Newspaper Page Text
Cite ^Horning Wltws.
jjy. 3 WH1TAKEB STREET
(MORNING NEWS BUILDING).
j. IS. Proprietor.
- : ff. *• »
Editor.
F KIi)AY. NOVEMBER 29. 1878-
THE SAVANNAH WEEKLY NEWS.
For Satnrdaj. November SO. IS<8
BEADI THIS aOBUBTO.
TABLE OF CONTESTS.
Firtt Paqe.-Po try: Snnset-AftBrwards:
Cb^p'er® IXL. IV -Waters
DolUrs-A Waj ward Woman s Wajs-A Pray
erful Tramp Outwitted by a ^“man
Maps Out Hia Futura-A Bell Punch In a Barber
^Srrcrul Pnye-Georgia and Florida News-
AT.-ncrlmg Pradient-A Twelre Year Old*
Paisi>o-Mia»lianeou?. , -
Th.rd Far -Pracwdingtof the Georgia Le-
dAawra-roe B-U Punch-Mr. Stephen. Inter
Wewed —the Trrautry and P.-sumption-Sh ■
11 ,-h ir T. acks—Haves' Final L-ap-Shot Down
at a Ba'i—Made lusaae by a Fright in a to»
yard—Wife and Children—A Burglary Allege',
to H ire been Set on Foot to Get Hold of a »ll
—Miscrlaueous. .
Fourth Page. -General Gordon s Re Election.
Its Stgniuc-luce— Bulldozing tl.e uouth-A Hath
e Iecredi.de Rumor-The afghan War-"T.oih
is ninety," etc —CbeS. John's at Jacksouv.il,
-A sinyularand Mel .ncholy Accident—Sotthv
T.uihb. Halt—Minor Editorial Itema— Latest
Ne«vs !»y Teiegra -h.
Fifth Pays —Telegraphic Summary — Th>
Cotton Worm, Some Pomes of an Interesting
Investigation-Local department - Advertise
ments.
S.xth Page. — Agricultural Department —
Orange Culture—Letter* fr m Our Travein*
Correspondent—Our Jacksonville Letter—Let
ter from Oyle Doug as—From M.ddle Florida
—Mi«eil n*ou8. _
Seventh Page*—Milit iry Department—Th.
Peop.e s Cnier, u*auon to eneral Gordon A
V<xlf of Tragedies—In a FeVer Stricken Town—
AFio i la tailroud Magnate in a New York
Puli *• ourt The Attach on the Silver Dollai
Romance of tae W .r - Removing Obj cL
from t ie c-*r—Miscellaneous.
Eighth Page.—Fin *nci 1 and Commercial In-
te*Lgence—Aive t.aementa. +
TAPPHU TI»K WIRES*
Thanksgiving day was so rigidly observed
by the Associated Press yesterday that out
quota of dispatches this morning is exceed
ingly reduced. This accounts for the
meagreuess of our telegraphic columns.
In the inter State rifle match at Charles
ton yesterday tbe Georgia Huzzars team of
this city «uu three of the four matches,
tbe German Huzzars, of Charleston, win
ning the fourth. The wind was high, or
tbe rbooting would have been even better.
The distance at which the shots were made
was two hundred tarda.
By the report of the Secretary of the
Navy, issued 3 esterday, it is shown that the
number of cruising vessels now iu comini.--
aiou is thirty three, and they need no repaiis
at preseut. Several vessels which do need
repairs wiil, when these are made, make the
effectual naval force of the United States
forty-seven steam-hips and five sailing ves
sels. Besides these there are thirteen moni
tors and two torpedo boats. The total fighting
force of the navy can be made, without an}
Increased appropriation be>oud what is ask
ed for, to be thirty-one ciuisere, fifteen
monitors and two torpedo boats.
The proporti in of the Bank of England’s
reserve to liabi ity, whi:h last year was 10%
per cent, is now 41 15 10 per cent. The
Batiks statement shows an iucrease of
specie for the week of £170 000.
It is anuou ced that Russia has de
clared her intention to interfere in
the Afghan war in behalf of the
Ameer in tbe event of England occupy
ing any point in Afghanistan which wili
threaten Russian dominion in Asia. Tbi.~
is based ou the assertion that Eugland has
violated the Afghan agreement of Lord
Clareudon by tbe occupation of Quettah
This iutentiou of Russia is confirmed by tbe
Moscow Gazette, which declares that Ru.-sian
intervention is now iudi-pensahle.
The Columbus Enquirer is iu favor of
keeping Atlauta literally up to her promise
to furnish ttie State with “as good a capitol
as the one at Milledgeville.” It tays: “The
State is not able to release any one from
obligations of the pa.-t. She is not jicb
enough to afford it. The propoiitiou was
made seemingly in good faith, voluntarily
for a valuable cou.-i leraiion, and it won, to
the great advantage of All*rta and tbe
detriment of Milledgeville. Atlanta is pa;
sive ou the subject. It is neither just uor
generous to relieve a city of an iudebted
ne^s when uo release is aaked, aud when so
much has been gaiued by the original prof
fer. Better let the matter stand as it is.”
The trouble about the matter is, however,
that the State needs a capitol in Atlanta better
than the oue iu Milledgeville. Besides, while
it would be perfectly proper to accept from
Atlanta a 6ite for a new capitol, we doubt
very much if a majority of the people of
Georgia are willing to be beholden to the
people of that city for a State House. At
lanta doubtless made her promises in good
faith, and we have no doubt that she will, if
required to do so, promptly redeem them.
But we submit that when she presents that
valuable property—Court House square—as
a site for tbe new capitol building and re
linquishes her claim to the Opera House,
she will have done enough, and It will be
neither magnanimous nor ju»t for the State
to require more of ber people.
Tbe KfW Yoik Times, whose editor
thinks sufficient paiDs is not taken by
the white people of the South ;o induce
the negroes to come up to tbe polls and
vote for scalawags and carpet-baggers to
represent us in Congress, insists that
Congress can make regulations for the
election of its own members. No doubt,
in accordance with the Times' idea of a
strong government, a law of CoDgress
taking tbe control of all elections out of
the hands of the State authorities and
giving it to Federal satraps would be the
proper thing. But while we have the
outward forms of a representative gov
ernment ai d members of Congress are re
cognized as representatives of the people
*ueh au usurpation on tbe part of Con
gre^s wocid be an outrage that could
only be justified on the ground that the
people are incapable of self-government.
However that may be, we apprehend
that tbe sovereign voters of the Union
are not yet witling to concede that they
need Fedeial supervision in the exercise
of the elective franchise.
Sugar Frauds and Adnlterations.
Tne result of the investigation of the
Congressional Committee of Ways and
Means, engaged in examining into affairs
at the New York custom house, has been
to disclose some very interesting facts in
relation to frauds and adulterations in
sugars. This Congressional investiga
tion has started general inquiry into this
subject, and the result has been indeed
startling. It has developed two main
facts. First, that frauds in sugars have
been extensively perpetrated upon the
National Treasury through tbe custom
house, and second, that frauds have also
been practiced upon consumers of su
gars wh.ch criminally undermine the pub
lic heal;h through poisonous and deadly
adulterations.
Regarding the first of these classes of
fraud—those upon the government—they
can be cited in few words. Our tariff on
foreign sugars is graduated, lower
grades being admitted into the country
it much lower rates than are refined vu-
'srs, a state of affairs established espec
ally for the protection of United States
efiners. In consequence, importers of
ligher grades of sugirs resort to every
ubterfuge to get them into the country
it the lowest possible rates. Hence such
ugars have been artificially colored, uo
lef classified, dishonestly sampled, and iu
naoy other ways the laws have been
.•vailed and tiie government swindled
This is one of the many such instance?
