Newspaper Page Text
dhc fgotnmg gjeirs
NO. 3 WHITAKER STREET,
(MORNING NEWS BUILDING).
J. f I. ESTILL, Proprietor.
W. T. THOMPSON, Editor.
FRIDAY, m-CEMIfEK 31. 1880.
TIPPING THE WIRES.
Oar telegrams this morning give further
accounts of the unprecedentedly cold
weather, which has been general through
out the United States, and is pronounced
from all sections the coldest weather in
many years. Fears are entertained for the
orange crop of Florida, only one-third of
which has been gathered.
The court-martial in the case of Cadet
Whittaker will convene at West Point on
January 18th. Brigadier General N. A.
Miles will be President of the court.
The New York 6tock market was
buoyant yesterday, and a general advance
was recorded on the day’s transactions.
All suits and differences between the
Louisville an i Nashville Railroad and the
Adams and Southern Express Companies
have been amicably arranged upon a basis
satisfactory to the railroad company.
The first detachment of engineers aDd
workmen to prepare*ft>r the commencement
of the Panama canal, will leave Paris on the
5th of January.
Twelve hundred Boers attempted on the
20th to capture a fort held by 800 soldiers,
'•but were repulsed, with many killed and
wounded. At a council of war held on the
22d It was decided to s'-arve the garrison
out.
The Irish State trials were continued yes
terday. There was no excitement in the
neighborhood of the court, and public in
terest is said to have considerably abated.
A letter Las been received threatening the
lives or Mr. Gladstone and John Bright If
they continue to oppose coercion.
Two British steamers are reported lost
with all hands—the Garnet, in the North
Bea, and the Montgomeryshire, on the coast
of Portugal.
A German naraed John Bruens was coat
ing the inside of a cask with brewery pitch,
In Memphis, Tenn., yesterday, when the
cask exploded, killing him and injuring
two others.
Immense damazo Is reported by flood.
&ud Inundations In Holland.
A train on the Richmond, Fredericksburg
and Potomac Railroad, which left Frede
ricksburg, Va., early on Wednesday morn
ing, had not been heard from up to last
ulght.
A negro named Wright, in resisting arrest
in Sumter county, S. C., yesterday, was
shot and killed by a Deputy Sheriff.
Trouble Is brewing between the Albanian
League and the Porte, and Greec" la nego
tiating with the League tu order to obtain
assistance in her struggle with Turkey.
The Ohio and Mississippi rivers are
blocked with ice opposite Cincinnati and
8t. Louis.
Scarlet Scourge.—Much excitement
prevails at Houlzdale, Clearfield county,
Pa., over the ravages nt the scarlet fever
among the children. Eighteen children
died Friday from the disease, and
Saturday many new cases were reported.
It is but a few days since the first case
was made known, and already thirty
deaths have resulted from the fatal fever.
Physicians have been summoned from
all the neighboring towns, as the few
doctors in Houlzdale were all overwr rk-
ed. and could not possibly attend to all
the demands made upon them. There
is scarcely a family in the town that is
not plunged into grief at the untimely
death of their children.
Jay Gould's railway consolidations,
wherewith he proposes to lake a big
hand in the battle of the giants, embrace
the following roads: The three divisions
of the Wabash, 3,487 miles: the Missouri
Pacific and branches. l,07."i miles; the
Missouri, Kansas and Texas, 825 miles;
the Kansas Pacific, 1,011 miles; the
Union Pacific, 2.115 mi'.es; the Denver
and South Park, 801 miles; the Iron
Mountain, 081: the International and
Great Northern, OOi, and the Texas and
Pacific, 587—a grand total of 9,649 miles.
Germans Foil tiik So: th.—Twenty-
Bix German immigrants arrived at New
Orleans last week, and were immediately
placed at work in the mills at Pascagoula
and Stockton. Another installment is
expected in a few days, and the agent
who went over <o Germany writes that,
owing to the number of applications,
they were able to pick the best carpen
ters and lumbermen in the country. The
New Orleans papers express the opinion
that the tide of German immigration is
about to set towards the South.
The possibility of an alliance of the
Democrats and anti Sherman Republi
cans in the Ohio Senatorial contest has
suggested a combination of Democrats
with one of the Republican factions in
the New York Legislature. Generally
such alliances resuit unsatisfactorily, but
if in New York au effective blow can be
thus given to the Oonkiing ring, the
proposed combination will be more than
excusable.
A Confession.—Buruham Wardwell,
who was warden of the \ irginia pent
tentiary during the reconstruction period,
writes to the New York Sun : ‘‘I
mingled freely with the institution of
slavery for twenty two years in Virginia.
At no time did I see anything so de
praved, wicked and brutal as has been
practiced at the Massachusetts State
prison, Tewksbury baby slaughter pen
and Westboro Reform School, so called.”
The Tennessee Sesatorship.—Ex-
Governor John C. Browu, of Tennessee,
who savs that he is not a candidate for
Senator in aay sense of the term, ex-
presses the opinion that there is not the
least chance of the Republicans electing
a Senator from that State, lie thinks a
combination between the Republicans
and either wing of the Democratic parly
out of the question.
Tile argument in the case of the Sa
vannab, Florida and Western Railway
vs. the State Railroad Commission has
been closed. Judge Woods' decision is
looked for with much interest, and will
probably be rendered in a day or two. as
he leaves for Washington to lake his
seat on the Supreme Bench on the 1st or
2d proximo.
Mr. Roscoc Cockling, it is said, has
concluded to let Mr. Bayard alone. The
Delaware statesman has had his say, and
certainly if Mr. Conkling can afford to
leave the matter where it now is Mr.
Bayard can. As the .case stands Mr.
Conkling is in pillory in full view of
r discriminating public.
If any super loyal citizen of the nation
with a big “IT’ wants lo know way the
South is solid, we respectfully refer him
to the case of R. K. Scott, of Napoleon,
Ohio, the murderer of young W. G.
Drury. Scott was erstwhile carpetbsg
Governor of South Carolina, and one of
the prime pets of the Radical party.
Draf^Tfor Ireland.-The" officials
of the Irish Emigrant Society in New
York city state that daring the first three
weeks of December it forwarded fully
*100 000 by drafts to Ireland for Christ
mas gifts, in which 5.000 givers partici-
pated.
What Carpcthaglsm Has Doue for
the South.
Col. A K. McCiurc has written another
letter to hie paper, this lime from Louisi
ana. In this letter he dwells at length
and with force upon the condition to
which that State has been reduced by
carpetbag rule, and the picture which
he portrays is truly hideous to look upon.
