Newspaper Page Text
ESTABLISHED 1850. I
j H ESTILL. Editor and Proprietor, j
fORGIA AND FLORIDA.
vrW sokthk two states
BK TO i,I) IN PARAGRAPHS.
th ,. Name' of the Four Falls
b ' Tallulah Were Derived-Work in
*' savannah River Near Augusta
tM ttlanta Murder of Two Years
Jtevived by Two Arrests.
GEORGIA.
vl llc anticipate' the erection of a
° rml nosed tramway for Cumberland j
TW PjjgjjJj UD iler di'.-ussion.
j, o ii‘ onnt j- stock breeders will give
!" \oveniber 15th and 16th.
’ colored, who outraged an
fthi* 1 ™ woman ln Atlanta a day or two
held for trial.
**“"f n- well known in Macon, lias been
B*l- 1 , [ L*,! on In- plantation in Twiggs
***a bout ten miles from Macon.
**l twenty earp j*>nils are now lieing
I‘ou' ‘ , on( .;. i, r . Mark Willingham, of
ui' - n one of hi' large carp for $5.
nublic and his friends will
T! *., ,r of the death of Mr. Green I!.
P* 1 ,' , ’ ..f etor of the Commercial House
ir*. iair
r Price, colored, of Korestville. lived
ilv with his wife. A day or two ago
a&vpiu . 1 [hjf f, tUl iiv’s fixe I. from the effects
t hM-h two "i the memhera have died and
* ‘l. , n a ' rittcal condition.
T. w 'might, of Uuthbert. lias a beaut i
...rveii printing horn made in 1777 by a
, . ir ! ioi iier while in camp, and pre
-1 tl. >lr.'isught's grandfather in 17x(.
■fe ,n tlio family ever since.
“ pegas Trammel, a resident of llamil
" m n .j author of “Ca Ira," will issue a
\ l -..iiic time early next year. The
, !' .leal with .lolin YY'ilkes Booth and
and will place before the pith
'f little secret history that will be full of
•me niirl> l last week someone broke Into the
tH,u-e near Walker’s bridge on the road
“'Hamilton to Whiteaville. and in wanton
', DC-'- tore up all the school lstoks and
”. th. -lutes in the bouse belonging to the
taught by .Mr. Key.
i ituen- of Trenton, in Dade county, are
in * active measures to establish a college
that i-'iiit. Two gentlemen from Indiana
Ip arfiu- m a few days to take the matter in
"‘and the Is-st informed think the pro
iluteliins adjourned Jackson court
i,i went liome. forgetting to sentence a negro
tlmt bad plead guilty and was
K m jail. Tlie lawyers say the prisoner
■ new sue out a writ of habeas corpus and
tsre :t release, as the law prescribes that
iteiice iuu-l Is' pronounced teforc adjourn
lir Uiivcross Heporter says: “We learn
n tauv m < barlton county —we could nut
puller name —became demented the lirst
'..fiu-i week and took her infant child
iiput off into the worsts, and up to the last
liunt- had not been found. I'ossibly she
g r her way into the Okefinokee Swamp
j fca- fallen a prey to some w ild animal.
* .niviety of her friends were intense, and
, ,an li for her and tlie infant was at la-t
Bunt' being vigorously poshed."
little l.dla Felton, a six-year-old daughter
Ivr,Mb Ivey, a fireman on the E. TANARUS., V.
do.'K >ad, fell from a trestle in East Rome
UTMlav afternism on a mass of ruck, twenty
g>|,iw. Terrible gashes w ere cut in her
iiand face, which, it is feared, will prove
uJ, -he-aw the passenger train coming
as.i tried to cross the trestle liefore the
in reached it. One of the cross-ties had
Brenewed and she fell through the opcit
l iiitlemore than two years ago, just liefore
i ampler of old man Hicks in Gwinnett
M tv. a miller in the Ben. Smith district, in
si ri.unlv. was surprised one day to find
si a- ere freshet had washed ’ii|mui his
■.ami left there the body of a murdered
The man’s skull was crushed in as if
y,i.|,, w from a heavy instrument. The tedy
a-wrapped almut by a heavy log chain, ami
iimmense rock was fastened to the man’s
,k.v-a -inker. The dead negro was named
m Martin. He came from Athens and had
*n m the neighborhood fora short time, and
B sus|ieeted of being a spy on the lookout
rilitrit distilleries. Two men have just lieen
■rt-icl under suspicion of living implieateit
i tie crime. They are Willis and Nathan
T!t> p.linrt mg appeared in the Washington
mrtr: "There is a force of ateut two
m-iri-l hand- at work on the Savannah river
BLißg oat obstruetious. They have worked
Urem below and now have passed the |mint
kb Broad r i runs into the Savannah.
i.Johiit ade, who lives at that {mint, tells
pjat he hear- the blasting in the river atere
every day. The river is being put in
fcr for pole Uiata, a numlier of w hich are
*i.i \ugiista from different |siints along
rr.nr. The appropriation for the work by
rTinted states Government is fSO.OOU. Mr.
Be inform- u- that there was ashoaly place
ate nver for the instance of seven miles.
Si hr has often gone over, going down in
Ethan an hour: but it required a day and a
■ tor. me up the same shoals. The govern
til work "it the river has greatly improved
tipljues as this one."
The Thoina-villc Times says: "The recent
M; i.ri here has rwnseit the authorities to a
iiatiioii of the fact that property here is
it properly protected. To the end tfiat every
mu!ion-hall lar taken in the future to Mill
ie ihe flam.-s, the City Council, at a called
wting Tuesday afternoon, closed a contract
sthMr. Ru—cv . southern Agent of the Sils-
Hvnufa. luring Company, Seneca falls, N.
.for a No. t Silsbv steamer. The steamer
* throw four good streams at the same
sc. With the steamer conies a handsome
*e carriage, r>oo feet of the very best hose
Jail necessary attachments to the steamer,
be price paid is ji.goO: one-tliird cash, bal
rem one and two years, payable the ad day
Deremter. with interest at 7 per cent.
be new steamer will be here within sixty
to. A crack company has been organized
and will be ready to receive the new guar
laet the city's pro|>erty."
f>se Athens ftmtor- Watchman has the fol
•*.’ “An old citizen at Tallulah gives
eWlovving correct names and their deriva
atot the four fails at Tallulah, as given by
. Addison Kiehards in 1*07: lanlore, ttovv;
Wnptevl into I.aDore, means ‘yellow w aters.’
t• to feet high. Just below’it is Temttesta,
tnh goes dashing over a precipice si feet
<(i. I'a—ing down the path that is cut along
fledges of this frightful chasm you come
tout ay feet from tlie top in full view of these
fil-. several hundred yards further down.
M St a point where 'the river makes an
intpt turn, yon reach the top of Hori
t-nnw- called Hurricane—named after a
utifiil little fall in Italy. It makes a leap
n"tv than ninety feet; amid its dashing
nr in the sunshine is a perpetual rainbow .
wa. now called Oceana, rolls down an m
fcti plane of rock as smooth as a floor for a
■:w.c of ft; feet, and striking the projecting
mere below, le’a|ts 15 feet into the air at
sseason of the vear. The descent to this
usjvrv dangerous, having been cut out
if.nz !:isj year. At the top of the cliff' is the
I’ulpit. which is 450 feet from the river.
Serb l eap is 600 feet high. Turner’s I'oiut
Iket. and l*oint Inspiration I,ool} feet."
FLORIDA.
Siit'* is full of strangers, in consequence
like fever at Pensacola.
fb-firm ..f t reary A Rourke shipjH'd ff.ffOO
of wool from Milton last week.
T >rk on the steamer Chattahooeltee. at
►ssmnlle. is progressing very rapidly.
A'.i.rimp to the T/mst-l'niott corres|>onil
k Fieri. la’s exhibition lit Louisville is a
F-itka i- to have a steam laundry. The
‘■••5Z.-1,. be fx\4* with a mangling room
ki.ltet wide.
F M
[* tins season 50 barrels of good corn
fj*o seres of pine land.
Jefram,- of the Hotvd Maet Jenny, at Dar
es*. I- lUnit up. Work on tlie hotel is
wf pushed forward very rapidly.
k. Key nob Is. of Jacksonville, has ta
'asr I*.—i,,o premium of SOO for the liest
■i>*fjute pr.sluced in the State.
’srali Brewster Wtllanl, late of Jack
|h He. dud m Brooklyn. Xew York, at 8
“•-kThursday morning, the 23d inst.
F*ttr.two additions were made to the
church at Pincastle as the result of
erst-ct -cries of revival meetings there.
*-fS; and three-quarter million dollars is
* * ation of unqicrtv in the state for 1883
“uu rvi-c of four millions over last year.
Jwfczgdad bridge across Pond Creek, at
*as "opened to the public" on the lsth
o- u-t three weeks tune lieing m cGpied in
'MKraetlon.
morning last, while Mr. I‘. A.
atm-. „f Sanford, w as assisting in moving a
?■. ihe rod of the piazza guve way and
*-'rushing him lieneath it. He survived
"•Abe- aliout seven hours, lie leaves a
ffite in 1,-i.iurn his loss,
agioru iin,, measuring 1!2 feet in length
11 • l.oi exhibition in Orlando by It. \.
|T' ,r ' Tin -lav last. It was grow non Ins
in <*rlaniio irotn sedl planteil only four
'jS2ii. This is actual running measure
does not include Jfiteral branches.
bf*iin WB 1 *” Fluff have been ssibserilied by
**' *** merchants towards defraying
f. xh.bits to the tsiuisville Exhi
i.u}'**- li'iscr also expects aliout half a
i vhiliiis fnana the eotiuty. He has
-t,ll'" ul l' Florida, where he expects to
mJi s n| anv others. Me also has an agent
Mid.fle Florida.
