Newspaper Page Text
*Thc gtommrj Stews,
NO. 3 WHITAKER STREET,
OIORNING NEWS BUILDING).
.J. I*. ENTILL, Proprietor.
W. X. THOMPSON, Editor.
TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 2*. 1880
NATIONAL DEMOCRATIC TICKET
FOR PRESIDENT:
WINFIELD SCOTT HANCOCK.
FOR VICE PRESIDENT:
HON. WILLIAM H. ENGLISH.
rz a congress:
GEORGE R. BLACK, of Scriven.
STATE BEMOfBlTIC TICKET.
FOR governor:
ALFRED IL COLQUITT.
FOR SECRETARY OF ST AT*:
N. C. BARN'ErT. of Baldwin.
FOR COMPTROLLER GENERAL:
WM. A. WRIGHT, of Richmond.
for treasurer:
D. N. SPEER, of Troup.
FOR attorney general:
CLIFFORD ANDERSON, of Bibb.
for senator :
PETER W. MELDRIM.
COUNTY LEGISLATIVE TICKET.
v,’. s. Basinger,
GEO. N. NICHOLS,
D. C. BACON.
IlPPINh JMJK ttiliW.
The situation on the Montenegrin-Al-
banian frontier grows daily more interesting,
the latest telegrams indicating the dernier
resort to the last argument of nations, gun
powder, to settle the Montenegrin ques
tion. The Sultan still persists in refusing
to order the cession of Dulcigno. the Mon
tenegrins and Albanians are armed ready
for the conflict over this slice of the proud
bird of the East, and await only the word of
Admiral Seymour, in commanding the in
ternational fleet, to precipitate the conflict,
■which,from the present outlook,can have but
one termination, the humiliation of Turkey
and the carrying out the decisions of the
Berlin conference, not only in reference to
Montenegro but al6o the rectification of the
Greek frontier. The combined fleet will not
fire upon Dulcigno in the the event of hos
tilities, but will bombard Maseura and other
fortified positions on the coast. It is stated
that the delay in pushing things to an ex
tremity has been caused by Prince Nikita,
■who i3 either unprepared for an advance or
has had pressure put upon him by Russia.
The Fall River spinners, at a meeting on
Sunday to take into consideration the ad
visabllity of a strike, have agreed to a re
port recommending a strike in all the mills
on the 4tb of October, in case of the pro
posed reduction In wages.
The respective forces of the Albanians
and Montenegrins are estimated—the former
at six thousand men and three field bat
teries, and the latter at seven thousand men.
Rlzi Pasha has ten Turkish battalions near
Dulcigno.
The British schooner Lizzie and Emma.
from Norfolk for Kingston, Jamaica, with
a cargo of shingles, was burned on Satur
day night at Lynn Haven Inlet, on the
coast of Virginia.
The son of a promiuent physician cf
Macon was found unconscious on the side
walk of Broadway, New York, 8und*y
night, suffering from the effects of opium
poisoning from smoking opium cigarettes.
The Queen, mother and daughter at Man
dalay, India, have been discovered iutrlgu
ing with court olllclals, and as a consequence
It is rumored that executions within the
palace have recommenced.
General Phayres’ force at Candahar has
been ordered increased to ten thousand,
which indicates the probability of the gar
rlson remaining there for the next few
mouths.
The Prince of Montenegro has received
official information from the Porte that an
advance on Dulcigno would be regarded as
a declaration of war against Turkey, conse
quently the Prince has notified Admiral
Seymour that he is not prepared to attack
the Albanians, reinforced as they are by the
Turkish regulars and artillery, without the
aid of land troops of the powers.
The steamship Canopus went ashore in a
dense fog on the English coast yesterday.
The passengers remain on board, and if the
weather continues line she will be got afloa*.
The Enon paper mills, at Enon, Ohio,
were destroyed by fire Sunday, and the 106s
Is estimated at thirty-five thousand dollars.
The recent murder of Lord Montmorres,
an Irish landlord, has caused the greatest
excitement in Dublin. A tenant farmer
named 8weeney, who was under notice to
quit, has been arrested and remanded for
trial.
In consequence of the arrival of a French
courier with dispatches at Ragusa, the sail
ing of the allied fleet has been postponed
for forty-eight hours.
The Sultan has issued orders that any
Minister who shall be heard expressing a
contrary opinion to his present policy of re
sistance to the powers, shall be dismissed
and exiled.
Rumors of the prevalence of yellow fever
in Key West are false. There has not been
a case of the fever at that place either this
season or last season.
An indignation meeting against the un-
English foreign policy of the present Minis
try in connection with the naval demonstra
tion will be held in London this week under
Influential auspices.
Judge Withey, before whom the Ten
nessee Railroad cases involving their
liability for a portion of the State debt, was
beard, has decided that the bondholders of
the 8tate have no lien on the railroads,
and has dismissed all the cases.
E. R. Kill&u, a real estate agent at Nor
folk, committed suicide yesterday, as a suc
cessful iheans of ridding himself of financial
troubles. His wife will probably die from
the shock.
The Turkish frigate Bchliememeh lies off
Dulcigno, and will be summoned to with
draw, and In case she offers resistance must
unavoidably be destroyed or sunk.
The Albanians are encamped on Mount
Mozura, where they have five lines of en
trenchments connected by covered ways.
Fifty New York gentlemen connected
with the shipping business of that port,
called on General Hancock yesterday, and
presented an address touching that interest.
General Hancock thanked them for the In
formation contained in the address, but ex
cused himself from a lengthy speech on ac
count of indisposition.
The report of the Auditor of the Post Of
fice Department in reference to the free pos
tal delivery shows a gratifying Increase of
business over last year. The net returns
from the Savannah post office is a fraction
over $29,000.
A report has been received by the Treas
ury Department from the Commander of
the United States Revenue steamer Corwin,
giving an account of the recent cruise of the
steamer in the Arctic Ocean, In search of the
missing whalers and of the exploring steam-
Jeannetie. Nothing has been seen or heard
of either of the missing vessels. The Cor
win went as far north as the 69th degree of
latitude, and was checked from further ad
vance by ice barriers.
The Accrington weaver strike has col
lapsed, and much satisfaction is expressed
thereat. The mills will now continue to run
on full time.
Senator Conkling has written a letter
to a Western editor wherein, says the N.