He shows how terribly the State bad
been desolated by the ravages of war—
she having been, next to Virginia, the
greatest sufferer of all the Confederate
commonwealths — and in what a
deplorable condition her carpet
bag despoilers found her. Her
people, he says, were impoverished
by the loss of many millions of dollars
in slave property, by the fearful wastes
of protracted war within her borders,
and by the possession of her chief centres
by the Federal army. Her plantations
were overrun or abandoned, and her
marts of trade and wharves were guilt
less of commerco. In addition to this,
she owed a legitimate debt of about
eight millions of dollars, and had always
scrupulously maintained her credit
This was the desolate condition in
which the carpetbag de3poiler found the
once rich and prosperous State of Lou
isiana when he first turned his greedy
eyes towards her with intent of swoop
ing down upon her to strip her of what
ever he could lay his hands on which had
been left from the general wreck. Surely
it would seem that nothing could be
found by him to steal. But what carpet
bagger, with hislceen scent for robbery,
was ever yet wholly cheated of his game
while he had the Federal Government
and Federal bayonets to encourage him
in his thieving operations. Here i3 what
he managed to do in Louisiana, accord
ing lo the personal observations and in
vestigations of a Northern editor:
“In a single decade the positive debt
of the State was increased to twenty-five
millions, and the contingent or guaran
teed debt to many millions more,making
an aggregate of forty millions. Nor did
he (the carpetbagger) content himself
with creating debt and wasting its pro
ceeds. Reckless assessors were sent out
among the people to value property for
taxable purposes, and they were tempted
to high valuations by being paid a per
centage on the amount assessed; and
upon these valuations the taxes for State
purposes alone rose as high as twenty-
one and a half mills. Trades, occupa
tions, professions, and indeed every
thing that earned money, wi re also op
prersively taxed, and with all this
revenue and all the millions of in
creased debt, the interest, the
schools and the ordinaty expenses of
the government could not be met.
of developing their vast resource* and
making of politics a secondary considers
tion. Mr. Garfield will have a magnifi
cent opportunity to descctionalize the
entire country if he will, but until there
is a change in Radicalism itself it is not
to be expected that there can be any
change in the political sentiment of the
Southern people.
and
the
the
The wealthy parishes were all dominated
jv the black vote, under the desperate
leadership of the carpetbaggers, and,
oeiug without property themselyes and
inflamed against the whites, they im
posed as high as 2 per cent, of parish
taxes in some instances, which, with
Slate and town and other local taxe6,
made from 5 to C per cent, the rate of
taxation in many of the wealthiest per
tions of the commonwealth. This terri
ble oppression came upon a people that
had nothing but debt and devastated
property, and the inevitable result was
widespread bankruptcy, the depreciation
of values from 40 to 60 per c*. nt. and a
Tpneral paralysis of every channel of
industry.”
As Colonel McClure well siys, such a
tide of bewildering profligacy could but
lead to one result, and that v/as the de
struction of the State credit and bank
ruptcy. Bonds so recklessly issued by
the carpetbag rulers of Louisiana fiepre-
ciated to nominal figures; the resources
of the people had been drained dry by
the insatiable thieves, and it looked as if
the plunderers would be forced to cease
their robberies from pure lack of further
material upon which to prey. But even
yet their wonderful capacity for stealing
enabled the thieves to devise ways and
means for still further filling their car
petbags with ill-gotteu gains. As Col
onel MClcure further says:
‘ State bonds had iKjen recklessly issued
by millions with little more than the
color of law, and they had ceased to be
marketable. In this utter despair of
creditors the Kellogg leaders in 1874 de
cided to speculate on their own robberies,
and they bought up at nominal prices
the fraudulent bonds they had issued,
and proposed to scale the whole debt,
good, bad and doubtful., at 60 cents on
the dollar in 7 percent, forty-year bonds.
The old, bona fide creditors of the State
who held the undisputed 6 per
cent, bonds, were tempted to ac
cept by the proffer of the re
duced principal on increased interest,
and the pools of fraudulent or doubtful
bonds, held largely by the plunderers
themselves at little or no cost, were
promised protection against inquiry into
their frauds and a fresh steal of many
millions besides. They hastened to fund
these bonds, and a constitutional am^ud
ment. declared as ratified by the election
machinery common in I,ouisiana in those
days, fastened a double fraud upon the
people, fii*t by a fraud upon the honest
creditors, ana next by a fraud that made
millions of dishonest claims a constitu
tionally adjudicated debt of the State.*’
These extract* convey but a faint con
ception of the terrible and true story
related by Colonel McClure in his New
Orleans letter. 3Iuch as tbs Southern
people hare suffered from Radical rule
in our section, we dare say that even
they themselves have never fully real
ized the extent to which they have been
plundered. Yet what is related of Lou
isiana is true, to greater or less degree,
of every Southern State The adventu
rers who were maintained in poorer
under Grant's two administrations, were
allowed to rob the entire South at >’111,
while she was held down on the points
of Federal bayonets,a helpless victim for
political vultures to feed upon until they
were gorged, but whose insatiable maws
could never be filled.
Can any fair minded man read (^olonel
McClure’s letter, or even the extracts
therefrom which we have given, and
wonder any longer that tfie South has
been and is "solid” against Radicalism ?
Yet in the recent Presidential election
there were thousands of men In the
North calling themselves fair minded,
and hundred of papers with claims to
respectability, who pontmually prated
about “a solid South," and the necessity
for “a solid North’* with which to op
pose her. The only excuse for such a
sentiment is that those advancing it
were ignorant of the horrors of Radical
ism in the South, and thn tumble effects
of carpetbag rule. We hope that ali
such will read this letter and be
edified, and then let them remem
ber further how, when the people
of Louisiana, justly outraged aud ren
dered desperate, rose in their might
against their despoilers, they were over
whelmed by United States sol.iiera, by
order of U. S. Grant, and their villain
ous plunderers were again placed in
power over them by force. If, under
these circumstances, any man can won
der longer at the solidity of the South,
then he is lost to all reason, and is sim
ply the creature of venomous malignity
and blind prejudice.
The recent treachery of certain Demo
cratic leaders in the North who were
willing, for the purpose of advancing
their selfish ambitions, to turn the entire
land once more over to the tender mer
cies of Radical and carpetbag rulers, will
tend, however, greatly to do away with
the solidity forced on our section by
Radicalism, provided a wise and gener
ous policy is pursued towards the South
by the incoming administration. Certainly
this treason has opened the eyes of the
Southern people to the'great importance
The Basutos and the Boers
Between the hardy Raff re tribes
the colonial Dutch Republicans,
Zulu?, the B&sutos and the Boers,
British Government in South Africa has
a rough time of it. A great deal of this
is the fault of the colonial government
itself. Sir Bartle Frere, with his im
practicable ideas and his meddlesome
ways, has made a dreadful muddle of it.