* ‘tem-wheel ttctßer Rent ha I.t't l ,
‘fcror.m feel l ““ a,n - having come 25
t rEJJf. , r passengers, has been bought by
ip : "te N;iwigation Company, mut
t*. .kT** l, hy .. on August 18 for Kiasim-
B Wtw k llrst - 4 ‘Jass ljoat, amt wili lie
t v,„„ •''-mnnee rivur, runner ting with
<“* 4 la Railroad at Kissimmee.
V b ‘T 1M ‘‘barge of Capt. K.B, IHjnglass.
Uj j 1 1,, e President of the company.
W;-" 'tillman. one of the founilers
Kne.T’ 1 • an<t a prominent citizen of
tet, aA* " l T , ‘ l“‘ hail a large lamleil in-
J“ wif| e23<l inst., after a lingering
ir *','ks. Ho was pri.wiient in
► as a Republican, and
wi * residential electors on the
F*tlv I , m the campaign of lsso. Sub
let,: !u ,lelll u important position in
"'hartments )u Washington, from
*§ .rf vf* coi ®l*Uhl to resign in the w
l*Wt!i t " >ui >‘iner in consequence of fail
p§
w. '-"'Sul correspondent of the Sanford
an, nt *‘" follows: “M. M. Tucker.
*T- , "nty, wa arrested in Sanfonl
, '*> ■'*' tbe liMtaoee of the Southern
*r ‘tnpany. The tacts f the case, as
*’*• TnJti? al ' le to get hold of them, are
•W' ** r * brother (front Ohio i Uonk
"f'tc I.:"', 11 ,. 1 * some time with hits, but
[for h a(l k ' ■>l - Tucker found out that his
■to hi,iinI n A an express package containing
- <rot her, and by using an order in
Savannah morning news
L or w 0b i a J in,n liters from the post
office, which did not specify i>ost or p\itrp
started , *2o°l bta k n r l | hi r b . rf>,her s monev and
S ba, k *? father for reasons liest
x. ret **ned t+sff for his
“fft get verv far, and
him u* - °?. e ot ,be feansof detecting
him He wa- kept in Sanford till Fridav
f.sT| Dl nf *.r ain [ ,,r ,he purpose of obtaining
tail, which, not succeding in procuring, he
sion!" r*'" Mrlando. Mr. Stockton, of the
•’■Apfusn Company, and Deputv
reheriir Grtgg- searched Tucker's house, but
*lni not nud any money.**
1 he machinery of the new steamer City of
Georgetown is now lieing put in at Pond’s
foundry, in Jacksonville, and she will lie
ready for business in a very short time. The
steamer is lieing built by La Bree, who owns
a large orange box mill at Georgetown, and it
is to lie employed in conveying the boxes to
various points on the river.' It is also proba
ble that just as soon as the orange season is
over a shingle mill will be put on board, when
she will run into close proximity to a cypress
grove and Fie occupied in sawing and deliver
ing shingles.
At Demen’s factory at Longwood last Fri
• lay-morning, John AlieeromTiie. sash maker,
while attempting to put a lieit on a pullev,
by the licit slipping over the nullev, was
caught by the right arm and drawn com
pletely over the shaft and dropped on a
mortising machine, which weighs 2,5ff0
pounds and was dragged eight feet from its
original |sisition. Mr, Abecrombie's arm
was crushed from above bis wrist to within
live or six inches of his shoulder, an L the
thumb of his right hand was so liadly
smashed that it was amputated Saturda'v
uioraing.
THE kYICKEI) CHI RICA HI’AS.
Past Misdeeds to Go Ciipunishe.l to Se
cure Future Peace.
Washington, August 25.—The follow
ing was received at tlie War Department
to-day:
Headquarters Dep’t Arizona,)
Whipple Barracks, [
Prescott, August TANARUS, lsxj. i
To the Adjutant tGeneral of the United
States Army:
>ik —Referring to the communication
from your office of July Huh transmit
ting copies of the correspondence from
the Governor of Chihuahua and the Min
ister of Mexico with the Secretary of
Mate, with reference to the punishment
of the Chiricahuas who surrendered to
me in Sierra Mad res. 1 have the honor
to state that I am in full sympathy with
Governor Terraeas in the’ultimate end
sought—that is the welfare and se
curity of life and property in both
countries. Though the < ’hiricahtta
prisoners are doubtless guilty of many
rejieated acts of hostilities and outrage
both in Mexico and the United States,
they are now prisoners, and surrendered
with the understanding on their part that
their past misdeeds would not be
punished, provided they behaved them*
i selves in the future. To attempt now to
j punish those who are on the San Carlos
■ reservation as prisoners would he an act
! of perfidy and had faith, and would un
questionably not only prevent the return
to the agency of the Chiricahuas left
in the Sierra Madres, but would
precipitate an Indian war
which would lie more serious
in its results upon the interests of the two
countries than any which has preceded it.
Inasmuch as both countries are rapidlv
developing and new interests and indus
tries are constantly lieing inaugurated.all
of which offer new facilities for plunder
and destruction, it would be almost as im
possible to exterminate the Chiricahuas
on their mountains as the, wolves and
coyotes with whom they share the posi
tion of the Sierra Madres, and so long as
any of them survive so long would the
carnival of death and depredation con
tinue. I believe firmly that au ex
act acquiescence by our government
in the terms upon which these
Indians understand that they are to tie al
lowed to live upon San Carlos reservation
appears tlie only possible’ means of pro
tecting the lives and interests of the
jieople of Sonora and Chi
huahua as well as our own country, and I
am as firmly convinced that if the present
prisoners are treated with good faith, not
only will the renegades, now in the moun
tains, return, but also that neither coun
try will hereafter have any reason to
complain of depredations or outrages
from them.
[Signed] George Crook,
Brigadier General Commanding.
A copy of this communication has
been furnished to the Departments of
State and the Interior.
A VICTORY IN TONQUIN.
The French Capture the Forts at the
Mouth of tlie Hue.
Paris, August 25.—A telegram has
1 let'll received by the Ministry of Marine
from Saigon, dated to-day, announcing
that the French have tioinbarded and cap
tured the forts and batteries at the mouth
of the Hue river after a brilliant land at
tack. The operations occurred on the
18th, loth and 30th insts. Seven hundred
Annamites were killed during the engage
men’. The only casualties sustained by
the French were several men slightly
wounded. The gunboats Vipere and Lyot
have entered the Thuaan passage. The
French Admiral has granted a truce. A
blockade has been declared.
M. Harmand, the French Civil Commis
sioner in Tonquiu, has gone to Hue, the
capital of Annam, to negotiate with the
Annamite court, which is greatly alarmed
at the movements of the French.
Paris, August 23.— Le Temps .says that
reinforcements have been ordered" to re
place the troops required to hold the forts
at Hue. • A regiment of infantry and a
battery of artillery will shortly embark
at Toulon for Annam. As an" effective
blockade of the whole coast of Tonquin
and the southern part of Annam is im
possible with the lorees at his disposal.
Admiral Courbet w ill coniine himself to
blockading Tourine, the Hue delta of the
Red river and Hako,
Paris, August 26.— I The Cabinet Coun
: oil to-day discussed the question of send
ing reinforcements to Tonquin.
WORK ON THE MISSISSIPPI.
Some Damage Done by the Recent High
Water at Plumb Point Reach.
Vicksbcrg, August 25.—The Con
struction Committee of the River Commis
sion arrived last evening Irom Cairo.
They have beeu examining the govern
ment works down to this point and report
them generally in good condition. At this
place they order a discontinuance of the
dredging "in the west pass of the lake and
to resume dreding in the harlior projier.
The committee returned by pail last night.
Nkw Orleans, August 23. —A special
to the Picayune from Vicksburg says tiiat
Gen, Comstock states that at Plumb
Point it was found that the work in
course of construction had t>een consid
erably damaged during the last high
water bv the large amount of drift ac
cumulating against the piling and dyke
work, which being unable to stand the
pressure, gave way, but he thought that
the plan of Improvement would eventual
ly prove successful- He spoke very
favorably of the operations at Providence
Reach and Wilson Point, there being sub
stantial evidence of the success ot the
work done, and but little damage having
been sustained at tboe points by the high
water.
REVENUE RKPROBATES.
Some of the Tricks of the Officers to be
hooked Into.
Washington-, August 25.—The Com
missioner of Internal Revenue to-day in
structed Revenue Agent Powell, at Ra
leigh. .V. to investigate the report that
several revenue officers in the upper part
of South Carolina have been swindling
the government bv having persons to put
up old stills in remote places, amt then
"capture the material aiul obtain tbe gov
ernment reward of SSO for each seizure,
and also that the same material was then
put up in another part of the State and
seized. It is alleged that only a few stills
raptured in the mountains ot" South Caro
lina have ready been used for illicit dis
tilleries.
A RAILROAD PURCHASED.
Richmond and Danville Scoops in the
Hi'iuiiltb and Charleston Road.
Nkw York, August 23, —It is announced
lliat the new Richmond and Danville
syndicate has secured control of tin-
Memphis and Charleston Road. This ex
plains the recent wide fluctuations iu the
latter’s stock, Memphis and Charleston
is now to l 4 and Richmond and Danville is
quoted at 65<tf67 and very quiet. It is
seated that cash was paid for the Mem
phis aud Charleston Road. A number of
the Directors of the Memphis and Charles
ton Road have resigned and will he suc
ceeded by representative* of the Rich
mond uad Danville syndicate.
