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Che IBortring gjetrk
NO. 3 WHITAKER STREET,
(MORNING NF.W8 BUILDING).
J, H. F.vriLL, Proprietor.
W. T. THOMPROS. Editor.
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 18,187».‘
TAPl'INO THE WIKliN.
Yesterday the final splice was made In the
new French cable, the entire circuit was
completed, and America and Europe are in
communication through an additional tele
graphic line.
The New York Sun reports that extensive
frauds have been discovered against the
government at the custom house there.
Customs officers of high degree have been
implicated.
Ex-Governor Seymour was asked yester
day if he had been requested to act as arbi
trator to settle the difficulty between the
New York Democratic factions. He replied
that he had not been approached on the
subject, and that for two years past he had
withdrawn from any participation in politi
cal matters. In his judgment the State Con
vention was the proper body to arbitrate in
such matters.
Yesterday in the three cases of the United
States against Emil Stafford, Adolph Wilt-
man and W. W. Johnson, the United States
Supreme Court decided that the traie mark
laws were unconstitutional and invalid.
The New York longshoremen yesterday
struck for an advance of wages of from 35
cents an hour for day and 40 cents for
night work to 40 cents for day and night
work. The leading stevedores acceded to
the demand.
The two principal competing parties in
the telephone business, the Western Union
and Gold and Stock Companies and the
National Bell Telephone Company, have
settled their difficulties. The Western
Union surrenders all claim to the Bell Com
pany, and the National Bell Telephone
Company agrees to pay a royalty to the
Western Union at agreed rates upon all tele
phones leased or used under its authority,
or manufac tured or sold exclusively for ex
portation.
The cases of the five managers of regis
tration arrested In South Carolina last week
under section 5500 of the United States Re
vised Statutes, were yesterday dismissed on
the ground that the United States Supreme
Court had decided that the act of Congress
on which the statute waa based was uncon
stitutional.
The French beet crop is a failure, and the
price of sugar has sensibly advanced.
The Philadelphia court of inquiry to in
vestigate the collision betweiu the Cham
pion ami the Lady Octavia was contined
yesterday, and the effort was made to prove
that if the Octavia had been stopped a dis
tance of seven feet the disaster would not
have occurred. Captain Johnsou of the
Octavia testified that it was impossible to
do so, and if he had attempted it the steamer
would have struck his ship further aft.
There was no time to ship about.
The Senate sub-committee investigating
the Spoilord-Keliogg case met yesterday at
the St. Charles Hotel, New Orleans. Henry
Howser, night watchman at Kellogg’s house
in 1870, and Lewis T. Garrick testified. The
former stated that the returning board offi
cials visited Kellogg’s bouse frequently aud
told him they were working on the returns.
Tue latter stated that P.G.Desland, Secretary
of State In 1876, hud told him that the Pack
ard Legislature which elected Kellogg had no
quorum. Kellogg objected to this testi
mony, but Senators Hill and Vance decided
that it was admissible. Kellogg will offer
no direct testimony.
There is evidently a plan on foot among
the hostile Utes not to give any information
with regard to the Thornburgh massacre,
and thus to thwart Chief Ouray aud the ob
ject of the commission investigating the
affair. At present the outlook Is not favora
ble for a peaceful solution of affairs, though
Ouray* has informed General Adams that he
will bring the guilty parties to justice, or
die in the attempt.
One night last week Jack and George
Hudson, an I one Bob Layton, attempted to
take possession of the town of B&tesville,
in Arkansas. After a desperate fight they
fled. The two Hudsons were arrested the
next day, but Layton, resisting arrest, was
shot and instantly killed by an officer.
The Readjusters had a grand demonstra
tion over their recent victory at Petersburg,
Virginia, last evening. General William
M&honc, Colonel Win. E. Cameron and
others were introduced from the speakers 1
stand by J. H. Hill, a negro, and spoke in
congratulatory terms of their success.
Resignation of Mr. Seward, Assistant
Secretarr of State.
Assistant Secretary of State Frederic
W. Seward has resigned his office, it
stated, on account of the ill-health of his
wife. “The exit of Mr. Seward from the
State Department at this particular junc
ture/’ remarks the Philadelphia Tele
graph, “is chiefly important because of its
probable bearings on the China mission
scandals, which are tolerably certain
have a rather lively overhauling when
Congress meets. The United States Min
isterto China carries the name of Seward,
and is a relative of the late Assistant
Secretary of State. Whether this rela
tionship had or had not anything to do
with influencing the very peculiar course
of the State Department with respect
to Minister Seward and the other
employes of the State Department in
China, we are, of course, unable to say
with positiveness. One thing is certain
—which is that, in the face of extremely
criminating evidence and in utter defi
ance of decent public opinion, the Slate
Department backed up Minister Seward
and his coadjutors in a fashion which
indicated very plainly in which direction
its sympathies inclined. The advent of
Consul Mosby at his station in China
had the effect of producing another ex
plosion with reference to the doings and
misdoings of the diplomatic represents
tives of the United States in China, and
Consul Mosby’s very plain talk was
promptly followed by attempts on the
part of the State Department to discredit
him and to squelch him. Fortunately
for the nation, however, it happened that
Mosby was one of the sort who could
neither be discredited nor squelched in
connection with a matter of this sort,
and when last heard from he was pre
paring to make the hottest sort of a fight.
It would be interesting to know whether
Mosby’s fighting attitude had anything
to do with the tender of Assistant Secre
tary of State Seward’s resignation just
on the eve of the assembling of Congress.
Mr. John Hay, formerly Private Sec
retary of President Lincoln, has been
appointed to fill the vacancy occasioned
by the resignation of Assistant Secretaiy
Seward.
Mr. Proctor, the eminent English as
tronomer, in a lecture delivered in New
York last Thursday evening, gave his
audience some interesting comparisons
to ait> tbeir comprehension of the size of
the earth and the sun, the difficulty of
calculating the distance between them,
and the extent of the solar system. If
the earth is regarded as a globe of one
inch diameter, the sun should be re
garded as a globe of three yards diarac
ter, and the distance between them 320
yards. The diilieulty of measuring the
distance of the earth from the sun may
he appreciated by supposing it were at
tempted to measure the distance between
these two globes by triangulation from
the smaller one. On the same scale, the
span of the solar system would be about
10£ miles. The illustration was modi
fied substantially thus: Let a one-inch
globe represent the sun, and by this scale
the earth should be represented by a tiny
grain, 1-100 of an inch in diameter, the
distance between them represented by
three yards, and the span of the solar
system ISO yards.
The most sensible comment which we
have yet seen on General Toombs’ late
bombastic dispatch to Chicago is the
following from the New York Herald.
Says that paper:
“We trust that our readers will not be
alarmed by the dispatch sent by Gen.
Toombs to Chicago in reference to ‘the
death of the Union.’ Gen. Toomlis is a
frank, eccentric person, who holds a posi
lion in the South something like Wendell
Phillips in the North—doing what he
pleases, saying what lie pleases, nobody
disliking him and nobody caring particu
larly what his opinions are, except that
they arc frank, fresh, original and gener
ally amusing.
“General Toombs is in no position to
speak for the Southern people on any
subject, and an effort to quote any of his
freaks as an exponent of public opinion
would do the South great injustice.”