»f the natural workings of a protective
ariff.
The second class of frauds, however—
hat against tbe consumers ihrough poisoL
ms adulterations—is the one in which the
noises are more particularly interested
or, as an exchang* truthfully remarks
Ti iulimatfcly concerns each household
n the land—every man. woman and
•liild, from tbe cradle to the grave. It
•oucerns iu an especial manner tbe bone
iud sinew of our population—the toiliu
nasses—for it is in the cheaper grade?
•f sugar that adulteration is chiefly
practiced.”
The New York Star and other jour
aals of the great -metropolis have had
most favorable opportunities in the city
if New York for investigating these
ugar adulterations, and we see it stated
tbat the important facts have been devel
iped that such adulterations are effected
l) by the admixture of cheap and gen
erally poisonous compounds with the
genuine product of the cane, and (2) by
be employment of noxious chemicals iu
ihe refining process to bleach low grade
sugars to a light color, and thus impan
to them a ficiitious market value.
The ingredient chiefly used for the
heap admixture alluded to b known a.*
Jucose. This is de-cribed as “an in
ipidly sweet product derived from corn,
and worth from two to three cents a
pound in tbe market. Human organs
of taste cannot distinguish it from pure
ugar when ‘doctored.’ It readily as
sumes all the external appearances of puie
ugar, but I here the resemblance ceases.
Glucose possesses no nutritious qualities
whatever, does uot assimilate with the
blood, and exercises a most harmful
ffect on the kidneys. In fact, the fright
ful increase of mortality caused by-
diabetes and Bright’s disease of receni
yeais, which has sorely puzzled pbysi
cians, is now generally attributed to the
ncrea-ed consumption of glucose as an
adulterant iu sugar. During the pasi
half a dozen years—that is since the ‘im
proved’ refiuiug proce.-ses have been
widely adopted—the manufacture of
lucose has grown to enormous propor
tions, and merchants who are competent
to judge say that its production surpasses
hat of the starch industry'. This is quite
credible, seeiug that the United Slates
possesses the most extensive corn-grow
ing area in the world.”
But injurious as is this glucose,
and great as is the proven profit
lerived to the refiners from its u?e,
(-aid to be so great that its introduc
tion at a rite of even less than 10
per cent, iuto refined sugars of low-
grade gives an extra profit of half a cent,
per pouud, or $1 23 per barrel; hence
if a large retiuery turns out 2,500 barrels
a day. not an exiravugant estimate, its
yearly profits from this moderate adultera
tion aloue would he close ou $1,000,000.)
t he grei d for gain will not rest quiet
with the genuine article, aud even it is
artificially manufactured. On this sub
ject Professor Chandler, a New York
clwmical expert, writes to the Star as
follows:
“Tne process is very simple. To a low
grade sugar bleached by the muriate of
tin, there is added starch and sulphuric
acid in certain proportions, wuich by
chemical act ion are converted imoglu-
The retiuer thus escapes lrom tbe
posing frauds which, under Radical rule,
have long been perpetrated in quiet, and
which, under a continuance of that rule,
would, most likely, have remained for
ever unnoticed. In consequence these
poisonous adulterations will, in future,
be carefully watched, and to a great ex
tent prevented. Hence it follows that if
| the present Democratic House does noth
ing else, it will probably save by this means
the destruction of the constitutions and
perhaps lives of millions of people, and es
pecially be it noted of those belonging
tn the working classes, for which it will
be entitled to the lasting gratitude of the
country.
—
The Origin of Yellow Fever Undeter
mined—Quarantine
The New Orleans Times says: “The
great American Health Congress is con
spicuous for having settled nothing, at
least in the special matter which gave to
its sitting nine tenths of the interest and
importance that attached to it Tk<
doctors have met and battled and tbe
?moke is now clearing away from abovt-
the field of a drawn fight. Drs. Chop-
pin, Austin and Herrick have made their
statements, reiterating the propositioi
that yellow fever can only reach thi>
country by importation, and have
fortified thiir theory by proviD*.
iver again that the epidemic ol
last summer was brought here by the
steamship Emily Souder, in May. But
Drs. Choppin, Austin and Herrick did
aot convince Drs. Holliday and Whitt,
physicians of equal ability and eminenci,
nor did they throw a single ray of fresh
light upon the controversy which has
ueen dividing public opinion in this city
for more than half a century. It will
never be established, as a matter of fat”,
hat the Emily Souder brought tbe yei
low fever to New Orleans, or that tin
men who died after coming to tb«
city on the Souder died ot yel
low fever. The proceedings of th.
Health Congress show this conclusive
ly and thus we must dismiss the hope oi
settling anything as to the origin of yel
low fever. There is nothing left but to
resort to the most effectual means of pre'
vention possible, and these means can
never be applied properly until they are
made universal. If the country insist?
on quarantine by all means let the coun
try have it, but we respec:fully submil
that after quarantine has been ordain* d
and the form and manner thereof agrees
upon, it would be the wildest of folly t<
except from the operation of thai
quarantine any port on our seaboaru
from Canada to Mexico.”
A Spontaneous Tribute.
The following letter, signed by nearly
one hundred citizens of Albany, Geor
gia, is published in the Atlanta Constitu
tion of Wednesday, and is, as that paper
remarks, “a fine tribute to a man who
has been greatly wronged
Albany, Ga. , November 23, 1878.
To His Excellency Alfred IF. Colquitt,
Governor of Georgia, Atlanta:
Dear Sir—Every Georgian and true
patriot ought, at all times, to feci inter
ested in maintaining the unblemished
character of the C* icf Executive of oui
State from slander and misrepre>en?a
tion. Your Excellency having been
entitled with this section of Georgit
long residence, and endeared to our peo
pie by a life in our midst of consi tern
piety, unquestioned integrity and faith
ful discharge of every private and do
duty, it is, therefore, as we conceive,
our duty, as well as work of love, t
utter our strong condemnation of the re
cent attempt to injure your charactei
and to express our unshaken confidence
u tbe purity of your public and private
life.
It wouid seem that no exalted po
sitioa. unspotted character or past patii
otic service can exempt a man from de
ractioa, for if so then the occasion thai
has gwen rise to this letter would never
have occurred.
With undiminished trust in your faith
fulness and ability as our Governor, and
with great love and respect f«»r you per
soualiy, we are very truly yours.
[Here follows the signatures, aftei
which is appended the following note:]
Every one who has had the opportunity
has signed this with earnestm-ss and si
eerily. Robert J. Bacon.
'The letter, wh.ch had not yet been
given to Governor Colquitt, was hand
to the Constitution for publication by
Captain Hobbs, of Albany.
The II ctimond Dispatch says the next
Democratic Congress will surely pass a
bill n pealing the law authorizing the ap
pointment of Federal supervisors of
Sections, and if the President vetoes it.
a plank will no doubt be inserted in tbe
Kaiioual Ueou.'Cratic pla form demand
ing its repeal, aud il will thus oe made
an issue in the next Presidential elec
tion an issue, too, which ought to rally
to the standard of our party thousands
of good Republicans
According to Republicans there is
never any fraud in elections or in can
vasses so long as the Republican candi
dates are successful. It is only on tbe
occasion of Democratic successes that
we hear the fraud cry from them. They
are truly good. They would not stuff a
ballot box or throw out a s ngle return-
unless they bad a chance. Then they
do it in a way to astonish people; and
they howl about the “pesky” Democrats
when they don't have a chance.