Cardinal Howard's Stay.
llomr, August 25. —'Che Vatican has
telegraphed to Herr von Scb looser, the
Prussian Envoy to the Holy See, asking
him to remove the misunderstandings
caused by Cardinal Howard's stay at
fcissingen. Cardinal Howard has issued
a denial of the report that he had asked
for an interview with Prince Bismarck.
A GI'ITEAU IN’ PETTICOATS
lil'CY HORTON’ TO SHOOT BOTH
FOLGER and BUTLER.
An Office or Your Life the Threat of
the Vixen—A Senator’s Son Once
Pierced by Her Bullet, and Her Threat
Not to be Laughed at—Voluntary Con
tributions Possible.
Washington, August 25.—Miss Lucy
Horton, a fair and dashing brunette, well
known in local society, has threatened to
throttle the Treasury Department. She
has spoken and written the mandate. It
is that she must be given a clerkship or
Secretary Folger and appointment clerk
Butler must bite the dust. Lucy is not
without a history, and her record is writ
ten in blood. She is probably twenty-five
years of age, and hence cannot he classed
as unsophisticated, having been a resi
dent of this city several years. Avery
few years ago she tired a slug of lead into
the liody of the son of Senator Morgan,
of Alabama, and left him for dead. She
said the young man had seduced her and
lietrayed her. She is tall, slender, rather
vivacious, and good looking. It is said
that she can love with a fervor seldom
equaled and hate with a vengeance
worthy a pirate. Six months or more
ago, the smoke from the field where she
shot young Morgan having cleared away,
she applied for a position in the Treasury
Department. She made her application
in person and was accompanied, it is
said, by Mrs. lngersoll, Representative
Sbellenliarger, of Pennsylvania, and
other good and reputable people, who
urged the Secretary to give her a place.
Tlie jieople who recommended her were
moved by her pleas and promises.
As soon as Secretary Folger
beard her name he bluntly refused to help
her. But the old man was soon out
manoeuvred by ardent friends. She was
given a position as a "sub.” for three
months under another name than Lucy
Ilortou. At the expiration of that time
she succeeded in securing another three
months’leaseol life. It was during the
last quarter that she displayed a spirit
not to Ik: courted by the saints, whereby a
prominent clerk in tlie department was
transferred from one division to another,
and came near losing his official head.
Appointing clerk Butler, discovering Lu
cy’s unenviable qualities, refused to help
her to another term at the end of her last
employment. Again her old desire for
blood returned. She coolly entered Mr.
Butler’s room in the department a few
days ago and informed him that unless
he reinstated her she would shoot
hint and Secretary Folger, too, remarking
with emphasis, “And 1 won’t miss niv
aim, either,” at which Mr. Butler pre
sumed she meant immediate work, and lie
replied that he should not treat her as
others had if she ever attempted to shoot
him, hut would reply with the same effect
as though she were masculine. Lucy left
Mr. Butler’s room with her anger un
soothed. Returning to her home on I
street northwest, she indited a note to Air.
Butler. She threatened his life if he did
not give her a place at once. She es
sayed tiie same fate to Secretary Folger.
Not hearing from hermote she wrote again
and again. The others were of the same
purport as the first—"A clerkship or your
lives, Messrs. Butler and Folger.”
Air. Butler informed Secretary
Folger of the woman’s threats
and repeated to him her dangerous
character, but did not say to the Secre
tary that his lib* was also threatened.
On Thursday Miss Horton entered the
office of the appointment clerk. She was
calm and her face bloodless. She was
penitent. She is subject to hysterics, and
after begging to be received back she was
seized with an hysterical spasm, and en
acted a scene that would put out pathos
its very self. But Air. Butler, to save his
honor, could not take her hack, and re
fused flatly to do so. She came again
yesterday and again to-day. Her visits
were long—probably of two or three hours
duration. This afternoon she repeated
her threat that she will shoot Air. Butler
and the Secretary, and those who know
her say that she doesn't talk so for a pas
time. Since she has grown so demon
strative Congressman Shallenbarger, Airs,
lngersoll and her other whilom influential
friends have abandoned her.
VOLUNTARY CONTRIBUTIONS POSSIBLE.
The Republican politicians seem to have
concerted a plan for securing contribu
tions front employes of the government in
this city. The system is to have the
Chairman of the local political organiza
tions in the several States request contri
butions .from those employed in the de
partments. A letter was' received here
to-day from the Chairman of the Aluskin
gum County (Ohio) Republican Execu
tive Committee, requesting a list of tlie
names of the employes from that county
in the department. The person to
whom this letter was addressed was
unable to furnish a list, but a
roster of the Ohio Republican Association,
which is made up principally of govern
ment clerks, was sent. He said, however,
that he supposed the Chairman wanted
the list in order to assess tlie clerks here
trom Muskingum county, and make them
pay for their brass bands, etc., during the
fall campaigns. The Chairman of the
Republican State Committee of Pennsyl
vania, Air. Thomas V. Cooper, is out witli
a circular which it is proposed to send to
all Republicans, whether they are in office
or not, who are supposed to be willing to
make contributions. The civil service
law only prohibits Senators, Representa
tives, Delegates in Congress and Federal
employes from asking for contributions.
Of course this leaves the local managers
at liberty to apply the bleeding plaster.
FRANK JAMES’ TRIAL.
Tlie Noted Witnesses Put in an Appear
ance W hen Wanted.
Gallatin, Mo., August 25.—At the af
ternoon session yesterday in the James
trial W. F. Eastman and James Moffatt
testified to knowing James under the
name of YVoodson. Mrs. Sarah Hite was
called and her testimony received with
breathless attention, She said: “When
I married George Hite in Kentucky he
had seven children, four of whom were
boys, Clarence, John. George and
Wood. In March. 1881. the defen
dant came to our house with
Dick Liddell and Jesse James, all armed.
They came hack the next month acting
as though frightened and watched at the
windows with guns in their hands. I
didn’t see Frank James on the 27th of
April. Mr, Hite's tirst wife was Frank
James' aunt.”
The defense declined to cross-examine.
After l'u at her testimony of minor impor
tance the court adjourned until this
morning.
Sr. Lons, August 25.—A special from
Gallatin, Mo„ to the Post-Dispatch says:
“The Frank James trial was resumed at
8 o’clock this morning, tlie flrst witness
called being Dick Liddell. The defense
immediately objected to the witness on the
ground that he was a convicted felon, hav
ing been found guilty of grand larceny in
Verpon county and sent to the peniten
tiary.
“Prosecutor YVallace responded that he
had a copy of full pardon restoring Lid
die to citizenship, Objection was then
made to the copy, the defense insisting
that the original pardon should lie intro
duced, and then the attorneys on both
sides consumed two hours in argument.
At 11 o’clock Judge Goodman ordered a
recess to give hint time to consider the
point, which is one of great importance
to the defense,since Liddell’s testimony is
vital to the prosecution.
Ex-Gov. Charles P. Johnson'statcd this
morning that the testimony would all be
in by next Tuesday evening, and the case
lie given to the jnr'y on Wednesday.
THE NASHVILLE COTTON BELT.
A Favorable Season Able to Produce a
Larger Yield Than Last Year.
Nashville, August 2ft.— A comprehen
sive and complete report of the cotton
crop ()f the Nashville district, which in
cludes Middle Tennessee and a portion of
We6t Tennessee and Jiortb Alabama, has
l>een received through correspondents.
Seventy per cent, of the reports received
St etc the crops to tie in a better condition
than on a corresponding date last year,
23 per cent, iu a s good condition and 7 per
cent, iu worse condition fiiau last year.
The crop of West Tennessee was the
poorest for many years. The reduction
in acreage this year amounts to 12*4 per
cent., but with continued favorable
weather the prospects are fair for a larger
aggregate yield than that of last year..
Paying Up the Pensions.
Washington, August 25.—The Trea
sury Department to-day issued warrants
lor sy.soU,ouo on account of pensions,
making a total ot about *2t,060,000 paid
,GUt on that account during the present
jpjonth.
(Cleanliness and purity make Parker’s
Hair Balsam the favorite for restoring the .
youthful color to gray hair.
SAVANNAH, MONDAY, AUGUST 27, 1883.
VIGILAXTS STEAL A TRAIN.
After Securing ttieir Victim They Ride
him Back to Town aid Lynch Him.
Park City, Utah, August 26.—At a
late hour last night a number of masked
men stopped Engineer Thomas, Road
Alaster Hughes and a fireman, in the em
ploy of the Utah Eastern Railway Com
pany, and compelled them to return to the
shops and bring an engine and caboose
out and run about thirty masked men to
Coalville, some twenty miles distant.
Leaving a number of men in charge of the
train the vigilantes proceeded to the
countv jail. Bringing their guns to hear
upon the officials they obtained control of
the jail, and after taking a man named
Jack Murphy from his cell returned to
the train and ordered an immediate return.
Upon arriving here tlie vigilantes took
Alurphy and hung him to a telegraph pole
near the station, the body being viewed
bv a number of passengers on an early
train. Alurphy was arrested on suspicion
of having shot Brennan last Wednesday,
and was awaiting trial,
CIXCINNATI’S EXPOSITION.
The Coining Show to Eclipse Any of Its
Predepesfiorji.