Another Steamship Line.—A line of
steamships is about to be established be
tween New York and Palermo. Two
fine vessels, the Washington and the
Florio, are now building on the Clyde
for the enterprise. There will be six
steamers in all, 4,000 tons each, aud
these will be united with the new steam
ers of the Florio Company, in order to
form one line. They will touch at
Genoa, Marseilles and other pons, ac
cording to the demands of business.
They expect to get a large share of the
emigration trade.
Senator Thurman.—It is announced
that a movement is on foot to send Sena
tor Thurman to the House of Represen
tatives from the Columbus (Ohio) dis
trict, where he resides. That district is
now Democratic, and though the new
Republican Legislature will doubtless
geiryrnander the State, it is questionable
if they can change its political character.
Ur Thurman was a member of the
Rouse thirty-four years ago.
- Chicago Deifies at Once Itself and
Grant.”
General Grant’s speech at Chicago, re
marks the Baltimore Su7i, was rather
more tame than the flowery eloquence of
Mayor Harrison and the flaming posters
of the committee of reception which
were stuck upon miles of wall in and
about that enterprising city. In these
posters, printed in colors, Chicago deifies
at once itself and Grant It is proclaimed
to be at least equal to the hub of the
universe, while the ex-President is de
dared to be “the man especially created
by Providence to triumphantly trample
out the most wicked rebellion of the
Christian era, and crush to the earth
those uncompromising traffickers in hu
man flesh in their heinous, unholy and
unpflhlonable crime of attempting to de
stroy the most indulgent government the
sun ever shone upon.” Considering that
this reception was announced to be
non partisan affair, the committee seems
to have drawn it very mild. They call
the guest “The man of destiny—our own
General Grant;” but it is doubtful if
the General will admit the pretension
They announce that preparations of the
most stupendous character have been
completed that Chicago may appear in
her most extravagant holiday attire.
Dispatches from the spot have given us
some indications of this extravagance.
The streets, it is announced, would be
“bedecked beyond expression,” and so,
perhaps, they were. “From Chicago’
housetops will float ten thousand starry
banners,” the posters say, “each and
every flag waving in honor of the illus
trious hero.” Bunting by hundreds of
miles and buncombe by the millions are
also announced—a spectacle, on the
whole “lliat will beggar description.
“Governors of States,” it is added, “dis
tinguished citizens and statesmen, all
striving to render imperishable honors to
the renowned soldier in war and our
respected chief executive in peace.
Ext-ry delegation is expected to bring
band of music.” The bands hive played
What the Radicals Expect as the
Fruits of Dr. Felton's Apostacy.
The Radicals in Washington are in
great glee over Rev. Dr. Felton’s letter.
The Washington Star says: “The letter
of Congressman Felton, of Georgia,
which lias just been published, is omin
ous of a loss of the control of the House
by the Democracy. The Democrats hold
the House of Representatives by a ma
joritv so small that a single vote taken
from them and transferred to the other
side would almost make a tie. It is true
the Republicans and Greenbackers would
have to vote together in order to produce
this result, and that is not very likely to
happen. Should the majority lose an
other vote, the Greenbackers would hold
the balance of power, and that is what the
Democrats have stood in fear of. Such an
opportunity would not be permitted by the
‘third party* to pass through their hands
unimproved. The Greenbackers have
lost nearly all their following, and, no
doubt, they would gladly avail them
selves of anything that promised to give
them a share of patronage. In the or
ganization of the House they were ren-
dered«powerless only because the Demo
crats had votes enough—and just enough
—to get along without them. It is
rumored, now, that Congressman Speer,
of Georgia, will take his stand beside
Mr. Felton, and that Mr. A. H. Stephens
will make the third member who will
hereafter refuse to act and vote with the
Democrats. It is true that the House,
having been already organized, the
Democratic officers cannot be gotten rid
of, but the minor patronage might be
distributed among others than Demo
cratic Congressmen.”
Prince Jerome Bonaparte, who has in
herited the Bonapartist claims, has
suddenly abandoned his expectant atti
tude and begun to agitate. The Prince
announced some time ago that he would
raise no agitation against the republic.
He does not propose this even now, but
announces himself as a candidate for
President under the present constitution.
As this was the very trick by which
Louis Napoleon got himself into power
and overthrew the republic, it has already
aroused suspicion, and Jerome will
probably be invited to cross the border
if he becomes troublesome. The Prince
has been hitherto very poor and always
cramped for want of money; it seems,
however, that he has lately come into
some, for he is now said to be paying it
out liberally to advance his interests.
California may be taken out of the list
of the probable Republican States in
1880. The Democrats and Workingmen
are making arrangements to combine for
the national fight, and they are reason
ably certain to be.perfected. As a proof
of this, Governor Irwin has just ap
pointed William F. White, the late
Workingman’s candidate for Governor,
to the important office of Bank Commis-
The Hudson Hirer Tunnel.
Just five years ago a company began
to sink a shaft at the foot of Fifteenth
street, Jersey City, with intent to bore a
tunnel under the North River to New
York. The first thing the diggers struck
was an injunction; then they struck
another, and h third—in short, the com
pany soon found itself occupied with
tunnelling through a series of law suits.
To the surprise of most persons,
emerged alive from the courts, about a
month ago, with the land damages
assessed on it paid or provided for, and
began on the shaft where it had left off.
Work, day and night, for a few weeks
soon had the hole sixty-five feet deep,
as required, although during the
last twenty-five the inpouring water
had to be pumped out with powerful en
gines. The next great step will be to
sink a like shaft on the New York side,
near the river—though the entrances to
the tunnel proper will of course be a
long distance back from these shafts in
order to get a very gradual descent and
ascent, just as in the case of the pro
longed approaches to the Brooklyn
bridge. Then the work on the tunnel
proper will go on simultaneously under
the river from both shafts, day and
night Exciting much interest when
first broached, this project of a Hudson
river tunnel dropped out of public notice
when it was taken in charge by the
courts. Yet it is quite within the range
of possibility that the tunnel may be
completed within two or three years.
Elder Coggeshall’s withdrawal from
the Mormon Church, four years ago, ex
cited a great deal of interest at the time.
He had been of considerable importance
in the council of Brigham Young, and
was officially damned, with elaborate
ceremonies, after his departure. He now
turns up as an actor in St. Louis. Of
Mormonism he says: “The President
and Council rule with a rod of iron, and
the worshippers are plundered and
robbed by them in the name of religion
while the same name is also used as a
cloak to hide other and more devilish
atrocities.” To the suggestion that such
things were confined to the past, Mr.
Coggeshali replied: “They exist now,
though kept a little quieter than former
ly. At one time the knife and the shot
gun were used, but the day for these
weapons has passed, and now poison is
called into requisition as a means of
getting rid of apostates. As no Gentile
doctor is allowed to attend Mormon pa
tients, the chances of discovery are
small indeed.” He talked still more
wildly of the Nauvoo Legion, the mem
bers of which, he says, are the succes.
sors of the Danitcs as assassins for the
church. Two attempts, he says, have
been made to murder him.
Affairs in Palestine.—Mr. Wilson,
United States Consul at Jerusalem, in a
dispatch to the Department of State re
views at length the present condition and
future prospects of Palestine. Its gov
ernment affairs are iu a state of disor
ganization. Great Britain is pledged be
fore the world, and is pressing upon
Turkey certain reforms which Turkey is
unable to carry out. She has neither
the men nor the means required to sup
port a just and equitable administration.
