPHIA., September 27, 1876.
“THE VERY HIGHEST HONORS WHICH COULD BE CONFERRED ON
ANY EXHIBITOR—TWO MEDALS OF HONOR AND TWO DIPLOMAS OF
MERIT—HAVE BEEN AWARDED THE SINGER MANUFACTURING COM
PANY FOR SEWING MACHINES. '
2,000,000 in Use-Salts in Excess of all Others!
THE SINGER M VN FACTURING COMPANY,
SO 172 BROUGHTON STREET, SAVANNAH, GA.
nr- Branch offices in Atlanta, Augusta, Macon and Colambns, Ga., Charleston, S. C , and Jack-
80..ville, Fla. " °ct4-6t
Org ©oufls.
RICH’D MO RGrAN,
18!) CONGRESS STREET.
Store Opens at 8 A. 31. and Closes at half-past 4 P. M.
o
FFER3 FOR SALE 50 PIECES NEW WINTER CALICOS—choice colors.
20 “ “ —mourn imr.
SEVERAL* PIECES NEW CASS I MERES.
LADIES’ WHITE COTTON HOSE—cheap.
GENTS’ ENGLISH SOCKS.
CHOICE BLEACH ED SHIRTINGS, atlOcento.
BLEACHED AND UNBLEACHED SHE3TINGS.
NEW NECKTIES FOR LADIES.
LADIES’ II. S. HANDKERCHIEFS.
LARGE BED SPREADS, at $1 00.
sep27-tf
WILL OPE5 THIS DAY!
A LARGE ASSORTMENT OF PRINTS, in new styles and designs; fancy colored SECOND
MOURNING and BLACK.
A fresh arrival of cheap BLANKETS; a full line of WHITE and COLORED BLANKETS,
all grades.
MOURNING GOODS.
A fine assortment of BLACK MERINOS, CASHMERES, CANTON CLOTH, HENRIETTA
CLOTH, ALPACAS and other goods suitable for mourning.
BLACK ENGLISH CHAPES, all prices; BLACK LOVE and CRAPE VEILS from {2 up.
oet!)-tf
DATIIROP & CO.
gttsuraure.
GRANGERS’
LIFE kB HEALTH INSURANCE CO,
—OF THE—
United States of America.
AUTHORIZKIMDAUITAL, $4,500,000.
E ach state is a home company, and its entire reserve is loaned and
INVENTED IN THE STATE DEPARTMENTS.
Parent Oflice, Mobile, Ala.; Bonds and Cash $2C0,O00
T. E. DAVIDSON, President.
Georgia Department, Rome, Ga ; Loans and Cash 100,000
C. G. SAMUEL, President,
Alabama Department, Montgomery, Ala.; Loans and Osh 100,000
Hon. N. N. CLEMENTS, President.
Mississippi Department, Meridian, Miss.; Loans and Cash 100.0C0
W. McINTOSU, President.
South Carolina Department, Columbia, S. C.; Loans and Cash 100,0C0
TIloMAS J. JETER, President.
Texas Department, Austin, Texas; Loan3 and Cash 100,000
GEO. B. ZIMPLEMAN, President.
Total assets - $700,000
BRANCH BOARD, SAVANNAH, GA.—Major GEO. W. ANDERSON, President; F. M. HULL,
Vice President; B. B. FERKILL, Secretary and Trea«urer.
BOARD OF DIRECTORS—II. M. COMtsR, J. G. LOW, Hon. F.. E. LESTBR, II. A. PALMER, F.
R. SWEAT, C. II. MOREL, J. K. CLARK, J. T. STEWART, C. M. CUNNINGHAM,B. B. MINOR,
GEO. S. HAINES.
Dr. J URIAH HARRISS and Dr. K. P. MYERS, Medical Examiners.
augl8-F,M&Wlm OFFICE : COMMERCIAL BU4LDIN6, BAY STREET.
iToUarro, <£igar$, gtyicg, &c.
Our Place of Business is Still Open!
AND WE HAVE ON HAND A FULL STOCK OF ALL STYLES
TOBACCO, CIGARS, PIPES, ETC.