This model Governor, of the rigidly
humaniiarian type, has caused no litrie
bloodshed since he was transferred from
his Commissionership in Zanzibar to
civil nnd military command at Cape
Town. He began by rousing the
Zulus and provoking them to
war by the process of “recti
fying their frontier,” giving to
the Boers of the Transvaal a part of
Zulu territory, to which they had no
real claim beyond what Sir Bartle
thought be could find in liberal quota
tions from the Old Testament Scriptures.
Then, when the Zulu war demanded the
concentration of troops on the frontier,
he angered the Boers by annexing the
Transvaal Republic. Thirdly, he aggra
vated the Basutos by permitting the
Colonial Legislature to pass a sweeping
vagrant law’, the object of which was
simply to compel able-bodied Kaffres to
work for colonists at low wages. The
Basutos did work in the diamond fields,
and thus secured arms and ammunition
in plenty. Now, when it is proposed to
open Basutoland to settlers, the tribe
revolts. They number 127,000; their
men arc all warriors, and their country,
one hundred and fifty miles in length by
eighty in breadth, of mountainous and
easily defensible territory, offers the
colonial troops a very hard nut to crack.
Some of the other Kaffre tribes will
probably join them, and in the mean
time the outbreak is so formidable that
the Boers seem to see in it their oppor
tunity. They have taken up arms and
again proclaimed the Republic. The
Boers have 5,000 horsemen in the field,
all brave, sturdy, good shots, aiepts in
woodcraft, and formidable in many
other ways. Their leaders are men of
the stern Puritan type of Pretorius of
Natal, and they hate the British rule
most bitterly. The Cape Colony is in a
panic, and troops have been telegraphed
for in every direction.
It is reported from Washington that a
war has already been declared between
Garfield and Conkling, aud the alleged
fact that Garfield induced Hayes to nomi
nate anti Conkling men for the Albany
Postmastership and the Buffalo Collec-
torship, is cited in proof of the report.
The World's correspondent say a: “The
possible developments of this early dis
play cf Garfield'* 1 antagonism to Conk
ling are ot great significance. At this
time there can of course be but surmises
as to just what it may i«ad, yet there can
be little doubt that in assuming the offen
sive two months before his inauguration
Gai field counted well the cost. The infer-
is natural, therefore, that General Gar
field has prepared himself to withstand
whatever opposition Mr. Conklin* may
be able to gather against him after twe
months of preparation. As to the new
nominations, the etianues ^re that they
will be confirmed, although Mr. Conk
ling may fie fible to keep them in com
mittee for awhile. But the taptips he
will need to employ to keep them there
will giv* Vis bittcruces a chance to
deepen, an! by the time the Cabinet
and other appointments begin to come
in, when it must appear to the country
that he has not only been overlooked
but actually antagonized, be will proba
bly be in condition for retaliation.”
TnE New Rothschild^ aiitnersiiip.
—The act of partnership between the
members of the Rothsehild family ex
pired on the 30tb of September last. A
new partnership has recently been form
ed between all but oue of the members
of the family—Baron Adolphe Roths
child, of Naples, retiriog with a fortune
of one hundred and eighty millions of
francs ($36,000,000). We have million
aires in the United States whose indi
vidual fortunes far exceed that of Baron
Adolphe Rothschild, that of Mr. Wm.
II. Vanderbilt being conspicuously one
of them; but the united fortunes of the
Rothschild family make the firm the
richest in the world. B it the financial
power of the Rothschilds is not de
pendent alone upon the money which
they have pm iui.Q Jheir banking busi
ness. It is the vast sums they can draw
from their co-religionists at any time
when they ueed the poiqmanrt of more
capital that, in conjunction with their
own means, constitute* them the fore
most financial power in the world. The
term of the new partnership just entered
into is for twenty-five years. It conse
quently expires in 1905.
Why Akermau Resigned.
The late Amos T. Akcrman, who re
signed the Attorney Generalship under
Grant, after having served about three
years, was forced out of the President’s
official family, it seems, for reasons simi
lar to those which occasioned the remov
al of Charles Sumner from the Chair
manship of the Senate Committee on
Foreign Relations—namely, because he
declined to favor with his official approv.
al a rascally scheme in which some of
Grant’s personal friends were interested
and which Grant desired to have pushed
through. The amount was small (for
Grant’s administration), being only $100,-
000, but the incident should not be lost
sight of in making up the history of our
times. A correspondent of that truly
loyal and stalwart sheet, the Chicago
Tribune, thus tells the story:
‘ 'Soon after Col. Akerman commenced
the duties of his office he was called upon
by numerous parties and sets of schem
ing men who desired him to investigate
and make favorable reports upon nu
merous claims against the United States.
Prominent among these claims was one
from Honduras. This claim was for
$104,000. and was brought to the atten
tion of the Attorney General by several
gentlemen who were warm personal
friends of the President. The claim was
well made out in such a strong and
plausible manner as to convince almost
any one that the charges were just Col.
Akerman. however, subjected the mat
ter to a most thorough and rigid exami
nation, and Llie fruits of the investiga
tion showed that the claim had not in
the first place been authorized to be
brought against the United States by the
Government of Honduras, and in the
second place that the claim was largely
in excess of what would have been just
in the event that the claim had been au
thorized. During the progress of the
examination of the Honduras claim,
President Grant called upon the Attorney
General frequently, and seemed by his
manner and conversation to show a de
sire for a favorable report. During one
of these interviews with the Attorney
General, President Grant stated that his
friends, who were the agents of the Hon
duras Government, had shown him the
papers, and that from what he had seen
he thought that a good case had been
made out, and that the claims should be
paid. When Colonel Akerman, as
Attorney General of the United
States, made the report, it was
found that it wa3 unfavorable, and the
grounds were eet forth in his usual clear
and concise manner. His report created
indignation, and the holders of the
claim declared war upon the Attorney
The New Mexican Mischief.
Montgomery Advertiser.
It is fair lo charge the merciless ras
calities and robberies that have been per
petrated upon the negroes of .he South
upon the Republican party. For, while
the party as such, may not have engaged
in the notorious outrages on these igno
rant and credulous people, it cannot be
denied that the rascals are not only active
agents and members of that party, but
they have been sheltered, encouraged and
lauded by its organs and leaders. T hat
party is responsible for embroiling them
in politics, distracting their peace, dis
turbing their pursuits, and setting them j
54tB8&m*nt3.
MOZART HALL.