Y. World, he “develops and insists upon
the doctrine advanced in his speech at
the Academy of Music in this city, that
property and not population should be
the basis of representation. It cannot be
doubted that the friends of Grant, who
have now reduced Mr. Garfield to a con
dition of servitude and who mean to
control henceforth the Republican party,
are bent on forcing this doctrine to the
front." ,
A letter receive^ in Washington from
Senator Wallace, says Pennsylvania is
sure for Hancock, and Sergeant-at-Arms
Bright, of the Senate, who is just back
from Indiana, says the Democrats will
pm away with the State in October.
Conkling's Speech Again.
We have been furnished with an ex
tract from a letter recently written by a
prominent gentleman, and a well known
thinking man, of this city to a friend in
the North, commenting on Conkling's
recent sj>eech in New York city, which
contains many suggestions of exceedingly
great interest. It is as follows: “It (the
speech) is more vigorous than able, and
I cannot doubt that it had a very power
ful effect on an audience unanimously
ready to receive all his statements as
truths, al! his bitterness as justice, all
his declamation as exalted eloquence.
The keynote of bis address—but softly
struck in the war song of the North in
1861, and, though lost in the great strug
gle, still its keynote—was the financial
and commercial supremacy of the North.
His address was therefore thoroughly
adapted to a Northern, and especially
to such a New York, audience. But
if his reasoning had been carried to
its just and ultimate conclusion, it
would have proven (allowing his
assertions to be true, though
many of the leading ones are utterly un
true) that our whole system of confeder
ated government is false and unjust; that
instead of being founded on the rights
of the States and of the people, and to
be administered by them, it should be
founded on the financial and commercial
supremacy of a section—that section the
North and East—and be accordingly ad
ministered."
The writer proceeds at considerable
length to dwell on this position of the
New York Senator, and we regret that
lack of space preaents us from giving
his able views in fulL Enough may
be gathered from the above extract to
show that Conkling, puffed up with
pride at the wealth which the North en
joy?. assumes that the governing class of
this country should be the mouied class,
that in this way there should at once be
established among us an aristocracy of
wealth, and that, therefore, the South,
being the poorer of the two sections,
should forever be under the control and
in the power of the North. It
is needless to say that in this Mr. Conk
ling is entirely in accord with the pnnei
pies of the"Radical party, which has
always labored for the benefit of the rich
against the poor, and to tax the toiling
masses for the aggrandizement and in
crease of the wealth of the favored
few. Its record in Congress generally,
and its financial record especially, amply
bears out this conclusion.
But Mr. Conkling reasons from false
premises. He presents statistics, garbled
to suit his purpose, to prove that what
he says is true, aud that the North is not
nly the wealthiest section of the coun
try, but that it supplies the greater por
tion of the iucome of the government,
and, therefore, being more interested in
the government, should rule £the coun
try. A3 the writer of the letter from
which we make the above extract further
says: “I do not doubt that the value of
Southern exports in a period of sixty
years past would more than double the
value of Northern exports in the same
period; neither do I doubt that the
North was made rich and predominant
by the exporting and purchasing power
of the South in the fust forty years of
the period uamed, and by the contempo
raneous protection given to Northern
productions. ”
Admitting, however, for the sake of
argument, that Mr. Conkling is right in
his statements, there is one material
poini which he entirely overlooks. The
North erueiged from the late war a vic
tor, flushed with success and wealth.
The South was conquered, its resources
completely paralyzed, and not only had
it sacrificed everything to the cause in
which it had engaged, but even its labor
system was entirely destroyed.
Yet, in the short space of
fifteen years—and notwithstanding
that during a considerable portion of that
time it was preyed upon and despoiled
by a horde of Radical vagrants and
thieves, maintained in power at the point
of Federal bayonets during Radical ad
ministrations—she has recuperated so
rapidly that she is fast accumulating
wealth, whiie the four Southern States
of Virginia, Missouri, Kentucky and
Georgia pay almost as much to the govern
ment in the way of internal revenue taxes
as does all of New England combined,
Virginia alone having paid, since the
war, as much as the States of Maine.
New Hampshire, Vermont and Rhode
Island. Y ear by year, too, the South is
rapidly becoming more and more pros
perous, and there is every indication
that in a very few years her cotton, to
bacco, rice and sugar will make her as
wealthy, if not more wealthy than any
other section. It may be, then, that
should the ideas of Mr. Conkling and his
purse-proud Radical sympathizers be
carried out, in another decade the
South, on the score of wealth alone,
will be entitled to absolute supremacy
in the government
There is another suggestion which
grows out of the above, which is alluded
to at length by the writer of the afore
mentioned letter, aud to which we desire,
briefly, to call the attention of the South
ern people. It is this. The wealth of
the North, of which Conkling boasts,
was mostly obtained from the South,
this section, almost from the foundation
of the government, having sent its exj
ports abroad, and then having been
forced to expend its money in the pur
chase of protected articles manufactured
in the North. It is vitally important,
in view of the stand taken by Conkling,
that this money should, hereafter, Le kept
in our own section. The South has
within her own limits facilities lor the
manufacture of all articles she needs, and
it should be the one object of the South
to foster and encourage such enterprises
in her midst. This is a vast subject,
which could, with benefit, be elaborated
upon at great length. We can, however,
only touch upon it hastily at this
time. Let the South but steadily keep it
in view, and in the course of the next
generation, instead of taunting her with
poverty, Mr. Conkling and his fellow
money worshipers will be crooking the
pregnant hinges of their knees to her,
each eager to outvie the other in doing
her homage.
The Demand for Fractional Sil
ver.—The Washington Star of Satur
day says: “The demand for fractional
silver has doubled within the past week.
The demand is principally for quarters,
dimes and half dimes. Much of the sil
ver is sent out in $70 bags, which go
through the mails as registered matter.
This is getting to be quite a popular way
of ordering silver, in places where there
are no backs and distant from the cen
tres where fractional silver accumulates.
Some silver has been sent in this way to
post offices as far distant as Oregon. It
is noticed that in sending orders to the
Treasury, the term fractional tsilver coin
is very frequently construed to include
one, two and three cent pieces and nick
els, but it does not These coins should
be ordered direct from the mint. The
Cashier of the Treasury is now shipping
to various parts of the country, princi-
cipally the South and West, about $25,-
000 in fractional silver daily.”
The Benefits and Evils of the Late
Civil War.
We do not propose to discuss the doc
trine of predestination, but age strength
ens the conviction, by our own expert
ences. that men are unconscious instru
ments in the Divine economy for the
management of the world. Twenty
years ago we were, like Ephraim, “join
ed to our idol"—African slavery. To
day, while not forgetting the wrong and
injustice by which it was brought about,
we are prospering under its abolition
joyfully recognizing our deliverance.