A LL ORDERS entrusted to us will receive our prompt and careful attention. Those of our cus
tomers livine in QUARANTINED SECTIONS, whose orders we receive, will have immediate
attention at our CIGAR FACTORY in New York and TOBACCO FACTORY* in Richmond, Va.
We will be pleased to serve all our old friends, and as many new ones as may see fit in favoring us.
Address
GOOIM1AA A MYERS,
NO. 103 BAY STREET, SAVANNAH, GEORGIA.
(Toa?
Prices of Coal Reduced!
Lorbcrry Ecil Ash, Egg or Stove Size, $7 50 per Ton.
Schuylkill Bed Ash, Egg Size, $7 OO per Ton.
Free Burning White Ash, Egg Size, $6 50 per Ton.
fF" Add for cartage $1 per ton. if delivered.
WEIGHTS GUARANTEED.
Sep22-tf
l’URSE & THOMAS.
IKcfriticrators:, &c.
JUST RECEIVED.
A New Style of Refrigerator,
SOLID BLACK WALNUT AND IMITATION OAK. WITH PORCELAIN LINED
WATER COOLER AND ICE TANK COMBINED,
T HE best ever offered in this market. ICS BOXES, CREAM FREEZERS, WATER COOLERS,
Glass and Wire FLY TRAPS*, SUMMER QUKKN and UNION OIL STOVES, FLUTING MA
CHINES, PINKING IRONS, FRUIT JARS, JELLY TUMBLERS, SILVER PLATED ICE PITCH
ERS, FINE CUT GLASS WARE, EXTRA FINE TOILET SETS and VASES; GLASS SHADES.
AU of the above articles will be sold LOW at the CROCKERY HOUSE OF
je2S-tf
GEORGE W. ALLEN,
192 BROUGHTON STREET.
Saddles:, Sridles!, harness, &t.
SADDLES, BRIDLES AND HARN ESS.
Rubber and Leath er Belting and Packing, &c.
TRUNKS AND VALISES—SHOE UPPERS AND FINDINGS.
A well selected stock for sale W HOLES ALE and RETAIL at LOWEST PRICES.
W>I. B. MELL & CO.,
160 CONGRESS AND 15S ST. JULIAN ST., MARKET SQUARE.
aug22-ly
$0ot;; and At.
SOOTS MD
28.
AGREATER REDUCTION.
I am now offering my large stock of Boots and
Shoes at and belotv cost, in order to close out my
stock to make room for a large fall stock.
JULIUS SPANIER,
sepl-tf
149 CONGEESS STREET.
^Bcdirinal.
PURE DRUGS!
PUKE DKUGS.—A FRESH STOCK OP PUKE DRUGS and MEDICINES JUST
RECEIVED. TOILET GOODS.—A large and well selected stock of tcilet goods.
PERFUMERS.—The FINEST PERFUMES MADE, in every variety. PAINTS
and OILS of all kinds. Sold at wholesale and retail, and ALL GOODS WARRANT
ED TO BE AS PURE AS CAN BE FOUND IN THE MARKET.
•X. A. POLHILL,
Stores comer Boll street and Broughton lane, and 93 Aberoom street.
|ifil
S TATE OF GEORGIA, CKaTRaR Coctttt.—
To all whom it mar concern: Wteau,
John C. Rowland will apply at the Court of Ordi
nary for Lettera of Administration on tbe eetate
Henry Hiram Rowland.
The*e are, therefore, to cite and admonlah all
whom it may concern to be and appear before
•aid court to make objection (If anythey have)
cn or before the FIRbT MONDAY IN NOVEM
BER NEXT, otherwiee said letter* will be
granted.
WitneM my official signature, thia Fifth day of
October, 1S76.
JOHN O. FERRILL,
cct6-F4t Ordicary C. C.
^TATE OF GEORGIA, Chatham Coutctt.—
O To all whom it may concern : Whereas.
Timothy E. Mieaban will apply at the Court of
Ordinary for Letters of Administration de bonie
non cum testamento aunexo on the eetate of
Morty Dorgan.
Theee are. therefore, to cite and admonish
all whom it may concern, to he and appear be
fore said court to make objection (If s-ny they
have) on or l>efore the FIRST MONDAY IN
NOVEMBER NEXT, otherwise said letter* will
be granted.