The future of Turkey is among thoughtful
persons here the question of questions.
The Lord Chief Justice of Cypru3 re
marked recently that Constantinople
must go to the Greek, or it will fall into
the hands of Russia. The reason it his
not been given to the Greek, he said, is
because of the jealousy of the Europeau
powers, and because of the incapacity of
the Greek for so great a trust, not hav
ing yet demonstrated any great adminis
trative ability. The Consul says that
Jericho is dead. Tiberias might as well
be. Damascus is declining. Nazareth
and Bethlehem are improving. Lebanou
is the summer resort of Cyprus people.
The defeated candidates of Tammany
Hall are quarreling among themselves
and making bitter charges in explanation
of the fact that they were not elected.
The candidate for Sheriff, Col. Roberts,
said at the Tammany meeting, the other
night, that the election had ruined him
politically and financially; that he had
been compelled to pay a ruinous assess
ment, and w*as then sold out by associates
on the ticket Similar statements were
made by others, and multeriugs of dis
gust were heard ou all sides. Not even
the presence of John Kelly could restrain
his followers. Indeed, the discontent
was principally directed against the Tam
many chieftain. When he appeared in
the hall he was greeted with very slight
applause, altogether different from the
tumultuous clamor his appearance for
merly called forth, and it was afterwards
explained that even this was produced
by the report that be had come to the
meeting prepared to tender his resigna
tion.
Railway System of Great Britain.
The enormous growth of the railway
system of Great Britain since 1856, when
Robert Stephenson made his report, has.
probably only been excelled by the de
velopment of the same system in the
United States. The money expended on
the system between that date and the
present, in capital, loans and debenture
stock, has been £698,545,454, or about
$3,380,958,545. The total mileage is
17,333 miles, or a length in single line
and mileage of more than 32,000 miles.
There are 12,969 locomotives and 418,322
vehicles of different sorts. The trains
last year traveled 222,376,114 miles *nd
carried 565.000,000 passengers, over and
above the holders of season and
periodical tickets. The number
train miles run is 9,000 times
the length of the equator. To
supply the engines alone with water
would tax the resources of the principal
water works of London. The work done
by the engines is equivalent to that done
by 400,000 horses, each working 3,000
hours per annum, and, if the fuel could
be used as economically as on the pump
ing engines of the Cornwall mines, the
energy resulting would be equivalent to
a million horsejpower. The men em
ployed in connection with this system
exceed 300,000, but it is estimated that
saving in time alone which the great
multitude of passengers are able to make
fully pay’s the wages of this army of em
ployes, the 212,000,000 tons of freight
annually carried representing the actual
profit to the United Kingdom from the
extensions of the enormous system, over
and above its cost.
Horatio Seymour and the Democratic
Nomination for President
Ex-Governor Seymour having been
strongly urged by leading Democratic
journals for the Presidential nomination
in 1880, the Rochester Union says it had
hoped that Mr. Seymour might be in
duccd to again lead the party, “but,
adds, “we now know, beyond the possi
bility of question or doubt, that, for
reasons conclusive to himself, Governor
Seymour will never again appear in pul
lie official life. And we know, further
more, that nothing is more distasteful to
him than the doubt thrown upon his re
peated declarations to this effect by the
mention of his name for office and the
assumption that he may be persuaded to
reconsider his determination and accept
the nomination. These facts are so well
understood in this State that no one
here, and least of all Governor Seymour's
warmest friends and admirers, thinks of
his name in connection with the Presi
dency, save to deplore the impossibility
of his acceptance of it. Democrats and
Democratic journals in other States do
both him and the Democratic party ic
justice by proposing and insisting upon
the impossible by the use of his name.
The Muse of the Boom slobbered all
over herself upon the occasion of Grant’s
reception at Chicago, as witness the fol
lowing choice excerpts from the papers
of that city:
Welcome, Patriot and Hero:
Welcome wells from every heart.
Thou art not another Nero—
Thou art of ourselves a part.
And he bis new-won honors wore.
Like an under garment out of sight;
As only the great and worthy can.
Assumed the plain garb of the con
common man.
In War. a rock firm as Gibraltar—
In Peace, as gentle as a lamb—
Grant never, nerqr’a known to falter
lo crush all Treason and all sham.
All the bells in tower and steeple
Welcome him, the Pride of the People!
And the great guns on the shore
Make fit music for the ear
Of him who ever loved to hear
The loud-mouthed cannon’s mighty roar!
Around the world Ulysses went.
The guest of every continent—
They made our Hero room!
His destiny the friendly Fates
Have woven in their loom!
As a ruler, noble. lofty.
Spurned he all things mean or base.
In the couq' il chamber oft he
Met the foemen face to face.
Made them blush for sake of freedom—
And he*!l make them blush once more.
Raise the boom—we surely need him
To protect us as before.
The Chief of all our Chivalry.
" rivalry—
Before whom fades all rivalry-
statesmen once again
Stands on his native shore to-day amongst his
countrymen.
Anil so on, and so forth. Was it for
this, asks the St. Louis Republican, that
the General braved the perils of every
sea and circumnavigated the globe? lie
has our sympathies in his affliction.
We hear, says the Bridgeport Farmer,
a great deal of Republican rejoicing over
the elections of 1879, but really a survey
t>f the field does not show any sufficient
reason therefor. In California and
Maine, - the Republicans succeeded
through division of the opposition, and
are in a minority in each. In Ohio, with
a full vote, the Republicans secured leas
than four thousand majority, which is
more than accounted for by the bolt of
the hard money Democrats against
Ewing. Pennsylvania, Iowa, Nebraska
and Wisconsin were Republican States,
and the Republicans retained them. So
with the New Jersey and Connecticut
Legislatures. In Massachusetts, the Re
publican majority has retrograded to a
plurality, and in New York the com
bined Robinson and Kelly votes consti
tute a heavy majority and prove the
State Democratic. There may be some
hidden causes for Republican boasting
in these results, but certainly they are
not visible on the surface.
But a few weeks ago the Republicans
were denouncing the Democratic Con
gress as having reduced the revenue be
low the necessary expenditures of the
government. The charge proves to be
falsehood. Not only is the revenue
sufficient to meet expenditures, but it is
large enough to allow Secretary Sher
man to go into Wail street as a heavy
purchaser of United States bonds at a
heavy premium. His pretext is that the
purchased bonds are necessary for the
sinking fund, hut this cannot be true,
for that fund is already charged with
more than its due. It is altogether more
probable that his object 13 to relieve
Wall street from the dangers of a strin
gent money market, made stringent by
crazy specula!ion. Mr. Sherman, it may
be remembered, has heretofore prosti
tuted his power to the service of a certain
clique of Wall street speculators.
Immigration is increasing, and it is a
significant fact that one-fifth of the
arrivals in November weie Englishmen.
The New York Herald thinks Beacons-
field’s remarkable speech about emigre
tion from the United States to Canada
and our inability to maintain our present
rate of production probably failed to
reach them in ti m ^
Lotteries and the Mails.—Post
master General Key has finally decided
that he has power enough, under the
United States statutes, to prevent the
delivery of letters addressed to the mana
gers of lottery concerns, upon the
general ground that they are schemas “to
defraud the public.” All letters so ad
dressed will consequently be detained by
Postmasters and returned to their initial
addresses through the dead letter office.
