Newspaper Page Text
slu fuming telegram.
J. H. ESTILL, PROPRIETOR.
NO. 3 WIIIT AK K K STKE ET.
(MORNING NEWS BUILDING).
Price *•’ 00 per year.
Subscriptions received at Estill’s News De
pot, 47 Bull street, or at the office, 3 Whitaker
street. Sold by all newsdealers and news
boys. Five cents per copy.
SAVANNAH, MARCH 11. 1883.
Peylste red at the Pont <>Jfiee in Savannah as
Second t 'titin Mail Matter.
President Grev\ is seventy-four years
old. '
New York has a school tor female
clerks.
The Alabama coal mines can’t half 1111
the demand.
Hod Bey. a Turkish officer, claims to be
120 years old.
Senator Eugene Hale was a pupil in the
'< bool of Solon Chase.
Senator-elect Manderson is culled the
best story teller in Nebraska.
over seventy different museums have
the eyeball taken from Gambetta’s head.
Nothing is impossible. David Davis
buttons hi - own suspenders, fore ami aft.
Mr. Moody, the evangelist, is now
holding forth io the unconverted in Ber
muda.
About one half the million and a quar
ter people of New York residein tenement
houses.
l ather Hyacinthe lately visited the tomb
of Gambetta and placed upon it a cross of
immortelles.
The receipts from Mme. Nilsson’s two
concerts in Cincinnati showed the hand
some footing of $16,400.
Now, does it really pay to tell untruths?
Ik eh er. No, indeed. “Gath" only
makes $16,000 a vear, and sometimes not
that.
A bank President left a New Jersey
town the other day forever, without taking
a cent of the bank's money with him. He
died.
Os the 1,962 newspapers now published
in Great Britain, England has 1,530,
Wales, 75; Scotland, 184; Ireland, 152, and
the Isles, 21.
The export trade in furniture is confined
chiefly to medium grades, w hich are sent
to Africa, China, the Sandwich Islands
and to South America.
A New York man who can't sing has been
fined $lO for join'ing his voice to the music
of a choir. A good many persons now
say they want to go to church in New
York.
A California Board of Supervisors ap
propriated $l5O to proved a pauper w ith a
wooden leg and charged the amount
to “permanent repairs and improve
ments.”
The sale of patent medicines in Italy
is prohibited, unless the precise composi
tion of the nostrum is given to the Min
ister of the Interior and the sanitary
authorities.
Jay Gould may be a very nice sort of a
man, but he w ill never make any headway
in New York society. He hates cham
pagne, don't knowmuch about polo, never
chased an ani-seed bag in his life, and
eawn't dawnee.
Sifting the various conflicting rumors
regarding the health of Prince Gortscha
kotf, tin* reasonable presumption is that
the old gentleman instead of being about
to die at Nice is in excellent health at Ba
den-Baden.
1 > ;ith by violence averages over 40,000
a year in Russia, then* being an average
often murders a day. About 1,250 are
frozen to death every year. And yet,with
all these advantages, Russian newspapers
are stupid.
Simultaneously with the rumor that
Fred. Gebhard is financially embarrassed
comes the report that two jewelers and a
cut-flower dealer in New York are forming
a syndicate to keep Mrs. Langtry in the
count ry another year.
When Mrs. John Jacob Astor wears her
diamonds at an evening party she is said
to be accompanied by detectives who are
“splendid fae similes of the society gen
tlemen of the period." This is rather
rough on the detectives.
A small boy in South Carolina raises
canary birds and gives the proceeds of
their sale to the Board of Foreign Mis
sion. In three years this enterprising
and benevolent young person has thus
gathered and given about SIOO.
Nine men, who say they are Americans,
are in prison at Panama on a charge of
stealing fifty thousand dollars. The fact
that it took nine of them to get away with
that -mall amount throws a good deal
of doubt on their claim of being Ameri
cans.
On our first page we present this morn
ing a portrait of Acting Governor James
S. Boynton. It is a creditable likeness.
The Governor is over six feet in height,
linelx proportioned, with iron-gray hair 1
ami clean-shaven face, and is altogether a
striking ligure.
“Dar’ am not much cash satisfackshun
in bein’ good," says Uncle Mose, “but
when de good man h'ars a knock on his
doah at midnight de feelin’ dat he kin git
up an open de doah an ax wheder de pus
son wants to borry campfire or mustard
am worf de biggest co’ner lot in any city
in de land.”
Although Kansas has for eleven years
had a capital punishment law, nobody
has been hanged except by lynchers. Un
der the statute a person sentenced to
death is first imprisoned a year in the pen
itentiary, and if, at Hie expiration of that
time, the death warrant is signed by the
Governor, the execution takes place;
but otherwise the imprisonment con
tinues.
Philip Rourke Marston is considered by
Rossetti to take leading place among the
younger English poets. He is the son of
Dr. Westland Marston, the dramatist:
and Arthur O’Shaughnessy, whose death
a year since was so serious a loss to Eng
lish poetry, was his brother-in-law. Asa
writer of sonnets on Love and Death, Mr.
Marston has no living peer. He has pub
lished two volumes of poems—“ Son
g and “All-in-All,” and has a third
volume nearly ready. Blind since the
age of three, his poems are distinguished
for a keen and exquisite* sense of natural
beauty w hich a painter might envy. He
is. at present, thirty-two years of age. hav
ing been born in August of 1850, and has
plenty of time before him in w hich to do
his best work.
The streets of Paris are lighted by
43,000 gas lamps and 429 lamps which
burn petroleum and colza oil. There are
in addition 25,000 jets of gas in the build
ings which belong to the municipality,
and the total cost for lighting them is es
timated for the current year at 6,500,000
francs. An ordinary gas lamp burns
about six galloils of gas an hour, and the
cost for a year, supposing the gas to be
burning for about ten hours every night,
is almost exactly 105 francs. The petro
leum and oil lamps cost about 50 per cent,
more. The gas company employs 76 men
looking after the lamps and the mains,
many of them being told off to inspect the
metres and the pipes in private houses, and
see that there is no escape. The lighting
power of the gas supplied by the company
is tested every evening at eleven labora
tories, situated in different parts of the
city,
Is it Irreverence?