Cincinnati, August 26.—The annual
exposition in Music Hall and the two
buildings connected with it, built ex
pressly for such purposes, will begin Sep
tember 5 and will continue until October
7. The character of the exhibition, which
is already determined, will place it high
in the list of successful displays
of this kind which have been
given here almost without in
terruption every year since
iB6O, a notable feature of the coming
Exposition will he a display of manufac
turing industries, machinery and art.
In the latter much space will he given to
decorative art. The opening dav will be
made attractive by efforts of the ‘order of
Cincinnati, a secret organization torined
for tlie purpose of presenting a pageant
similar to those of Rex in tlie Alardi Gras
festivities.
I It ELY Nil's COXSPI RATO US.
The Connelly Brother* on Trial for Mur
tier Conspi i tic y,
Limerick, Ireland, August 26.—An
examination of Dr. Connelly and Patrick
Connelly, the brothers who were arrested
at Bruff on Tuesday last on a charge of
being connected in a murder conspiracy,
was held yesterday. A man named
Michael Dineen testified that the
Connellys had compelled him to
swear that he would shoot
John Carroll, a rent Warner of the Earl of
Limerick, and promised him that the
head centre would pay him £SO for so do
ing. He had laid in waiting several times
for Carroll, hut his (witness’) courage
faiied him, and he did not shoot him. The
witness swore that tlie Connellys had
also proposed tin* poisoning of Carroil
and his sister. The prisoners were re
manded.
SUNDAY’ AT OCEAN GROVE.
The Services Thronged by Thousands
of Worshipers.
Ocean Grove, N. J., August 26.—Dr.
J. P. Newman preached at 10:30 o’clock
this morning to an audience of from 6,000
to 7,000. At the same time large meetings
were held in the Tabernacle, seating 1,000
persons, the A’oung People’s Temple, the
Salvation tent, the Ross pavilion,
where an audience of 9,000 was
addressed by Professor Lawrence,
of South Carolina, and at the Lilligores
pavilion. At 2 o’clock a Sabbath school
session was held, the school numbering
over 3,000. At 3 o’clock Rev. J. B. Brady
preached to a vast audience. At 6 o’clock
was seen the largest beach meeting ever
held at Ocehn Grove, numbering at least
20 4 000 persons of all ages.
FIVE LIVES LOST AT A FIRE.
A Half Hour’s Work in a Boston Tene
ment Accomplishes the Catastrophe.
Boston, August 26. —An alarm was
rung this morning for tire in the two-story
tenement house at No. 6 Thatchers Court.
The house was occupied by eight
families. The flames spread with
frightful rapidity, and before the
inmates could be taken out
four were smothered and one was fatally
injured by jumping from the building.
The cries for help from persons impris
oned amid tlie flames were heart-rending,
but those on the street could do nothing
to save them. The tire was subdued in
less than half an hour.
Alifflintown, Pa., August 25.—This
morning a tire broke out in the stable of
the Foreman Hotel and was not checked
till it had burned the hotel, the post of
fice, a private residence and a block of
brick stores. The mails were saved. The
loss is $66,000, and the insurance $17,000.
SUNK WITH 23 LIVES.
Two Steamers Run Down Two Others
anil Sink Them.
London, August 26.—A collision oc
curred at 3 o’clock this morning off the
Eddystone light, in the English Channel,
between the French steamer St. Germain,
Captain Bonneau, bound from Havre for
New York, and the steamer Woodburn
from the East by way of the Suez canal.
The Woodburn "sank immediately after
the collision and eighteen of her crew
were drowned. The St, Germain, which
was disabled by the collision, has arrived
at Plymouth where she landed her pas
sengers and those who were saved from
the Woodburn.
London, August 26.—The steamer Pa
lermo, tiound from Hamburg to Lisbon,
collided off Ushant with the steamer
Rivoli, bound from Bilbao to Middles
borough. The latter steamer sank and
five persons were drowned. A thick fog
prevailed at the time of the collision.
Poor Crop Prospects,
New Orleans, August 26.— Dispatches
to the Times-Democrat from all sections
of tlie cotton belt show a considerable
falling off in the crop prospects, as com
pared with last year, except in Tennessee
and portions of Texas, caused by drought,
caterpillars and boll-worms. The decrease
is estimated in some cases at 33 y A per
cent. Many reports from Texas also show
a falling otf in the outlook. The corn crop
also is reported considerably damaged by
drought.
Mexico’s Revolutionists.
Galveston, August 26.—A special
from Laredo says that tlie report that
Felipe Cortina, in command of 300 revolu
tionists, has been defeated nearTanjuco iff
confirmed. Cortina is the same insurgent
who was recently reported as being in the
neighborhood of Gueriero below Laredo,
in the report of which fact Gueriero was
changed in transmission to read
taro, a place far removed from the State
of Tamaulipap, in which'the disturbances
have occurred.
Ireland’s Demands.
London, August 27. —At a conference
of the Irish members of Parliament, held
last night, a programme was prepared' for
the convention of tlie Irish National
Leagqe of Great Britain, announced to be
held at Leeds, September 39. The pro
gramme demands self-government for
Ireland and direct representation of the
Irish laboring class in Parliament.
A District Attorney Resigns.
Galveston, August 26.—District At
torney Guthridge, of the Eastern district
of Texas, to-day handed in his resigna
tion, to take effect immediately, to Special
Agent Wiegand, who has been investi
gating the Htiaha assassination and
other matters in that district.
The Chofera in Egypt.
Loxpqx. August 26.—The cholera Saw
urday numbered 129 ii upper Egvpt and
38 in lower Egypt.
It is reported that cholera has broken
out in Sumatra.
Coatbridge Still in Turmoil.
Londox, August 26.—The rioting be
tween Orangemen and Catholics at Coal
bridge, Scotland, was renewed Saturday.
Twenty-two persons were arrested.
Parnell to Fight for a Seat.
LONDON, August 26. —Mr. Parnell will
contest’cjqnty Down at the next eJec}lor,
for meifllier ot Parliament.
Stanley Closes the Congo.
Lisbon, August 2fl— It Is roportod that
Henry M. Stanley has closed the upper
Congo to commerce.
Ireland’s League.
London, August 25.— The Irish Na
tional League of (treat Britain will hold
a convention at Leeds, September 27th.
Mr. Parnell will probably preside.
Daniel Buie, Laston, Ga.‘, says:
“Brown's Iron Bitters relieved me Of se
vere suffering from dyspepsia.”
LIFE IN THE METROPOLIS.
THE CHARGE THAT THE TELE
GRAPHISTS WERE SOLD OUT.
A Favorite Way of the New York Police
of Dodging Highway Robbery Cases—
Abuse Heaped Upon Misfortune—
Coining Attractions of the Metropoli
tan Play-Houses.
Correspondence of the Mornitta .Yews.
New York, August 23. —The result of
the telegraphers’ strike, as you may re
member, was anticipated by me beiore it
begun, and although the surrender of the
American Rapid caused me to halt in my
opinion, I still claim to be a better pro
phet than Mother Shipton or YY’iggins. It
is said by some that, so far as the leaders
were concerned, the strike was merelv a
movement in the “ bear” interests. The
story is that the head men in the Brother
hood were bribed to bring about the strike
in order to depreciate Western Union,
and with it other stocks, and that, for the
sake of a few thousand dollars each, they
caused thousands of ojierators to lose a
month’s pay, and in some cases their situ
ations, in a fictitious strike that was not
merely fated to failure, but which was
never intended to succeed. When the re
sult was accomplished which the make
believe strike was designed to produce,
the purchased initiators of the movement
declared it at an end! Those who believe
this story point to the coincidence of the
surrender of the Brotherhood following on
the heels of last week’s slump in stocks
as a proof that the strike was solely in
tended to produce the slump, and accord
ingly when tiie designed effect had been
accomplished, the cause was removed.
To my mind, the most unkindestcut of
all which the striking telegraphers re
ceived. was when the Knights of Labor
refused them aid because they wore
“store clothes.” Men who can support
themselves and their families and dress
comparatively well on $2 a day, or thcrea
houis, deserve commendation in place of
being called dudes. That word, by the
way, according to those who first used it,
does not rhyme with rude, as it is com
monly pronouncej. It has been in use
“down East” for a numlier of years, and,
when 1 was in Massachusetts'last week,
I was told that the true pronunciation
made two syllables of it, as if it were
spelled dudy.
PLANTER TOWLE, OF PALATKA,
who was found stretched senseless on the
sidewalk at Read street and West Broad
way at 12:40 a. in., August 15, and claims
to be the victim of highwaymen who
struck him with a sandbag, and robbed
lum of $1,600, labors under the disadvant
age of having no witnesses to the alleged
assault, In addition to the case of Cadet
Whitaker, there are instances of several
women hereabouts who have pretended to
he the victims of terrible injuries at the
hands of hold, bad men, that existed onlv
in their imaginations. Consequently, i’f
W. H. Vanderbilt or Jay Gould were to he
found bound and gagged in Madison
Square with their watches missing and
pockets turned inside out. the police would
insist that they were either cranks who
wished Tor notoriety, or that having
pawned their watches’and gambled away
their-money, they hoped thus to hide their
losses from their families! As Slender
in the “Merry Wives of Wind
sor,” after being robbed when
intoxicated byßardolph Nyn and Pistol
vowed never to be drunk again except in
“honest, civil, godly company,” and
“with tnose that have’ the fear of God.”
so Mr. Towle must not permit himself to
be robbed again, except in the presence
of at least half a dozen witnesses, unless
he wishes himself a second time to he
proclaimed an impostor by the New
York police.
The plea of the police in regard to Mr.