Tbe Baton Rouge Herald will wait for
the official returns on the vole fixiog the
capital of Louisiana. The vote, with
five parishes to bear from, stood—Baton
.Rouge, 37,017; New Orleans, 37,994.
c<»se.
charge of purchasing this adulterant, and
chuckles over ilie trick that covers the
fraud. Now this is a very pretty little
chemical irick, and we can thus see
how t is thai the glucose wolf is di:
guised by the beautiful white fleece of
the granulated cut-lump sheep. Th
same chemical trick is resorted to in the
oauufatuie of syrups, these innocent re-
fiuers putting <>n the market anuually
millious of gallons of this sort of syrup.”
And, remarks another analyst: “It
would be no figure of speech to say that
the man who happens to eat syrup of
this sort must have a tin lined stomach.
These are some of the adulterations
made use ot in the manufacture of cheap
sugars. The other conspicuous method
of fraud practised in refining is the em
ployment of muriate of tin, muriatic and
sulphuric acids, aud tin crystals for the
purpose of bleaching low grade sugars
to a light color, and thus palm them off
on consumers of moderate means as
be'ng “astonishingly cheap for the
money.” Says the Star on this point:
• Raw sugars classified below No 10,
D. S.. are of a dull, sooty color; but
placed in ihe magic crucible of the re
finer, and therein subjected to ‘modern
processes,' they issue lorth as transform-
«d as a black poodle dog after being
dipped in a tub of white paint. In re
gard to this special pliase.of the subject,
Mr. T. A. Haveineyer. and those whom
he terms ‘the great refiners,’ freely
avow that they do make use of some or
all of the ch*-tnicals mentioned; but they
claim tbat the deleierious elements are
all worked out durin a the final processes
of manufacture, and sink among the
residuum The claim is pitilessly refuted
by chemical analysis, for we have seen
various quantities of mineral poisons ex
tracted from sugars aud syrups t>ought
at random in various grocery stores. It
may be worth noting that some of these
Secretary Evarts said the other day:
“There is no use denying the fact th .
tbe Southern people have suffered greatly
—the Southern whites, 1 mean—from the
sudden boulevcrsement of their social sys
tem or fabric, tbe sudden interjection
iuto their voting aggregate of an elemeui
of ignorance and consequent domination
of uneducate*: and inexperienced power
in their political affairs. It was. per
haps, a mistake that this was done by
the Republican party of the North, bu
all ibis does not justify murder and
wholesale disregard of existing law.”
“No,” remarks the Courier Journal,
“one crime docs not justify another
crime, but the crime w r hich Mr. Evarts
treats so lightly, and which was commit
ted by his party for political purposes
only, justifies the employment by tbe
Southern Democrats of the same means
which are used in the North to subject
the vote of the ignorant and the unedu
cated and the unexperienced to the party
of intelligence and experience, which, in
the South, is composed of the whites. If
the ‘bouleversement’ referred to by Mr.
Evarts had been forced upon New York
State, the people would have disregarded
the law which brought it, and would un
doubtedly have resorted to wholesale
murder to bring society to its legitimate
condition.”
The New York Herald, while it echoes
the slanders of the bloody shirt crusaders
against tbe South, does not quite approve
Judge Reeves’ recent decision viriually
depriving the State courts of jurisdic
tion in criminal cases in which negioes
are parties. Alluding to that decision,
a report of which we published yester
day, the Herald 6a\’s: “We are inclined
to believe for our part that its ultimate
result will be a large number of execu
tions, for it will simpiy throw all cases
of accused colored men into the jurisdic
tion of Judge Lynch.”
The New Orleans Times thinks it must
be a source of great sorrow to the stal
wart Rod.cals to discover that there is a
slight difficulty in the way of instituting
wholesale prosecutions against the people
Radical Falsehood and Bravado.
We print the following fron the New
Y'ork Tribune, of Monday, as a speci
men of the vile slanders and insolent
bravado which constitute the staple
arguments of that paper in its efforts to
inaugurate a new bloody shirt crusade
against the people of the South:
“In South Carolina the man who*
stuffs twenty five hundred tissue paper
votes into a ballot box, or drives a L nited
States supervisor away from the polls
with a revolver, is not molested; the man
who dares to make an affidavit to these
facts is locked up on a charge of per
jury. The United States revenue officer
who attempts to do his duty in almost
any part of the South gets shot for his
pains: the thief who shoots him is neither
indicted nor arrested. The man who
recklessly tells the truth in Sou'h Caro
lina lies in jail; the man who delib
erately murders a United States official
is at large. This is the epitome of
Southern justice. Commissioner Raum
bas been collecting a few statistics upon
this branch of the subject of immunity,
which he finds to be very one sided indeed,
in ihe last two years twenty-five or thirty
teveuue officers Lave been murdered or
wounded in tiie performance of their du
des. and there have been no arrests or
indictments lor these crimes save in one
instance, and this occurred in a Republi-
•an district in Tennessee. But tbe Com
missioner's patience being exhausted by
he last exploit of the whi?ky’ bulldozers
iu besieging his officers at night and order
mg them out of the county, he has tele
graphed to South Carol in a'lliat there will
be no more ‘immunity’ if he can help it.”
It is scarcely necessary to say that the
charges of she Tribune, based on the
iving reports of its hireling Bohemian
correspondents, and such unscrupulous
scalawags as Mackey, Lee and Swails,
tre notoriously false. No cne knows
letter than tbe political Pecksniffs who
conduct Jay Gould’a organ that there is
rot a shadow of truth in the slanders
which are daily disseminated through its
rolumns, for the sole purpose of “firing
he Northern heart,” and hounding on
»he myrmidons of the Federal Govern
ment in the work of ruthless persecution
*nd terrorism.
The Tribune certainly entertains
very low estimate of both the intelli
gence and the patriotism of the people of
the North when it thus attempts to im
pose upon their credulity and excite
heir passions and prejudices against
the people of the South. For
ourselves we have no fear that
the Tribune's dishonorable tactics will
win. The bloody shirt has had its day.
The fraud ha9 been too thoroughly ex
posed to admit of its being again utilized
in the game of pol'iics. The enemies of
tbe Democratic South who would disre
gard truth, right, justice and the peace
and prosperity of the country in their
desperate effort for political supremacy
will signally fail. The true men of the
North are as tired of sectional strife as
are those of the South, and are no less
er;rne=tly opposed to the restoration of
bayonet rule. Commissioner Raum will
not inaugurate a general hanging in the
South uutil lie has obtained convictions
>n better evidence than the unfounded
'landers of the Tribune and the lying re
ports of its Bohemian correspondents.
BY TELEGRAPH.
THE INTER-STATE
TEST.
RIFLE CON-
The Georgia Hussars
Laurels.
Gain Fresh
THEY WIN THREE OUT OF FOUR
COMPETITIONS.
Scores Made by the Different Teams.
General Notes ot the Affair.
Lome will rule over a dominion that
lias some aspirations to becoming a great
country yet. The introduction of the
national policy', or “Canada for the Ca
nadians,” idea shows that the people of
be dominion fed quite independent, and
magiue they can go alone without help
roinanyone. Canada is no doubt do
ng as well as could be expected. Its
commercial marine is increasing at the
rate of 50,000 tons per annum, and now
ranks fifth among the nations, surpass
ing that of France, Spain or Germany,
*nd nearly equaling that of Norway and
Italy. In railway mileage Canada ranks
eighth, having 5,706 miles of railway,
• »ne mile to each 690 persons, while Great
Britain has only one mile to every 1,859,
and France one mile to every 2,860. The
Canadian fisheries, not including New
foundland, which does not yet form a
part of the domiuion, employ some 1,400
vessels, 22,000 boats, over 52,000 men,
and over $3,500,000 of capital.
Special Telegram to the Mamina Xeurs.