African slavery had its mission, and
that accomplished, was no longer needed
in the scheme for the world’s progress.
Its usefulness gone, it became a stum
bling block in the path, impeding
our material development, progress and
civilization. It had grown, too, to be a
costly possession, drawing heavily upon
the time, energy, and purses of the
comparatively few slave proprietors,
and becoming a barrier to knowl
edge and progress for the non
slaveholding masses — the majority
of the people. We of the South
are more sensible of the advantages of
emancipation than are or can be the citi
zens of the antebellum free States, as we
feel the relief from the burden that was
resting on our shoulders and not pressing
upon theirs. Hence it is that no intelli
gent Southern man would restore
African slavery if he could. We see
that the benefits of emancipation are in
calculable, as it has relieved U9 of
the most expensive labor known to
the civilized world, and thrown wide
open the gates and avenues to other won
derfully valuable resources of wealth
and influence hidden in the bowels of
the earth, and unproductive. We did
not know how rich we were until eman
cipation unlocked the doors of our treas
uries. Materially, then, we regard the
civil war as an advantage to the South
ern States, cvqn at the cost of the blood
and property sacrificed to it.
Being the result of faction the civil
war cultivated, naturally, the ideas that
engendered it, until their baneful effects
impregnated prolifically the minds of the
people, producing the political demoral
ization of the present hour that opposes
the reorganization of the National Demo
cratic party, destroyed by faction in
I860. The honorable obligations of
party, of union, and of unity, are no
longer held sacred. Personality has
taken the place of politics, and our gov
ernmental organization turned into a grab
bag for the public offices. Modesty has
fled in horror, and shameless desire
supplanted high toned ambition. Men
pursue each other on the stump with
personal criminations and recriminations,
instead of m the discussions of political
government, to that degree that the peo
ple are beginning to believe that there is
no longer an honest public man in the
State of Georgia, and that public men
are all thieves of the State or cf the Con
federate funds. In fact, the people are
fast arriving at the conclusion that the
civil war h is resulted unfortunately for
the moral and mental faculties, and that
we are compelled in self-defense to ob
serve Otway’s advice to
Avoid the politic, the factious fool.
The busy, buzzing, talking, harden’d knave:
The quaint smooth rogue, that sins ‘gainst
)i!s reason.
Calls saucy, loud sedition, public zeal:
And mutiny, the dictates of his spirit."
This loss of moral and mental tone is
the great curse, to us, of the civil war—
the legitimate offspring of its parent
faction.
These evils must be checked or
we destroy our influence and interests;
and the only curb severe enough to re
strain and stop them is to determine that
in spite of the factionists we will reor
ganizs the National Democratic party as
it was before the war. To do this, it
will be necessary to support the candi
dates of the party, whatever may be said
of them, on the safe ground that the
nominating committees guarantee their
competency, honor, and honesty, by the
nomination. These nominating execu
tive committees may be open to the
charge of “ring” management, and we
doubt not justly in some cases. But in
the present campaign, when we are
struggling to elect a Democratic Presi
dent and a Democratic Congress, it is
far better to swallow the “ring” as a
minor evil than to endanger the success
of the grander purpose we have in view
by Independentism. We may elect
Hancock, but if we fail in securing a
Democratic Congress we shall have been
trying to lift water with a sieve. We
love our candidate, but we love more
the political principles of which we have
put him forward as the exponent, and
we must not abandon him at the key
point of kiB strength and influence. That
would be treachery to him and treason
to Democracy. After the victory we
shall be in position to reform abuses and
crush out rings.
A current topic of interest is the con
test now going on for the control of the
Western Union Telegraph Company at
the coming annual election. Jay Gould,
who is the head of the opposition Ameri
can Union Company, is seeking to get
proxies for a majority of the stock in
the Western Union, in order to obtain
control of the company, and direct its
management His object in this is said
to be to put an end to the cut-throat
rivalry now existing between the two
companies, and which involves enormous
expenditures on both sides. At the same
time he declares that the American
Union Company does not wish a con
solidation; “that the country is large
enough for both companies, and that the
people will no longer submit to a
monopoly of the telegraph business.”
To outsiders, however, it looks very
much as if the result of Mr. Gould’s cap
ture of the Western Union management
would be a “consolidation,” to all in
tents and purposes, to the end of stop
ping competition and increasing prices.
The widow of President Polk is liviDg
at the old homestead in Nashville, and is
remarkably vivacious for her age. She
likes to talk about the career of her hus
band, and recently said : “My life has
been singularly free from sorrow and
disappointment The administration of
my husband was a success, and he re
tired from office enjoying the respect
and confidence of his countrymen. It is
natural, therefore, for me to dwell with
fondness upon every incident or circum
stance that recalls the happy past”
“The South,” says the Philadelphia
Bulletin, “has cheated the Federal Gov
ernment out of about four million dol
lars in whisky taxes.” If that is true
(there is no evidence of it) it does not
equal by a million of dollars what the
Republican whisky ring, organized by
Republican officials and Grant’s private
secretary, stole from the government in
about two years.
Judging by an editorial in theCincinnati
Gazette, the Republican leaders there are
not entirely sanguine of their ability to
carry Ohio in October. The Gazette
gives warning that the Democrats are at
work in earnest, and that the Republi
cans must stir themselves if they would
escape defeat.
The Presidential Canvass.
There is, says the Bridgeport Farmer,
one point connected with the contest
which may have escaped attention, viz.
the relative decency of the two cam
paigns. From the commencement, the
Democratic campaign has been carried
on with becoming moderation, and with
out abuse of opposing candidates. Not
one false charge has been brought against
Mr. Garfield or Mr. Arthur, and indeed
none at all, except such as have been ex
traded from the columns of Republican
papers and official records. There have
been no forgeries of dispatches or let
ters, and no mi^epresentation of the
utterances of Republican leaders. No false
issues have been raised. In brief, the
Democratic campaign has been one of
moderation and decency, and has ap
pealed solely to the reason and the good
judgment of the people. No other
policy would have befitted the majority
party of the republic. The Republican
campaign, we regret to say, has not been
similarly conducted. It commenced
with unfounded attacks upon General
Hancock, which policy was only aban
doned when the managers found they
were literally driving the ex-soldiers to
the General’s support. Then the cam
paign was turned against Mr. English,
and the organs are still pushing charges
against him which have been conclu
sively refuted. In the last week of
August was commenced a series of at
tacks upon the Democratic party, with
such materials as the gross misrepresen
tation of the Hampton speech, the forged
Beltzhoover letter, etc., and this attack
still continues. Finally, the organs have
taken up, and are still endeavoring to
concentrate public attention upon, a
batch of bugaboos and bogus issues
“war claims,” “free trade,” etc. What
will be added to this disgraceful list in
the ensuing weeks before the election
cannot be foretold. But the record, as
it stands,, should be sufficient to con
demn the Republican campaign in the
minds of all respectable men.