This order applies more especially to
money order letters and those which are
registered, and the order is made specific
by the fact that the department, in its
order, designates certain firms of lottery
dealers as amongst those employing ficti
tious firm names in the pursuit of their
enterprises.
The Davis Committee of the Senate,
which has been investigating the Treasu
ry accounts, have found, says the New
York Sun, millions improperly entered,
and balances forced to cover up these
fraudulent charges. “Volumes of the
most important accounts are missing,
and it is evident from their connection
with the public loans that they were pur
posely carried off and destroyed to hide
villainy. In some of the existing books
whole pages are torn out, and thejL are
otherwise mutilated, and erasures visible
to the eye, and others to an ordinary
magnifier, may be counted by thousands.
All these charges, this thievery, this mu
tilatiou, aud this destruction, relate to
the most important books and accounts
of the Treasury.”
—re
BY TELEGRAPH.
DR. FELTON’S LETTER.
RADICALS Bi
Grant and the Nicaraguan Canal.
Special Telegram to the Morning Sexes.
Special Telearam to the Momma Sexes.
Washington, November 17.—The letter
of Dr. Felton has created something of a
sensation here. It was calculated to do so.
It was written for sensation. That sticks
oat all over It. The correspondents of Re
publican papers have been enlarging on it,
and predicting that it is but the beginning
of a wholesale desertion from the Demo
cratic ranks. As far as I have been able to
discover, Dr. Felton has not for some time
been considered a Democrat. His course has
not been that of a Democrat. It therefore
seems strange that his “cutting loose” from
the Democratic party altogether should be
heralded as “a fatal blow to the party.’*
Bat politics are made up of lies. Unless
the Radical press of the South can convince
its readers that Felton was a good Demo
crat, who experienced a change of heart,
his letter would be of but little use as
a campaign document. The Grant
folks herald the assertions of Fel
ton as the inaugural of a grand
boom for the demigod or demagogue in the
South. Georgia ever alqcc there was a so-
called Independent movement has been the
Mecca towards which the Republican party
has turned its eyes. Felton’s letter has
intensified their gaze. Some conservative
men go so far as to intimate that there is a
possibility of a political upheaval In the
South for Grant, but the possibility is re
garded even by them as being very remote.
Democrats, however, think nothing of
any Bach possibility. They admit nothing
of the kind. They know that nothing of
the kind is within the range of probability.
There are a certain number of Democrats
here—or men who have been Democrats—
who openly say for Grant, and upon their
•aylags is based all the rot that goes out ot
Washington to the country at large that the
Grant boom is afire in the South. These
men are quoted as “ representative South
ern Democrats.” The truth is, they came
here for offices when the only true party as
sumed ascendancy in the legislative branch
of the government. They were not fit for
any office and didn’t get the bone. They have
developed into bummers, their natural bent.
Soured and dissatisfied, they are now for
Grant or any Republican, and omit no op
portunity of imposing tbeir views upon the
correspondents of Republican papers as “re
presentative Southern Democrats.” Bah!
The subject is disgusting. As stated in
previous dispatches, Mr. Stephens is sup
posed to coincide with the views of Felton.
Emory Speer is also mentioned as of a like
faith. If there is to be a Grant boom, or a
boom for any other Republican in the South,
we at this end of the line are most seriously
inclined, before believing, to hear something
about it from sources other than mere specu
lation based upon what Mr. Felton or any
other of that Ilk may say.
Hayes and the administration have de
cided, If General Grant comes here In the
interest of the Nicaragua canal, as he will
very likely do, to afford him every facility
for prosecuting his work. Any negotiations
that he may desire will be conducted through
the Department of State. If Grant desires
to visit the country iu the interest of this
great work a United States vessel will be
placed at his disposal. Grant, you know, is
T—
THE CHAMPION COLLISION.
Philadelphia, November 17.—The coart
of inquiry continued iu investigation to-day
into the conduct of the officers of the Brit
ish ship OcUvia at the time of the collision
with the steamship Champion. The helms
man of the OcUvia testified that he saw the
steamer’s light before the collision, and did
not change his course, having received no
orders to do so. An effort was then nude
to prove that If the OcUvia had been stop-
toni _.
ped a distance of seven feet the collision
would not have occurred, for then the
steamer would not have struck the OcUvia’s
bowsprit. In this connection Capt. John
son, of the OcUvia; was recalled, and asked
the following question:
Taking into consideration that there was
only about seven feet between where the
steamer struck the ship and where she
would have gone clear, do yon not think
that If yonr chief officer had given orders to
let go your lee fore ana main braces when
he saw the collision Inevitable, the steamer
would have gone clear, with perhaps carry
ing away your jibboom or bowsprit?
Captain Johnson replied that he did not
think it would, and even if his main and
fore braces had been let go, his ship would
have carried its headway some disUnce and
the steamer would have struck her further
aft. There was no time to ship about. The
inquiry was then adjourned for the day.
THE INVESTIGATION OF THE THORNBURGH
MASSACRE.
Los Pinos, November 15, via Liu Cm,
November 17.—Chief Lowawick was ex
amined by the General Adams Commission
yesterday, but seemed disinclined to give
ttuy Information with regard to the massa
cre. There is evidently an agreed plan on
foot among the Indians to furnish no infor
mation of any kind, and by this means to
thwart the wishes of Ouray and the object
of the commission.
At present writing the outlook is not fa
vorable for a peaceable solution of affairs,
and unless there is a decided change on the
part of the Indians and a willingness to tea
tify to facts as they have occurred the com
mission will be compelled to close its labors
and turn the whole matter over to the War
Department. The influence of the hostiles
seems to be in the ascendancy, and they are
evidently controlling the action of the Un-
corapabgre Utes.
Latest, 12 Noon.—Owing to the indisposi
tion of Ouray the commission has ad
journed uutil Monday. Ouray informed
Gen. Adams that he will accomplish the
purpose for which the commission was con
vened, and bring the guilty parties to justice,
if he dies in the attempt.
te attempt.
TRADE MARK LAWS DECLARED UNCONSTITU
TIONAL.
Washington, November 17.—A decision
was rendered in the Supreme Court of the
United States this afternoon in three cases
of the United States agaiust Emil Steffens,
Adolph Wiltman and W. W. Johnsou, In
volving the validity and constitutionality of
the so-called trade mark laws. This court
holds that the statutes here in ques ion es
tablishing a general system of trade mark
registration and prescribing penalties for
violations of its provisions, cannot be up
held either in whole or in part, and must be
declared invalid and unconstitutional.
Under the provisions of the Federal trade
mark law, which the Supreme Court to-day
pronounced unconstitutional, about eight
thousand trade marks have been registered
at the patent office and about two hundred
applications for registry are now pending.
foreign news items.
London, November 17.—A dispatch from
Cabul to the Standard says: “In all forty-
nine Afghans have been hanged for com
plicity in the massacre of the British Em
bassy. It Is reported that trouble Is appre
hended In the Ghuzni country. One Khan
and his brother are inciting insurrection in
Khanistan.”
A dispatch from Vienna to the Times say6:
“ The Archduchess Marie Christine, future
Queen of Spain, officially renounced her
right to the Austrian succession on Satur
day last. The Archduchess will leave here
for Paris to-day.”