Charleston, S. C., November 28.—The
inter State rifle contest opened to-day at
eight o’clock a. m. The weather was
glorious, with a cold bat very strong wind
blowing, interfering greatly with the shoot
ing, hence the scores were small.
COMPETITION NO. 4.
In competition No. 4 the Georgia Hussars
won on a score of 257. The following are
the individual scores:
Captain J. W. McAlpin .28
Lieutenant G. B. Pritchard 26
Sergeant J. W. Schley 25
Private C. M. Cunningham 25
Surgeon J. D. Martin 34
Private L. M. Ryals 27
Corporal John S. Coburn 25
Private O. L. Tilton 19
Q. M. Sergeant D. M. McAlpin 24
[The above is just as we received the re
port by telegraph. It will be noted that
the scores given do not foot up the total of
257, and that the name of 3erge an t Julian
Schley is entirely omitted from the list of
individual scores. These may be errors iu
the transmission of the telegram.—Ed.]
The following are the scores of the other
contesting companies :
Get man Volunteers 218
German Huzzars 213
Sumter Guards 221
Savannah Volunteer Guards 214
Carolina Rifle Battalion 206
German Fusiliers 236
The prize, a gold medal, is a very hand
some oue. It is an eighth of an inch thick,
and inch and a half in diameter, with em
bossed border and elevated rim. The face
is inscribed as follows: “Presented to the
German Fusiliers by Gen. Rudolph Siegling,
to be awarded to the champion team, No
vember 28, 1878.” On the reverse is in
scribed; “Inter-State rifle match, Charles
ton, S. C., at the invitation and under the
direction of the German Fusiliers. Won by
the Georgia Hussars, November 28, 1878.”
The medal is suspended by a brooch, on
which is inscribed in English text, Cham
pion Medal.
COMPETITION NO. 3
was also won by the Georgia Hussars, on
score of 155. The following is the re
sult:
Georgia Hussars 155
Savannah Volunteer Guards 139
German Fusiliers 141
German Artillery H2
German Hussars 735
Sumter Guards 141
Palmetto Guards 140
German Volunteers 129
Prize—A 6ilvcr tilting pitcher.
COMPETITION NO. 2
was won by the German Hussars, of
Charleston. The following are the scores
German Hussars H®
Georgia Hussars 105
German Artillery 90
Carolina Rifle Battalion 101
German Fusiliers 113
Sumter Guards 104
Savannah Volunteer Guards 107
Palmetto Guards 106
German Volunteers 109
Republican Blues 100
Prize—A silver pitcher.
COMPETITION NO. 1.
In this contest the Hussars were again
victorious. The following are the scores:
Georgia Hussars.... 83
Republican Blues 79
Savannah Y'olunteer Guards 75
German Fusiliers 76
Carolina Rifle Battalion
Fifth U. S. Artillery 65
Sumter Guards 73
German Volunteers
BANK OF ENGLAND MATTERS.
London. November 28, 6 p. m.—The pro
portion of the Bank of England reserve to
liability, which last week was 10%, is now
41 15-16 per cent. The amount of bullion
gone Into the Bank of England to-day on
balance is £16,000. Tne Bank of England
statement shows an increase of specie for
the week of £170,000.:
r
3m iBoofis.
Adrrrtismrnts.
LUTHERANFAIR
Fair for the
Lutheran
Benefit
Church
WILL BE HELD IN
MASONIC TEMPLE,
COMMENCING ON
MONDAY NEXT. DECEMBER 2d,
And continue for six days.
Lunch every day from 11 to 1 o’clock, and
a hot supper every night.
The friends of the «hur'h and the public
gen* rally are cordially invited.
nov2y—3t«£Tellt
Steamer Cumberland
U ^VILL leave as usual THIS EVENING, at 7|
_J o’clock, from wharf foot East Bread
street, for Matthews' Bluff and wav landings.
nov29-lt DORSETT & KENNEDY, Agta.^
JN the District Court of the United States,
for the Southern District of Georgia.
Bankruptcy.
No. « OT.—In the matter of HERMAN
SCHR1ENER, Bankrupt.
The said bankrupt having petitioned the
court for a discharge from all hi* debts prova
ble under the Bankrupt Act of March 2u. 1867.
notice is herebv given to all persons inter
ested to appear on the TENTH DAY OF
DKCEMBHK, 1878, at 10 o'clock a. m.. at
Chambers of said District Court, before Isaac
Beckett. Esquire, one of the Registers of
said Court in Bankruptcy, at his office at
Savanna". Georgia, ana show cause why the
prayer of the said petition of the bankrupt
should not be granted. A nd further notice »s
given tbat ihe second and third meetings ot
creditors will be held at the same time and
place.
Dated at Savannah. Ga, this 27th day of
November, 1878. WILLARD P. WARD.
nov29-lt Clerk.
it'atrhrs, Sfudrti,
SAMUEL P. HAMILTON,
IMPORTER ANT) DEALER IN
The Wik'hiugion correspoudent of the
Philadelphia Times says:
“The army, of course, Is for Grant to
a man. It is fairly represented by General
Sherman, between whom aud Grant
there ii an inexplicable attachment
Sherman has said ever since Grant’s last
:erm expired that the country would
have use for him yet in the Presidential
chair, and he Wis always expre>sed the
belief tbat tbe Republicans would nomi
□ate him iu 1880, and that he would be
elected. He has said within two day9
that the country was rapidly settling
down to the belief that Grant was the
only man who could bring safety and
confidence."
General Sherman does not represent
army sentiment. The army is not “for
Grant to a man.” A canvass of the
sentiment would prove this: General
Sherman wants Grant because he be
lieves in the Pretorian system. His at
tachment to Grant is not inexplicable.
They both believe in governing the
country by arms and camps.—Courier-
Journal.
The project of turning over the Re-
German Hussars
Prize—A silver goblet.
THE REPUBLICAN BLUES.
The Republican Blues entering late, had
the last position, and had to shoot in almost
darkness In consequence of the heavy
wind and in order to get through with the
shooting, the rounds were reduced from
seven to five per man.
THE TARGET SHOOTING.
The first prize at target No. 1, a Reming
ton Creedmoor rifle, valued at $100, was
won by Corpora* John 8. Coburn of the
Georgia Hussars, who also won the first
prize at target No. 2, a Sharp’s rifle, valued
at $20.
The first prize at ring target No. 8 fa full
cut-glass fruit 6tand, 6ilver base,) was won
by Lieutenant George Allen, of the Savan
nah Volunteer Guards.
GENERAL NOTES.
A grand ball in honor of the visiting
teanrs is in progress to-night. The prizes
were presented at ten o’clock.
Lieutenant Scbachte, of the German Fu
siliers, received the visitors iu a happy
speech, to which Captain Mercer, of the
Blues, responded.
General Anderson, who was director of
the contest, and managed splendidly, de
serves great credit.
The teams return to Savannah to-morrow.
AN ARREST.
Deputy Sheriff Xaughtin arrested this
afternoon a negro named Eugene Grant, who
broke jail in Darien In 1876, where he was
confined on a charge of assault with intent
to murder Joe Mansareld. He is also con
cerned in an outrage on a white woman in
McIntosh county. He will be taken to Sa
vannah on to-morrow's train.
publican party of the South solidly to Ml [)N III H T TE L EGRAMS
Uonkling in 1880 may not be so easy a 1 J lu ’ lu lJ A A *7 U UU nrl^uo
joke. Of course he will have the "ad
vantage of position after Grant, but it
must be remembered that the Southern
Republicans are a marketable article, and
will go to the highest bidder. The
Plumed Knight of Maine will be among
ihe gentlemen who attend that auction
—Cincinnati Enquirer.
