Newspaper Page Text
lie looming §tapu.
> STBEKT, savannah, qa.
MONDAY. SEPTEMBER 15. lMt.
ReoUtered at IA Post Office in Savannah <>"
Second Close Mail Matter.
Tb> Morning News every d*y in the
year (by mail or carrier) —...
The Morning News every day lor iix
months (by mail or carrier) 5 00
Tke XotsiW News Mondays, Weff.-
nesdavs and Friday*, or Tuesday*,
Thursdays and Saturday* (by
mad) 5 00
THE Weeelt News.one year.... .... *OO
The Morning News ia served in the city by
newsdealer* at 25 cento per week. Single
copies S cento.
ADVERTISING.
Ten lines make a square—a line average?
seven words. Advertisements, per square,
one insertion. *1 OO; two insertions, *1 80;
three insertions, 12 60; six insertions, 15 00.
Local or Reading Notices double above rates.
Reduced rates on continued advertisements.
Amusement advertisement* II 50 per square.
Auction advertisements. Marriages. Funerals.
Meetings and Special Notices II 00 per
square each insertion.
Wants, Bosrdiag. For Rent, Lost and Found.
10 cents a line. No advertisement inserted
under these headings lor leas than SO cents.
Special rates for Weekly Meets.
We do not insure the insertion of any adver
tisement on any specified day or days, nor
do we insure the numlior of insertions
within the time required by the advertiser.
Advertisements will, however, have tneir
full number of insertions when the time
can be made up, but when accidentallj'
left out and the number of insertions can
not be given, the money paid for the omit
ted insertions will le returned to the ad
vertiser. All letters should be addressed
J. H. ESTILL, Savannah. Ga.
J. c. GOODRICH, Northern Advertising
Manager of Daily Morning Sews and
Weekly News. Sun Building. New York.
Johnnycake will soon be in season up
the country.
Austin, Texas, is poor, indeed. It does
not possess a single silver-tongued orator.
Magnetism did not do much good in
Maine, until it was reinforced by bright,
crisp $lO bills.
Editor Dana will not be so lonesome
now that Mr. Grady has got into the same
little boat with him.
A reformed moonshiner is now a Sheriff
in Tennessee. From being the pursued
he has come to be tbe pursuer.
Punch's society caricatures are drawn
by George Louis Polmetta Busson de
Maurier. No wonder they make people
laugh.
Has Ben Butler really given up all hope
ot carrying Massachusetts and New
York, that he is devoting so much time to
the great West?
Apropos of political
publicans may learn after
“those who live in glass houses shouW
not throw stones.”
Grady, the young Tammany orator,
missed his opportunity. He would have
created a greater sensation if he had come
out for Mrs. Lockwood.
Gen. Bold Front Butler—“ Hold the fort,
for I am coming,” p. and. q. Yours, des
perately, Grady, ex-Senator, ex-Tammany
Sachem and ex-pired politician.
Blaine ought not to receive the support
of the dynamiters unless he will agree, in
ease he is elected, to make O’Donovau
Rossa Minister to the Court of St. James.
The worst thing about civil service re
form, in the estimation of the Republicans
is. that it forces the rich Republican
monopolists to make up the campaign
fund.
The Republicans in Illinois appear to
he hard pressed. Some of them have been
threatening to shoot Garter Harrison, the
Democratic candidate for Governor of
that State.
Agricultural Commissioner Loring is
not wasting any time on trying to raise
tea, as Baron Le Due did. He Is devoting
his talents just now to making campaign
speeches.
John Sherman carried the cold wave
down to Cincinnati Thursday, and he did
not try to heat up the political atmos
phere by touching off a batch of Dan
ville riot reports.
Flannagin. of Flannagin’s Mills, will
probably be the Republican or the Inde
pendent candidate for Lieutenant-Gover
nor of Texas. He is not really very fond
of “Old Ireland” alter all.
Texas towns are rapidly taking advan
tage of the local option liquor law, but
the question is kept out of politics. Can
didate St. John is not hoping for many
electoral votes in that State.