A Change of Republican Tactics
Necessary.
Some of the Republican organs are
slightly changing their tone. Finding
that the majority of the people canuot be
made to believe that another rebellion is
brewing, they advise a change of tactics.
The New York Graphic, for instance,
says:
“The moral of Maine is that with Gen
eral Hancock at the head of the National
Democratic ticket, the cry of a solid
South and rebel claims is by no means as
effective as it would otherwise be. The
Republican leaders had better change
their tactics and insist more upon busi
ness topics, currency, tariff and the re
funding of the high interest bonds.
There is more hope in following Secreta
ry Sherman’s method of discussing the
issues between the two parties than
in following those of the untamed
orators who declaim about a new
war and the issues being now the
same as they were sixteen years ago.
Though the Republicans have lost an
outpost, they have not lost the battle.
And, if the* had, there is time to win
another. But, in order to do so, they
must organize their army at once for a
severe struggle. They have no dress
parade before them. Whatever they
win can only be obtained as the result of
strenuous efforts. Talks at fairs and re
uuions are good enough in their way,
but Ohio and Indiana can not be carried
in October by such methods alone, nor
can 185 electoral votes be obtained in
November by them. ”
This is reasonable advice, but the Re
publican leaders will not heed it, because
nine tenths of them are howling Stal
warts, whose hatred of the Southern
people destroys their reason and patriot
ism.
About Indiana, Ohio and New Harnp
shire.
The Washington Star (Ind. Rep.) says
“The interest in the Maine election is
dwindling, and all eyes now turn to
Indiana. The Republicans claim that
Indiana will be carried by them in Octo
ber, and to fortify this claim have the
assurance of some of the shrewdest lead
era now in the State. It is alleged that
there is a good deal of discord among
the Indiana Democratic leaders, and that
with a view to patch up a truce Senator
Barnum has made several unsuccessful
trips to Indianapolis. On the other
hand, the Democrats are even more con
fident. They count largely on the fact
Jjmt Indiana is a Democratic State, and
with the bulge the Maine election has
given the cause it is hardly in the raDge
of probability that the State will slip
away from her Democratic moorings. As
to Ohio, there is also a deal of Demo
cratic confidence. Leaders like Thur
man, Thompson and Hurd have en
couraged the hope that Ohio can be
carried for the Democracy if an energetic
canvass is made.
“In New Hampshire the Democrats do
not abandon hope. If Indiana goes
Democratic in October it is said t'iat
Frank Jones, the Democratic nominee
for Governor, will put his money in the
campaign and make a vigorous fight
otherwise, he will not.”
Circulating the Documents.—The
Democratic Congressional Committee is
now sending out tons of documents
daily, Among the more important
documents circulated are the speeches
of Joseph Pulitzer, in German, delivered
at Indianapolis; the speech of General
Ewing on the army bill, made in the
House on April 13th; ex-Senator Turn
bull’s speech at Belleville, Ill.; Senator
Bayard’9 speech on the deputy marshals’
bill; Senator Davis’ report on Treasury
bankruptcy. There is also being circu
lated a list of the men (vide the circular)
Hayes had paid who made him Presi
dent; the report of Senator Wallace on
the socalled New England election
frauds; a pamphlet showing alleged ex
travagance in the expenses of the White
House; extract from a recent speech de
livered by ex-Governor Hendricks at
Indianapolis; a list of alleged small
9teals helped along by Garfield; General
Butler’s Fanuiel Hall speech, and copies
of Harper's Weekly of March 15th, 1878,
which has a cartoon of Nast showing
Columbia in the attitude of denouncing
all the public servants who had anything
to do with the Credit Mobilier scandal.
The Ministeral crisis in Franc *, pro
duced by differences in the Cabinet on
the question of the enforcement of the
religious decrees, has been tided over
temporarily by the appointment of new
Ministers to replace those who resigned
with Premier de Freycinet. Thus far the
victory of the Gambettists has been com
plete. It is expected that the whole
question will be reopened when the As
sembly again convenes. Until then the
Gambetta party will have their own
way, nor is it probable that they will be
defeated when the Assembly meets. The
position they have taken is the popular
one in France just now, and the influ
ence of Gambetta, joined to the popular
will, may be relied on to secure a steady
majority in support of the Ministry as
now constituted, upon the question of
religious decrees at least.
New York’s Summer Pleasures.—A
New York journal sums up the cost of
summer pleasures to the citizens of that
busy town, and shows that Coney Island
alone has taken in $11,000,000 during
the season. This represented 4.500,000
visitors, and an expenditure of $2 45
per capita. The total number of visitors
at Coney Island, Long Branch, High
lands, Rockaway, Long Beach, Glen
Island and Fort Lee is summed up at a
grand total of 7,950,000, and their ex
penditures, outside of transportation, at
$14,752,000. To carry them the round
trips cost $3,972,500 more, it is also es
timated that several millions were con
sumed in excursions to remoter places.
A large proportion of the visitors to
Coney Island and other adjacent spots,
however, were transient sojourners in
New York.
Conkling’s speech is the most dam
aging blow to his own party yet deliver
ed. No Democrat has yet so well dem
onstrated the Republican hatred of the
Union and incapacity for government as
has Mr. Conkling. The Boston Post
begs Lord Gobbler to hurry up and re
peat his speech in Ohio, where it will do
more to aid the Democracy than all the
campaign documents that have been
sent out by the Congressional Commit
tee.
Standard Dollars. — During last
week the Treasury issued on orders re
ceived therefore 640,992 standard silver
dollars. During the corresponding week
last year but 297,489 standard silver dol
lars went out
How They View It in Washington
The Washington Star (Independent
Republican) says: “The divided Demo
cratic pai ty of Georgia finds its difficul
ties increasing as the election draws
nearer. The leaders of both factions have
labored to keep the Presidential question
out of and above the State muddle, but
an indiscreet Hancock elector named
Akin has upset this programme by pitch
ing into Governor Colquitt. Instead of
confining himself to the national issues,
Akin let the Presidency drop and en
tered upon the Gubernatorial question.