The Enquirer has not found out that
‘there is no Republican party in Geor
gia,” or it would have excepted our
State from the “auction.” For its infor
mation we will state that the party has
changed its Dame.
RUSSIA INTENDS TO ACTIVELY
SUPPORT THE AMEER.
Report of the Secretary of the Navy.
Affair* of the Bank of England.
liddious pojsous can be traced through of the parishes in Louisiana, whom they
in.
their specific effects in geueratiug skin
diseases, piles and other physical ail
ments of serious character.”
There are many other aduderations,
frauds and systems of poisoning prac
ticed in ibis refining of sugars, but space
forbids our noticing them in detail at
this time. From what has been above
given, however, some idea of the great
imposition practiced upon the public by
dishonest refiners in tbe United Slates
accuse of outrages against the negroes at
the late election. This difficulty, simply
stated, is that there is no law under
which they can act “In other days,”
says the Times, “when they had com
plete control, this would have made little
difference; but now it is an insurmounta
ble obstacle.”
The contest for United States Senator
from Florida to fill the place of Conover
may be galbered, and from it Ihe country I promises to be a lively one. The candi-
may learn two very important lessons.
Here is again strikingly exhibited the
evils of a high protective tariff. Were
the tariff on sugars low enough to be for
revenue only, pure sugars could be im
ported. and refiners would not be able,
under the specious pietensc of giving
proper stimulus to Americau industries,
thus to destroy the health and lives of
their fellow men in this wholesale way.
Again the>e startling disclosures are
the result of the investigation of a com
mittee appointed for the purpose of ex
dates are Gen. J. J. Finley, ex Governor
D. S. Walker, Hon. Wilkinson Call,
Hon. John A. Henderson and Gen. Rob
ert Bullock. General Finley, it is said,
has the inside track.
General Hancock won ihe sword at
the New York Cathedral Fair, the votes
being: Hancock, 634; Newton 624; Jos.
E. Johnston, 515. Considering the “pre
cinct” in which the election was held,
Wet pepper, it seems, throws off great
quantities of carbonic acid gas. On
•ard an English steamer in a Chinese
port lately, a quantity of peppier was
taken on board, a part of which had
been wet with rain. Next morning a
Chinaman went into the hold and fell
senseless. Four English sailors went
down to render assistance; they, too, be
came senseless; aud finally all five, after
a ventilation of the hold, were found
dead.
It is reported from Florida that Da6e
and Brevard counties have added two
hundred to Hull’s vote. If this is so it
insures the election of the Democratic
candidate beyond a doubt.
The four p>er cent, government bonds
keep bravely up. In five days last week
there were about seven millions taken by
subscription at the Treasury.
The Fliytlologjr of the Liver.
The liver is the largest secreting organ in the
bumau body, and the bile which it secretes i3
more liable to vitiation and misdirection from
its proper channels than any other of the
animal fluids. Luckily for the b.lious, how
ever, there is an unfailing source of relief from
liver complaint, namely, Hostetler’s Stomach
Biti ers, a medicine which for over a quarter
of a ce* tury has been achieving thorough
cures of the above mentioned ailments, fever
and ague. tlyi<pepsi«, bowel complaints
its, i heu-
voivius: lo<s of nervous v gor It is, moreover,
a preventive of to lariat dj-ease, and affords
pro'ection to thousands, of pers*<ns residing in
districts of country where that dire scourge is
prev .1-nL As a remedy adaptettotbemedi-
cin il requirement of fami'U-s, it is supremely
General Joe has a just right to be proud a ™ eAns °/ 1 fortif ? in ^, a de 5ii*
_ , . , 6 * I tated sjstem, it is thoroughly to be dei-ended
of the vote he received. 1 upon. a6v$MI,W t F«wn
PROBABLE RUSSIAN INTERVENTION IN THE
AFGHAN WAR.
London, November 28 —The 7*unes y Ber
lin s-pecial 6ays tbat tbe St. Petersburg cor-
re.-poudent of tbe Vienna (semi-official) /b-
lihcal Correspondence says: “Ruesi* bas
anuounced tbe intention of actively sup
porting tbe Ameer in tbe event of Eugland
occupying any points in Afghanistan from
which tbe Russian dominion iu Asia might
be effectually threateued. This is based
upon tbe assertion that Englaud violated
the alleged Afghan agreemeut of Lord
Clarendon by tbe occupation of Quettah.
The Intention of Russia to interfere in
Afghanistan is apparently confirmed by the
Moscow Gazette, declaring that intervention
is indispensable, now tbat the occupation
of Quettah has been succeeded by expedi
tious in the direction of Candahore and
Herat,
WASHINGTON WEATHER PROPHET.
Office of the Chief signal Observer,
Washington, D. C., November 28.—Indica
tions for Friday:
In tbe South Atlantic States, clear or
partly cloudy weather, northwesterly winds,
stationary or higher temperature and barome
ter.
Iq the Middle Atlantic States, clear or
partly cloudy weatber, northwest winds
falling followed by rising temperature and
rising preesure.
In the East Gulf States, warmer, clear or
partly cloudy weather, wiDd6 mostly north
erly and stationary barometer.
In the West Gulf States, warmer, clear
or partly cloudy weather, winds mostly
southerly, stationary or falling barometer.
In Tennessee and the Ohio valley, clear
or partly cloudy weather, winds mostly
southwesterly, stationary or higher tempera
ture, and in the eastern portion higher
pressure.
REPORT ON THE NAVT.
Washington, November 28.—The naval
report is issued to-day. It shows the num
ber of cruising vessels now in commission
at thirty-three, and they need no immediate
repairs. There are several vessels needing
repairs, which, when accomplished, would
make the effective cruising force of the
navy forty-seven steamships and five sailing
vessels. We have thirteen monitors ready
for service and two torpedo boats.
Tbe Secretary says that without any in
crease of the appropriation beyond what is
asked for that is within the means under
the control of the department, with current
appropriations, the total fighting force of the
navy is thirty-one cruising ships, fifteen
monitors and two_torpedo boats, (
DIAMONDS,
JEWELRY,
SHYER k PUTED WARE,
CLOCKS. CLOCKS,
OPERA GLASSES.
BRONZES, CANES,
SHELL, IVORY AND PEARL CARD CASES
AND PORTMON N AIES,
Purses, Bags, Belts,
IF.McKEMA&CO.
137 BROUGHTON STREET,
BETWEEN BULL AND WHITAKER STS.
A Great Fall in Prices!
DOMESTIC DRESS GOODS, now at 5c. and
6Wc.. formerly sold a* 10c. and l2J£c.
DOMESTIC DttEbS GOODS, now at 10c. and
I2t$c.. formerlv sold at 15c. and 20c.
DIPuRTED DRESS GOODS, wool fillings, now
from IN?, to 2 c.. formerly sold at 20c. to 30c.
CAMEL'S HAIR SUITINGS and CLOAKINGS,
fully a yard and half Wide, now 75c., formerly
NAVY BLUE BOURETTE. &-4 wide, now 50c..
f rmerly Si 25.
FANCY CASSIMERES, for men's wear, at
prices much below value, to close the stoc -
We intend relinquishing this branch of our
business.
LADIES’ CLOAKS.
A new lot of over 100 English Beaver Cloaks,
to arrive to-day, all new styles. Will be sold
30 per cent, iess than early fail prices.
B.F. McKENNA& CO,.
137 BROUGHlON STREET,
Are offering at lower prices, full lines of the
foilowi g go- ds:
C4UFORNLA and E \sTERN BLANKETS.
kED and WtH TE SHAKER FLANNELS.
Gentlemen's. Ladies' and Children's MERINO
UN. ERVtSTS.