Towle resembles Hume’s argument
against miracles. As the Scotch
philosopher reasoned that it
was more likely that men should lie
than that a law of nature should be bro
ken, so the police have argued that it was
more probable that Mr. Towle invented
his story than that highwaymen should
ply their trade with impunity in the heart
of the dry goods district. Unfortu
nately for the theory that
highwaymen are conspicuous by their ab
sence in the metropolis, a young man was
shot and perhaps fatally wounded in
Morrisania because he resisted robberv on
Saturday night, and more recently two
policemen interrupted a robbery in the
very precinct in which Mr. Towle met
with his adventure.
The language used by the police to
characterize the unfortunate planter,
combined with their mode of argument,
reminds me of a story which Sir Walter
Scott used to tell about Dr. Johnson and
Adam Smith, who, the only time they
were ever in eaeh other’s company, got
into a fierce discussion respecting flume.
Finally, Johnson called his antagonist a
liar. Smith in reply said in plain lan
guage that Dr. Johnson was the off-spring
of a female dog. “On such terms,” says
Sir Walter, “did these teachers of morali
ty meet and part, and such was the classi
cal language used by the two great
moralists!”
ALTHOUGH IT WILL BE A MONTH
or more before fashionable theatre-goers
return to town, a general opening of the
theatres takes place this week and next.
The Union Square reopened on Monday
with Oscar Wilde’s play of “Vera.” On
Tuesday a spectacular play entitled “ Ex
celsior,” which, despite its being of the
“ Black Crook ” genus , is supposed to
point a moral, was produced at Niblo’s
Garden, and the same evening a so-called
opera by S. G. Pratt, entitled “Zenobia,”
which one paper says, as regards its mu
sic, is a plagiarism from “Patience, 1 ’
while another journal considers it mod
elled after Wagner, was performed for the
first time in the new theatre on Twenty
third street, in which Salmi Morse so long
and so unsuccessfully tried to produce
his “ Passion ” play. Tomight Lecocq’s
“Heart and Hand” will be given
at Daly’s Theatre, although not by Mr.
Daly’s company, which is still playing in
the “provinces,” and on Saturday evening
the Grand Opera House opens with the
sensational and now familiar drama of the
“Lights o' London.” Lawrence Barrett
reopens Wallack’s old theatre, now called
the hitar, on Monday with Baker's old trag.
edv, “Francesca da Rimini,” which is said,
as played by Mr. Barrett, to have met with
success outside of New York. Harri
gan and Hart’s theatre reopened a
fortnight ago, the Windsor and the Four
teenth Street last week, while the Casino
and the Madison Square Theatres were
Closed; so that by next week every theatre,
with the exception of the Fifth ’Avenue,
Wallack’s, and the Bijou Opera House,
which is undergoing repairs, will be open.
Oscar Wilde’s play of “Vera.” as per
haps might have been expected, is so poor
that every one wonders at his temerity in
bringing it out in New Y’ork. The pro
duction of “Vera” here indeed is only ac
counted for on the theory it was necessary
for the play to begjn its career in the
metropolis in order to secure a hearing be
fore country audiences. Even in the local
papers which “damned” it “Y’era” is ad
vertised as a “great success,” and you
will doubtless in time find the play m
Savannah, preceded l>y mammoth posters
announcing its “instantaneous success”
in New York and “repeated triumphs” in
other cities.
As far as the weather is concerned, the
managers choose the wrong time for re
opening the theatres. It lias been hotter
for the past few days than any time for
the previous sis weeks -that is, since the
first woek in July, N. D.
Telegraph Rates to Buenos Ayres.
Buenos Ayres, August 25.— The com
mercial public of this place are much
pleased with the reduction of telegraph
charges for foreign telegrams via Galves
ton. Before the establishment of the
American line the charge was $4 tM) pet
word from the United States via London.
Die new rate- just announced from the
United States is $2 92 per word. The new
land line to Brazil, in connection with the
Central and South American pelegraph
Company, via oalveԤton, w*U 6Qou be
opened, and followed by a further reduc
tion of rates between the United States
and all places in Brazil.
Captain Kress Acquitted.
Washington, August 25.— The court
martial which tried Captain John A.
Kress at San Antonio, Texas, for neglect
of daty in exceeding the amount appro
prited for the erection of military out
posts, has acquitted him.
Nroilting Dike Kosadalls.
I have suffered 37 years with Liver Com
plaint, Ifbeutnatisw, Sick Ijeatjacue and
disordered Stomach. I vyas at one time
raving distracted, rubbing my hands and
half crazy with pain, My wife sent for a
doctor and he attended me l) months, He
said be could do me no good. I felt I was
in the jaws of death. Another physician
took me in charge and doctored "me 18
months. I paid him $33. and ow - him sto
more, but oue bottle of Itosadalis did me
more good than all the medicine the doc
tors ever gave me. J. H. Walker, ‘
Creek r N, C,
PENSACOLA’S QUANDARY.
The Doctor* Disagreed as to the Nature
of the Disease.
Pensacola, August 25.— Later reports
state that Mrs. Owen and Paymaster
Brown are sick with the prevailing fever
at tlie navy yard. Theodore Rush, the
Quartermaster, is dead. The people of
the naval reservation, lieing surrounded
by a cordon and having heard nothing
from their appeal to the Secretary of the
Navy, have issued an appeal tor help to
the public
The statement from Washington that
the house to house inspection ordered by
tile Marine Hospital service had developed
cases pronounced to be yellow fever is in
correct. They were under charge of the
Marine Hospital surgeon before the in
spection commenced.
Milton abolished the quarantine against
Pensacola to-day. One year ago to-dav vel
low lever was announced. Sickness was
then general. Another epidemic may come
this year, but to-day Pensacola is abso
lutely healthy and the people are hopeful.
It is reported that Secretary Chandler re
pudiates the contract under which
Civilian Surgeon Harges went to the navy
yard at SIOO per day.
Drs. Huson, Renshaw and Bravey pub
lish a card in to-day’s Commercial assert
ing that Surgeon Murray, of the Marine
Service, is wrong, ami that the cases
were yellow fever, provided Drs.
YV hite and Fordham, who had charge
of the cases, gave them a cor
rect clinical history. Public confidence
is firm in Surgeon Murray, of the naval
reservation. Two new cases of fever are
reported—Lieutenant Wniffle, ol the
Marine corps, and the wife of Paymaster
Brown. No deaths are reported. By au
thority of Surgeon General Hamilton a
house to house inspection was commenced
at YVoolsey and Warrington to-day.
Y\ ashington, August 25.—Superin
tendent Jewell, of the railway mail ser
vice at Atlanta, has been authorized to
issue the necessary orders for the fumi
gation of the mail matter arriving at
Jacksonville, Fla., front Pensacola, if it
can be done without expense to the Post
Office Department.
The Surgeon General of the Marine
Hospital service received the following
telegram from Pensacola: “The inspec
tion reports are satisfactory. Onlv a few
houses were found unclean, and those re
ceived immediate assistance. There is no
sickness of a serious nature in the city.
Mr; Murray reaffirmed the correctness ot
his post-mortem. The doctors here are
much excited over it and the people much
elated. The cordon is perfect. I inspect
Hie same three times a week personally.
The navy yard reports three cases.
[Signed] Guttman, P. B. H.”
Tampa, Fla., August 26.—There is no
yellow fever here.
AT THE STATE CAPITAL.
An Uneventful Day Put in by Both
Houses.
Atlanta, Ga., August 25.—1n the
House to-day, with Mr. Rankin still pre
siding, the prayer was delivered by Rev.
Dr. J. W. Ileidt.
Mr. Studdard, of Morgan, asked for a
reconsideration of the action defeating
his fence hill yesterday.
Mr. Simmons, of Terrell, opposed, and
Mr. Russell, of Clarke, favored, and the
reconsideration was granted.
The rules were suspended, and the Sen
ate resolution to provide a stenographer
for the Penitentiary Committee investigat
ing whether or not the lessees of convicts'
have sub-let any convicts to other parties.
The hill appropriating money to com
plete the insane asylum was made the
sjiecial order for Monday. The rules
were suspended, and bill’s were intro-
dueed as follows:
By Mr. Lofton, of Bibb—Providing for
the drawing of jurors for Superior Courts.
By Mr. Patton, of Thomas—Allowing
Thomas county to provide for working the
public roads by taxation or otherwise.
Allowing Thomas county to vote for
prohibition. The balance of the morning
session was devoted to reading bills a
second time. There were about seventy
five absentees.
IN THE SENATE.
In the Senate the hill requiring Judges
to give in their charge to grand juries
section 4500 of the Code as to the practice
of medicine was debated, Senator Beall
concluding his argument against the hill
and Senator Paul replying in favor.
The report adverse, to the bill was dis
agreed to for the purpose of allowing
amendments, and the hill goes to its third
reading.
Committees reported, and bills were
read the second time.
There was a rather thin Senate.
Senator Hovt introduced anew bill
changing the time of holding the Clayton
Superior Court.
The following bills passed:
Incorporating the town of YVard, in
Randolph county.
Creating commissioners of roads and
revenue for Schley county.
Amending the Gate City Railroad char
ter of Atlanta, granting an extension into
DeKalb county.
Amending the act creating the Boards
of Commissioners in tlie State.
Preventing the driving of stock into
Georgia from other States to graze,
The bill incorporating the Vigilant Live
Stock Insurance Company was tabled.
The Senate adjourned at half-past ten
o’clock for want of business, although the
House has taken in over one thousand
bills.