His abuse of Colquitt has created a good
deal of feeling, and he is admonished
that unless he stops it he will have to re
tire from the electoral ticket Of course
the Norwood men defend and champion
Akin, and thus was a quarrel
between the two factions, involving the
Presidential electors, inaugurated. The
threatened outbreak has been averted, at
least for the present, but it is plain that
the Georgia Democrats are not in a good
humor. Each faction is carrying an
imaginary chip on tfie shoulder and defy
ing the other to knock it off. If it is
knocked off there will be war.”
The supporters of Garfield and Arthur
will delude themselves if they indulge
any hopes or take any comfort from the
present division among Georgia Demo
crats. The bolters m our late State Con
vention have spread discord and confu
sion in the ranks of the party which may
hereafter work serious evil, but the Presi
dential election will not be affected
by it, even if it should result in giving
us a mixed Legislature, and in the loss
of a Congressional district or two. The
organized Democracy will elect Gov
ernor Colquitt, and in November Geor
gia will be solid for Hancock and Eng
lish. By that time it is to be hoped that
the leaders of the Independent move
ment, rebuked by defeat, will be satisfied
with their experiences, and repent them
selves of their folly.
A New Remedy for Profanity.
David SwiDg. in the Alliance, tells
how a bride reformed her profane hus
band. She invited her bridesmaids, four
in number, to a quiet dinner. As the}'
knew of the profane habits of the groom,
and also knew of his good qualities—
that he was a man worth saving—they
entered gladly into the proposed comedy.
The plan was that all these beautiful
women should use profane words at the
table, as the hot coffee, or hot weather,
or slow servants might afford oppor
tunity. It was a bold plan, but
it is said to have cured the wick
ed husband, for when his elegant
wife applied a profane term to the
biscuit, and a fair guest made a like re
mark of the coffee, and still another ap
plied a profane expletive to the move
ments of a servant, the husband absolutely
cried with remorse that he had ever him
self used such an outrageous form of
speech. Professor Swing thinks that
“while such a cure cannot be justified,
because it might kill the ladies without
curing the masculine offender, yet the
story itself may serve to show that man
as an animal that swears is a mournful
curiosity.”
Female suffrage is not provided for by
the laws of Maine and Vermont, but if
the spinsters do not vote how can the
returns from those States be accounted
for? Vermont recently cast 70,820 votes.
The population of the State, as shown
by the late census, is only 334,445.
Maine did even better. It Las just cast
148,000 votes. The population is 639,
092. One vote to four persons may be
regarded as indicating much interest in
the issues of the day, especially when it
is remembered that the women of voting
age in Maine largely outnumber the
men. Some people will persist in think
ing, however, that so full a vote indi
cates fraud. Who were the beneficiaries
of the fraud may be inferred from the
fact that the Republicans controlled the
polls and had all the machinery in their
hands.
Fusion in Maine seems to be practi
cally accomplished. The defection of
Solon Chase and a few other Green
backers, in response to the Republican
wish, is not material to the situation.
The same persons, aided by Mr. Weaver,
exerted themselves to defeat General
Plaisted, and are likely to have no better
success in November than they did at
the late election. It seems assured that
Maine will give three doctoral votes to
Hancock. They will not probably be
needed, and will be chiefly valuable as a
proof that one more Republican strong
hold has been effectually broken up.
Three able St Louis lawyers, Krum,
Brodhead and Phillips, have studied the
question of Indians’ rights in the Indian
Territory, and they agree in an opinion
that all the land is open to pre emption.
They hold that, as the territory was ac
quired by purchase from France, and
not from the Indian tribes, the title to
the part now occupied by Indians
has never been relinquished by the gov
ernment. They get over the treaty point
by maintaining that the President has no
power to dispose of public land in that
manner. It is understood that an exten
sive invasion by whites is contemplated
on the basis of this unofficial report.
The Cry is Still They Come.—The
Bureau of Statistics reports the arrival
of 50,508 immigrants to this country
during the month of August. Of this
number there were from England, 6,239;
Scotland, 1,737; Wales, 77; Ireland,
6,157; Germany, 11,918; Austria, 1,235;
Sweden, 3,003; Norway, 1,677; Denmark,
492; France, 412; Switzerland, 650;
Spain, 49; Portugal, 49; Holland, 281;
Belgium, 151; Italy, 624; Russia, 576;
Poland. 204; Finland, 37; Hungary, 487;
Dominion of Canada, 13,506; China, 396;
Cuba, 111; all other, 436.
It is said that Major Walsh, of the
mounted police of Canada, has secured
Sitting Bull for three years for a compa
ny of Canadians, who propose making a
tour of the United States and Canada
with him, beginning on the 1st of Janu
ary. He will appear in a border life
drama.
First Congressional District—Col
Black's Appointments.
The Hon. George R. Black, Democratic nomi
nee for the Forty-seventh Congress, will ad
dress the people of this district at the follow
ing times and places. Wherever it was practi
cable he has conformed to the appointments
heretofore made by Mr. Brad well. Democratic
elector for the First Congressional district:
Appling county, at Baxley Tuesday. Septem-
McIntosh county, at Darien Wednesday. Sep
tember 2?.
Echols county, at Statesville Friday. Octo
ber 1.
Clinch county, at DuPont Saturday. Octo
ber 2.
Pierce county, at Blackshear Monday, Octo
ber 4.
Bryan county, at Ell&rbee's store Tuesday
October 5.
Glynn county, at Brunswick Saturday. Octo
ber 9.
Ware countv, at Waycross Monday, Octo
ber 11.
Camden county, at St. Mary 's Tuesday, Oc
tober 12.
Charlton county, at Centre village Thursday,
October 1*.
Liberty county, at Hinesviiie Saturday-, Octo
ber 16.
Emanuel county, at Swainsboro Monday,
October 18.
Tatnall county, at Beidsville Wednesday,
October 20.
Bulloch county, at Statesboro Thursday. Oc
tober 21.
Scriven count}-, at Sylvania Friday, Octo
ber^.
Effingham county, at Springfield Monday,
October 25.
Burke county, at Waynesboro Wednesday.
October 27.
Chatham county, at Savannah Thursday,
October 28.