Gentlemen's RcD LAMB S WOOL .medicated
SHIRTS and DRAWEHS.
LINEN TOWELS. TOWfcLINGS. NAPKINS etc
SHEETINGS, SHIR1INGS, PILLOW CAS
INGS, etc.
The Best Showjfl the World.
SAVANNAH^ THEATRE.
FRIDAY AND SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 36
AND SO.
matinee Saturday at * o'clock.
BAKLODT. WILSON,
PRIMROSE & WEST’S
ENTIRE
MINSTRELS J
NEW SHOW
SEASON!
NEW PEOPLE:
NEW SPECIALTIES
Houses crowded to the doors with the elite of
society everywhere. The Minstrel Honarehs in
their New Programme of merit and briliianev.
Prices $1 00, 75c , 50c Seat-* secured at Bren's
Ticket Agency. No extra charge.
SPECIAL NOTICE.
Entire change of Bill every performance from
overture to afterpiece.
nov965t
(Srormrs aatf Srorlsions.
colored wo :an wb£ p ,
A of shoe, at mystureonaa:u
ber loth, giving in oayment an.
and leaving a blue son tnabreiJ
something to her adr ftn tag^ oy caiitv-g It - -
SiCHoLS.1?
123 Broughton street. nov^r-w
Mantra.
VT-AXTED. pieassat room, -ir-.th
T v gentleman and wre; central loca-.-
Address, stating terms, letter E., Mon it*
•
WANTED, a Grocerr Clerk: must be wT"
▼ ▼ recommended. Corner Liberty
ton street* kot&\J
XV T £ SORROW, rent or bu . a7~-4
p’.TF^vf A PP‘r U tcrtiEs i
BATES Muric house.
W A - NTtD - * compel n: Cook. AttTTT.
’ ▼ corner Drayton ana Waidburg
nov26-2t
WANTED, 10 ,K) Trade Dollar*, a- , 7777."
V1 S. P. H. ; i5ULTo>, comer L
Broughton sows. c iTir .. -
V Respect able wl giri «a L :,^
tion as cook or k >usc girl ir a ~ - .
family. Address M.. tius office. lo ^ : ' e
B. F. McKENNA & CO.
HOSIERY, GLOVES. NECKWEAR, etc.
Ladies' FANCY COLORED STOCKINGS, now
35c., formerly sold at ' c.
Ladies' extra long WHITE and BLEACHED
H SE, French toes, 30c , formerly sold at 50c.
Ladies' UN BLEACH fc.L» (regularly made
HOSE, at lUc. worth 25c.
Chi.dren's FANCY COTTON HOSE, in great
varieti **, from 5c. a p - ir up.
Full lines of elegant FRENCH HOSIERY.
Ladies' WHITE LACE NE-'K SCARFS.
L idles' BL.V K SILK LACE NECK bCARFS.
Children's FANCY NECK RIBBONS.
Lacies' FANCY' BOWS.
Ladi-s' LINEN COLL • RS and CUFFS.
Gentlemen’s LINEN COLLARS and CUFFS.
Gentlemen's tLLK NECKWEAR.
KID GLOVES.
Ladies' 3-button KID GLOVES at 50r.
Ladies' fine 2 button KID GLOVES at 40a
worth 75>\
Ladi-s‘ 3 button KID GLOVES at 90c., worth
SI 25.
Real Alexandre Kid Gloves
3 buttons, Black and Colored.
nov25-tf
A RARE OPPORTEWn
s.
REAL SHELL COMBS.
FRENCH NOVELTIES, ETC.
P. HAMILTON,
CORNER BULL & BROUGHTON STS.,
SAVANNAH, GA.
nov22-tf
Concw Syoirsss St.
At the Old Stand, Opposite the
Pulaski House.
T HF! subscriber is still to be found at the OLD
STAND, i35 CONGRESS STREET, where
he has a g >od selection of
Watches, (’locks, Jewelry,
STERLING SILVER WARE,
SI LYE I? PLATED WARE, &c.
Which he sells at prices to suit the times.
Sole aeent f r the sale of the celebrated DIA
MOND SPECTACLES and EYEG ASSES.
Watches, dockland Jewelry repaired.
CHRONOMETERS KATED BY TRANSIT.
F. D. JORDAN,
135 Congress st., opp. Pulaski House.
nov'tMim
ADOLPH SACK,
—DEALER IK—
WATCHES, JEWELRY,
FRENCH AND AMERICAN CLOCKS,
Spectacles and Silver-Plated Mare,
13934 BROUGHTON STREET,
SAVANNAH. - - - GEORGIA
I WOULD call the attention of the public to
my g iods. Every article sold io my estab
lishment is guaran'eed to be as represented.
In addition to the above, 1 have also received
a splendid lino of
Musical Boxes and Accordeons,
Suitable for Holiday Presents.
Having twenty four years’ experience as a
Practical Watchmaker, I can say that all work,
such a* REPAIRING a LL KINGS OF ATCH-
ES. JEWELRY. CLOCKS, MUSICAL AND
SURGICAL INSTRUMENTS, will be done in a
workmanlike manner, and consequently satis
faction given. nov]6 2m
fainting.
ANDREW HANLEY,
(Successor to McKenna & Hanley,)
Paint and Oil Store.
RAILROAD, STEAMBOAT AND MILL SUP
PLIES.
Doors, Sashes, Blinds, Etc
SIGN FAINTING A SPECIALTY
E STIMATES FURNISHED for every descrip
tion of painting. Satisfaction guaranteed.
Sole Agent for the celebrated “ HOME
LIGHT” OIL.
All orders will receive prompt attention.
sep24-tf
PAINTING
CHRIS. MURPHY,
House, Sign and Ornamental
PAINTING.
Orders for Work of Every De
scription in the above
line Solicited.
jy31-tf
GRAY k O’BRM
HAVING PURCHASED OF A FRFNCH 1M
PORTING HOUSE ITS WHOLE STOCK OF
NOA ELTIES!
—CONSISTING OF—
28,000 PIECES!
Will offer the same at prices 75 per cent, less
than the like class of goods have ever before
been offered to the people of these United
States.
20 pieces 6-4 DP.AP TACODORA at SI 25.
former price S2 50; never offered in this market
tefore.
27 pieces CACH3DRE De LINDE, blacks an'
colors, all wool, at 50c.. w«.rth $1.
15 pieces DRAP MOULTAN. DRAPMORAH.
DR-VP LAHORE, superb goods, beautiful de
30 pieces 4-4 CACHMIRE D' ECO- c SE, black
and colored, in new choice shades, 75c., worth
81 25.
0 pieces all wool SHOVELASS. beautiful
shades, at 50c. worth 85c.
2.(XX) pieces of WASH POPLIN at prices not
to be mentioned.
BOYS’ SUITS, one thousand, at $2 50 and $3.
cheap at 85.
Tie Bipst Drive of All!
300 dozen DAMASK TOWELS at 25c.
117 dozen NEW KID GLOVES, 2 to 6 buttons,
from Harris.
GENTS’ Dog SKIN. LADIES' CASTOR
GLOVES, MISSES' KIDS.
A new line of LADIES' CLOAKS open to
day.
GRAY & O’BRIEN.
RECEIVED DIRECT THIS DAT.
4 N invoice of that splendid TOKAY WINE.
A Also,
PORT. SHERRY. CLARET and RIESLING.
From the leading California vintners.
MALAGA GRAPES, in kejs.
APPLES, POTATOES, CABBAGES, etc.
MERWIN'S SUPERB MEATS.
DATES. FI P. RAISINS. PRUNES. CUR
RANTS, CITRON and other dried fruits.
FLORIDA ORANGES.