The Chicago Inter-Ocean laments the de
cline of the spirit of reverence for great
men and the growth of a tendency to
iconoclasm regarding the traditions
which a generation or two ago almost
served to canonize the worthies of early
American history. It says: “There was
a time when American children could be
persuaded to believe no wrong of the
patriots ot the revolution. Are there not
children of this day inclined to believe no
good of them until the evidence has been
carefully weighed? If there are such
children are they not following the ex
ample of their elders in taking a low view
on impulse, and working slowly toward a
better one under pressure of facts ?” There
is probably at least a measure ot truth in
the Inter-Ocean-s statement of the condi
tion of sentiment in this direction, but if
it is exceptionally apparent in the young
that circumstance is probably due only to
the fact that youth is more ingenuous and
more demonstrative in the expression of
its faiths and prejudices than is the case
with mature age. It is, however, probably
a misconception to ascribe the phe
nomenon to a decadence of patriotism or a
decline of regard for distinguished worth
and virtue. Reactions, whether physical,
moral or sentimental, are prone to equal,
if not to exceed, in extent and energy the
movement or operation to which they are
the sequel. If it may be justly affirmed of
the American people that they are lacking
in that sentiment well described as
“hero worship," the characteristic is cer
tainly one of quite recent development,
and its inception must be indicative of a
reaction. The tendency of our people to
hero worship has attracted the attention
and provoked the satire of every European
critic who has visited our shores and pub
lished his impressions of our character
and manners. And w hile not. gratifying
to our national amour propre, such reflec
tions can not justly be denounced as
wholly unfounded and slanderous. The
picture has quite commonly been exag
gerated and rendered a caricature rather
than a sac-simile of the national foible, but
that the national character really pre
sented the salient point thus travestied
can not be ingenuously gainsaid.
Not only has the indulgence of hero
worship among us been universal and ex
travagant, but it has required but a ridi
culously meagre equipment of heroic at
tributes to secure this popular homage.
“Generals” who never set a squadron in
the field—“statesmen” whose conception
of the science of government was limited
to the acquisition of the loaves and fishes
—“reformers” whose pretended virtue was
the subtle cunning ot the demagogue and
whose loud professions were mere “sound
and fury, meaning nothing”—all these in
turn have strutted their span before a
credulous public and in turn claimed and
received a homage as effusive as unmerit
ed. Time and again the borrowed plum
age has been stripped from such pretended
eagles, revealing jackdaw s or buzzards,
and the revelation has naturally not
tended to enhance the popular faith in
heroes. If our people are over enthusi
astic and prone to intemperate zeal in the
manifestation of their sympathies, they
are also earnest in their detestation of
charlatanry and quick to resent any form
of imposition. Having so often found
themselves deceived in the character of
particular heroes, it is natural that they
should come to doubt the legitimacy of
“heroism” itself, and to regard all such
claims and professions of peculiar excel
lence or eminence w ith incredulity.
Nor is it wonderful that such a spirit of
skepticism, once aroused, should have a
retroactive operation. If the acknowledg
ed heoes of the present day have so often
proved to be impostors and hyprocrites
after having succeeded in posing for a
time as models of ability, w orth and phe
nomenal superiority of character, what
conclusive guaranty have we ot the au
thenticity of the heroes of a past age,
whose characters live only in a possibly
too partial history and w hose virtues are
recorded only by tradition? To such
speculation as this has the popular judg
ment of the day probably been led by the
oft-recurring discovery that contemporary
heroes are made of very ordinary clay,
audit is probably to the disillusion result
ant from such discovery rather than to
any decline of admiration or reverence for
true nobility of character or true emi
nence of achievement that the tendency
deplored by the Inter-Ocean is referable.
A crusade against the cigarette is like
ly to be begun among the children of the
public schools in Philadelphia. One of the
principals, Mr. William Stephens, has
called the attention of the Board of Edu
cation to the subject, in w hich he says
that, of the 50,060 pupils in the public
schools of the city, a large proportion use
tobacco in various forms; and that the
habit has increased to an alarming ex
tent since the cigarette was instituted.
Mr. Stephens has prepared and had print
ed a short statement ot the physical and
mental disorders produced in children by
tobacco, and has pasted it on the inside of
the cover of every text-book used in his
school. The Association of Male Princi
pals has approved his letter to the board,
ami an energetic campaign on that line is
the expected result.
A man was arrested in Boston for
drunkenness. He gave a recognizance to
appear before the court. He then went
immediately to Brockton and w T as again
arrested, being still drunk. He gave an
other recognizance. Being found guilty
by the court in Boston, he pleaded before
the court in Brockton that he had already
been convicted of the same intoxication.
The court held the case under advise
ment.
An English woman whose husband had
beaten her, torn off her clothes,throw n her
down, reviled her, w iped his shoes on her
mantle, sat up all night to burn her
clothes up, cut toss one of her eyebrows
and shaved one side of her head, was told
by the Judge that her suit for divorce was
premature, and that she must wait until
her husband should put het in danger of
erious “injury in life and limb.”
President Arthur, according to the esti
mate of a reliable correspondent, has
heard “Hail to the Chief’ 7,000 times in
the last seventeen months. When the
orchestra struck it up on his entrance at
the opera the other night the corres
pondent says “he folded his handover the
lower part of his ample white w aistcoat
and looked a little seasick, but beyond
that he bore the ordeal manfully.
The Czar has ordered 900,600 pies for his
coronation dinner. The banqueting table
will be eleven miles in length, the brass
bands will number 1,000 instruments, and
when the national anthem is sung 8,000
trained voices will join in the chorus.
Nihilistic performances are not provided
for in the programme.
A woman lay three days in a trance at
Big Rapids, Mich. On recovering she be
lieved that she had died and come to life
as another person. This delusion cannot
be dispelled, though in other respects she
is sane. And her husband w ill be put to
all the trouble and expense of courting
her O'er again.
Reports of cruelty incur State prisons
and penitentiaries are so numerous and
distressing we should think they would
have the effect to discourage young men
who contemplate entering upon a crimi
nal career. Yet such doesn't appear to
be the result. They take the chances all
the same.
A manufacturer of “rare gold coins”
for the numismatic market recently set
up business in Kansas, but his infant in
dustry is just now languishing in the
Olathe jail.
The Rule of Three—For the third person
to clear out.
A Crazy System.
A little girl, eight years old, died in
Baltimore last wdbk. and the certificate of
the attending physician gave as the
cause of death “over study.”
She had been reduced one
grade last summer for inability to keep
up with her class, and having been re
cently promoted was in terror of being
put back. This was an exceptional
case, but there can be no doubt
that the unreasonable and brutal system
of “grades” is doing harm to thousands
of school children. This system proceeds
on the hypothesis that, if all children are
not equal in mental gifts, they can ap
proach a standard of equality, to rise
above w hich is to be reckoned a prodigy
and to fall below it a dunce.
A child of tolerable abilities is spurred
on to efforts beyond its pow ers. Mediocre
talent is forced in the hope of budding in
to genius. Falling short of the arbitrary
standard in one study necessitates an
amount of extra energy to come up to it,
the expenditure of which retards progress
in others, and thus it goes.
Under the old system of free schools the
scholar's progress was natural. Industry
was exacted, but a boy's deficiency in
arithmetic did not prevent his familiarity
w'ith history.