The Governor had fourteen applications
today for requisitions, which shows that
the criminal business is lively just now.
AT DE CHAM BOKO'S BIER,
A Grant! Cordon Surroqndine the Dead
Count.
Frqhsporp, August 25.—The hotly of
the Count de Chambord lies clothed in
evening dress and decorated with the
Grand Cordon and with tlie order of the
Holy Ghost. His hands are folded over
his breast and in one of them is a crucifix.
Wax; tapers are burning at the head of
the corpse.
The First Chamberlain of the Emperor
Francis Joseph will be present when the
will of the late Count is opened. As the
deceased enjoyed ex-territorial rights fie
was not subject to the ordinary laws of
Austria. As soon as the news of the death
of the Count became known the inhabi
tants of the villages around Frohsdorf
thronged to the chateau where they at
tended mass. Telegrams of condolence
with the family of the dead prince poured
in all day yesterday. As the Count was
dying his confessor, raising his hand, ex
claimed: “Ascend to Heaven, son of
Saint Louis.”
The Count left a large legacy to the
Pope, His Holiness has telegraphed to
the family of the deceased his condolence
with them in their bereavement.
Paris, August 25.—The Councils Gen
eral of the Departments of Vendee and
Loire Inferieure adjourned out of respect
to the memory of the late Count deChani
bord.
Te Temps (Republican) believes that
the disunion of the Bourbon and other
monarcbial elsinents will become wider
than it was before the death of Count dh
Chambqrd.
he Francaise (Conservative) says that
the Count de Paris, conforming to tradi
tion, will relinquish the title of the Or
leans family and assume that of the
House of Bourbon. Le Francaise adds
that the royalists are neither divided nor
scattered. The two parties of conserva
tive France are made aware of their faults
by their misfortunes, and will
henceforth be united. The future is np
longer doubtful. We aro certain tnat the
transition will occur, the constitution
permits*us to loot forward and strive for
a revision.
London, August 25.—The Daiiy .Yews
in an article op the Cotint de Cham lamb
says; ‘'His death like bis life, will not af
fect French jaditics. The event,” it savs.
“belongs to the romance of history and
not to its business.”
The Times says it sees little ground to
anticipate any movement in France fa
vorable to the Orleans Princes, who, it
thinks, will not be so ill advised as to urge
their claims, which at the present time,
are entirely hopeless,
Bkhi.in, August J,, -j t i s generally
thought nere’that the Count de Charn
bord S death will have no influence on
i rench politics.
Freest says
thpt the mil of [the dbunt de Chamltord
was opened k rulay, and that nothing was
found referring fo the political wishes of
the priuco,
August 20.—The eounells of the
Ministers to-day discussed the adoption
of measures against the Orleanists. The
council decided to take no action unless
the measures are rendered necessary bv
events with which the Orleanist Princes
are connected.
Vienna, August 26.—The body of the
Count de Chambord has bppr embalmed,
fphefal will take place September Bd.
GEN. WARD ON THE STUMP
HE FIRES THE FIRST GUN FOR
HOADLY” IN OHIO.
A Review of Democracy’* History—lm
portance of the Tariff Question—The
True Course on the Protection Ques
tion—The Alma of the Two Parties—
Civil Service Reform.
Galiox, 0., August 25.— Gen. Durbin
AY ard, candidate for United States Senate
from Ohio, delivered his opening speech of
the campaign at Gabon, 0., Saturday.
The following extracts are taken from it:
4 ellow-Cii iZF.xs: The cardinal principles
of our party have been the guide of the na
tion during most of its existence. Perhaps
no titter time to recall them than now could
be selected. The country is in no ferment ef
excitement. It is not a Presidential vear, and
the people s minds are more open to reason
and readier for the exercise of calm judgment
than when some great national party struggle
arouses popular passion. The all-pervading
idea of Democracy is the sovereignty oi the
lK*ople. its principles of action relate to their
safety and welfare. Those principles are
naturally classified into such as pertain to
the constitutional organization of govern
ment, and such as grow out of its adminis
tration. Each class springs from Die central
idea of the people’s sovereignty, and each
aims to secure their safetv and welfare The
Democratic party Ims ever held definite views
as to the nature and proper organization of
our State and National Governments, and as
to the constitutional relations hot ween tlie
States and the Federal Union. These ques
tions have always lieen, and still are, and \\ ill
ever continue to he, while our political system
lasts, the broad and deep dividing line be
tween parties in America. Constitutional
questions abide, while questions of policy are
ever changing with the changing wants of
society.
Our'adversaries scoflingly tell us that the
Democratic party has no principles; that it
struggles only for the spoils of office, is it ev
idence of lack of principle that we submit to
be excluded from national power for twenty
odd years rather than go over to our ad versa
ries and take the fat places they have had to
oner: It is our steadfast adherence to princi
ple that has kept ns alive and out of office.
During the sixty years of our rule no country
Bits ever better governed and none ever pro
gressed with such rapid strides. YVe gave the
Union nearly all its new territory and nearly
all its new States. YVe robbed no citizen of a
right; we fostered no special interests; we
built up no monopolies. The States ami the
people were seeuic in local self-government.
We moved with tin* progress of the
age. One evil aionc was hevond
control of any party. That rent
us asunder and drove us from power. A mil
lion Democrats from the North rallied to the
support of the Union in the field, and the rest
saved the Constitution from overthrow at
home. YVe have grown strong in defense of
constitutional liberty and popular rights.
Democracy is never old and decrepit; it is
new ami living as the wants of society. Demo
cracy is never new; it is as old as the love of
liberty. One of the merits of our party is
that it is at once conservative ami pro
gressive. It has uo dead past to bury, its
march is onward with steady step to the
front. Whatever sustains the true life of
Democracy we appropriate as we advance.
Y\ hatyver begins to rot on our hands we
cremate to avoid contagion. He that lags in
the march is left by the wavsido to ramble
into some other oamp, and ite'that dies in bat
tle we bury with the honors of war.
THE TARIFF.
The coming election not only involves the
the choice of State officers hut the selec
tion of a Cnited States Senator. National as
well as State issues may, therefore, proper
ly lie debated in this canvass. The tarifi'
question and civil service are the most im
portant subjects now likeiv to be considered,
and they both involve administrative reform.
On these questions I shall ask your attention
to-day and repeatedly during the canvass
though with such brevity as will lie rather the
statement of my opinions than the arguments
sustaining them.
The tariff question has been much debated
ever since Adam Smith formulated the sci
ence of political economy. Almost the whole
hodv of economists have for a hundred years
condemned the principle of protective duties
and now scarcely a ripe thinker in political
economy is found in Europe or America
whose writings do not snstain freedom of
trade. Statesmen have not been so well
agreed, though the protective idea has not
held its place in legislation so much bv the
force of reasoning as by the power of influence
and the difficulty of adjusting the details of
tariffs to the standard of revenue. In the
early history of our country protection was
claimed for our infant manufacturing indus
tries. Many of our greatest statesmen favored
the claim. Both Y\ ehster and Calhoun at
different jieriodg of their lives sustained and
opposed protective duties,and YVehster’santi
protective sjK-'eeh of 1824 is tlie ablest effort of
his life on any economic question. Four years
Ititcr nc took the other side with eouitl zeal.
Calhoun favored protection in the early davs
when Webster opposed it, and opposed it in
the later days when YVebster favored it
Nothing could better illustrate the notable
remark of General Hancock that protection
was a local question. Each of these great
men favored or opposed protection according
to the altered interests of his section. (Jluv
was tlie steadfast friend of his protective
"American System,” and through life treated
" hat he termed our ‘‘lnfant manufactures*’
as the wards of the government. The Demo
crats of iß4li enacted a revenue tariff, and the
principle stood unrepealed till the war neces
sities of secession changed the policy of the
government. After l# slavery issue became
prominent tlie tariff question 'dropped out of
s'glit until very lately; and, therefore, my
fellow-citizens, von have heard little of the
subject in public discussion. It is now risin ,r
into importance, and will require wise con
sideration,
REVENUE TARIFF.
Let us consider for a moment a tariff for
revenue, for the tariff' must ratse revenue
whatever else it does. 1 fear the phrase
■tariff for revenue only” is very liable to
mislead. It may convey different meanings
to different minds. Some may construe it as
meaning that a revenue tariff should he so ad
justed as that uo “incidental protection”
should follow, This would involve levying
fluties on only such articles as could not come
into competition with home production, for
whenever that competition does arise “inci
dental protection follows a tariff for reve
nue. Such articles are too narrow a basis for
revenue, and, by checking importation,
might defeat revenue, entirely. When
protection incidentally follows a
duty whose purpose is revenue barely, it
would he refining too much to say that tlie un
avoidable incident should not follow, though
Ihe article itself might he a proper subject for
revenue. 1 axes of all sorts ought to he so
levied as to impose tip; leapt burden on iudus-
! r V , l his priui iplc requires tariff duties to
he laid on .Artie,Os whoso consumption is not
reproductive. Whatever is consumed in the
reproduction of other wealth adds to the ag
gregate wealth, and, therefore, is beneficial to
the tax-payer by broadening the basis of fu
ture taxation, and hence lessening the per
cent, to be levied. As heavy a tariff duty as
they will hear ought, therefore, to fall on lux
uries, not with any idea of enacting laws of a
sumptuary nature to check or control tlieir
consumption, hut because their consumption
is not, as a rule, reproductive of wealth, anti
hence they hear the tax without burdening
industry. Again, it is a canon of political
economy that the last stage before consump
tion at which a tax can be levied least bur
dens industry, because the amount of duty
being an element of cost to the consumer, he
then pays no interest on the tax; whereas, if
a - ” a r ller each dealer must
h.uc profit on ips investment* One oilier ele
ment in a revenue tariff we must passover
for want of time, and that is the proper selec
tion of articles to he taxed. Experience onlv
can determine that in detail, though the
principle Should he to equali/c as near as
possible the burdens to *ho consumer
RROTECriO.V.