A dispatch from Nish to Reuter’s Tele
gram Company 6ays Prince Milan opened
the Skuptscbini on Sunday, the 16th Inst.
READJU9TERS’ DEMONSTRATION IN VIR
GINIA.
Petersburg, Va., November 17.—The
Readjusters bad a grand demonstration
here to-night in honor of their success In
the recent election. Some private resi
dences were handsomely Illuminated. The
procession halted at the centre of the mar-
. . „ . , ... .... . . -et house, where Captain J. H. Hill, col-
going to Cud*, and will very likely accept oredi wu ca]Icd thc BUnd aDd i' ntro _
the vessel, if he decides to visit the route of
the canal proposed. French capitalists have
agreed to subscribe one-third of the amount
necessary to build the canal over the Nica
raguan route if Grant is President of the com
pany. The modern Ulysses is holding this
duced the speakers of the evening. General
Wm. Mali one, Colonel Wm. E. Cameron
and others spoke in congratulatory terms of
their victory.
NORTH CAROLINA COLORED PEOPLE’S EX
POSITION.
Raleigh, N. C. f November 17.—The
open to contingencies. He will work for the 1 colored people’s first Industrial exposition
canal before the Republican Convention J opened to-day. There was a large number
meets, and will accept the Presidency of a
company formed to build It, if he does not {
receive the Republican nomination. That’s |
the situation.
of entries and a good crowd. It will be a
success.
Xim giUs.
FIGHT IN ATLANTA.
BrgK i
One Han Fatally Injured—Tlie Par
ties Arrested.
Bxf Telegraph to the Mamina Sexes.
Atlanta, Ga., November 17.—To day a I
terrible fight took place at the rolling mill I
between four employes about wages. On [
one side was a young man named Harris,
son of A. L. Harris, and David Reid, fore- I
man of the pattern department, and on the
other side were two brothers named Sheats. I
Reid fired several shots at the 8heats brothers |
FILLS
SYMPTOMS OF A
TORPID LIVER.
JjOss °f Appetite, Bowels costive, Pain in
the Hcrui, with a dull nensationin thc bock
pert, Pcin under tho shoulderbls.de, full
ness after eating, with a disinclination to
And this Prince of Heroes and this Pride of Reid fired several shots at the Sheats brothers 1 temper. Low sjnrits/with a foSng cfhav-
witbout effect, when Frank Sheats struck I itg nselected somedut7, Weariness, Diz-
Reid on the head with a scantling, Inflicting
a painful wound. Harris then struck Ed-I ccno:ril7 over tno right cyo, Bestlcssnosa
n I v/itii fitful dreams, highly colored Urine.
ward Sheats ou the head, crushing his skull.
Edward Sheats cannot live. All the parties |
are under arrest.
FATAL ACCIDENT.
IF THESE WARNINGS ART! UNHEEDED,
oCfilGUS DISEASES WILL SOON OE DEVELOPED.
TUTT’S PILLS nro especially adapted to
cut'll CIIWM, 011c done eUccta such a change
of feeling ns to astonish thc sufferer.
CONSTIPATION.
.‘L --.ILL..... ,.--U
gm sUvMi$mntt$r
CA6ES
Canaries, Parrots,
MOCKING BIRDS
BRASS, BRIGHT
METAL,
JAPANNED.
OR
ROUND. SQUARE OR
OBLONG.
Crockery House
novl8-d£wtt
Jas. S. Silva
140 BROUGHTON ST.
For the Hood Children
The undersigned will take an order for a
SET OF ACCOUNT BOOKS
CASH BOOK, JOURNAL,
INDEX,
LEDGER AND
Made of the very best quality of paper, and
the usual
SUPERIOR STYLE
For which bis establishment is noted. The
gross cost of the set of books will bo donated
to the fund for the
Benefit of the Hood Childre
SEND YOUR ORDER TO
GEO. N. NICHOLS
Printer, Binder and Blank Book Manufacturer,
93U BAY STREET.
“FIRST COME FIRST SERVED.”
noviS-lt
Bananas, Coeoannts
1 BARACOA COCOANUTS.
20,000’
7 20,000 fine Florida ORANGES.
200 bunches RED BANANAS.
200 barrels choice APPLES.
For sale cheap by
F. H. WARD & CO
novlS-tf
Bazaar
ILL be opened in the Lecture Rooms of
W 1 Trinity 'Church THIS AFTERNOON,
and continued TO-NIGHT. TO-MORROW AF
TERNOON and EVENING.
An elegant supper and choice refreshments
will be on hand. Tickets 50 cents.
There wilt be a fine display of fancy articles
at reasonable prices.
The object is the benefit of the missionary
fund.
The patronage of the public solicited.
18-21
novl»-2t
WAKTTBD,
Old Copper, Brass and Lead
HIGHEST CASH PRICES PAID BY
COOPER, JONES & CADBURY,
15 North Seventh street, Philadelphia, Pa.
Established 20 years. Correspondence so
licited. nov!8-2Gt
Real Estate Wanted
I N the southern and central portions of the
city. Any one having improved property
rnaser by
or vacant lots to sell may find & purchaser by
giving me a description and tbe price of their
property.
C. H. DORSETT,
novlS-lt 156 Bay street.
Cranberries, Cranberries
I N Barrels, Half Barrels and Quarters, in fine
order, for sale by
HAYWOOD, GAGE & CO.
nov!8-6t
SUNDRIES.
50
CRATES CATAWBA GRAPES, PIG’8
FEET. PIG S HEADS, APPLES, POTA
TOES, ONIONS, CABBAGE, BEETS, TUR
NIPS, CARROTS, ORANGES. LEMONS.
In store and to arrive for sale.
novl8-lt
JOHN LYONS.
REMOVAL.
HAVE removed my DYEING ESTABLISH*
. . MENT to 92J4 Broughton street, two doors
east of old stand..
A continuance of the patronage of the public
is solicited.
nov 18-5t&Tellt CHAS. RATZ.
(Commission ^Herchants.
A Comedian Instantly Killed.
Only w.th regularity of ths bowels am perfect
Leakii bo enjoyed. If the constipation Is
of recent date, a single dote of TUTT’S FILLS
will suffice. but if it has become habiiaal, one
pi!! should lie taken cvuiyn!ght,cradually lessen
ing tho frequency cf tho dose until nregular daily
movement is obtained, which will soon follow.
Bu Telegraph to the Morning Sexes.
Macon, Ga., November 17.—Samuel
Aimes, of Chlllicotbe, Mo., a comedian of
the Globe Comedy Company, was thrown 1 Dr. I. Guy Lewis, 1 niton. Ark., nnym
from a carriage and Instantly killed at Mil- I P£ a fJ ict v ot ** yyars, I prouoc
1 j —in tti # , . , . , . I Tt IT S PILLS the best anti-bilious xuedii
ledgeville. His funeral took place to-day | ever made.'
at the Episcopal Church in Mllledgevllle.
MIDNIGHT TELEGRAMS
THE CHAMPION COLLISION.
Rev. F. R. O»?ooi!, New York, says*
I “I have had Dyspepsia, Weak Stomach and
Nervousness. I never h:ul any medicine to do
any
me fo much good as TUTT’S PILLS,
as pood ns repre>eiited.'*
OEler 35 J»X array Street, New York*
They arc
The SpolTord-Kellogg Investigation.