He could apply his energies to his
studies in proportion to his power. To
day children are culled on to make bricks,
but the all-important straw' may not be at
hand. Nevertheless, their task goes on
without regard to the supply of the neces
sary adjunct.
The preposterous system should be abol
ished and the laws of nature be followed.
It may be hard to kill the average boy
with over study, but the educators of
to-day are making systematic efforts to
demonstrate the facility with which his
dispatching may be effected.
The Church ot England hah just pub
lished its first year-book. The work is
necessarily incomplete, but exhibits great
activity and liberality in the English
Church. In twenty-eight out of the thir
ty-two dioceses there w as spent from 1840
to 1871 the large amount of $128,000,000 in
restoring and building churches, not in
cluding repairs which cost less than
$2,500. In thirteen out of the thirty-two
dioceses over $20,000,000 has been spent in
the last ten years for the same purpose.
The church building societies of England
have no endowments, but make use each
year of the benefactions of churchmen.
The Calvary Monumental Episcopal
Church, a brown stone edifice built 36
years ago on Front street, Philadelphia,
has been moved piecemeal to Forty-first
street, four miles from its original posi
tion. Every portion of the old material
w as marked before the structure w 7 as de
molished, and now occupies the same po
sition it did in the old building. The
church originally cost $28,000, and the re
moval caused an expenditure of $14,000.
The stone was cleaned with acid, and the
exterior presents all the appearance of an
entirely new' building.
During the recent festivities at New
market, England, on the occasion of
Archer’s wedding, a balloon was sent up
representing the great jockey mounted on
Beau Brummel. The success of the aerial
equine was not all that could have been
desired. The balloon ascended to a con
siderable altitude, and then was seen
floating through the air with the horse's
tail w here his head ought to have been.
This was regarded by the superstitious
as an omen, and those who had backed
Beau Brummel for the Derby forthwith
hedged their money.
According to Ludwig Nobel, the oil king
of Russia, a gigantic fortune awaits the
inventor ot a lamp capable of burning the
thick, but non-explosive, oil of Baku,
which yields only 25 per cent, of kerosene,
and is therefore heavily handicapped as
against the rich petroleum of America.
Herr Nobel is of the opinion that a revo
lution in the oil trade would follow the
invention of such a lamp; for Baku then
would not attempt to compete with
America in kerosene, but would flood the
world with non-explosive oil.
Mr. Robert I’. Porter writes from the
English manufacturing city of Bradford
that the coffee houses there vie success
fully with the gin shops in lavish display
of gilt letters, glaring lights, stained glass
and polished brass, and that a frank pub
lican said to him: “The coffee ’ouses is
playing the with our trade, sir.” One
striking result of the coffee house work is
apparent in the fact that the number of
arrests for drunkenness in Bradford was
1,053 in 1875, but had fallen to 346 in 1881.
The total discharge of the Mississippi
during the flood of 1882 was 2,200,000 cubic
feet per second, and it was then estimated
that the Atchafalaya carried off one-sixth
of the volume of the river. This year the
Atchafalaya is discharging at the rate of
600,000 cubic feet per second, equivalent to
30 per cent., or nearly one-third of the vol
ume of the Mississippi, having more than
doubled its outflow since last year. Here
is a danger that is threatening and imme
diate.
His Grace the Duke of Norfolk, premier
Duke of England, tried to enter Palace
Yard, London, during the Bradlaugh de
monstration at the opening of Parlia
ment, but was prevented by a policemen,
who didn't recognize him. In vain the
Duke revealed his august identity. “You
a peer?” cried the guardian of the law;
“You’re no peer, you’re a Bradlaughite.”
And the Duke had to give it up as a bad
job.
The trustees of Columbia College have
declared it inexpedient to educate thetw’o
sexes together. But while not prepared
to admit females into the college, they
deem it expedient to take measures to
raise the standard of female education by
courses of study to be pursued outside of
the college, but under its jurisdiction,
w r ith suitable academic honors.
A statistician has gathered figures
show ing that the United States has 38,-
900,000 cattle, against 30,000,000 in India
and 29,000,000 in Russia. In horses this
country stands second in the list, with
10,500,000, against 20,000,000 in Russia. In
sheep we stand fourth, but the number of
horses and sheep in the United States is
rapidly increasing.
Manganese bronze is growing rapidly in
favor as a material for screw-propeller
blades. It is very strong, and its durabil
ity far exceeds that of steel, the life of
which in a propeller averages about three
years. A propeller made of bronze will,
however, last as long as the vessel, and
afterward be of considerable money
value.
According to reports prepared by the
Cincinnati police, the number of business
houses inundated in that city during the
flood was 1,548; number of residences,
2,548; number ot families occupying these
houses, 3,691; number of persons in these
families, 15,383. There were 17 railroad
depots inundated and 15 coal yards.
An exchange speaks of a man being
’ ••numbered with the silent dead.” It
must be a great satisfaction to his friends
to know that he is not numbered with the
noisy dead. The latter position w ould be
decidedly unpleasant to a quiet, orderly
corpse.
Arabi Pasha is said to be much pleased
with his new residence in Ceylon. He is
much better off there than he would be in
Egypt, and Egypt is much better oil’ with
out him.
They are 221 trotters in this country who
have won in purses, stakes or premiums
$10,006 or more each. Their aggregate
winnings are $5,131,590.
£iCr- Hoods, scarfs, ribbons and any
fancy articles can be made any color
wanted with the Diamond Dyes. All the
popular colors.
Coronation of the Czar.
The sword of Damocles still hangs sus
pended over the Czar, despite the elabor
ate preparations going on for his corona
tion. A correspondent of the New’ Y ork
Sun thus gives the show side of the pic
ture: “Eleven miles of table are being
constructed for the banquet on the plain,
and 85 circular counters for the distribu
tion to the moujiks of 900,000 pies. Ru
benstein is to write a march and direct an
orchestra of 1,000 musicians and 8,000
choristers. Sixteen enormous vats, to
bold the free beer, are being built in the
public places, and an English company is
covering the Kremlin with electric lights.”
On the other hand, what must be the feel
ings of the royal hero of all this fuss and
feathers, when the police are continually
finding new proofs of Nihilist activity?
They tell of securing communications of
the great Hartmann in Germany, giving
directions how to turn the feast into a
funeral. But probably the most terrible
thought to the Czar is not what the police
find out, but what they fail io find out. It
is “the faint, perplexing dread,” the
knowledge that he is watched by a vigi
lant, secret enemy, whose blow may come
from the quarter least expected, which
must make it all very much like a hollow’
mockery.