Commeacing Thursday Night. l)ec. 30
Every Aftern<ioa and Night until further
- notice. Afternoons, 2 to 4:30: Nights.
7 to 10 o’clock. Most Wonderful
Exhibition on Earth.
Miss Millie Christine
The marvelous
TWO-HEADED WOMAN,
Ar.d her Combination of Novelties.
Sei7S wi it is^^Tor’Se i Blitz, the Great Wizard,
Freedmen s Bank swindle by which they i And the
M I BOHEMIAN GLASS BLOWERS,
With their Gloss Steam Engines and an en-
General. They combined with the hold
ers of other claims of a similar character
winch had also been unfavorably re
ported upoD, and a political charge was
made upon the bulwarks of integrity,
officered and commanded by Colonel
Akerman. Colonel Akermau, seeing
that this refusal to make a favorable re
port upon the Honduras claim had made
the holders antagonistic to the President,
handed in his resignation, aud the office
was ipade vacaut for a successor. He
preferred to give up his office rather than
be an instrument to the fraud aud cor
ruption that unprincipled men were
making an effort to perpetrate upon the
government of the country that he
loved.”
Hctt the Russian Exile Llres.
London Standout.
On his arrival the prisoner is driven
straight to the police ward, where lie is
inspected by the I-pravnik, a police offi
cer, who is absolute lord and master of
the district. This representative of
the government requires of him to an
swer the following questions: His
name? How old? Married or single?
Where from? Address of parents, or re
lations or friends? Answers to all which
^re pnterefi in thp books. \ solemn
written promise is then exacted of him
that he will not give lessons of apy
kinq or try lo Icppfi anyone, that every
letter he writes will go through the
Rpravnik’s hands, and that he will fol
low no occupation except shoemaking,
carpentering or field labor. Up is then
told luai he is true, blit at'the same time
is solemnly warned that should he at
tempt to pass the limits of the town he
were robbed of $6,000,000 of their hard
earnings. It is responsible for the emi
gration schemes concocted for despoiling
the poor creatures, who have been in
veigled into wretchedness and death by
sweet words and pretty pictures, even as
unsuspecting swine are tolled by a few
grains and encouraging words into the
slaughter pen.
It is jcsponslble for the Kansas exodu3
and other devilment of the same sort.
It was but the other day the Chicago
Tribune, one of the leading organs of
the party, sought to allay the indigna
tion that has been aroused in some quar
ters on account of the movement and
the mischief it had done, by saying, in
the fac« of well kuown facts to the con
trary, that the thousands of these
wretched people, who are shivering and
starving on the bieak plains of Kansas,
are thriving and happy. And it pre
tended to give Governor St. John as
authority for saying that such progress
had they made already in providing
homes and all the needful supplies, that
only about five hundred were now de
pendent on the public for support? The
Tribune advocated further colored
exodus from the South. The truth is,
not one of their leading papers, or lead
ing men, have had a word to say against
these schemes that have entailed so much
needless suffering and death upon these
poor people.
The last scheme to make money out of
the ignorance of the negro, and the sim
plicity of his Northern friends, is the
scheme to locate an immense colored colo
ny from the South upon the deserts of
New Mexico. The head man of the move
ment seems to be the notorious Parson
Conway, whose reputation for honesty
and truth in Louisiana, achieved
during the carpetbag rule in
that State, is on a level with
the other scamps that depredated on
the people and debauched the public
service to their own selfish purposes. He
was the superintendent of the public
school system, and his conduct ought
to have satisfied his profligacy and kept
him “hid out” the balauce of his days.
He was one of the chief engineers of the
Kansas business, and having made all
ho can out of it, he has now turned his
attention to this Mexican scheme.
Last November he informed George
W. Williams, the noted member of the
Ohio Legislature, that certain New York
capitalists had purchased an immense
tract of territory in New Mexico,
amounting to 700,000 acres. lie men
tioned as the President J. M. Wood
ward, aud as Secretary A. D. Mellick,
and informed Williams that all this
territory was to be settled up by
colored people of the South.
The name of the company was the
“New York Land League.” Williams
shortly %f\\# set about to investigate the
matter, but not getting from Secretary
Mellick such information as tended to
satisfy his curiosity, he determined to go
to New Mexico and see for himself. Sec
retary Mellick bearing of this impru
dent venture of Williams made haste to
telegraph him not to go: that the “Land
League” was not prepared to exhibit
their lands. But Williams went When
he got to Santa Fe he called on Gen. Lew
Wallace, who, to his surprise, informed
him thath* had never heard of the “New
York Land League I” Nevertheless,some
body, being no doubt ordered to he on
the lookout for the “Land League” in
vestigator from Ohio, introduced himself
as the surveyor of the institution. He
exhibited to Williams a drawing of “the
Sebastiau Martin grant” containing, as
he said, 100,00b ftCIW. The records, how
ever, in the Land Office, which Williams
examined, showed that the “grant’ con
tained 51,000 acres.
Since hi9 return, he has received a let
ter from Judge Prince, Chief Justice
tire Lady's Costume made of glass.
M’Donough’s Royal Marionettes
amine English PUNCH AND JUDY,
And a n
description of Exhibition, see small billa and
posters.
SPKCIIL ISOTICK.—Ladies with chip
dren are requested to attend the afternoon
entertainments and thus avoid the crowd at
night. Admission 50 cents: Children 23 cents,
dec^-tf
SAVANNAH THEATRE.
FRIDAY AND SATURDAY. DEC. SI AND JAN.
1. GRAND MATINEE SATURDAY.
THE CBOW.NI.NO CLIHIX!
HARRY MINER
PAT ROONEY’S
CONSOLIDATED COMBINATIONS!
Including the Great and Only
PAT ROONEY!
O ■OBSERVE the array of talent: E C. Dunbar,
Lamont and Ducrow, Tommy Dayton,
Bi'Iy Carter, Larry Tooley. Jeppe Delano, Tsd-
bot and Owens, Tfie Carroll Bros . Miss Georgia
Kaine. Miss Fannie Delano, Miss Katie Rooney,
Miss Annie Dayton, Miss Josie Granger, to
gether with a full Bras j Band and Orchestra.
Popular prices. Reserved seats for sale at
Bren’s. dec2Mt
NINTH ANNUAL HOP
-or THE—
Young America Social Club,
METROPOLITAN HALL,
FRIDAY. DECEMBER 31.
3rj! ©oofls.
ETERNAL VIGILANCE
FOR THE GREATEST BARGAINS IN THE NORTHERN MARKETS IS THE PRICE OF
On
WHETHER IT BE STORMY OI. THE SKY CLOUDLESS.