TUTT’S HAIR. BYE.
INVESTIGATION OF THE THORN
BURGH MASSACRE.
Office 315 W!urr.-.v £ t.. New York.
febl7-Tu.Th.&wiTe)lT
TRADE MARK LAWS DECLARED \
UNCONSTITUTIONAL.
SRillinttg <£ooa$.
Desperadoes Attempt to Capture an
Arkansas Town.
This is not a good year for third par
ties. The Socialists did no better than
the Greenbackers. In Chicago, their
head-centre, their vote almost entirely
disappeared. An examination of the
returns shows that this vote—not a Tory
desirable one—went over almost solidly
to the Republicans.
It is stated by a friend of Senator
Chandler that during the last Presidential
campaign he spent thirty-seven thousand
dollars out of his own pocket, and would
probably have “ seen ” this, and "gone
several thousand better, if he had lived
(ill next year. This is what adds
peculiar poignancy to the general grief
of the Republican party at his decease-
The Hood bale of cotton, which was
recently sold at thc Galveston Cotton
Exchange for the benefit of the orphan
fund, has been shipped to Liverpool to
be resold in London by Ifon. Judah P.
Benjamin in thc interest of the same
charity.
Brooklyn school boys thrashed one of
their teachers within an inch of his life
Tuesday evening, and besieged the oth
ers in the schooutouse, whence they es
caped by some back door or cellar win
dow. A policeman stood by looking on,
bat was afraid to interfere with the diver
sions of the future voters. It was a very
Brooklynish incident.—N. T. Sun.
READJUSTERS’ DEMONSTRATION
IN VIRGINIA.
Fancy Goods!
OBDEB TO THE BRITISH FLEET j
COUNTERMANDED.
Foreign News Items.
FEATHERS, ROVERS,
TUE SPOFFORD-KELLOGC. INVESTIGATION.
New Orleans, November 17.—The Sen
ate subcommittee Investi^atiug the Kel-
logg-Spofford case met at the St. Charles
Hotel to day. Henry Houser, night watch- I
man at Gov. Kellogg’s house in 1876, testi
fied with regard to tbe visits of the return
ing board officials to Kellogg’s house and
to the conversations which he overheard
there. Blanchard B. Jewett visited Kellogg
frequently, and told witness thev were
working on the election returns. The wit
ness admitted he had tried to get a place in
the custom house, and that a friend of his
had written a letter in his name to Senator |
Kellogg threatening to go before the com
mittee and testify unless he got a place,
Lewis F. Garrick testified that a few
months ago F. G. Desland, Secretary of
State in 1876, told him the Legislature that 1
elected Kellogg had no quorum, and that if
he were not a poor man he would make a |
clean breast of the matter. The witness
wrote Senator Gordon what Desland said.
Senator Kellogg objected to the admission
of this evidence, on tbe ground that the
de<
SATINS AND RIBBONS.
A FULL SUPPLY OF
FOR CHILDREN.
Bergmann’s Worsted,
IN ALL SHADES.
Stamping Done to Order.
United States Senate had decided that tbe I
MRS. POWER,
168 BROUGHTON STREET.
_ reopened.
Vance, a majority of the committee, decided
the testimony admissible. Both of thc
above witnesses were called by Spofford.
Kellogg will not offer direct testimony.
POLD ATTEMPT OF DESPERADOES.
Chitting.
Little Rqck, November 17.—One night I
last week Jack and George Hudson and Bob I IjUUIJ
Layton, hailing from Granby, Missouri, and
supposed to have been concerned in a mur
der at Short Creek, Kansas, undertook to
take possession of the town of BatesvlUe,
Arkansas. After a struggle they fled, but
AT THE HEADQUARTERS
CLOTHING!
We are opening Unlay:
TTffNE BLACK CLOTH SUITS.
JU FINE BLACK DIAGONAL SUITS.
BUSINESS SUITS, CHILDREN’S SUITS,
27“ 2thiTtwo HudsonsWer* I and a full line of the KING OF 8HIR18,ad-
were pursued, and the twoHadaons were I ^ the best Shirt' ever offered in the
arrested the next night. Layton was recog- I dty tor the price.
nlzed on the street, and refusing to sorren-1 With a full line of GENTS* FURNISHING
uucu uu uic suvci. auu i ciiuui
der was shot dead by an officer.
FATAL BOILER EXPLOSION.
Columbia, S. C., November 17.—The
boiler of an engine attached to the material
train on the Greenville and Columbia Rail
road exploded torday near Belton, and in
stantly killed the engineer, fireman and an
other man.
ORDER COUNTERMANDED.
GOODS, HAT8, CELLULOID GOODS, etc.
Call and see toy yourself.
B. EEEXDT’S,
noTl7-tf 138 CONGRESS STREET.
NIGHT BELL.
London. November 17.—A dispatch from I
Malta to Reuter’s Telegram Company says: I
“Admiral Hornby yeat&day countermanded I
the order to the fleet to be in readt-1
ness to proceed Raetwaiil in four days.”
C ALLS for medicines wQl be answered at
any boor of the night. Bell on Bull street.
OSCBOLA BUTLER, Bracelet,
novll-tf Boll and Coogrem streets.
500 BUSHELS THOMAS COUNTY RUST
PROOF OATS.
Just received and for sale by
HOLCOMBE & GRADY.
50,000 lbs. 8MOKED C. R. SIDES.
25,000 lbs. DRY SALT BELLIES.
25,000 lbs. DRY 8ALT BACKS.
10,000 lbs. DRY SALT PORK STRIPS.
10,000 lbs. SMOKED SHOULDERS.
5,000 lbs. ARMOUR HAMS.
300 bbla and sacks FLOUR, all grades.
100 sacks COFFEE, different grades.
50 bbls. RED ONIONS.
200 bbls EARLY ROSE and PEERLESS
POTATOES.
BUTTER, CHEESE, SOAP, STARCH and
JANNED G
CANNED GOODS of all kinds.
In store and for sale by
HOLCOMBE & GRADE
OCt2S-Tu£Stf- 2p
Tioltdati (goods.
' 3P-5BK
3tonis«tt*ttts.
SAVANNAH THEATRE.
MONDAY A TUESDAY EYITGS, NOT. IT A 18,
Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Florence,
Under the management of Hr. THOS.
HALL, win appear in tbeir original
and Cameo* personations of
HON. BARD WELL SLOTE
MRS. GENERAL GILFLOKY,
In tbe satirlral Comedy of
The Mighty Dollar.
WEDNESDAY EVENING, NOV. 19,
Supported by the great New York cast,
TICKET OF LEAVE MAN
Mr. W. J. FLORENCE as BOB BRIERLY
Admission SL No extra charge for i
“ nts; Gallery
Family Circle 75 cents;
Can be had at Bren’s.
j SO
nov!7-3t
SAVANNAH
THEATRE
Two Nights Only, Thursday & Friday,
NOVEMBER 80th AND 21sr.