The Lord Chief Justice of England,
Lord Coleridge, will visit our country
during the coming summer, having ac
cepted the invitation of the New York
Bai- Association to be their guest. Lord
Coleridge will leave England about the
middle of August if his health will per
mit. He is a grand-nephew of the poet
Coleridge, an d has held the high positions
of Solicitor General, Attorney General
and the Chief Justiceship of the Common
Pleas. Lord John Duke Coleridge was
made a Peer in 1873 with the title of First
Baron Coleridge. He is sixty-one years
old, and gets a salary of $40,000 a year
and is a Liberal in politics. He suc
ceeded Lord Cockburn on the Queen’s
bench.
The Rev. Dr. Morgan Dix, of Trinity
Church, New York, in a sermon last Sun
day, made some strictures upon the ad
vanced ideas of some of the opposite sex,
and on Monday he was attacked in a lec
ture by Lillie Devereaux Blake, a woman
suffragist, who described the doctor as a
Rip Van Winkle, who had slept for 220
years instead of 20, and on wakening w as
startled at modern innovations. Women,
she said, were to-day regarded more near
ly the intellectual equals of men than
ever before, and progress would continue
to be made in spite of the opposition of
Dr. Dix. She ridiculed the doctor’s idea
of male protection, but said she had no
objection to clinging vines, provided there
was something respectable to cling to.
PERSONAL.
Senator Tabor’s few 7 weeks in the
United States Senate cost him over SIO,OOO.
The Earl of Dudley, whose income from
his various mines often amounts to more
than $5,000,000, is in a condition border
ing on imbecility.
Rev. Isaac Nicholson, D. D., rector of
St. Mark Protestant Episcopal Church,
lias been elected Bishop of Indiana by the
Episcopal Convention of that diocese.
The New York Times says that “ex-
Speaker Keifer should begin a personal
scrapbook, if he never has before. He
can find plenty of mighty interesting
reading to paste in it.”
Ex-Governor Stanford is thought to pos
sess the largest vineyard owned by an in
dividual anywhere in the world. The
vineyard at Vina, Cal., embraces 3,500
acres, all in thriving vines.
Henry Kimber, a solicitor of London,
has loaned £25,000 to the English colony
at Rugby, Tenn. The residents of the
colonv think that the sum is sufficient to
put the enterprise on a good basis.
Sir Moses Montefiore, the noted philan
thropist of England, w ill be a century
old next year. There is a movement on
foot among the Hebrews of New York to
present him with a centennial gift of some
kind.
Managgiala Rocca, during the carnival
at Rome, went about dressed as a General
and giving w ine and bread to the children,
and on the last day he gave them a plate
of macaroni. His trade is that of a rag
picker.
The w idow 7 of Dr. Glenn, of California,
has written a kind and sympathetic letter
to Mrs. Miller, the wife of the man who
murdered him. The two ladies, says the
Colusa Sun, have been like sisters all
their lives.
Wagner was mixed up, very much
against his w ill, in the celebrated trial of
Count Arnim, who, in a political letter,
many years ago, said, ironically, that
Prince Bismarck was “the greatest living
personage next to Wagner.” This, it was
argued for the prosecution, was a deadly
insult, “it being perfectly notorious that
Wagner, the musician, was stark staring
mad.”
The celebrated singer Ronconi died
recently of heart disease. He was about
to sing in “Faust,” but when the curtain
rose and he attempted to rise from the
chair in w hich he w as seated on the stage
he could not do so, but fell back in it,
trembling and staring wildly. Thejorches
tra w ent on playing, but no sound escaped
his lips. The audience laughed and hissed
by turns, some saying that Ronconi w 7 as
drunk, and others that the man on the
stage was not Ronconi at all. It was soon
found that Ronconi was dead.
Mr, Blaine is writing his new book
without an amanuensis, beginning after
breakfast and working about three hours
daily at the composition; he devotes some
of the remainder of the day to library and
documentary research, and occasionally
to personal inquiries. He has made a
contract with a New England publishing
house, and will issue the first volume at
the close of the present year or at the first
of next. The distinguished author w ill,
it is understood, pay a high compliment
to Mr. Jefferson’s diplomatic talent, and
will deal with Mr. Conkling and his liv
ing compeers with a generous and appre
ciative hand.
A Just Cause for Shooting,—During
the war, while General Steele commanded
the post at Little Rock, an old Arkansaw
yer was drawn up before the General on a
charge of shooting a soldier.
“YVhy did you shoot the soldier?” de
nuded Steele.
“I had a right to shoot him, General.”
“Did he insult your wife?”
“Wussen that. General.”
“Did he strike you?”
“A heap wussen that.”
“What did he do?”
“Why, General, the cuss said that I w as
an uneddycated man. That was mor’n I
could put up with. He hit my daughter
w ith a churn-dasher, and said that my
wife was as homely as a cow, bvt, Gen
eral. when he insinewated agin my col
lege trainin’ I couldn't stand it no longer,
and I lifted him.”— Arkansaw Traveler.
“I Have Been Afflicted
with an affection of the throat from child
hood, caused by diphtheria, and have used
various remedies, but have never found
anything equal to Brown’s Bronchial
Troches.”— Her. G. M. F. Hampton,
Piketon, Ky. Sold only in boxes.
Remember This.
If you are sick Hon Bitters will surely
aid Nature in making you well when all
else fails.
If you are costive or dyspeptic, or are
suffering from any other of the numerous
diseases of the stomach or bowels, it is
your own fault if you remain ill, for Hop
Bitters are a sovereign remedy in all such
complaints.
If you are wasting away with any form
of Kidney disease, stop tempting‘Death
this moment, and turn for a cure to Hop
Bitters.
If you are sick w ith that terrible sick
ness Nervousness, you will find a “Balm
in Gilead" in the use of Hop Bitters.
If you are a frequenter, or a resident of
a miasmatic district, barricade your sys
tem against the scourge of all countries —
malarial, epidemic, bilious, and intermit
tent fevers—by the use of Hop Bitters.
If you have’ rough, pimply, or sallow
skin," bad breath, pains and aches, and feel
miserable generally. Hop Bitters will give
you fair skin, rich Wood, and sweetest
breath, health, and comfort.
In snort they cure all Disease of the
Stomach, Bowels, Blood, Liver. Nerves,
Kidneys, Bright's Disease. SSOO will be
paid for a case they will not cure or help.
That poor, bedridden, invalid wife, sis
ter, mother, or daughter, can be made the
nicture of health, by a few bottles of Hop
Bitters, costing but a trifle. Will you let
them suffer?
MISS WILDROSE.
HARRIET PRESCOTT SPOFFORD.
Miss Wildrose was very young when
she made her earliest literary venture. It
was in a long poem, of such a scope and
nature that at first uo one was disposed
to believe it could be the work of a girl
not yet twenty. But she had made no af
fectation of disguising herself under
silence or with a pseudonym, and the rec
tor of the parish had heard portions of
‘‘The Song of the Morning Stars” before
its completion: and when this was known,
and the first poem was followed by an
other and yet another kindred to it. the
doubters were silenced, and Miss Wild
rose took her place among the poets—on
the bench with Milton thought her family
and friends; on the humblest footstool of
all Miss Wildrose herself thought. She
was content to be the lowest there: only
to be in the glorious company at all was
quite enough for her.