APPOINTMENTS OP S. D. BRAD-
WELL.
8. D. Bradweil, Democratic elector for the
First district, will address the citizens as fol
lows:
McIntosh county, at D&rien, Wednesday,
September 29.
Pierce county, at Black shear, Monday, Octo
ber 4.
Glynn county, at Brunswick, Saturday, Octo
ber 9.
Camden county, at St. Mary’s, Tuesday, Oc
tober 12.
Charlton county, at Centre Village, Thursday,
October 14.
Burke county, at Waynesboro, Monday, Oc
tober 18.
Emanuel county, at Swainsboro, Wednesday,
October 20.
Scriven county, at Sylvania, Friday, Octo
ber 22
Effingham county, at Springfield, Monday,
October 25.
Bulloch county, at Statesboro, Wednesddy
October 27.
Chatham county, at Savannah, Friday, Octo
ber 29.
Bryan county, at court house, Monday,
November 1.
Democratic papers in the district will please
copy.
Mr. J. Clephane, now living in Wash
ington, D. C., at the age of ninety years,
and the oldest resident of the capital, as
sisted as a compositor in setting up the
first editions of Waverly, and also read
proof with Sir Walter Scott. He came
to this country in 1817, and was for
many years employed on the National
Intelligencer.
Beautlflers.
Ladies, you cannot make fair skin, rosy
cheeks and sparkling eyes with all the cos
metics of France, or beantlfiers of the
world, while in poor health, and not’ ing
will eive you 6uch good health, strength,
buoyant *»plrits and beauty as Hop Bitters.
A trial is certain proof. See another
column.
A man asleep at the top of a telegraph
pole wa3 a recent spectacle in Boston,
lie was a drunken repairer, who had
grown drowsy at his work. A great
crowd gathered, but nothing was done to
arouse hinc, and he finally awoke in
safety.
iUic AtUrertlsemrnts.
THREE REMEDIES IN ONE,
In all disorders—mild, acute or chronic—
Keep up the strength and keep the bowels
free:
Give a corrective, laxative and tonic,
In one pure medium that combines the three.
Seltzer Aperient is that medium glorious;
It tones, refreshes, regulates, sustains.
And o’er disease for thirty years victorious.
The world’s we’l-founded confidence retains.
Tarrant's Effervescent Seltzer A pianvr-
FOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS.
sep23-Tu&F2w
Sesqui-Centennial Celebration
—AND—
PIMLICO RACES
—AT—
BALTIMORE.
Special Excursion Rate $20.
T HE M. & M. T. Co. are prepared tc issue
round trip tickets at £20 each, including
meals and stateroom berth, to parties visiting
the celebration of the 150th anniversary of the
founding of Baltimore.
Tickets at the above named rate good by
steamers sailing from Savannah on the 9th,
14th and 19th October, and returning by steam
ers from Baltimore on the 14th, 19th and 25th
October.
JAS. B. WE8T & CO.. Agents.
sep28 2w H4 Bay street.
1 8 almost as good as French China, and the
shapes are equally as good. Keep a full
line always on hand.
GEM AND MASON’8 IMPROVED
FRUIT JARS.
A FULL LINE OF
House Forum Hoods
ALWAYS ON HAND.
&. W. ALLEN,
165 AND 16514 BROUGHTON STREET.
sep28-tf
ELECTION TICKETS.
NORWOOD or COLQUITT.
E LECTION Tickets for Norwood or Colquitt,
1 or any other man. printed at NICHOLS’
JNTING HOUSE at the following
iny other
8TEAM PRINTIN'
prices:
1,000 92 1 2,000.... S3
3,000 4 | 4,000 5
Orders to be for not less than 1,000. Changes
25c. extra each change. Send in your orders at
once. Cash to accompany the order.
sepzS-lt
GEO. N. NICHOLS,
93^4 Bay street.
miss McIntosh
Will reopen her
SCHOOL
On the FIRST MONDAY IN OCTOBER,
At 97 South Broad street, between Drayton and
Abercorn. sep2&-Tu£S2t
T. M. ROACHE,
Boot and Shoe Maker,
H AS reopened at his old stand, 8t. Julian
street, between Whitaker street and
Johnson square. Is prepared to do any kind
of work in the boot and shoe line at reasona
ble prices. All work guaranteed. sepfiMt
Deutenhoff's Fever King Pills
THE KING OF FEVER MEDICINES, MADE
AND FOR SALE BY
sepl5-if
G. M. HEIDT & CO.
LUID EXTRACT COCOA
IN STORE AND FOR SALE BY
G. M. HEIDT & CO.
aepl&-tf
Urw Afirmisronus.
ENTERPRISE MILLS.
GRITS. JEIL. FEED, SRAM,
HAT MB PROVISIONS.
MILL, AND ELEVATOR,
S., F. & W. R’y Depot,
OFFICE 109 BAY STREET,
Next Express Office,
sep2S-tf
PROPRIETORS.
HEADQUARTERS FOR
DOMESTIC FRUITS AND VEGETABLES.
10,000 Florida Oranges, 400 bbla. selected Apples, 300 bbls.
Early Rose, Snow Flake and Peerless Potatoes, 50 bbls. Cab
bages, 50 bbls. Onions, 30 baskets choice Grapes, Hay, Corn,
Oats, Bran, Peas, Rice, Rice Flour, Grits and Meal, Seed Rye
and Rust Proof Oats, for sale at lowest prices by
sep2*-lt
T. F. BOND,
151 1-2, 153 and 155 Bay «treet.
3r»fftry.
GOLD WVTCHES.
SILVER WATCHES.
diamond rings.
DIAMOND EARRINGS.
GOLD FINGER RINGS.
GOLD NECKLACES.
GOLD LOCKETS.
SPECTACLES.
CLOCKS.
OPERA GLASSES.
M, Sternberg,
24 BARNARD STREET,
SAVANNAH, - - GEORGIA.
STERLING SILVERWARE.
GOLD HEADED CANES.
SILVER PLATED WARE.
GOLD CHAIN BRACELETS.
GOLD BAND BRACELETS.
GOLD SLEEVE BUTTONS.
GOLD STUDS.
GOLD CHAIN8.
GOLD EARRINGS.
GOLD 8ETS.
sep24-tf
(Srormrs.
FRED. AX. HULL,
WHOLESALE GROCER and Dealer is HAY and DRAIN,
87 BAY STREET, SAVANNAH, GA.
Agent for the HAZARD POWDER COMPANY.