Now that the Republicans and Green
backers of Mississippi have united on a
State ticket, it is time to ask Vice Presi
dential candidate West what he expects
to do for the Butler ticket, anyhow.
Pension Commissioner Dudley will take
charge of the Blaine campaign in In
diana this week. He will probably not
agree to pension all who will vote his
ticket, but will pay a liberal bounty in
ready cash. •
As Gen. Logan gets warmed up in the
campaign be cherishes the delusion that
the bloody shirt is still a potent factor in
politics, and he is wearing himselt out
making a great deal of unnecessary noise
on the subject
Baron Tennyson having published a
poem on spring late in the summer, has
an ode to summer in his refrigerator
which he will let the literary world read
for a liberal consideration some time the
coming winter.
It is said that Gen. Butler will get
about as many votes as there are govern
ment offices to fill. As there are about
100.000 of them, he will not be entirely
without support. lie will be lueky, how
ever, if he gets his name mentioned in the
electoral college.
While the wheat cropot Dakota Is enor
mous, the farmers are seriously embar
rassed. It takes one-thinl of the wheat to
get the other two-thirds to market. What
they would ordinarily rejoice at —an unu
sually large crop—is the very thing that
is giving them trouble.
The advance in the price of votes since
the last Presidential election is what now
troubles the Republican party. It will
take a good deal more money to carry a
doubtful State, when $lO each is asked
for votes, than it did when they could be
had by the thousand at $2 each.
There seems to be no ground to hope
that the new capital will be built out of
Georgia material and by Georgians. This
is too bad. After all, the Gate City will
have to give up its claim to being the
second Chicago, as Chicago men will
probably get the contracts Tor the tetter
■terns of tlje job.
The papers continue very kindly to
make up President Cleveland’s Cabinet.
The New York Herald urges Senator Bay
ard for Secretary of State, and the Boston
Globe wants Gen. P. A. Collins, of Massa
chusetts, for Attorney General. Perhaps
it would be better to save Bayard for the
Presidency in ISSS.
An analysis of the vote in Maine shows
that the Republican gains were made in
twenty-six cities aud towns where the
floating vote was large, and where bright,
crisp $lO bills could be easilymjpfJfhere
they would do the most stated
that in as open
and the Republican
at Chicago.
manufacturing companies are at a
(Recount in Pittsburg. The natural gas
I companies are furnishing both fuel and
* light for thf city, and the leading compa
nies estimate that by this time next year
their profits will be $200,000 a month. The
stockholders wish to make all they can
while the gas bolds out to burn, for it is
not believed that the Bupply is by any
means inexhaustible.
The Charleston Sews and Courier ap
pears to misconstrue the position of the
Georgia press towards foreign capitalists.
There has been no
tion” of foreign capitalists, e Geor
gia press has almost unanimously warned
the people against borrowing foreign
money, or any money, on the terms being
exa-ted by the foreign corporations. It is
a dangerous business, to say the least
The Outlook In Ohio.
About the most noticeable feature
*the campaign at present is the ef
wfcicli the Republicans are making
to carry Ohio in October. They are
alarmed about the outlook in that State,
and are making extraordinary exertions
to avert what threatens to be a disaster.
There isn’t a doubt m the mind ot any
shrewd, well-informed politician that it
would be disastrous to the Republicans
to lose Ohio in October. The loss of that
State next month would he a strong indi
cation that Blaine is losiug all over the
country, and thousands of voters in ev
ery Northern State, who are always
anxious to be on the winning side, and
who, perhaps, would vote for Blaine if
Ohio went Republican in October, would
vote for Cleveland in November.
There is, therefore, a very loud call for
money by tbe Republican managers. The
collectors are urged to do their utmost
to raise money not only from government
employes but also fro.m the manufactur
ers. If reports are to be credited, argu
ments and threats are used to secure the
needed cash.