Os course this was criticised. This great
critic counted the number of Saxon deri
vatives on a page, and honored her ac
cording to his sum total, and that one
weighed her rhymes the hair balance un
der glass that is sensitive to the sound of
the falling snowflake, and the other found
a real mare’s nest of delight in the lame
foot of the blank verse. But the people
liked the little books, and the popular ac
knowledgment was such that Miss Wild
rose’s head might have been turned it her
art had been less a matter of moment with
her, or if just at the time she had not met
Raphael Stuart and loved him almost on
the meeting.
She had always lived in the village. He
came to her like a being not only of the
outside world, but of the world of art in
which her dreams and fancies lay. For he
was a painter of more than common prom
ise if not yet of absolute performance,
and if poor as the traditional painter is,
yet with too much love of the colors and
harmonies and shapes of nature that be
long to all who can see them, to sigh for
those heavier luxuries that belong only to
the few. In time he would like them too,
but just now he has youth, art and love.
What more could he wish?
Like most young artists, Europe was
his goal, if he ever could sell enough
sketches to warrant his departure. And
now, since coming to the village, he had
doubled the distance between him and
this goal; for how was he going without
Miss Wildrose? and in order to take a
wife with him he would have to make
twice as many sales as he had counted on
before. Miss Wildrose’s little income
from her books would not go a great way
in their purse, for the sale of the best
liked verses is not a miraculous draught,
and she had really worn out various
copies of her books in the service of bor
rowers not buyers. Moreover," as Mrs.
Stuart, she could hardly make her way
with the same expenseless simplicity as
when only Miss Wildrose. Plainly old
age was likely to creep upon them'both
before they could venture to let their lives
become one and make their vision of those
old streets and galleries, those sum
mer seas and glacier tops, a thing of real
life.
This, however, did not seem so sad a
thing to Miss Wildrose as it did to
Raphael. She could go on singing her
songs in the little village as long as
her heart and soul were in sympathy with
the great strain that nature sings, and
here was Raphael all day and every day
beside her. But it troubled her at length
a little to see his unrest. Perhaps she
caught the unrest herself. Her work felt
the trouble, and for a time she feared she
had lost the secret word of her power;
she began to be as eager as he for the im
possible.
“I want my outlook opened,” he cried,
searching the blue sky with his bluer
eyes. “I want to see" for myself how
Raphael turned this line, how Veronese
blended those tints, how Rembrandt flung
that shadow. 1 want to know what they
mean by saying Turner made color do-the
work of drawing. I want to see the great
masters of to-day in their studios or atield.
1 want to see Venice before some ac
cursed steamboat rips up her looking
glasses.”
“I want to see theEuganean hills,” said*
Miss Wildrose, casting her glance dream
ily along the flat country where never a
hill was seen.
“I want my home, my wife, my hearth,”
he said, and then for a little time the
lovers’ happiness seemed only a high value
of their art.
“If you could only be sent to Europe,”
said she at last. “If you could be
Consul in some foreign town in France
or Italy, or in the East, or in the north
of Africa.”
“If I could go abroad and be paid for it,”
he said, laughing. “Ah, yes, if 1 could have
the moon for my lantern!”
“But it is not impossible,” she answer
ed with a brightening smile. “Now 1 con
sider it not at all impossible. I really think
it may be compassed. Oh, Raphael, if it
only should!”
“I am afraid you are building
castles and the scaffolding is in the
clouds,” he said.
“Listen then. “Isn’t the new Secretary
of State a man of letters? Hand-in-glove
with publishers and authors ? A patron of
painters too?”
“A regular Maecenas! My darling, your
wits are as bright as your eyes. Take
me for a clod! I see it all now you have
illuminated it. Yes, yes, a good case ought
to be made out between my credentials
and yours.”
“Oh, I shouldn’t want to figure in it,”
she murmured shrinkingly.
“Then you shall not. My little wife
shall stay on the dark side of the moon
till she wakes up ana finds herself in a
gondola some sunset, with the moon in the
lagoons.”
And it was not a month before armed
with all sufficient papers as he deemed,
Raphael Stuart was waiting in the Secre
tary’s ante-room so confident of success
that he was already canvassing in his own
mind the merits of the opposing ocean
lines, the best place for his wife’s state
room and whether or not he would be able
to get any sketch of weltering waters or
bits of sail or shipping or sea-birds on the
way.
He had plenty of time to think over as
the hours went by before he was called
into the great mail’s presence. The Con
sulship to Venice? Ah, that was a pity!
He should be very sorry to be obliged tore
fuse a request of his friend the writer of
the letter Mr. Stuart had sent in. He had
heard of Mr. Stuart; he had seen some of
his work and indeed had purchased a lit
tle scene, “The Spent Wave,” if Mr, Stuart
remembered it. And as Raphael Stuart’s
color rose something about him seemed to
interest the Secretary more, for he read
the letter again and asked him for his
other papers.
“They are very strong,” he said, “and
it is very fortunate. I have all but prom
ised the Consulship to Mr. Tiernay, who
had just left me. Perhaps you saw him
pass' out; he looks like an Italian brigand
and there seems something fitting and ap
propriate in designating him for the post,”
said the Secretary, laughing, for he knows
how to fill disagreeable pauses with light
words,
“Very well,” he said, “I shall regret
it very much if I cannot be of some ser
vice to you. Depend upon it I shall try.
I am sorry to have so far committed my
self. Perhaps something can be done, al
though lam doubtful. Are you in the
city long? Where are you staying? Can
you dine with me to-night ? My wife and
daughters shall be pleased. A few pleas
ant people. Sharp seven. Good-morn
ing.”
And before Raphael recovered himself
the plausible Secretary had bowed him
out and admitted the next, and he was
standing with a dazed air among the
ruins of his hopes, the face of the Italian
brigand, whom he now remembered to
have seen, dominating the ruins like that
of an evil genius.
But he was not the sort easily cast
down. After a couple of hours he was on
his feet again, full of pluck and purpose,
investigating the art of the eapitol, and a
•few minutes before seven he was at the
Secretary’s door, admitted by stately
black porters, making his bow to Mrs.
Secretary, and if not conscious that Miss
Secretary was regarding him with an aus
picious eye, quite conscious that she
looked like one of the sweetest and best
natured young woman in the world
and one to whom, before the dinner
was announced to which he led her out,
he felt like confiding both his joys and sor
rows.
What troubled him was that before he
had been five minutes in the drawing
room he had seen the Italian brigand
talking with a famous General and look
ing as though he was taking his points
so as to be ready for the next ambush,
and that now he was placed on the
other side of the table but a few seats dis
tant.