SPICED PIGS' FEET, in half and quarter bbls.
MIXED and PLAIN PICKLES, loose and in glass
FRUIT JELLIES, in 5 and 10-lb. cans.
TOWN TALK BAKING POWDER
CHIP BEEF.
New Pickled and Smoked HERRING.
CONFECTIONERY and FIREWORKS in great
variety. And last, out not least.
83 GOLD DUST. 83
J, B. REEDY’S,
21 BARNARD STREET.
nov27-tf
RUSS AIK * CO.
—ARE OFFERING—
P^RESH GOODS in cans.
MACKEREL, SALMON, LOBSTERS,
ASPARAGUS, QUINCES. DAMSON,
PLUMS, CHERRIES, STRAWBERRIES,
-•-AND—
PURE KEROSENE OIL at 15 cents.
VklWSl'At'Er. PRES'
hand Printing Pre<'.
lor a nine column paper. Chase- «cd
same
We have for sale. Chases and Ruie> • , r a «.
column paper. Address, staging iowe't 7
terms. J. P a. Lr.- \-
Editor and Proprietor OkHeen< c-ar
nor23 6c DuPont ' n
L^Iv E thousand do! ars w.-nn . :
A HAN.' Fl’rN.TURE AND
WANTED —The highest ca>h t .
su«-h at the S-.C No-IIAND *57«jKr
East Broa! and Brought >n sx
waited on at their own houses by Mr-
nov 13-1 11
B EtR BUT 1 Lr s WAN 1 Ll* 1 *.
CEN r apiece for PIN i BEE* c
Freight will he paid by me on aL.-
railroad or steamer. HENRY bAJ. JHU
Cor. South Broad and Jefferson sta.. Sav7rr^v
oct25 tf ^
.hf
persons who hot relative
mw 1I1 it hi rif irm pill In ai if muj
advantage by co.xmuiiAlihr
RODREuUEs, care of :m« _ !*- ..
■jctlii-tr
DAN Da.—,
£ust ana jpoumi.
PICKED UP, a sm-U !-oirei SlU E
-1 1 ope around its ntek. arxmt .
which the owner can La ve by pro*
and paying expei.s.s, at J. T. Ki...
Wood Yard, foot of New str*-e:. : -
I O-nT, on Wcduerday afu
a pair of black LYE-GL.
Liberty and Jones st eels. A su.
will be paid for their return to 12;
nov29 it
L OST, a white Cow. with reii r o:
the right e*e Five -i- lLi s re
pail for her return to corner Pxi
streets.
•-on, h, »
itab.e reward
^5-ardinc.
PAVILION HOTEL u h Bre.;l an.:
A sireeSavaiin >.-orgi*. - -R^:-> ....
day. Simper week. W iL It. JoHN>< •>. Pro
prietor. nov2l-NATeltf
£er *au.
•2 2 BAR N A R D
novSO tf
STB i; E T .
\\7HITE CAMELLIAS lor bails and parties.
» ▼ Freob tlaiiy, a: GARDNER'S. » ■ .u
street nov2S St
IT'L’ RID V OR \ N'iEs $ i er hue r.
X 1 GAkD 'JtR'S 23 Bud st:**,-; n .
SECOND-HAND F EN i UEL—The highest
O cash price pa: . f. _
Btoves. Carpets. Bed ing. e:. . NcwaLd-e : {.
hand Fur pure always kept on ban: E*.
pairing and exchanging. Ma;tresaes madt; to
order.
L. REMION,
.. 1-7 Broughton.
Two doors from Jefferson street
nov26-tf
FRUiT OAKES!
T EMON SNAPS.
L< ROCKAWAY fruit.
C< >COANUT DROP CAKE.
GINGER DROPS.
GINGER NUTS.
GINGER SNAPS.
ICED FRUIT.
COMBINATION.
EXCURSION.
Also, a line of PLAIN CRACKERS
BISCUIT. AH fresh.
t. M. & C. W. WEST’S.
nov-25-tf 159 LIBERTY STREET.
CAW MILL FOR SALE, desirably located.
and in running order, with Riving and Shire le
Machines, land and improvements, an 1 all ap-
purcenances c-omple e for ma ufacturing lum
ber and shindies For further information ad
dress or apply to MANNING McCALL, ISO St.
Julian street. Savannah. Ga. n^vlS-ldt
LX)R sale or ex range.
A nice i.uilding laud. .
shade t
ih aqu*durt
ana s*x at. a fi-ii calcs f
Boston, mortgaged <E l -r
at $41,000 Win exchang- ;
and equipments free ana cte".
BUTTERFIELD, Box 1.011,
nort-lm
MACKEREL,&c.
Y7ERY choice large F AT MACKEREL.
▼ Very choice BONELESS CODFISH.
Very choice LOND* >N LAYER RAISINS.
Very choice new CURRANTS.
Very choice new CITRON.
Very choice new NUTS, all kinds.
Very choice Tr^h BUTTER
Very choice FLORIDA ORANGES.
Very choice APPLES.
All at REDUCED PRICES.
BRUCH & COOPER.
Itf
aud Tea Store,
jiov20-N&Teltf
1
139 BROUGHTON STREET.
FLORIDA JEWELRY MADE TO mR ER.
4 Watches, Ckcbs And Jewelry careftu v
fixed at A. L. deSBOUILLON S, S. Bull street
oci2lF3m
pOR SALE Oak. Puie and Light wood, sawed
JL or m stick. Al. orders left at corner
Taylor and Last Broad streets, or dropped in
boxes through town, will receive prompt atten
tion. R B. CASSEL8.
LX1R FALL two LITHOGRAPHIC FREk'&j
T and lot of LITHOGRAPHIC STONES.
v Whitaker street.
2o Sent.
I j^OR RENT, large and ema’l room?, on *ec-
oud and third floors, w.th use of bath *-:c
one room with s.jULhern expo-are; also o" the
premise*, a large and airy S able. Apply u,
uov->-tf
j25 Joins street.
AND AUNG JAVA, O. G. JAVA.
MEXICAN RIO, LAGUAYRA.
MARACAIBO, MOCHA, and selected
RIO COFFEE roasted every day.
Pure TEAS at the lowest prices.
SPICES of all kinds.
novl-tf A. J. MOLONEY.
HAMS, TONGUES
SAUSAGES!
DEST SUGAR CURED HAMS at 1214 cer.ts
1 ' per pound.
FRESH LOT CHOICE TONGU ES, 50 cent*
PHIJ AUEU’HIA BOLOGNA SuSAGE
cents per pound. u
A. C. HARMON & CO.,
noTai -tf 31 WHTTAEER STREET.
Pearl Dress Shirts
81 EACH. BOYS’ 90c. EACH.
JOHN OLIVER’S
Paint and Oil Store.
STEAMBOAT,
RAILROAD AND MILL SUPPLIES,
SASHES, BLINDS,
Doors, Mouldings, &c.
NO. 5 WHITAKER STREET,
ap25-tf Savannah, Ga.
HEUEUMANN & O’NEILL,
138 ST. JULIAN STREET.
We are SOLE AGENTS for the above Shirts,
acknowledged to be the most complete fitting
Shirt s- Id. We invite all in want to call and
examine.
A full assortment of GENTS' 4-PLY LINEN
COLLARS and CUFFS, the best goods made.
I. DASHER & CO.
Saddles, Sariuss, Sc.
IV. R. .WELL & CO.,
(SUCCESSORS TO N. B. KNAPP),
DEALERS Dt
Saddles, Harness, Belting, Etc.,
HARNESS AND SOLE LEATHER,
Calf Skins, Shoe Uppers,
Tranks, Valises & Saddlery Ware,
W ert end Gibbons’ Building Market Square,
sepl7-d£w3m
8AYANNAH, GA
PAINTIN
IN ALL ITS BRANCHES.