ADR STORE IS THRONGED WITH
Thousands of oar patrons could not be waited on during the past Jew weeks. A ithough we
were prepared to moet such an emergency, we found our preparations Inadequate,
crowds as have beleaguered our counters can only be met with and equaled In some j e
ing New York store*. Our success was complete and beyond our moat sanguiae .pectaUons.
WE HAVE BUYEKS
The whole year round in the Northern markets to do nothing else bat to hunt up bargains, and
therefore we are in a better position than any other house to sell goods at
Marvelous Prices
THIS WEEK WE CALL ATTENTION TO THE FOLLOWING GOODS:
r TMCKETS fl. admitting gentleman and two
ladies, refreshments iocluded, to be had
from the following committee:
HUGH LOGAN. Chairman.
ROBT. McCALLA. THOS. KENNY.
J. KEARNEY. ROBT. BARBOUR.
dec9.S!&T«>19
Sthj &avmtgrnmtts.
COKE.
Great Reduction in Price
100 bushed and upwards 3c. per busheL
Under 10U bushels . .6c. per bushel.
remove same
Purchasers are required
promptly. Apply at
GAS OFFICE.
dec31-6t Exchange Building. Bay s'reet.
FOR LIVERPOOL.
r piIE first class Spanish steam
ship
JUANA,
Ga-staxaoa, Master,
Will sail about loth January. 1881. For freight
apply to |
do< *
dec3l-5t
CHARLES GREEN A CO.
City Marhbal’s Office, I
Savannah. December 31. 1880. \
B Y virtue of authority conferred by Coun
cil, and under the direction of the Com
mittee on Public Sales and City Lots. I will
sell, according to the provisions of existing
ordinance of the city of Savannah, lot No. 82
Lloyd ward, on the premises, at 11 o’clock, on
TUESDAY, January 4th, 1981. Terms and
conditions made known at time of sale.
L. L. GOODWIN.
dec31-td City Manual.
1W Fine MARSEILLES SPREADS, 12-4. worth $3 CO, at $2 00.
M0 do/en 3-BUTTON KID GLOVES, the latest shades, at 38c. -
200 dozen BOULEVARD SKIRTS, Red, Purple, Blue and Brown, at 37tfc.. usually sold at
81 00 and 81 25.
250 dozen Pure LINEN TOWELS at 5c. each, no more than 6 to each customer.
300 dozen GENTS’ KNITTED UNDERSHIRTS at 20c. each.
6,000 dozen DRESS BUTTONS, the latest s f yles and designs, sold elsewhere at 35c., at 10c. per
dozen.
1.0C0 BOYS’ PURE LINEN SHIRT FRONTS at 3c.
l,0CO BOYS’ CAMBRIC 8HIRT FRONTS at 5c.
■V) Children and Misses’ CLOAKS (sizes six to fourteen years) at four and five dollars.
f0 pieces BLACK ALPACA at 12£$c.
75 pieces Double-Width ENGLISH CASlIXERE at 15c.
1,000 pieces FAST COLORED CALICO at 5c. per yard.
603 dozen -GENUINE’’ 3-BUTTON KID GLOVES, worth 81 73, at 50c. and Tic
240 dozen “GENUINE’’ 4-BUTTON KID GLOVES, worth 82 00. at 75c.
175 dozen White and Opera shades 6-BUTTON KID GLOVES, the same sold elsewhere at
81 50, at 60c.
5C0 LADIES’ CLOAKS, to close out “at and below cost.’’
600 pairs BLANKETS and CALICO 8PREADS at almost half value.
PLEASE CALL EARLY TO AVOID THE GREAT RUSH, AT
DAVID ¥E ISBEIN’S.
dec29-N*Teltf
GltElT (LEIUnit SALE
FOR THE HOLIDAYS, AT
.furniture. &c.
Special Jndacements.
shall be shot down like a dog rather than ~ v «
be allowed to escape, and should be be nhi.rf
Immense Immigration.—Up to Mon
day morning the number of immigrants
arriving at j^'ew Yqrjf siace January 1,
1880, was 318,037. In the fire days that
remain before the year closes, it is ex
peeled that the aggregate will exceed
320,000. By comparison with the totals
of previous ye$rs, these figures are in
teresting to contemplate. Take the sta
tistics for J854 as an instance—the year
that is noted for being the one in which
emigration was enormous, and whose
record has not heretofore been beaten.
Then immigrants came by sailing vessels
onty, and stwe days srnall armies of
them were i^ndpd. t<a the qth oi June
thirty five ships brought in 12,500 steer
age passengers. At that date the Bureau
Emigration was not established at
o?
Castle Garden, and vessels put passengers
ashore at tbgir various docks. The sta
tistics for the year t&ijt the num
ber of fojeigntfs landed in me port of
New York was but tb»3 number
included steerage and first gud second
cabin passengers. Of steerage passen
gers alone 1880 falls but 280 behind, and
several steamships are now due with
their quotas.
Memphis >» 8$. Lquis.—St. Louis
seems to be on the decline as a cotton
market, the receipts so far this year foot-
j ing up but 139,058 bales, a considerable
falling off compared with the same
months last year, while 1-ke receipts for
the same time at Memphis amount to
201,300 bales, a handsome increase.
Alluding to these figures, the Memphis
Aralanche cruelly observes that “with
the completion of the Memphis and Jef
ferson Railroad St. Louis will hand in
its few remaining enUcaph^cks to Mem
phis.”
taken alive shall be sent offto Eastern 8i
beria without further formality than that
of the Ispravoik's persc-Dal order.
The poor fellow takes up his little
bundle, and, fully realizing that he has
now bidden farewell to the culture and
material comfort of his past fife, be
^alks out ffitfl the cheerless stree t. A
group of exiles, all pale and emaciated,
are there to greet him, take him to some
of their miserable lodgiugs, and fever
ishly demand news from home. The
new comer gazes on them as oue in a
dream; some are melancholy mad. others
nervously irritably t y, P remainder
have evidently trietj to find solace in
drink. They live m communities of
twos and threes, have food, a scanty
provision qf clpthiJ*, money and
books In common, and consider
it their sacred duty to help each other in
every emergency, without vlistinetion
of sex, rank or age. The noble by birtn
get sixteen shillings a month from the
government for their maintenance, and
commoners only ten, although many of
them are married, and sent into exile
with yoqng families?. Ijaiiya gendarme
visits their lodgings, inspects the prenii
ees when and how he pleases, aud now
and then umkos 9ome mysterious entry
in hid note book, should any of their
number carry a warm dinner, a
pair of nowly mended boots, or a change
of linen to some passing exile, lodged
for the moment in the police watd, it is
just a3 likely as not marked against him
a9 a crime. 11 is a crime to come and
see a friend off, or accompanying him a
little on the way. In fact, should the
Ispraynik feel out of sorts—the effect of
cards or drink—he vents his bad temper
u which the Chief Justice says that *!’
the arable land in the pretended “grant”
lies in little narrow strips along the Rio
Grande, and these strips have long been
settled and are now occupied by people
who have an absolute title under the
St^tutp of limitations As for the bal
ance of the lands, he says a colony of
agriculturists, so far as any present bene
fit or development is concerned, had as
well locate on an iceberg.