The dinner went on quite as usual,
when suddenly there was a lull in the
conversation, which had been turned by
the Secretary to the subject of modern
literature, and Mr. Tiernay’s voice was
heard quite distinctly saying to the
Secretary as he bent slightly forward:
“Oh, I assure you. my dear sir, there is
no one better qualified than I to speak of
the ‘The Song of the Morning Star,’ since
I wrote it. as I may say.”
And then as Raphael tossed back his
hair like one preparing to offer battle, be
addl'd:
“That is to say. Miss Wildrose and I
wrote it together and rewrote. I think
there is not a single stanza in which our
joint work is not to be found. The idea of
the opening chorus is her own, and the
work mine. I myself suggested the refrain
of the Wandering Stars, and she worked
that up—"
“And the Cloud of Comets?” asked the
Secretary.
“Ob. that is mine. too. and so was the
Earth's recitative in the Region of Me
teors, all mine. But her delicate touches
gave it a grace not within the power
of a masculine pen. Miss Wildrose’s
grace—”
“I beg pardon. Are you speaking of
Miss Wildrose?” said the Secretary’s
daughter, as Raphael sat aghast and
utterly incapable of using her name in
this scene.
“Os Miss Wildrose?” said Mr. Tiernay.
“Oh, certainly!”
“And do you really know her?”
“Like a sister,” said the Brigand. “Bet
ter than a sister, I might add, since we
have worked together for our name and
our name together.”
“How I should like to see her! Do
you suppose she will ever come toJWash
ington ?”
“Ah, it is unlikely. The poet is too sen
sitive for contact with practical things,
you know.”
“Then you must tell me of her. Is she
pretty? Is she pleasing?”
“Pleasing, yes. I—l can hardly speak
of her so openly, you must believe me.
She is perhaps one’s idea of Sappho— ’’
“Yes. Large?”
“Superb moulding.”
“Blue eyes?”
“As violets.”
“Then I hope her hair is black.”
“As black as night.”
“Every one has such a different idea of
Sappho,” said Miss Secretary. “Now to
me Sappho looks like Story's Cleopatra.
And by the way, papa, do you know that
Mr. Gould's ‘Ghost of Hamlet’s Father’
is to be seen in Boston? I could take the
journey there to see it! He is the Shelley
of sculptors.”
And then the Secretary took up the
tale, and his daughter bent her head over
her little satin menu and whispered to
Raphael:
“I thought you said you were engaged
to marry Miss Wildrose?”
“So I did.”
“Why then didn’t you announce your
selt just now?”
“Drag her name before a dinner table?”
“I believe in you!” she said, earnest
ly. “Have you her picture? Pray let me
see it?”
She looked at it and passed it to her next
neighbor.
“It looks more like a New England
maiden than like a Queen’s daughter,”
she said as she did so.
“Oh, is this the new Princess?” cried
the lady into'whose hands it came direct
ly afterward, and it presently reached the
Secretary. It was a miniature that Ra
phael himself had painted.
“ ‘Eyes dark as pansies in the front of
March,’ ” said the Secretary. “Those
close braids of fair hair contrast well.
Quite a, petite young woman. You spoke
of seeing the Princess when you were
last abroad, Mr. Tiernay. This is quite
unlike the picture in the illustrated
newspapers. Tell me if it is a good like
ness.”
And the little picture passed from hand
to hand, glance by glance, to Mr. Tier
nay.
“1 really am unable to answer,” said
the Brigand. “They are such a swarm.
This must be a new one, for I don’t recol
lect seeing her. No the face is quite un
familiar. I have never seen it.”
“Is it good likeness, Mr. Stuart?” asked
the Secretary’s daughter, in a voice like
a bell, regardless as to whether she
violated any sanctities of hospitality or
not.
“It is called so,” said Raphael.
“It is the picture of Miss Wildrose,”
cried the young lady in the same clear
treble, as her mother, to avoid the fiasco
she saw coming, rose from the table.
And if there is any happiness in Sea
sickness Mr. and Mrs. Raphael Stuart,
on their way to Venice a fortnight from
that time, were most supremely happy.
A Story of Diamonds.
V. I’. Cor. Philadelphia Record.
There is a good story told at the clubs
about a certain young man in this city—
too good not to print—which, fortunately,
does not lose all its point in withholding
the names of the principals. The young
man in question inherited a fine business
from his father (a self-made man of the
highest integrity), and although the es
tate has not yet been settled, the son has
been able to get hold of considerable
money, but, having got under the influ
ence of a cleverer and more vicious man,
he is spending more than his income war
rants. Although he has a wife, he became
interested in a lady connected with the
stage, to whom he has been paying marked
attention. This lady took it into her head
the other day that she would like to have
some diamonds, and she expressed her
wish to the young man. Os course, gal
lantry compelled him to gratify the, wish
and he went down to a diamond broker in
Maiden Lane and purchased $ 10,000 worth
of the precious stones, which he duly pre
sented. When he took the diamond he
did not pay for them; but the broker,
knowing who he was and his father’s
reputation for integrity, allowed him to
take them with a simple memorandum of
the transaction. In a day or two he call
ed at the young man's place of business
and asked*for payment. The young man
was very polite, but regretted he had not
the money just then. He would, however,
give the broker an I. O. U., which the
broker took for the purpose of having
something negotiable. He felt a little un
certain about its value, and consulted
with a prominent business man whom he
knew would know all about the young
man’s affairs. To his supreme disgust he
was told that the note was not worth the
paper it was written on; that, while the
business the father had left was apparent
ly flourishing, this note was entirely per
sonal, and that the town was white with
similar ones, The poor broker was
worried to death. A loss of SIO,OOO was
not easy to bear, but he set himself to
work to think out away to retrieve his
loss. Relief came in tlfle most unexpect
ed manner, like an answer to prayer. The
woman to whom the diamonds had been
given, with a fickleness that is peculiar to
her kind, got tired of the setting in a few
days, and, without saying anything to the
young man sent them down to Maiden
Lane to be reset. When the broker saw
them come in, he could hardly believe his
eyes.
"“They were sent to reset,” said the
clerk, handing them to him.
“I will reset them,” said the broker;
“I will reset them in the safe;” and there
there are to-day.
What the woman said to the young man
when her diamonds didn’t come home,
and what the young man said to the wo
man in explanation, is more than even the
prying ears of the club have discovered
yetj but I fancy there was a scene on
which it would be well to ring down the
curtain.
Senator Tabor’s Only Speech.—
It is an unwritten law of the United
States Senate that no Senator shall speak
during the first year of his term, no mat
ter what his prominence may have been.