The Frayne-Tiffany Combinatioa
I N the Greatest Dramatic Success of the Da
as played to large and enthusiastic aud
ences m all the principal cities of Europe and
America, entitled a *SI SLOCUM.” The
eminent actor and world-renowned sharp
shooter. Mr. FRANK L FRA YNE: the charm
ing Comedienne and Emotional Actress, Miss
ANNIE WARD TIFFANY, supported by a full
and efficient company. The famous acting
celebrated '*■**
log, “Jack.” Tbe celebrated Black Bear. The
robbing of the overland mail coach—a wonder
ful mechanical construction. Mr. Frayne will
introduce his original and daring shots with a
rifle. Reserved seats $1, at Bren's ticket office.
novl8-Tu,Th&F,3t
jfotsira! 3jnstrmnfnts, &c.
Pianos, Organs, Husk
PROF. C. S. MALLETTE
AT MALLETTE’S VOCAL ACADEMY,
ARMORY HALL,
HPAKES this method of informing his friends
JL and the public that he is agent for the
justly celebrated
WEBER PIANOS, BILLINGS A CO.’S
PIANOS, BAY STATE ORGANS,
and that he keeps a choice assortment of
took:
SHEET and BOOK MUSIC, vocal and instru
mental. A liberal discount allowed to teachers,
schools and seminaries.
Pianos and Organs tuned and repaired.
Old instruments exchanged for new ones.
All orders promptly executed.
Academy open from 8:30 o’clock a. m. to 6:30
P. M. novT-lm
JjuraUurf. &t.
HAVE you SBBIf THOSE
Mammoth Chairs ?
Take a walk around to the corner ot Bull and
Broughton streets and examine the
choice assortment of
Carpets and Furniture
At the salesrooms of
E. A. SCHWARZ «0.
^^LREADY on hand a nice lot of Children's
TOY BUREAUS,
BOOK CASES, BEDSTEADS,
CRIBS, CHAIRS, etc.,
VELOCIPEDES, DOLL CARRIAGES,
BOYS’ WAGONS.
The celebrated SLEEPER, the bert BABY
CARRIAGE in the market, and cheap too.
The GEM FOLDING CARRIAGE.
GEM FOLDING ROCKER and the JEWEL.
FOLDING CHILD’S HIGH CHAIR.
Phaeton and Rocker combined. Three “little
beauties.”
Just received a lot of common BUREAUS,
common BEDSTEAD8 and CHAIRS needed to
fill country orders.
MATTRESSES of all kinds on hand and made
to order.
Kiln dried LIVE GEESE FEATHERS.
SPRING PILLOWS, etc.
Call and see for yourself.
E. A. SCHWARZ & BRO.,
125 AND 127 BROUGHTON STREET.
novil-Tutf
A.* J* MILLER & CO.,
148,150 AND 152 BROUGHTON STREET,
Invite special attention to their
CAM DEPARTMENT!
T\7E flatter ourselves that we can show the
» » finest stock of these goods ever offered
AXME
in the city, embracing AX MINSTER MO-
QUETTES. VELVETS, BODY and TAPESTRY
BRU8SEL8, three pi r and two-ply INGRAINS.
IRU8SEL8, three-ply and two-ply INGRAINS,
HEMPS, etc.
CHINA, COCOA and NAPIER MATTINGS,
for offices and halls
OIL CLOTHS, WINDOW SHADES, LACE
CURTAINS, etc.
UPHOLSTERY GOODS in great variety.
Public Buildings, Offices and Residences
Furnished.
All work promptly attended to and guarav
teed satisfactory.
A BOOKKEEPER Whore
room, with
. T T .^I°°SL ,ri£h or without board n ,r ^'
family* >U p re b SS, i
fany. COMFORT.
-aw
Salary f 10 per month. Address \ h 1
omce. D - *• •-
W ANTED to porch as**, a
right Piano. Address CASH^f 2 ^ to
days, at this office. L • r
nom u a
norlsjj
WANTED, Salesmen to tare —
’J Agencies. Salary and
References required. Truttph^;.!-!
Monroe street, Chicago
Dkeh bottles Wlvmrrr- - ' “
X> CENT apiece for PINT BEEP l.'■
will be paid by „i. •.nihip, Tr !~ .
railroad or steamer. HENRY b
eor.South broad and Je!fcr*.n sts i, ~ IL '
H eirs wasted -tfjcasTXn,:.
person* who lost relative* h,
revolution of 1S35 will hear of *om.r?,. T ' ! -
HOIn*-fi ir ..
cornmanicatinir > T'
HODRjgDIM, care of tih iJofflce. SavLm'
Sost and /ocafl.
L OST. Sunday niitht. betw^-,
O clock, a Gold Locket, w.th t).
M. engraved on black stone’ ‘’* r ’ A
will benaid for the return «if the JL
ARCADE SALOON, corner t: -
Drayton streets. ui
^ ti’>\
fet Srnt.
TO RENT, in a desirable an I cenfr j
A several pleasant unfurnished r.;,‘ 4
all modern convenience - n •
Prmi;^«i
room and option of bounlirg u : *», "■*
retained. Also one delightful
with modern improvement. .. v -
tion of city. Address exr-Ih-.i-v }■■'.-V ’ • *
O. Box Hi. n..vV
T^OR REST, the flat over the Souther- R
1 cOpfaininrernnp'a.w.. i u uctn C
containing four’arge hetlrooe-s ->-< -
small one. Two of the . ..
nished. Pogte»«ion given im
to J. N. JOHNSON. M Bay ; 7 -M7
novlS Tu.TfaJtbif
r JX> RENT, asmail
smai! d-.voiling.
street
Apply at BrongSii
r fX) RENT, the office latch ,, ■ ,
1 ^ Rm Va lOWVI.. • . * * u ‘T
* Bro.. Xo 1J4 Whitaker street „ '
Also, several offices on the sara- ,-i”
moderate. Apply to J. H. Esl I:.; 7. . : :
street. Si rS?
<SOA —STORES IN masonkTtSsv
with modern COOVeniescr - *
^ — »iui ujouem conveniences ' - *7.
at S20 I*-’ r month. Apply to S. i* HjLMli • V
corner Bull and Broughton streets, nor* ,?'
TT'OR RENT, from 1st November ?|,
JL corner Bay and Whitaker streets
to A. G. GUEKAKD.
iPffT
£or £alr.
fJH) MASTERS OF VESSELS -
BOWSPRITS and SMALL MASTS
FOR SALE CHEA
d. c. bacon 4 c«i
« Sir street
B ananas, liaies and tine appi^s .
the fruit vessel at the Ex. ham- I
am selling at very low prices Ti.-v , . • ^
and ripe and must be clc^ - T
call early and select nice fruit at :
than ever offered before. J. H. RHEiA
P ARTIES in want of Grape Vines win r.Ut*
leave their orders this nn-r.tk. i: i -
Se>d. Tulip and Hyacinth Bii:. - _ ; : re
call at TATEM'S Drug St- -re, c> rtirr ft ■ iZ
and Liberty streets. oot:«V
"pOR SALE, a Sloop, just built. flv c
-L tots. Will be sold at a reasonable f
Enquire of J. H. HELMKLN. Ex charge *rurf
foot Bull street.
*PJ ILL'S MANUAL of S.- ial ard
-U. Forms.'' One of the U—t s-Ihrg *
ever made. Agents wanti-d.