Williams further informs the publicin
his exposure of this New Mexican infa
my, that Lowery, colored, has
been appointed agent of this “Land
League” swindle for this State. We are
not informed of any movement of the
agent or Ips “subs.” Nor do we know
of any disposition on the pari of any of
the colored people to listen to the tales
of these Mexican trappers. But cer
tainly it Is the duty of every intelligent
colored man in the State to be prepared
to warn his people against this satauic
enterprise.
Another Handsome Gift.—The trus
tees of Union College, at Schenectady,
N. Y-, have received $50,000 from Levi
Parsons, to be held in trust for the bene
fit of worthy students. The interest of
the fund is to be used to support two
scholarships of $300 each, three of $200
each, and eight of $150 each, and for the
support of deserving students in need of
assistance. Union College will select
the beneficiaries, Judge Parsons gave
$30J)OQ to Union College last winter for
the Parsons Library.
A scheme is under consideration for a
— ~~ *4.o w..v4 u.uij’U! - canal across the Malayan Peninsula, by
on the exiles; and as cards and drink are which it is believed that English mails
** J may be delivered in Hong Kong in
twenty nine days and a half, a saving of
the fayorite amusements Ixj tneec dreary
regions, crimes are marked down against
regions,
the esiie3 in astonishing numbers, ^nd a
report of them seffi regularly to the Gov
ernor of the proviuce.
Winter lasts eight months, a period
during which the surrounding couutry
presents tfie appearance of a noiseless,
lifeless, frozen marsh—no roads, no
communication with the outer world,
no means of escape. In course of time
almost every individual is attacked by
nervous convulsions, lollowed by pro
longed apathy and prostrariefi.
They begin to ^uartcj, and even
to bate each other. Some of them
contrive to forge false passports and by
a miracle, as it were, make their escape,
but the great majority of these victims
of the Third section either go mad, com
mit suicide or die of delirium tremens.
Their history, when the time comes for
it tp bp studied and published, will dis
close a terrible t^ie oi human suffering
and aduiinis’erial evils and shortcom
ings not likely to find their equivalent in
the contemporary history of any other
European Slate.
A watchmaker al Copenhagen is re
ported to have made a watch which re
quires no winding up. inasmuch as it
perfoiws that work iupll by m^ao* of
au electric current. An electric magnet
fixed inside the watch keeps the spring
perpetually in a state of tension. All
that is required to keep the watch going
is to preserve the battery in proper work
ing order, for which purpqsfi ouj) or two
inspections in a twelvemonth are said to
be sufficient,
The substance of the electoral count
resolution, gainst which the Republi
can Congressmen are exerting ibemsclyes
so fiercely, is as follows:
I. If but one list of votes of electors
from auy State be submitted to each
House for its decision, and the two
houses do not concur in rejecting it, that
list shall be received,
II. If more than one list of votes of
electors from an> State,or paper purport
ing to to be such list, has been submitted
to each House for its decision upon ob
jections made thereto, and it shall appear
that the two houses have not concurred
in receiving either of said lists, they
shall be declared a9 being rejected.
Although the tax on beer is but $1 a
barrel, it gives a revenue of $11,000,000
& year.
For Christmas decorations this year
the citizens of Philadelphia used 15 000
trees, 500,000 yards of laurel and other
wreaths, and 1,000 barrels of moss, cost
ing in the aggregate about $54,000, to
say nothing of vast stores of holly and
flowers. The trees came principally
from Maine, and the laurel and moss
from the swamps of New Jersey.
A Galveston man named Joseph.is C.
Morgan, who is also a great nuisance, 4
everlastingly abusing the female sex.
The other day he said to John W. Smith:
“There would be fewer evils in the
world if it were not for women.*’ “Yes,”
responded Smith, “you, yourself,
wouldn’t be in it;” and now they hardly
speak.—Galveston Nete*.
Wonders will never cease is again
illustrated by the fact that fireproof
houses can now be built out of cotton
and straw*. In the first instance, the
cotton used i* the refuse of plantations
*nd factories. Jt is converted into a
paste, which gets to be as hard a* stone,
and is called architectural cotton. It is
made in large slab*.
In order to make room for a
larjre lot of Holiday Goods, I
am offering my entire stock of
Fine PARLOR and BED-
ROOM8UITS, SIDEBOARDS
etc., at cost. A full assortment
of all grades and styles of FUR
NITURE on liand. A Iso a large
stock of SH W CASES. Prices
ower than the lowest.
GUSTAVE ECKSTEIN & CO’S.
4Tattt«£5.
ATT ANTED, nurse to accompany I
T» fant tj Nas aa. Pf-wikc:
I ibcr&l wages. Apply by 1^ o c’ou 1
KENNEDY, BarnarJ street, 3 do.
Gaston.
W
street.
ANTr-D, a white woman &*
family. Ap-^ly ]«y
AATANTED, throe inesnenF^r
YV to W. U. TEL. CO.
ANTED TO PURCHASE, a pi ao:ai
within two hour* railway rid- of Sarai
Prefer part clear and timber Er-^ t
risit Georgia this winter, I will exam.c'
places as I think will answer mj
reply to all communications add res.. - \
A. C . New York City, P. O. Bor No '«*
decdO-6tJtw:t
\WTANTED, two or three furnished
H light housekeeping. R. g.
office.
C OOK WANTED —A good restaurant
wanted, white or colored.
situation guaranteed to a good
99 Bay street -del
YITANTED. Pianos and Orjri
YY repair. Rates reaso a'_
for second-hand instruments.
134 State street, between E.
streets.
A
|_|EIRa WANTED — TRXAtf LANDtT7
persons who lost relative : in th. tJ
revolution of 1836 wiU hear of sc-i ethic* ■
advantage by comm unicat mr with C
BODREOUES, care of this Sav^i.
Vtf
octlJ-tf
.for Seal.
pOR RENT, two large unfurnisn-d ,
on second floor,
Whitaker.
1133 Hull *tr<i
^or £al?.