Blaine, Conger and others who were con
spicuous in the Lower House were mute
as tombstones through their first year in
the Senate. Mr. Tabor, the new Senator
from Colorada, who was elected in Jan
uary for a term which expires March 4, so
highly esteeming the honor chartered a
special train for Washington, so that he
might not lose any time. He also, it ap
pears, did not intend his term should ex
pire without at least one speech from him.
So the day before yesterday he arose to
address the Senate. Conversation was
hushed. The galleries were solemn in
their silence. All eyes were turned upon
the new Senator, and all ears strained to
catch his words. Mr. Tabor, addressing
the Chair, said:
“Mr. President, I am paired with the
honorable Senator from Hampton.”
That, for a maiden speech, was a model
of brevity; but the Senator made his first
and only speech in the Senate.— St. Paul
Ci lobe.
Designing Villainy.
When you go to your druggist to buy a
bottle of Simmons Liver Regulator, and
he offers you some counterfeit with a
similar sounding name and says, “It is
the same thing or just as good,” ask him
his motive for not giving you the genuine
preparation in White AV rapper, with red
Z thereon, prepared by J. H. Zeilin & Co.
The only object such a dealer can have is
the fact that he makes an extra twenty
five cents per bottle profit by selling "a
cheap and counterfeit article which may
do you positive injury.
Horsford’s Acid Phosphate
is a preparation of the phosphates of lime,
magnesia, potash and iron in such form
as to lie readily assimilated by the sys
tem. Descriptive pamphlet sent free.
Rumford Chemical Works, Providence,
R. I.
£Jron ©iftrro.
Oh,Myßack!
That’s a common expres
sion and has a world of
meaning. How much suf
fering is summed up in it.
The singular thing about
it is, that pain in the back
is occasioned by so many
things. May be caused by
kidney disease, liver com
plaint, consumption, cold,
rheumatism, dyspepsia, over
work, nervous debility’, &c.
Whatever the cause, don’t
neglect it. Something is
Avrong and needs prompt
attention. No medicine has
yet been discovered that
Will so quickly and surely
cure such diseases as
Brown’s Iron Bitters, and
it does this by commencing
at the foundation, and mak
ing-the blood pure and rich.
Logansport, Ind. Dec. i, ISBO.
For a long time I have been a
sufferer from stomach and kidney
disease. My appetite was very poor
and the very small amount I did eat
disagreed with me. I was annoyed
very much from non-retention of
urine. I tried many remedies with
, no success, until I used Brown’s
Iron Bitters. Since I used that my
stomach does not bother me any.
My appetite is simply immense. My
kidney trouble is no more, and my
general health is such, that I feel
like a new man. After the use of
Brown’s Iron Bitters for one month,
1 have gained twenty pounds in
v.eight. O. B. Sargent.
Leading physicians and
clergymen use and recom
mend Brown’s Iron Bit
ters. It has cured others
suffering as you are, and it
will cure you.
llrgrtablc (fompounb.
1 gCSh 1
I Jpj
LYDIA E. PINKHAM’S
VEGETABLE COMPOUND.
la a Positive Cure
For tril those Painful Complaint* and Weaknesses
so common to our bent female population.
A Medicine for Woman. Invented by a Woman.
Prepared by a Woman.
The Greatest Medical Discovery Since the Dawn of History.
dTIt revives the drooping spirits, invigorates and
harmonizes the organic functions, gives elasticity and
firmness to the step, restores the natural lustre to the
eye, and plants on the pale check of woman the fresh
roses of life’s spring and early summer time.
Use it and Prescribe It Freely
It removes faintness, flatulency, destroys all craving
for stimulant, and relieves weakness of the stomach.
That feeling of bearing down, causing pain, weight
and backache, is always permanently cured by its use.
For the cure of Kidney Complaint* of either box
thia Compound 1* unsurpassed.
LYDIA E. PINKHAM'S BLOOD PURIFIER
will eradicate every vestige of Humors from the
Blood, and give tone and strength to the system, of
man woman or child. Insist on having it.
Both the Compound and Blood Purifier are prepared
at 233 and 235 Western Avenue, Lynn, Mass. Price of
either, sl. Six bottles for $5. Sent by mail in the form
of pills, or of lozenges, on receipt of price, 81 per box
for either. Mrs. Pinkham freely answers ail letters of
inquiry. Enclose 3ct. stamp. Send for pamphlet.
No family should be without LYDIA E. PINKHAM'S
LIVER PILLS. They cure constipation, biliousness,
fandXorpidity of the liver. 25 cents per box.
j®a“Sold by all Druggists.<>)
Sold by all druggists. Trade supplied by
LIPPMAN BROS., Savannah.
yam fuller.
DIPHTHERIA
HAS
NO CHANCE
WHEN TREATED WITH
Perry Davis’s Pain Killer
This wonderful remedy has saved the
lives of many, many children
who were almost dead with
DIPHTHERIA.
8. Henry Wilson, Lawrence, Mass., Bays:
“The surgeons pronounced my cane Diph
theria, and decided that no remedies could
reach it. Perry Davis’s Paia Killer saved my
life.”
Libeous Leach, Nashua, N. IL, says: “ I had
painters’ colic and diphtherc tic sore throat very
severely. Pain Killer drove both away.”
DRUGGISTS ALL KEEP IT.
#roptrolartir lluifc
Darbys Prophylactic Flnii!
For the prevention and treatment of
Diphtheria, Scarlet Fever, Small-Pox,
Yellow Fever, Malaria, Etc.
The free use of the Fluid will do more to ar
rest and cure these diseases than any
known preparation. .
Darbys Prophylactic Fluid!
A safeguard against all Pestilence, Infection,
Contagion and Epidemics.
Use as a Gargle for the Throat, as a
Wash for the Person, and as
a Disinfectant for
the House.
A CERTAIN REMEDY AGAINST ALL
CONTAGIOUS DISEASES.
NEUTRALIZES at onceall noxious odors
and gases. Destroys the germs of diseases
and septic (putrescent) floating imperceptible
in the air, or such as have effected a lodgment
in the throat or on the person. A certain
remedy against all contagious diseases.
Perfectly Harmless used Internally or Exter
temally.
J. 11. ZEILIN & CO., Proprietors, Manu
facturing Chemists, Philadelphia.
Price 60c. per bottle. Pint bottles sl.
f LU a tn r ft.
AVW E1> ’ Bookkeeper. to
V V Al man. Must be sober, industriouA.nU
competent to take entire charge of a set a ,
Address for three o'< e
PETENT, care Moming News. ' ’ c
\V ANTED, a good reliable < ~
(must lx? a goo.l cook - % . ", lr ‘ n
general housework for a small f»,„ o a .”' l ' Io
at 44 W hitaker street, corner York str'
WANTED, a number of well •><?. 777
boys, from twelve to sixteen v‘- r
», nl laical association now fon u ±'
Object Thorough musical instruction to r,
a military band for self amusement. 1
For further information, call on
PROF. D. L. FERRAZZI,
151 York street.
Between 3 and G p. m.
for Brut.
r pOßENT,unfurnished rooms. TabielmtiriL
1 ers wanted. No. 89 York street, corn*
A]»ercorn.