G
FRESCO AND SIGN PALMING SPECIALTIES.
oct28 3m
JOHN 0. 11UTLEK
Wholesale and Retail Dealer in
Paints, Oils, Glass, Varnishes, Etc.
A LSO, a full line of WALL PAPERS House,
Sign and Ornamental Painting done with
Qeatness and dispatch, at prices to suit the
times.
NO. 22 DRAYTON STREET, SAVANNAH, GA.
Also, have on hand and for sale the beet qual
ity of GEORGIA LIME in any quantity.
mh25-ly
50
FLOIR, BUCKWHEAT, ETC.
Barrels Ch^ek & Whitlock's E'-tra
Choice FLOUR.
50 Barrels Epnneo*w FLOUR.
00 Barrels Wwera FLOUR, choice brands.
25 Packages BUCKWHEAT, self-raising and
plain. 25 Tabs choice BUT TER.
15 T>oxes MACC4RONI and VERM I CEL LL
FARINA. TAPIOCA, ARROW ROOT, MaR-
QOSIA, MANIOC A. etc., for sale by
nevl9-tf CUNNINGHAM £ HEWES.
BERG 3t CO.,
157 BROUGHTON STREET,
DJtOLZltS L\
Saddles, Harness,
SADDLERY HARDWARE,
Shoe Findings,
LEATHER,
Ms,Satchels,k
WORE MADE To ORDER, AND t-ttpitp
ING NEATLY DONE.
J. H. VOX X E W T O X ,
(Formerly with Gomm 4 Leffleri,
—DEALER Hf—
FAMILY CROCERIES.
'> , fo EI r ESS 9 ODF i' sJf in 5-Ib boxe«, for
D family use; large LABRADOR B* OatVps-
fine PEAKS and GRAPES: new .PRUNE* CTR
RANTS and K-»ISIN>: new NTT?of £l brndV
froeh riteTL-n APDITu T.r, t •‘ID OS.
L OR REN L—I offer for rent the h us - cow
i occupiel by me. No. Hi \- r , i
to November 1, IS:S. Posse- rdon given m tweel
after a PP Uca ^n: s oner if poss.oie.
Kent $.0 per monen.
„ JAMFS HUNTER.
nov ~-* tf 110 B. yacht reel,
KfcNT. desirable Residence, in sou:hern
A part of city. A. p!y to J rs. H. BARER.
Savannah Market, before id o'clock a. *.
noviatf
©durational.
Academy of St Vir ceut de
Conducted by the u MenT
LIBERTY ST., COR ABERCOKN.
T^mionToT- 1 ^ Session is now open. In ad-
given in G ' Free h. instruction 13
Uonsfor 5 rn, “ b - vDR - B. COHtN. AppLca-
oct9 ^^dmlssion may be made now. ■
* •
'tf A £ LE ^ OC P INSTITUTE. Concordville,
hi* Ba-, 20 nuies west of Ptuiadeinhta B*>vs
£0 per quarter: Girls $45. >r ;d-n& prepared
ror business, Yale or Karv_- ; Fight
instructors. . References : Henry Sok n.
pq.. Savannah: (apt. J. W C&tharm- steamer
Juniata. JOSEPH SHORT1J.UG2. A. M . Prin-
rinal
hit2Ht
irrad.
majors brud still
EVERY MORNING.
HOME-MADE BREAD, f
GRAHAM AND RYE.
SS? Cr * Db * r ” ««• Apple Pie..
TAWBA WINE; old SNOW _ -auo-
BREAKFAST ROLLS.
•trictly choice:
ing purposes
old SNOW HILL WHISKY
^LffreMUSTARD OIL. forcookl
: PlG FEET and PIG PORK.
—at thx—
BLTE STORE,
novlJu? Con * ree8 mad 73 St - •J'-ffian street.
RESERVOIR HILLS
Congress and Jefferson Streets,
MANUFACTURE DAILY
CHOICE GRITS AND MEAL,
THE BIST IN THE CITY.
ORDKKS FOR
Grain, Hay, Feed, Fiour, Bacon
Filled with dispatch at lowest market rates, by
seplS-ly ^ L - MEKCEB.
SALT.
Ten Thousand Sacks
For sale by
c. L. gilbekt &
WHOLESALE GROCERS.
Salt.
CO.,
HOTHOMEMADE BRRiD at t»e Bakery
fcVEEr EVENING .1!
AJ1 orders in ■ he bakery line, no matter how
small promptly attended 1
nov26-tf THUS
XUCJFNT. Manager
.firearms. &r.
D01M1 BarreTsit Gins.
sale a w*p ,
,7 ’ °* Bar lock. Fine Twin
Muzzle Loading ''TC m ^
doi ble barrel SHP- , .
at about Otthhalf their orapo. ‘
one wailing a fine Muzzle Le -* oo*t. To any
bargain. W> w * ’ ader. th-sie 1 tins
GUN and rNOUSH i;R- al-o ihe PaBK.E
a general a«ss rimeo»r - £ 'H LOADERS, w-.-ii
Orders lyj zuail wv t artie’e- f>-r sportsmen,
description of Du- .nptiy attended u>. and a
-*s rurm'b-d.
155 B- * LOVELL,
oovlSMip *™»gbton street. Savannah, Ga
noriJfc-tf
COFFEE.
1- BAGS COFFEE.
Per Norwegian bark Hermes, direr, f™, t>-
de Janeiro. Undm^tj fo7£le™“ &
nov26-tf ^EED & OORNWEI.T.
H. W.TILTOX&CO.,
LROCERS
W ISFI “inform the pub'ic that ther are
» » selling CHOICE GROcERIEsTheaTS AS
tha f, W other houT^fjf
rroughton atraet iane.
?aadnii.
MAD ' L °^'“* MC,NG academy,
MASONIC TjE.TIPLE. J
T>ROF. MINOR has arrived sad taxes
A charge of our Dancing Scht^L Houra
of instruction for Misgoi and
fram 3^:joVlTwlcuS.
sens wishing teachers tor schools £ thk enX
try or town* will mA, Uie COMO-
ilesvjaoobs.
LElTlKES I\D SIRtliVs
Her. W. E. ML7\8E Y, D. D.
Cffer ' or »' Fhnlesa -
ah<vir Su/5?**' w^ e a ' x>TH work. It coztaiE>
likenevs Wilix ex ‘ >15eut engraved
i Pnc - (~ r MAiL post paid.
libera! ^top^b^ahldeffiS.
Macon. Ga.
nor2*-3t
glusters, Ac.
0YSTBK8 AN!) JtisH
•ovl6-im niRr, ^ \ 1 BElI>ARIO.
•' - ‘ . Savannah-
try or towns will address as a^ove
Savannah.
novO-Sm
for
PROF J. B. SHERWOOD’S
Waltz and Banee Academy
Vonn s .Hen. 1
c D^prHT.'N^be*? rRi -
S&u 0r |Sti!2d“n,*3 Braughmn^S*
3otirrs.
notice. '
T? McCOY is not authorized to trarsac* anv
, • Susinest for. or collect anv mon**> ' ri,,-
to D. G. ALLEN or ALLEN Jt LINDS' Y /3 dUS
nnriss ->1 ALLgS k L, ->^SAY.
no ~' p - r . D. G Alien
^ LV’JAB. <’ea-ral Hoase Rejting
r and l oUecung gent. No. m Bry an street
Sav-»nnall. Ga.. w-U attend personally to all
give Ids unrii-
vjded attention U> the interests of hi* patrona
*»inS SiSS