G. P. PREDjiope
Mai
f *OR SALE—Everybody, ti^and littl
and old. pay attention. Horaesh.»
rets only 35 cents apiece
VAUGHAN'S Photographic 1
Broughton street.
decSOtf WILSON &
a''gh_i
F 'OB SALE—Six Lot? fo. Kiie la
ward, corner East Kroad and Hat„ M
streets. For terms apply to K. B. REpfq
No. 70 Bay street. d<
17'ORSALE, a Grocery Store
r der. complete stock, gcoa ti
_ der, complete stock, gcodtrad^, flr>:
chance, central location, terms lib-m
drees CONFIDENTIAL, this off._e. dt,
[THDR SALE—D. C. BACON .5 CO., YEL
PINE LUMBER, PITCH PINE TTMR^H,
PRESS, OAK and ASH LUX3ER, by th
and in lots to suit purchasers.
’’HE »argest stock SEASONED FLCK
in the city.
aug28-tf
3 our etc :k
Call and exam!’.;
BACON £ br;
baffle.
R AFFLE—All parties interested
Shawl and Fruit Cake are notrf
News Depot on FRIDAY EVENING, z
at 8 o’clock.
Tunrfe.
XTEW YORK OYSTERS >ND G4M
x> COTTON EXCHANGE IcESTACR
No. 6, Dravton strec*, rear Pc*
and Gents'prirate dining roo
dec6,M. wdts-i m
rf trot
^ HFDILI; FOR EKC>3I . t:
SCFXRIJTTEXDCT’S OFFICE 8., S £
MONDAYS, TUESDAYS. TH . RSDAYS
FRIDAY-'.
OUTW’D. |
LXAVX : ARRIVE LEAVE
SAVaXSAH. 'savannah. ISL^ OF HOPE
6:40 p. *.| 3:38 a. m
S:10 a. «. 7:C
BARGAINS
BLACK
SILKS!
BARGAINS IN COLORED SILKS.
M. HOLEY,
186 AND 188 BROUGHTON. AND 17, 19 AND 21
JEFFERSON 8TRKKTS.
nov3-tf
SELLING OUT.
BARGAINS.
B ALANCE of my CHRISTMAS GOODS, in
cluding BEDROOM SUITS, CARPETS,
and
STOV ES and 8TOVE FURNITURE, will be sold
VERY LOW on EASY TERMS.
M
Corner Jefferson &Ad President streets.
dec»-tf
jOfuttstrif.
DENTAL NOTICE.
D R >,
S. M. ROACH, successor to Dr. E.
Henry, ha* moved to 13^ BROUGHTON
STREET, where he will be pleased to zee hie
patients. dec2l-lm
DR.
nearly seven days by the present route.
The line would lie from Bombay to
Madras by rail, thence across the Bay of
Bengal, and by the canal over the penin-
* Gr - “ ~ M
sula (uto the Gulf of Siam, and thence
direct to Hong Kong.
A Teacher Kills a School Boy.—
A school boy in Eliot, Me., aged fourteen
years, was struck on the head with a
book by LL teacher on Monday, 13th
instant, and died on the 22d, after being
out of his senses for some time. It is
alleged that tfee blow with the book rup
tured u blood vessel in his head.
A. O. BEST,
DENTIST,
Corner Con^rrss A Whitaker Streets,
KA' ANNAH. CJA.
fflotaiug.
Clothing at Reduced Prices.
HEIDT’S stock of Clothing id largt*. and
E • to reduce it will offer at very low'prices.
$4C
Fatally Squeezed by an Elephant.
—Tom Sullivan, of John Robinson’s
circus, got drunk on Christmas day, and
undertook to “prod” an elephant. Tfie
latter turned *p.cn him, and seizing him
with his trunk, cave him a powerful
squeeze. Sullivan was sent to the hos
pital. and it is feared is fatally injured.
All the census statistics for Illinois are
in. They show the population of the
State to be 3,080.824, an increase of
only 23 per cent, in the past decade.
Omitting Chicago, the rural' population
of the Slate has increased only 15 per
cent.
OVERCOATS fur Men and Buys from 84 00 up
to fine Reversible ».nd English diagonal or
Beaver Goods equally reduced. BUSINESS
SUITS for Men or Boys from 85 00 up to fine
goods at proportionately reduced priced. Our
stock of IlATS is replete with all the late
styles, including special styles for the holidays,
at popular prices. KING OF 8HIRT3 at Si 00
and 31 25. The “ACME.” a splendid ahirt, in
White and Fancy Colored Laundrted, for 8l 00.
Gents’ SILK and CAMBRIC HANDKER
CHIEFS, SCARFS. TIES, BINGS. PINS, etc.,
wuliable for presents, in endless variety. Gents'
and Boys’ UNDERWEAR, etc. Headquarters
for Good Clothing. 139 CONGRESS ST. decl3-t/
(Tarpntters.
The tax on matches amounts to more
than $3,000,000 a year, but it is an op
pressive tai;, and ou^ht to be removed.
The amount of revenue produced by
matches should lie raised from some
thing that is not used by every poor fam
ily.
The valuation for 1880 of property as
sessed for taxation in Kentucky is :
White men’s, $347,440,026; negroes’,
$3,123,942. This u s,n increase over the
assessment in 1879 of $5,490,705 for the
white, and $35,388 for the colored resi
dents.
JAS. IVIcGINLEY
CARPENTER,
YORK ST., SECOND DOOR EAST OF BULL.
given on all clawu* a/ work. 4dl4-M.W£Ftf
fterman Sainit.
me (Mu Ksisrr.
structions from their London agency to
make preparations for tfie reception of
sixteen Irian families, to be sent out, with
a good farming outfit, by the Duchess of
Marlborough in the spring.
The Sweet Singer of Michigan has
been heard from at Mentor in the fol
lowing terms :
O mighty Garfield, thou dost flllest
The seat which for thee people wiliest.
Thy fame resounds through all the land,
In palace great and peanut stand.
Lieut Schwatka, who commanded the
late Franklin search party in the Arctic
regions, slipped upon the snow-covered
pavement near the Sturtevant House,
New York, on Tuesday evening, and
fractured his right ankle.-
(SALTS OF POTASH.)
DIRECT IMPORTATION. FOB SALE BY
33. B. Minor, Jr.,
as 'AAY STREET
oct14-3t»
MASQUERADE
COSTUMES !
TOU BALLS AND PARTIES,
To rent at
MRS. M. HETTERICH’S,
No. 152 State street.
dec97-*ufcTellt
At Butler’s Drug Emporium
C AN be found a full line of WHITMAN’S
and MAILLARD’S BON BONS and CARA-
BULL AND CONGRESS STREETS.
decStf
KIESLINC’S NURSERY
WHITS BU7FT BOAD.