Witness my official signature, thia Fourth day
of Octoter, 1S76.
JOHN O. FERRILL,
oct5-Tb4t Ordinary C. C
S TATE OF GEORGIA, Chatham Courtt.—
To all whom it may concern: Whereaa,
Mary J. McFall will apply at the Court of Ordi
nary for Letters of Administration on the eetate
of William M. McFall.
These are, therefore, to cite and admoniah aM
whom it may concern to be and appear before
t*a';d court to make objection (if any they have)
on or before the FIRST MONDAY’ IN NOVEM
BER NEXT, otherwise said letters will be
granted.
Witness my official signature, this Fourth day
ot October, 1S76.
JOHN O. FERRILL.
oct5-Th4t Ordinary C. C.
S TATE OF GEORGIA, Chatham Cocmtt.—
To all whom it may concern: Whereae,
Wm M. Davidson will apply at the Court #f
Ordinary for Letters of Administration on the
estate of George Buckingham.
Toese are, therefore, to cite and admoniah aJi
whom it may concern, to be and appear before
said court, to make objection (if any they have)
on or before the FIRST MONDAY IN NO-
VEMBER NEXT, otherwise said letter* will be
granted.
Witness my official signature, this Fourth day of
October, 1876.
JOHN O. FERRILL,
oct5-Th4t Ordinary C. C.
S TATE OF GEORGIA, Chatham Couhtt —
To all whom it may concern: Where**,
Mrs. Margaret Randolph Anderson will apply at
the Court of Ordinary for Letters of Adminis
tration on the estate of Edward C. Anderson,
Junior.
These are, therefore, to cite and admonish all
whom it may concern to be and appear before
said court to make objection (if any they have)
on or before the FIRST MONDAY IN NOY’EM
BER NEXT, otherwise said letters will be
granted.
Witness my official signature, this second dey
of October, 1876.
JOHN O. FERRILL,
oet3-Tu,4t Ordinary C. C.
S TATE OF GEORGIA, Chatham Cochtt—
To all whom it may concern : Whereas.
Thomas Henderson will apply at the Court ef
Ordinary for Letters of Administration on the
estate of Elizabeth and Catherine Cahill.
These are, therefore, to cite and admonish all
whom it may concern to be and appear before
said Court to make objection (if any they bsve)
on or before the FIRST MONDAY IN NO
VEMBER NEXT, otherwise said letters will he
granted.
Witness my official signature, this thirtieth
day ot September, 1876.
JOHN O. FERRILL,
oct3-Tu,4t Ordinary C. C.
S TATE OF GEORGIA, Chatham Conrrr.—
To all whom it may concern: Where**,
Mary J. Ives will aptly at the Court of Or
dinary for Letters of Administration on the
estate of Anson B. Ives, late of said coanty
and State, deceased:
These are, therefore, to cite and admonish el
whom it may concern to be and appear before
said court to make objection (if any they ha e)
on or before the FIRST MONDAY IN NOVEM
BER NEXT, otherwise said letters will he
granted.
Witness my official signature, this 25th day of
September, 1S76.
JOHN O. FERRILL,
sep26-Tu,4t Ordinary C. C.
S TATE OF GEORGIA, Chatham Cochtt —
To all w’lom it may concern: Whereas, Aiu.e
M. Von Harten will apply at the Court of Ordinary
for Lettergof Administration on the estate of
Albert Von Harten, late of said county, de
ceased.
These are, therefore, to dte and admonish all
whom it may concern, to be and appear before
said court to make objection (if any they have)
on or before the FIRST MONDAY IN NOVEM
BER NEXT, otherwise eaid letters will be
granted.
Witness my official signature, this twenty-fifth
day of September, 1S76.
JOHN O. FERRILL,
sep26-Tn,4t Ordinary C. O.
S TATE OF GEORGIA, Chatham Cothtt.—
To all whom it may concern: Whereae,
Dora Triest will apply at the Court of Or*
dinary for Letters of Administration on the
estate of Jacob Triest, late of said county, de
ceased
These are, therefore, to cite and admonish all
whom it may concern to be and appear before
eaid court to make objection (if any they have)
on or before the FIRST MONDAY IN NOVEM
BER Nil XT, otherwise eaid letters will he
granted.