Orders intrusted to me shall have careful attention, and filled at the lowest market price the
day they are received. I respectfully ask for your patronage. sep4-tf
fry <8oo&$, &t.
3-Button Kid Gloves at 50c.
Excellent quality, latest shades, fresh stock.
3-Button Kid Gloves at 75e.
None better, equal to the most celebrated
makes, select shades.
4-Buttoo Kid Gloves at $1.
Whoever buys these once will always buy
them.
CLICK KID GLOVES.
2-Buttons 50c.
3-Buttons 75c.
4-Buttons $1.
Opera Slades Kid Gloves.
2-Buttons at 50c. They are equal to any 91
Kid.
BEAR IN MIND
We offer genuine KID GLOVES at these
jrices, and not Sheep Skin Gloves, of which
be markets are filled, and which are usually
sold as Kid Gloves.
Silk and Lace Ties.
J ust received, tasty goods at popular prices.
White Shetland Shawls
AT 75 CENT8 EACH,
WILL BE OPENED THIS WEEK.
These are the same goods we sold a few
weeks ago at that price and had such a big
run on. This is the last lot we shill have at
this price, unless something will occur in
course of tune of which we are not aware
now.
Amusmrntis.
HDSIG at BATTERY PARK
THE GUARDS BAND
WILL GIVE A
Concert This Afternoon
FROM 4 TO G:30 O’CLOCK.
Cars leave the Market every eight minutes.
Extra cars at dusk to accommodate those
who desire to wait until the end of Concert.
Dancing and refreshments as usual.
F. VAN WAGENEN.
auglft-Tu&Ftf Supt. B. £ A. St. R R.
*Faatrd
TV ANTED, on the 1st November, by % -...T
▼ t manent tenant, five unfurnished room.
in a pleasant location, or a suitable 7.
moderate rent. Address stating t*rn,
location) TENANT. News office. *ec-2stf
W
- ANTED, an office lad. from L5 to u .....
.» of age. Must bring testimonial fcha.
acter, etc. Apply at the office of tile SaraSun
Cotton Press Association, ~ septet
*.”*!,*- ODt ' ’ rho has been in a
’ ’ German family preferred KeieTe'«a
required Apply at HI Broughton afreet "
sep-b-2t
TV a furnished room for two gentle -
▼ ▼ men. convenient to Bay street. «7777
GENTLEMEN. News office.
H eir* wanted -texas land^tit
persons who lost relatives in the Texaa
revolution of 1336 will bear of something to S3!
advantage by communicating withCARLX
BOnSLEOURtf, care of this office. Savannah, Qa.
fox 5fut.
C'OR RENT, from first November next, raat-
I ern tenement, corner Lincoln and
Julian streets. Caarel Row. Apply to H J
THOMASSON, Real Estate Agent nz offi^
James Hunter. UP Bryan street. Sm——■
F OB RENT, three rooms, with modern im
provements. Apply at 11 Brought&n
street. sep2h-tf
I JOOMS TO RENT, large and Knell, with -r
k without board. Address W. B. H.. at thi.«
office - sep28 It
F°l
•R RENT OR SALE, a large house on Bol
ton street, next to the corner of Barnard
two stories on an English Vnsement and all
modern improvements: possession given the
1st of November. Apply at 99 Bay street.
nep2S-Tel£Ntf
J ( X)R RENT, offices and rooms in Sorrel
Building, corner Bay and Bull street*. Ap
ply to W. W. MACKALL. Jr . No. 108 Bryan
aep2l-Tu.ThAS2w
TO RENT, southern tenement of the Guards
1 Building, on Bull street, corner of York
lane, from Is: October. C. O. FALUGAST
General Insurance and Real Estate Agent. 104
Bay street. aep23-6t
TO RENT, furnished or unfurnished, .erooii
1 floor, four rooms; also two south rooms.
All in fine order. New set Walnut Marble top
Furniture for sale low. 151 Jo nee. near Whita
ker aep7-tf
j^X)R RENT, the Fair Grounds, now under
lease to Messrs. Drayton £ Thomas. Pos
session given January 1st. 1S8L Condition*
made known on application to
J. H.E8TILL.
Secretary Agricultural and Mechanical Associa
tion of Georgia. augiu-tf
for SaU.
OTRANGER to Policeman—Where, oh. where
O i* Tatem s Drug >torer I want to get my
-irescription propeny prepare 1. Policeman —
'atem’s Drrg Store is on the corner of Whita
ker and Liberty streets. It is just the place
you want, as bis medicines are pure and of the
right strength, and none but competent drug-
gists are employed sep2b-U
TT'OR SALE. —A very desirable and well
U known Barroom can be bought cheap.
Address CASH, Morning News office.
jaepgfi-lt
t jX>RSALE, a covered Spring Wrgou, nearly
new. longer than ordinary’ wagon*. lightly
built, with harness. Apply at 62 State street.
*ep28-tf
t ?OR SALE —Six Lr.ts for 8ai»* in atiauuc
ward, corner East Broad and Huntingdon
streets. For terms apply to R. B. REPPaRD,
No. 70 Bay street. sep2S3t
Apply t
and Prii
i ce streets
sep27t»t
pOR SALE.—SHINGLE8—1,OCO.OOO all heart
Cypress, 1.030,000 No. 2 Cypress, for sale cheap
in lots to suit purchasers.
sep21-tf
D. C. BACON A CO.
Sry Co oils.
GRAY & 0’IIRIE.Y.
We have just received our
Fall Stock of
Black Cashmeres.
very Department is just Brim
ful with Bargains.
DAVID WEISBELl
sep27-Tel*Ntf
Spertaclrs.
DIAMOND SPECTACLKS.
T HESE Spectacles are manufactured from
“ MINUTE CRYfi
CRYSTAL PEBBLES” melted
together, and are called DIAMOND on account
of their hardness and brilliancy.
Having been tested with the polariscope, the
diamond lei * ’ * ’ -
teen
pel
lenses have been found to admit flf-
<*n per cent, less heated rays than any other
. 'bbie. They are ground with great scientific
accuracy, are free from chromatic aberra
tions, and produce a brightness and distinctness
of vision not before attained in spectacles.
Manufactured by the Spencer Optical Manu
facturing Company, New York.