The protectionist points with triumph to the
prosperity of the country, and Wannithat to
be the result pf Ins -ys(eu, There hi*, in
deed, certain elements of prosperity: but
what evidence lots unv man that they are due
to protection!- The Democratic tariff of istti
tvas, in the main, a revenue tariff, and the
country never had greater industrial prosperi
ty than during its existence. But even now
it is not the highly protected (nwrests that
give the country its prosperity, as an exami
nation of Uya subject, for which I have no
tune. Will abundantly show. What has pro
tection ever done for the great agricultural
planting, mechanical, transportation and
shipping interests- Are the manufacturers
of wooden-ware, mechanical and agricultural
implements, carriages, i-oUing-mtlls, rail
machinery and the products
of the myriad workshops of the
country “protected'’ in any effective sense?
Say Uiey are cH^pled,' for U(eir in
trade u taxed by tariff duties, which, ns thev
increase the price to the consumer, lessen his
ability to buy. There may be a few favored
interests growing rich off protection, but the
masses of the people-thehard-workingtoil
ers at the bench, the anvil and the plow—are
not. They are not and cannot be enrioußd bv
paying a tax to other interest* that cannot
thrive without tj,c did of that tax-. Must one
man wo*a at ft business ftnd divide his earn
ings with another who works at a business in
which he cannot make profit? Is "S
right which makes one man v,ut to supnor
another? But why the cap'tTbs
who .maMnaeiurek need protection? l Can?
tal IS Cheap and abundant. Amer -a
is no longer poor. Interest U low? Tine?
tenths of the producing powei of factories is
machinery, not men. And skilled labor com?
mauds IltUc more in America than Fntr
land. With fifty millions of the most
gent and enterprising human beings on earth
and unbounded supp Ties of the raw material
if our people cannot compete with foreign'
nations in producing What we consurc lue
remedy is not found in profe-tiem. t bra’ineC
?i?± Rn ? e 8 * he Pring £r
CSCJI 15 tke 7a‘in y er if
merce sV ° ' 6A P er ‘ban produce. Com-
S ttlere . al ~rotecti° " to butuc in
< * O through exchange of pro
lutts the largest returns to, capital and labor.
WHAT TgE PARTIES ADVOCATE.
The Republican party advocate the protec
tive principle, and the Ifemocratio party the
revenue (irinciple. The protective principle,
like all its other policies, is founded on the pa
ternal idea. The government must direct the
people what they shall produce themselves
and what buy from abroad. It builds up a
favored class’, promotes monopolies and taxes
labor to enrich capital. It makes the poor
man pay more tax in per cent, on the value of
his coat and blanket than the rich man pavs
on hie. Taxes the farmer, mechanic, work
ingman on the implements of %ja industry, on
every article of flotilla*, and comfort of home,
not vo'eitpptfrt the government,
wit to enru'h the manufacturer. The
Democratic party, on the other hand,
supports a revenue tariff liputed to
of ( be government
, aJrni nstored. fn adjust
lng this tariff for revenue we insist that it
shall impose no unequal burdens, hut encour
age all industries alike, without creating or
fostering monopolies to rob later of its iu*t
eomuensatiqn. 1 would not have worded the
tl.eli° rm i? , Y te ‘‘* B is v T ordl ' li * ~l' t the idea is
there. It leaves freedom to industry, and
* , ‘ v ! os tax “? to support the government only,
and not to build up special interests. 1 heart
ily concur also in the platform’s denunciation
of the reduction of the tariff on wool, while
it leaves a highly protective duty on woolen
goods. Ihe pro|>osition is so monstrous that
the Republicans themselves have hail to re
cede from it; and the wool-growers owe the
Democracy a debt of gratitude for forcing the
Ummbhcans to do them justice.
The whole tariff ideas of the two parties
divide on the line between later and capital.
A Republican tarifi' is in the interest of capi
tal The Democratic tariff is in the interest
or labor. Ihe one protects monev, the other
protects men. A man is better than a dollar.
I he dollar in the thousand forms of aggregated
capital is strong enough to take care of itself,
the man. unorganized and competing, is ever
ihe Prey of the dollar, organized and com
bining. lie needs freedom from governmental
favoritism to capital. Republican tariff's en
slave, Democratic tariff's enfranchise later.
Republican restrictive legislation has driven
our ships from the ocean. Under Democratic
free legislation the breeze will kiss our mer
chant flag in every clime and on every sea.
i upit.'il Hint labor at homo will caoli have its
just reward. Legislation will not, as now,
make the rich richer and the poor poorer.
I •emocratic taxation, like the dewsof Heaven,
w ill full on all alike, and not as now. exempt
the rich by taxing the poor.
civil. SERVICE.
I must not lie silent as to civil service. If
we hud time to consider it in its largest sense,
we would begin with primaries, conventions
and elections. The freedom, intelligence ami
purity of the voting power are above all price
to the institutions and imlicy of the country,
though unfortunately not always above a
money value in actual politics. But to-dav
the civil service to be discussed involves the
appointment of suterdinate officers under the
federal Government. This is a most impor
tant subject, and one that of late has attract
ed much attention. Our platform demands as
tlie first step in the reform “a change
in the Executive administration itself.”
ln that view 1 heartily concur. A
new party came into power simul
taneoush with secession, and for twenty-two
years, except in rare cases, lias held'every
office worth having in the civil administra
tion, The civil service has been during that
period a close corporation, in which none
could he stockholders except Republicans.
Ber\ icc to Die country, or fitness for the place
passed for nothing, unless the applicant could
shoo ms party patent of nobility. Nay.
Democrats were jeered at as disloyal, though
they had bled for the country or defended tne
Constitution against those who reviled it as
•’covenant with death and a league with
hell. The administrators of the civil
service handed together to keep their
party in power, contributed money to the
cause, went home on leave to manipulate
conventions and electioneer at the polls; in
short, became a trained army of political
mercenary soldiers, armed with the influence
and patronage of the government, and obey
ing no call hut the command of their master
—the Republican party. Their votes and in
fluence determined the last two Presidential
elections. Against t his abuse of the adminis
trative power and patronage the Democracy
has teen constantly outspoken and bold. But
their warnings and denunciations have been
unheeded by those in power. The frauds and
corruptions of the service have gone on from
bad to worse. Jay Huhtel! and his commit
tce, in defiance of law, hied department
clerks at his pleasure, and star route wicked
ness defrauded the government and elected
a President with the plunder. The
first and essential step in civil service
reform is, therefore, to muster out of
service these disciplined cohorts of Republi
can power, and put in their places Demo
cratic, honest and competent successors.
" I hey have allowed themselves to he made
the mercenaries of a party, and are no longer
lit to be the servants of "the whole people.”
Indeed, no party can safely he trusted with
unrestrained power so long, and the subordi
nate officere in it least of all, for they feel
responsibility to their superiors alone, anil not
to the people. The chiefs feel some responsi-
bility to public opinion and the people. When
the chiefs go out, let their dependents go too.
Of course, trained men in the several de
partments must be retained to instruct their
successors, hut let the body of the
civil service give place to new men, gradual
ly and circumspectly selected from the
Democratic ranks. This is not only justice,
hut good policy, for tlie country ought to feel
that the government is not the property of
oue party. The grip of the Republican party
on the civil service was remorseless till they
felt power slipping away from them. Then
they began to plead for non-partisan civil ser
vice, so as to retain their liegemen already in
place, and weaken their rivals by giving them
fewer places to hestowr upon their followers.
If there were no other reason for opposing the
recent civil service act, it would be enough
that practically it gives the Republicans in
office an advantage over Democrats out of
office. First let the parties he equalized, at
all events, before applying competitive tests.
PARLIAMENT PROROGUED.
| Y'ictoria Draws a Roseate View of Eng
lish Foreign Relation*.
London, August 25,—Parliament was
prorogued at 2 o’clock this afternoon.
The Queen’s speech proroguing it refers to
the continuance of harmonious relations
with foreign powers. The administrative
reorganization of Egypt, though retarded
by the outbreak of the cholera, has
steadily advanced. Her Majesty reasserts
that the occupation of Egypt is only tem
porary. She says that the aim thereof,
which has been explained to Parliament,
remains unchanged. Communications
with France concerning the occurrences
in Madagascar have been conducted in a
spirit of friendship, and she has no doubt
that they will lead to a satistactory re-,
suit. Her attention has been anil will be
steadily directed to all which may affect
the rights and liberties of her subjects. The
working oft% convention with the Trans
vaal Government has proved in certain
respects unsatisfactory. The Ministers
and confidential envoys dispatched from
the Transvaal will discuss the matter
shortly. The condition of the Kingdom,suf
fering from the depression of agriculture
has in most districts shown some decree
of improvement. The general state of
trade ami industry is sound, Bhe says
that she can refer with greater satisfac
tion than on former occasions to the
condition oi Ireland. The provisions of
tno land act have been brought into wide
operation, and the late combination
against the fulfillment of contracts,
.especially for rent, have been in a great
degree broken up. There is a marked
dimunition of agrarian crime, and assas
sins, having murder for their object, have
been checked by the detection and punish
ment of the offenders. Her Majestv re
fers to various measures to which she has
given her assent, and which she hopes
will advance the interests of all. She re
fers to the legislation of the session in re
gard to Ireland, as evidence of the anxie
ot I drliament to promote tho
of that country. r
The House of [.orde, at the last moment,
a Sreed tqthe agricultural holdings bill.
the Standard, in commenting on the
close of the session of Parliament, says
that the weakness and divided counsels ot
the opposition during the session have ex
tricated the Ministers from their worse
straits. The Ministers may take heart for
the future when they remember the mar
velous impunity which they have enjoyed.