Witness my official signature, this l?tb day of
September, 1S76.
JOHN O. FERRILL,
eep!9-Tu,4t Ordinary C. C.
S TATE OF GEORGIA, Chatham Cochtt,—
To all whom it may concern : Whereas*
John Williamson will apply at the Court of
Ordinary for Letters Dismissory as Administra
tor on the estate of Henry Tuson, late of »ald
county, deceased:
These are, therefore, to cite and admoniah all
whom it may concern, to be and appear before
said court to make objection (if any they hav«)
on or before the FIRST MONDAY IN JAN
UARY NEXT, otherwise said letters will be
granted-
Witness my official signature this 19th day of
September, 1876.
JOHN O. FERRILL,
sepl9-lam3m Ordinary C. C.
S TATE OF GEORGIA. Chatham*Cochtt.—
To all whom it may concern: Whereae,
William U. Garrard will apply at the Court of Or
dinary for Letters Dismist-ory as Administrator
on the estate of Charles Doll, late of said county,
deceased.
These are, therefore, to cite and admonish
all whom it may concern, to be and appear
before said Court, to make objection (if any
they have),on or before the FIRST MONDAY IN
DECEMBER NEXT, otherwise said letters
will be granted.
Witness my official signature, this 16th day of
August, 1876.
JOHN O. FERRILL
augl7-lam3m Ordinary C. C.
Notice in Bankruptcy.
I N the matter of J. D. A J. W. Butt and Joha
D. Butt and Joshua W. Butt, bankrupt*.
The undersigned hereby gives notice of his ap
pointment as assignee of the above parties, whe
have been adjudged bankrupts upon their owi
petition by the District Court of the United
States lor the Southern District of Georgia.
ROBERT L. PIERCE,
oct4 W3t Assignee.
iRuhtury ©oofls.
REMOVAL.
H. C. HOUSTON
HAS REMOVED TO
129 CONGRESS STREET,
Where he will continue to offer
GREAT BARGAINS
Hats, Ribbons, Ties, Rnchings, Hosi
ery, Moves, Corsets, Ecru and Cash
mere Laces for Oversnltinsr, Real Hair
Snitches, Fans, Cooibs, Jet Jewelry
and Fancy Goods.
nr- REMEMBER THE PLACE, _Mt
129 Congress, 3d door from Ball street.
sug2S-tf H. C. HOUSTON.
Educational.
The Medical College
— OF —
GEORGIA, AUGUSTA.
T HE Medical Department of the University of
Georgia. The forty-fifth session of thia In
stitution will commence on the FiItoT « ON DAY
IN NOY’EMBER. Apply for annual circular to
DeSAUSBURE FORD.
oct7-Sa.M.W*Th.4t Dean.
Postponement.
J HAVE postponed the opening of my School
until November 29.
oct9-3t CHAS. C. TALIAFERRO.
BOYS’SELECT SCHOOL.
H AVING secured very comfortable rooms ill
the old “Bogardus Hall,” on State street, be
tween Bull ana Drayton, I will reopen my school
on MONDAY, October 2, 1876. Terms the same
as last session. C. C. TA LI AIERRO,
sep»5-tf PrincipaL
U RSULINE ACADEMY’, East Morrieania, N
Y. The scholastic ye xt is divided into two
[sessions. Terms per session, including board,
tuition in English aod French, washing and bed
ding, $141; Music $30. Studies will be resumed
|on the first MONDAY of September. ang2S-«*i
grirfe.
BRICK, BRICK.
paa AAA HARD BURNT BRICKS f*r
OUU.Vl/U gale at our yard on Springfield
Plantation, opposite the Arkwright Cotton Fac
tory, consisting of PRESSED BRICK, for fronts
of buildings and paving; also. GRAY, HARD
and SOFT BROWN BRICK, for buildings,
which we will sell at the lowest market price.
Apply at the yard, or to
mjlMin f. GRIM BALL A CO.
nlea
IIM