For ?ale by responsible agents In every city
in the Union. F. D. JORDAN, Jeweler and
Optician, is Sole Agent for Savannah, Ga., from
whom they can only be obtained. No peddlers
employed. Do not buy a pair unless you see
the trade mark mhl6-Tu.Th.»Awlv
Do You Want Specks l
T HE largest and best assortment of SPEC
TACLE8i - - -
TA*
near and far
My
ie city,
goods
Single
suit all eyes and a'J
P. LINDENSTRUTH,
22 JaffenwMi
aSrokirs.
H. M. STODDARD,
— DEALER IN—
Stocks, Bonds and Real Estate,
114 BRYAN STREET, SAVANNAH, GA.
epl0-FATu7tATel2t
HAMBURGER BREST THEE
IN STORE AND FOB SALE BY
G. M. HEIDT & CO.
sepl5-tf
Black Silks.
Black Silk Dainmes.
Black Satins.
Black Tamise Cloths.
Silk Warp Henriettas.
'J'HE largest &tock SEASONED t LOOKING
in the city. Call and examine our stock.
aug26-tf
bacon a brooks.
F ^X>R SALE CHEAP, one of fcramhall £
Dean's Portable Bake Ovens, never used.
Capacity for one hundred people. Apply at
the Pulaski House. jyA^tf
T3ARTIES desiring driven wells complete or
X materials for same will find it to their ad
vantage to call on the undersigned. Puiuik:
and wells of aii kinds repaired. W. A. KENT,
13 West Broad street. Savannah. myil-ftm '
£ottmcs.
''HE 24th Popular Drawing of the Common
sep2B-2t
Stmt Satlroafla.
Superintendent's Office S., S AS.R.RCo.1
September 22, 1880. (
N and after FRIDAY. September 24th, tha
following schedule will be observed:
O
ISLE OF HOPE. 1 MONTGOMERY.
LEAVE LEAVE LEAVE LEAVE
SAVANNAH. ISLE OP HOPE SAVANNAH. NONTO EST.
10:25 A. M.| 8:10 A. M. 110:25 k. K 8:06 a. x.
•3:25 P. M. 12:50 p. x. 3:30 p. m. 12:15 p. x.
7:00 p. x. 5:40 p. x. 7:00 p. x. 5:20 p. x.
•Sundays the 3:25 to Isle of Hope and 3:30 lo
Montgomery the last outward trains.
Saturday nights last train at 7:20, instead
of 7:00 o’clock.
Monday morning early train to Isle of Hope
only at 7:10.
EDW. J. THOMAS.
gep2S-tf Superintendent.
OFFICE COAST LINE RAILROAD CO., J
O
Savannah, September 17, 1880.
N and after MONDAY, the 20th imt., the
following schedule will be run:
LEAVE
SAVANNAH.
LEAVE
THUNDERBOLT.
ILEAVE
BONA VENTURE.
6:00 A. X.
6: 30 a. u
6:40 X. x.
7:00 A. x.
7:30 A. x.
7:40 a X
10:35 A. x.
12:30 p. x.
12:40 p. s.
3:00 P. X.
4:00 p. x.
4 :10 P. X.
4:35 P. x.
5:30 p. x.
5:40 P M.
6:35 p. x.
7:05 p. x.
7:15 P. X.
Sunday schedule as usual, except last car.
which in future will leave Thunderbolt at 7:06
sep 17tf
FRANK LAMAR,
Superintendent.
CITY MARKET TO BROWNSVILLE
—VIA—
Laurel Grove Cemetery.
GRAY & O’BRIEN.
8epl4-tf
JACOB COHEN
AND HIS
BIG lllivtms!
Price List for this Week Only.
3 _ 4 BROWN DOMESTIC 5c. a yard.
X 4-4 RKOWN DOMESTIC 6#c. a yard.
3-4 BLEACHED DOMESTIC 5c. a yard.
7-8 BLEACHED DOMESTIC 6Wc. a yard.
4-8 BLEACHED DOMESTIC 3c. and 10c. a
yard.
1,000 pieces PRINTS 5c. to 6J<c. a yard.
TOWEL8, extra bargains, 5c. to 25c.
BLACK alpacas, bonanzas, 25c. to50c. a
yard.
CANTON FLANNEL 8c. to 25c. a yard.
A GREAT REDUCTION in HAMBURG
EDGING and LACES of all kinds.
Also. one thousand other articles for 50c. on
the dollar.
JACOB COHEN,
152 BROUGHTON STREET,
aug26-tf 8A VANN AH. GA.
SttAs.
Buist’s Warranted Garden Seeds
T hubnips.
CABBAGES.
SPINACH.
Just received at
sepJ-tf
BEETS, etc.
OSCEOLA BUTLER’S,
Bull and Congrew streets.
Barnard and andxhson 8t. RK.,1
Savannah. Ga.. July 6, 1880. I
Cars leave Market Square every tigkt
minutes until 8 p. x., when they leave every
half hour, stopping at 10 p. x., except
days, when cars leave every five minutes, last
leaving Market at 10:30. _
Sundays first car leaves Market i :30 a. x.
During the afternoon there will be a car every
five minutes, and extra cars at
Music at the Park TUESDAYS aud FRIDA xS.
Fare 5 cents; 6 ticket* for 25 cent*.
F. VAN WAGENEN,
Jy7-N£Teltf Saperintendeo
Mineral Wattr.
Buffalo Lithia Waters
for diseases of the
URIC ACID DIATHESIS.
TT is claimed tor these Waters that « »
I remedial aaent in Gout,
Rheumatism, Stone or Gravel ol theaxm^^.
Bladder, and in certain formsof Dyspep^*
Cutaneous Eruption* or Blood Poisoning,
indeed in all diseases common to orna
their origin in the Uric Acid
have no equal among the Mineral Water*
the American Continent, and no
among the most celebrated Water* of Trsnce
°Thr Spriass Pamphlet, containing
niais from many of the first tncdicfl tnen^
the land, and other well known P era ^; n --in
statements defy imputation or question,
be sent free to anv address.
OSCEOLA BITLKB, Acent.
SAVAX5AH. GA.
THO.YIAS F. GOODE, Proprietor,
Buffalo Lithia Springs, Fa
decP-Tn/TbASeowly—2p
SEA ISLASlTPACKLliG Ci
FRESH SHRIMP
WHOLE SHRIMP.—A delicious relish. Soak
in water a few moments beforemang.^.
CONSERVES dx CREVE1TES. — PreP^ 0
. ,, - r. C.I.A. .-/I QnllriM
the denizens of the water. . _
Packed fresh from the sea U» gU«
they retain all their pungent flavor, boiu uj