1?OR RENT, desirable rooms, very !..« ,t
117 Gordon street. Monterey square.
r?OR RENT, rooms, furnished and unfur
nished, at 37 Charlton street. Terms
moderate.
''l''* RENT, one or two rooms, furnished
A or unfurnished, at,sti}A Broughton street.
?or Sale.
LM)R SALE t HEAP, a gentle andpretts
A Pony, suitable for a small bov. To lie
seen at DeMARTIN’S STABLE, York street
near Abereorn.
1?OR SALE. Cigar Image Turkish woman .
Apply MRS. S. ROY AL, corner of Bar
nard and State streets.
Yoot.
I OST.—Strayed from 107 .Tones street, t
J Black Shepherd. Dog. with tan feet and
legs, about the size of a Newfoundland pup
py, about four months old. A liberal reward
will be paid for his return toT. H. M<l\ -
TOSH.
potteries.
The public is requested carefully to notice tie
new and enlar ed Scheme to be drawn Month',.
fHr*CAPITAL PRIZE, 575.000.-qfr>
TICKETS ONLY' $5. Shares in proportion.
LOUISIANA STATE LOTTERY CO,
"We do hereby certify that we super rise the
arrangements for all the Monthly and Semi-
Annual Drawinqe of the Louisiana State Lottfr y
Company, and in person m.inaye anti contra’,
the Prawinys themselves, and that the same are
conducted with honesty, fairness, and in good
faith toward all parties, and see authorize the
Company to use this certificate, with fac-sim l, „
of our signatures attached, in its' adrertis,
ments.”
COMMISSIONERS.
Incorporated in Istbi for 25 vears by the Leg
islature for educational and charitable pur
poses—with a capital of 11.000,000—t0 which a
reserve fund of over $550,000 has since been
added.
By an overwhelming popular vote its fran
chise was made a part of the present st ate
Constitution, adopted A. D. 1879.
The only Ixittery ever voted on and in
dorsed by the people of any State.
It never scales or postpones.
Its Grand Single Number Drawings take
place monthly.
A SPLENDID OPPORTUNITY TO M IX A
FORTUNE.—Third Grand Drawing, Ulas.-
C. AT NEYV ORLEANS. Tl KsDAY, MARt It
13. 1883—154th Monthlv Drawing.
CAPITAL PRIZE $75,000.
100,000 Tickets at Five Ilollars Each. Frac
tions in Fifths in proportion.
LIST OF PHIZES.
1 Capital Prize. $75,000
1 Capital Prize 25.000
1 Capital Prize 10,(00
2 Prizes of $(5,000 12,(MM)
5 Prizes of 2,000 10,(MH)
10 Prizes of 1,000 10,000
20 Prizes of 500 10,000
100 Prizes of 200 .. 20,000
300 Prizes of 100 30.000
500 Prizes of 50 25,000
1,000 Prizes of 25 25,000
APPROXIMATION PRIZES.
9 Approximation Prizes of $750. .. G. 750
9 Approximation Prizesof 500 4,500
9 Approximation Prizes of 250 ... 2,250
1,967 Prizes, amounting to $265,500
Application for rates to clubs should be made
only to the office of the Company in New
Orleans.
For further information write clearly, giv
ing full ail dress. Send orders by Express,
Registered Letterer Monev Order, addressed
only to M.'A. D YUPIHN.
New Orleans, La.,
Or M. A. DAUPHIN,
607 Seventh street, Washington, D. C.,
Or JNO. B. FERNANDEZ,
Savannah. Ga.
N. B.—ln the Extraordinary Semi-Annual
Drawing of next June the Capital Prize will
be $150,000.
Strcrt lUiilroaiiG.
Isle of Hope and Moolpmery.
CHANGE OF SCHEDULE.
THREE TRAINS A DAY.
GENERAL MAN AGER’S OFFICE, >
City and Suburban Railway/
Savannah, February 8, 1883. 5
ON and after February lltli the following
daily schedule will be observed:
outvvarK
LEAVE I ARRIVE LEAVE I AP.KI'i
CITY. I ISLE HOPE. ISLE HOPE | MONT’G Y
10:25 a. m. 10:55 a.m. ! 1 :<i Ia . -<i. i1 i
*3:00 p. m. 3:30 p. m. 3:32 p. m. 4:02p.m.
6:50 p. m. 7:20 p. m. 7:22 p. m. | 7:52 p. m.
J N U A F ’
LEAVE i ARRIVE I LEAVE ; ARRIVE
MONT’G’Y | ISLE HOPE. | ISLE HOPE | CITY.
7:35 a.m. 8:05 a. m. I s-h Ta. m. I sho a. m.
12:15p.m. 12:45 p. m. 12:50 p. M. I 1:20 P. m.
4:58p.m. 5:28 P. M. I 5:30 p. M. j 6:00 p. m.
Monday mornings early tr-”in for Mont
gomery only at 6:25 o’clock.
♦Sundays'this is the last outward train. Ke
turning, leaves Montgomery 5:18, Isle of Hope
5:50, arriving in city 6:20 p.'m.
Saturday night’s 'last train 7:10, instead of
6:50. EDW. J. THOMAS,
General Manager.
JJoitair pelte.
" OR.
I
WWLrtJW
1 3EFORE - AND - AFTERA
Electric Appliances are sent on 30 Days' Trial.
TO MEN ONLY, YGm GH GID,
■XTTAiO are Buffering from N’r.r.vors
VV Lost Vitality, Lack or Nnnrc Fotr l .
Viaoit, Wasting Wkaksksse- and all th< • • .-a,--’*
of a PEE3ONAI. Nl-IURZ Fl Liiirrr I Ar.i.;-:: . r 1
OniKR CAUSES. f-.|xe-!y r lief toil comp!. ,e i<■■:<»-
ration of HKAi.TB.ViGOBan'I SlanhogdGi aha: rr: i>.
The grandest discovery of theNlniU-, JO " :rv.
Send at once for Illustrated Pamphlet tree. Z - ress
Y3LTSIII B*LT CO., R'.ARSHALL, LHGri,
Spool C'ettOH.
( «H, g 1 ffe Y \
■ - ■■
■ 3g gWßWMiifwiHiii
o >—j
us 9 a 2. c:
3 ° ?53 ’ s W
o - " 2 £ i ;
■:•>-. §'>■’“ 5 v s
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P
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L- f zr.
Geoi’ge A. Clark A Brother,
SOLE AGENTS,
New York