96 Fulton street, N. Y.
W.K.5h
n.ffIT-3
TTHDR SALE, several choice Farms. :an>
P small, well adapted for tm< k ran!, !.::; • t
DAVID R. DILLON. 27G Pay street ;. ; i
^LACK WALNUT, WHITE PINE mxUT
PRESS for sale by BACON & BROOKS. Lu
Broad and Liberty street*. not;*
RAGGING
nov4-tf
FOR SALE BY
WALTER A HAST
^OR SALE, a second-hand Earth t . ~m
. . most convenient arti.-!.* where water..
not at hand. Address CLOSET, at this T -
nov6-Th,S£Tut;t
" T'OR SALE, that desirable residence on H-i j
street second door west of Bull j-tix
Apply to ED. F. XEUFVILLE. Ji9 Bay
nov!3-Th,S£Tu6t
fOK SALE, one Portable Engine. : -■*
- - power, and one Stationary Engr.- cl
Boiler, complete, of 10 horse power, and :*
D ‘** ! Engine 30-horse power, fi |
able f
Stationary
sold on reasonable terms by applying to
sepl8-tf McDONoUGH Jt BALLANTYXE.
T’LORIDA JEWELRY. Orm v Caae.-. tic. I
Watches, Spectacles. G- id Pens, etc I
Watches, Clocks and Jewelry careful!? re I
paired at A. L. DESBOCILLON s 1
sepl-4m il Boll saerf
D esirably located real estaten
PRIVATE SALE.—The large frame il*i4 I
ing and three lots. Nos. !. 2. located corns ]
Abercorn and York streets fa ring Ogicthcn* I
square, is offered for sal*-. Apply to GE' 1 |
LAMAR. No. lit Bryan street.
©durational
M rs. sylvanus reed s hoarding and
r
Also, an immense stock of
FURNITURK
Of
the latest designs at LOWER PRICES than
ever have been or ever will be sold again.
Our large elevator offers easy access to any
portion of our iwimtnnth building.
A. 3. MILLER & CO.
octao-tf
(Suns, Sc.
GUNS.
JSE HAVE IN STOCK A LARGE
ASSORTMENT OF
BREECH LOADING GUNS.
MUZZLE LOADING GUNS.
BOYS’ SINGLE GUNa
BREECH LOADING SHELLS.
BREECH LOADING IMPLEMENTS.
HUNTING COATS and SHOES.
HUNTING LEGGINS and BAGK
SMITH A WESSON REVOLVERS.
200 low-priced REVOLVERS.
75,800 METALLIC CARTRIDGES.
Dupont's celebrated GUNPOWDER.
roa SALK LOW BY
PALMER BROTHERS
octis-tf 1« CONGRESS STREET.
CHRISTMAS
—AND—
1ST e w Y ear
WILL SOON BE HERE.
W E have just opened our new and beautiful
^HOUDAY GOODS, selected with great
care from the newest and most elegant styles
of MALACHITE, BOHEMIAN and other ware*,
chiefly from Limoges, France. Some superb
selections from the * *
Baccarat, in Paris.
Come and choose your presents before the
assortment Is broken.
G. M. HEIDT & CO.,
DRUGGISTS.
Cotton Hits.
roo Cotton Ties for Sale.
' /"ENNEDY HOOK and DuBOIK IRON' COT-
i N-IS? at *Sper bundle. Also. ARROW
FIrJ .Kll TIES.
noTl7-W
H. JL COMER * CO.,
110 Bay street.
Breech Loading Gnus,
814 to *300.
Muzzle Loading Guns,
*2 25 to *75.
A FULL stock of
_ a full assortment of
at the Hardware House of
LOADERS, and
•RTING GOODS.
CRAWFORD & LOVELL,
135 BROUGHTON STREET.
jSfamorg, sc.
PiperHeidsieck
CHAMPAGNE.
TWENTY-FIVE BASKETS JUST RECEIVED
AND FOR SALE LOW BY
JAS. McGRATH & CO.,
NO. 17 WHITAKER STREET.
aepflC-tf
W.
M. DAVIDSON,
IXFOKTER AVD PKALKR Dr
Foreign and Domestic Wines,
LIQUORS AND ALES,
158 BBTAK STREET,
OFFERS FOB 8ALE.
J A CASES quarts and pints ST. MARCZAUX,
T" 90 cases quarts and pints CHARLES
FARRE (sole agent). 50 half barrels WM. MAS
SEY & CO.’S CELEBRATED PHILADELPHIA
ALE, *3 50 per cask. Luge stock of GIBSONS
’ERDnSem,
oct&tr
DAY SCHOOL FOR Y< ifM; I-ADIE.S > •
and 8 East 53d street. New York. R-ipw J
October 1. French and German
practically taught. Thorough tn;ai::x:'-
mary. secondary ar d coQrjpate If-partaina I
Singing (solfege}. drawing, paintir-z aai c—
work included. Each popfl receives tL? ptr
sonal care and supervision of Mrs Reed.
oct28-TuAFlm
Atmt Saiircafls.
Coast Line Railroad.
SUBURBAN SCHFDCLE.
^TEEK DAYS—Cara leave city daily « [
Thunderbolt 6:05 and s x. x . ac«lSr. a
Passengers for Schuetzen I'ark take the I- 3
a. x. or 3:35 p. k. cars. ...
Saturday night last cai leaves city d J|
SUNDAYS. —Ca-s leave city 9:V, I
12 n., and EVERY HALF HUl’R:naftere*« |
from 2:30 until 5 p. x.
Last car out 6:35 p. x. _ . . rn -
JOHN S. SETTER^
nov3-tf ■
umi
SCHEDULE.
OUTW’D |
INWARD.
LXAVK LEAVE LEAVE
SAYASSAH. MOJfTO'M KT ISLE «T IK-rT -
3:25 p. m.
•7^0 p. M.
7:33 A. x.
5:03 p. JL
» ;« p * 6r ‘11
SUNDAYS and WEDNESDAYS a I
leave citr 10:25 a. x.: returning. * , |
gomery 12:15 p. x. and Isle of Hope l--*
Arrive city 1 :‘JHl . ...
SATURDAYS a train will Jrav- • '7 ■'j
of Hope only at 10:23 a. e. : return, leave L -
Hope 12:50 p. jr. ,
•Saturday night's Ia«t train l -ave> • ^ I
Monday morning eariv trail, leaves ■ ■
Montgomery only at j vA0 ^
octfc8-tf Superintend^-
MARKET TO LAUHEL
Barnard am> ^ j
Savannah, Ga.. Aujrx-t 5. -
CARS on this road run as f. .k>w*. I
Ten -minute schedule, with four csrr.
tbe week. „ . ,
Five-minute schedule on Saturda.
day afternoons. «6^** I
After 8 o'clock cars will \eare I>~ I
Cemetery at 8:25 and 9.-25 r. k. k xi f I
(corner of Barnard and Congn** t 1
and 10 p. u. All cars run through oh ■
cbee Road extension. Noeri. r
angMfiTeltf F ' '
fflusir grattfLj^
nmi
THE WELL KXOWS
Basso of theltalianOptf*
rf3*i r i
ATELY returned from Italy-
receive a few pupils in \ OC.vl
attention paid to
LANGUAGE.
For further partii
’ Music!
den Si Bates’:
inrssll^l
Iculars see otcaJM^s: r
Store. „—
j»hip gupp
TO SHU’ M AS l ttf''
AM
5JKMX-.. to S’.ipp}v
BEEF and other MEAT. ' .
etc., of the best quality and at
ures. Give me a calL
OCtU-tf
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bo
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Uu
wi]
gla
the
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