T3LAHTB, B08K8 and *OT FLOWHBS. AU
A order, left »t BerumAh New, Decor, raw.
ner Boll end York etreett, promptly flLed
fablT-tf GUSTAV* firaOlfo. Prop,.
BELOW COST!
THE ENTIRE STOCK TO BE SOLD AT
TREMENDOUS REDUCTIONS!
Balance of Holiday Goods Regardless of Cost!
G. ECKSTEIN
d«S21-Tu,W4Ftf
& oo.
Monday morning L-siu f .r
at 6nS a. m.
WEDNESDAYS. SATURDAYS A 8UKpj
|C 2> a.
** r.
6 ;0 p
| 8:3S A. M
! 1:30 p. m
5:50 p x.
8:10 a. M. T
U:C0 p. x. 13:15
5:20 p. *j 4-45
'Sundays this i* the last outwar
Saturday ni°;bt last train . .Jj w «
of 6:40.
EDV7. J. 1
novi-tf £~ T pe
COAST LINE RAILROAD OFFI Cl
Savajojah, October 30, 1850.
O N and after MONDAY, :»orsmLer ftt
the following suburban schedule vr
observed:
SUNDAY SCHED . LE.
Cars leave Bolton street at 6:3ft 16r<$
12:00 o'clock in the mornin.r. A ix T
ing every half hour from 2 i5 until t
Last car leaves Thunderbolt : 7.05 f-.
FRANK LAMAT.
oct30-tf Superintend
JruH, £tr.
C ABBA
TJ T 3VH A IV
141 Broughton Street.
HOLIDAY PRESENTS, HOLIDAY PRESENTS!
In Addition to our Sne display of JAPANESE WAKE, FANCY SATIN COVERED PIN
tu8nION8,
WORK BOXES. WRITING DESKS. WHISK BROOMS and HOLDERS and other fancy rood*
WE WILL EXHIBIT
THIS WEEK
BLACK RILKt, BLACK SATINS. BLACK CASHMERES
BROCHET SHAWLS. HAND MADE WORSTED SHAWr q
LACE HANDKERCHIEFS. I.ACE TIES, SILK HANDKKR -htvki
A NEW LOT OF CORDS AND TASSELS RECEIVED, INALLOOI ilRB
- Country orders solicited. ^ ftcSIll
ittrelrg,
A. L. DESBOIJILLONS,
JEWELER AND DEALER IN
Waltham and Elgin Watches,
FINE GOLiIJ JEWELRY, DIAMONDS,
AGENT FOR THE PIONEER WATCH.
STKBLING SILVERWARE.
FRENCH AND AMERICAN CLOCKS.
SPECTACLES.
GLASSES.
triple-plated ware.
gold-headed canes.
Fresh from the countxy
Florida Oranges
C ORN. COW PEAS. OAT
PE * S, HAV, Virginia and Trnnr
NUTS. BRAN. COCOA NUTS, GRITS.
RU8T PROOF OATS If ye, 500 Larr
an 1 Peerless POTATOES, OMONS.ei^. a
T- I 3 . BOND’
151J4 153 AND 155 DAY SnC
dec29 tf
Bananas, Coeoana
ORANGES, APPLES.
LEMONS
GRAPES
NUTS.
RAISINS
DATES.
FIGS, etc
P. H. WARD & C(
IMPORTERS OF FRUITS, SA7
decl6-tf
RED BANANA!
MALAGA GRAPES.
FLORIDA ORXNGES.
CANDIES, '‘UTS.
RAISINS, C ITRON.
dates, etc. ’SHfc.LLS.
CORAL and GRASSES.
manufacturer of
JEWELRY.
FLORIDA
nora-W.F&Mff 1 BtJILI ‘ * TBEEr > OPPOSITE SCREVEN HOUSE.
OTT
Haa been most itratlfjln*.
SUCCESS!
“SMALL PROFITS AND QUICK SALES’
_ It X inb ® , *« “MP^Ple 0 mistraJftoS 1 'Jri^^wL” a*. *? tncreeae on
We hare more than doubled the volume of our
proved to us that the old adage: business.
this prejudice, but ne are pleaded to say that sur 1 n,.,1..^%." “O » battle against
Jobbing _ promptly, attendad to. .Estimate. do"*55u£?
understood that our *ood. are equal U, ur,y\SZ hJl.\Mh^ it to £
the same as all other Waltham^ Watches. si»ordin» n. thS 6 . ur .Waltham Watches are
ViSSZ“Sf; i7* arr determined lo sell only such^^lf^3T I “ , J?®J' a ^ t ’ au< ' »•> with all
w ,® Kuarautee to be aa reprientedf ** i ” arlabr * »atiafaction.an<l
of roodA, such aa are*to*be found’cndT"!*TnRST^LAS JFW.r D o lT fl “* ® tock of *" hinds
rnlTy inrite the public to examine ou?^ HOUSE, and
24 BARNARD
STREET.
<5ag gurntrs.
1008 GAS BILLS!
BY U8ING THE
Celebrated Empire Burner!
SISCUIOI IT girea MORE LIGHT with the
same amount of Gas
than any other burner in general use. It snita the poor
man and th, rich man. a. th. amount of w CM be regu-
Uted by the lltti, check shown in the cut to auit th. con-
sumer. Thousand, are add every 7e*r, and the d a
Mill Increase,. Call end see It on exhibition at
t my
JOHN NICOLSON,
PMMBER.8TRAMAND GAS .FITTER, a DRAYTON
decictf
—AT—
ta-AHDKriim’
decU-lm 3JJ4 BZZSTRf,
CRANBERRIES.
15 Barrel* Choice Crauberr
Just receivec and for u e by
€. lu. GILBERT & C
d« *c29-tf
Subs.
BREECH LOABEif
WE HAVE IN STOCK A GOOD
KENT OIT
ENGLEH BREECH IaO A DEES i*0
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ERA
W- 4 c. aSCOTT’S BREECH LCAl
8150.
BOY ft ’ SINGLE BREECH LOADED
BOYS’ SINGLE MLZZLE LOALIIliS
GUN9 a<rSOrte<i iJiGLlSIi DOUBLE B
We wfit take order* for eiCrer
1
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mu
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mu
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colts ok mum c:i
And furnish at manufactcre~i’ pr!:«
Valaw s full assortment c' HI N
COATS and SHOES. LEQGINS and B. .G:
"ale at lowest prices.
PALMER BROS
148 AND 150 CONGRESS ST?EET.
GEOBCl
HOLLAND <31*
A pure article, for ?aie al
tf c. STRONG’S JPrug SCO
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