FurbppHn Before Fublished.
Bc.rmn, August 25,-M. Anterne, mem
ber lor the Alsace Protest party In the
Reichstag, recently forbidden to publish
a newspaper in M,eU by Marshal Matouf
lei, the Governor of the conquered pro
yinock, and who wrote the Governor ex
pressing a hope that he would be avenged
will be prosecuted for high treason. The
order, fherefoie, has already been issued
Vhe appearance of M. Anterne’s news?
paper, which was to hare been called
.Uel,?, was forbidden by the Governoi
General on the ground that it was likely
'IV?° B >'tious and anti-German in
o? m lill K llev , < i d tbat *'Uo prosecution
of M. Anterne will nhow that the recent
article in the North German Gazette, at
"rounds Franee ’ ,8 baßed on scriou-
The Revenue Kekftte-
M ASHiNGiygN, August 25. —The Internal
Keyenue Bureau to-day received from the
Collector of the Fourth district of Texas
a schedule of eleven hundred claims
tor pehaßi an tobacco, eto., amount
ing to. about SBO,OOO. The aggre
gate amount of these claims for
rebate received to date is about $3,500 (go.
The schedules are ail in, with the excep
tion of the District of Virginia and Ten
nessee and the Second Minnesota district"
the Fourth Judtaua, and the District oi
yuWado,
A Wire Factory Burned.
V Hite Plains, August 25.—This morn
ing a tire broke out in the wire factory at
Annsville, near Peaksktll, The buildings
w-ere soon a heap of mins. The loss is
about $75,000, Two hundred and fifty
hands were thrown out of employment.
Mails Delayed by a Collision.
New Orleans, August 25.—A collision
is reported between two freight trains' of
the Louisville and Nashville Railway at
Chef Menteur Biidge. Conductor .(onefe
and two brakeuten were badly injured
Trains and the tnailg are Relayed.
Trance’s Mistake.
Rome, August K.-L’Dirin* points out
to trance that her fatal badness has
left nothing undone to, alienate the friend
ship of Spain, Italy and England, and
Mopes that she will repair her faults and
avert the perils which beset her.
! 10 A year. 1
1 S CENTS A COPT. j
ARTHUR TORE KIDNAPED.
A BAND OF COWBOYS OX HIS
TRACK IX THU WEST.
The Alleged Plot Betrayed by an Infor
mer—The Entire Presidential Party to
be Spirited Away and Held for Ran
soms—A Fairy Tale From the Wilds
of flit* West.
Ogden, Utah, August 25.—Con sidera
ble excitement exists in this city over a
report which appeared in the Wood River
Times of last evening that a party of cow
boys started for the Yellowstone Park to
kidnap President Arthur. Sheriff Farrv has
detailed two trustworthy deputies to look
it up. with instructions to summon a
strong posse and arrest the kidnappers if
the facts are as stated.
The Times says during the past two
weeks a number of strangers, all well
provided with good riding animals and
tire arms and resembling a partv of
regulators or Texas cowboys, have been
camped on Wilcox creek, and con
siderable curiosity lias been ex
pressed as to the intention of the partv
borne accounted for their outfit bv de
scribing them as a party organized to go
up into the Indian country on a propect
ing trip, while others believed them to be
a party of Arizona rustlers. During
several days past some of the party
have ridden through the town
in a defiant manner and mysterious!v dis
appeared. 1* rom a man who came in to
day it.islearned that the partv, who in
duced him to join them and make certain
pledges ot secrecy, were organized to pro
ceed to the Yellowstone Park. Thev left
last night, going on the stage-road, and
the informant escaped during the
night. Ibe object of the expedition
is to corral and capture President Arthur
and his party and to spirit them awav
into mountain fastnesses and caves where
they will be fed but kept prisoners while
the members of the party act as pickets
to prevent them being surpr sed and cap
tilled \\liile negotiations lor ransom are
conducted.
The Captain or leader of the party lias
an idea that a heavy ransom will be ot
tered by personal friends of the President
after a search for the President’s party
sha i have been given up, and
that hall a million dollars or more
?>'" ~ thus 1,0 extorted from
tlie Secret Service fund and divided
among the party on the principle adopted
by the Italian banditti. The escaped
member of the party says that there are 65
men in the outfit, some of whom were
guerrillas in the iate war, and that
five wild Shoshone and Bannock In
dians go along as guides and scouts,
who are armed with repeating rifles
and scalping knives. The leader is a
lexas desperado, on whose head a price
has been set, and with the exception of
two Italians, who left the railroad grade
and flew, the others of the party are cow
boys. A grand council was held night
belore last on the prairie, when every
man swore by his dagger in the firelight,
to do his duty.
Upper Gieser Basin, Yellow Stone
National Park, August 24 —At 1 o’clock
to-day, after a dusty march of twenty-six
miles over a rough trail, President Ar
thur and party arrived in the Upper
Oieser Basin of the National Park and
went into camp. After thisrideon horse
back of 2.T0 miles, every member ol the
expedition is in the best of health, and
not an accident of the slightest character
has occurred on the whole journey to mar
its pleasure.
THE COTTON CHOP.
Bradstreet’x August Report from Geor
gia Counties.
The August cotton report to Brad
street’s, based upon 1,048 replies from Old
out of 057 counties In the cotton districts
growing over 500 acres each, shows a se
rious falling oft' in the condition of the
crop since the July report. The drought
in this State and in .South Carolina lias
had a serious damaging effect. Corre
spondents in twenty-eight counties of
south Carolina report serious injury from
shedding, the average injury thought to
lm\e been inflicted being 20 per eeni He
ports from f, ir counties state that uo ini
jury has been caused by shedding. The
reports from South Carolina are agreed
that no injury lias resulted from worms
Correspondents in Bft counties of Geor
gia report on the average an injury of 22
l>er cent, to the crop from shedding. No
injury is reported in 25 counties. Worms
in Georgia have inflicted some injury in a
L7o,?°.iw t,e ?’ bu A taki “S th(! State as a
whole the injury therefrom is very slight,
ihe following table relates to the mors
important counties in Georgia*
CONDITION OF COTTON IN THE LARGER COCN
TIES OF GEORGIA OS AVGUST 17.
I Coweta | 3149,000/ 12- I Fair, i Fair. I Good. I Fair.
, Dougherty. | 1:41,000 ! 25i 15 Bad. • Bad. Fair. Bad.
Greene 2f40,000/ ;| Bad. I Bad. | Fair. Bail.
Harris j 2,40,000; 8) |Fair. 'Fair. Fair. Fair.
, Henry 1)35,000! 30Good. Fair. Fair. |Fair.
Houston 2170,000 15 j 2-Fair. I Fair j Good. I Fair.
Meriwether 2[51,000 2Sj (Bad. j Bad. Fair. Bad.
Monroe 2 48,500 j Bad. | Fair. Good. Fair.
[Putnam . 2 35,500| Bad. Fair. Fair. Bad.
l’ike . 1 85,000 1 Good.iGood. Good. Good.
Talbot 2 40,4001 13 'Bad. Bad. Fair. Bad.
Troup. 3 j 01,0001 j i Good, j Good. (Good.! Fair.
Pro* pert* for good
crop .. .... .
Cultivation
I! looming and fruiting.
Weather *ince July 17.
Per cent, injury by
worm*.
Per rent, injury bu
ehedding
Average
XuQibcr tif ~/t'e n \je* |
Mr. Shaw Liberated.
Paris, August 25.—The government has
received a telegram from Admiral Pierre,
the French Commander in Madagascar’
stating that the trial of Mr. Shaw, the
English missionary who was arrested by
the French, has resulted in the dismissal
of the charge against him, and he'has,
therefore, been liberated, and has arrived
at the lBlandof Reunion.
Walter Pool Dead.
Raleigh, N. €., August 25.—Walter
Pool, Congressman elect from the First
North Carolina District, succeeding Louis
C. Latham, died at Elizabeth City, this
morning, after a long illness. He had
but recently returned from Hot Springs,
Ark., and was thought to be somewhat
improved in health. He was thirty-two
years old,
Atlanta Post Office Officials Removed.
Atlanta, August 25.—Ex-Governor
Benjamin Conley, Postmaster at Atlanta,
and five attaches of the post office were
removed to-day. The removal was wholly
unexpected by the public- The cause is
said to be general dissatisfaction.
Sexton Heats Schaffer.
San Francisco, August 25.—Sexton
won the 1,000 point billiard match in
twelve innings, Schaffer scoring 730. The
highest run was 431. and was made by
Schaeffer.
Staking iloniDcr.
&4K!N<*
PDWDER
Absolutely Pure.
This powder never varies. A marvel of
purity, strength and wholesomenees. More
economical than the ordinary kinds, cannot
be sold in competition with the multitude of
low test, short weight, alum or phosphati
powders, Sold only in can* by all grocers.
At wholesale in Savannah by
HENRY SOLOMON A SON.|
8. QUCKBNHXIMJEB * SON.
COt'NTIKS,