If Maine had gone Democratic, or had
given a very small Republican majority,
the Republican cause would have been
injured, but the respectable majority
wbich the Republicans got there did not
assist the Republican cause a great
deal, because at the beginning
Of the canvass the State
was conceded to them. It was expected
that they would carry it, and it was
acknowledged that Blaine’s popularity in
his own State would help very materially
to swell the Republican vote. In fact,
the efforts which the Democrats made in
Maine in behalf of the State ticket bore
no comparison to those made by the Re
publicans.
The situation in Ohio is very different.
The Democrats have a fighting chance for
the State, and they are making the most
of it. If they are victorious it is reason
ably certain that they will carry the State
in November.
It is alleged that the Republican Na
tional Committee spent $209,000 in Maine,
and that, besides this vast sum, Blaine
and his immediate friends distributed
many thousands of dollars. If this state
ment is true it is not to be wondered at
that the Republican managers are mak
ing frantic appeals for money to be used
in Ohio. If it required so much in Maine,
where everything was favorable, the
amount which they want for Ohio must be
immense. Their dependence on money
shows that their confidence in their abil
ity to carry the State is not strong.
Progress of the Cholera.
S The example of King Humbert is having
a good effect, doubtless, in allaying the
fears of his subjects. The ravages of the
cholera in Italy, especially in Naples,
are far more terrible than they were in
France. In Naples, out of a population
of about 500,000, nearly 500 a day are
dying. The mortality is simply fearful.
It is possible that the epidemic has not
reached its greatest proportions.
King Humbert is receiving, as
he deserves to receive, ex
pressions of admiration and respect
trom all parts of Europe. It would be a
very easy matter for him to seek a place
of safety, and his withdrawal from (be
scene of danger would not be unfavorably
commented upon at home or abroad. He
has chosen to take his chances with his
people, and if be survives the ordeal, his
courageous and unselfish conduct will be
acknowledged, doubtless, by his gratclul
subjects in a fitting way.
The King no doubt understands that
fear increases the ravages of an epidemic,
and he knows, of course, that if he sought
safety in flight the alarm of the peoplc
would be greatly increased. By remain
ing and sharing the danger he inspires
confidence and helps, perhaps, to save
many from becoming victims of the
scourge.
It is too early yet to congratulate our
selves on escaping the dreaded disease
this year, although the chances are that
it will not find a lodgment on our shores
before next year, if at all. But because
we have escaped it thus far is no reason
why we should relax any of our efforts to
prevent it trom reaching us. As long as
there is a case of cholera in Europe every
precaution known to sanitary science
should be taken to keep the disease out
of this country.
The sanitary condition of Naples will
compare favorably with that of New
York, and if the cholera should make its
appearance in the latter city the chances
are that the death rate would be as great
as It is now in Naples. When the cholera
first appeared at Toulon and Marseilles
Dr. Koch said that it would not disappear
until it had spread over all Europe. It
looks very much as if his prediction
would be verified. If the scourge should
appear in New York it is probable that it
would visit every town and city in the
United States. No efforts should be
spared to avert such a calamity.
An Honest Party.
At the great Democratic ratification
meeting at Washington last week Sena
tor Jones, of Florida, in the course of a
very able 6pecch, said that the Democratic
party was in power two-thirds of a cen
tury, and the stench of corruption never
emanated from it.
One of the strongest reasons advanced
for turning the Republican party out or
power is that it is so corrupt
that it is dangerous to longer en
trust the control of the government to
it. It has been scarcely a quarter of a
century 6ince the Republican party came
into power, and for the greater part of
that time it has teen noted for its corrupt
practices.
It has not only degraded the public ser
vice in order to accomplish its purposes,
but it has overridden the barriers of
the constitution in its efforts to re
main in power.
The man chosen for its standard bearer
in the present contest is a tit representa
tive of the parly. He is not better than
the party, and is, therefore, popular with
the masses of it. The man who wrote the
Mulligan letters will never find any
thing in the record of the Repub
lican party which he cannot
indorse. The party and its can
didate suit each other. Senator
Jones made a good point in calling at
tention to the clean record of the Demo
cratic party when it went out of power.
The people have about concluded that the
party which went out of power without
charges of corruption ought to be returned
to power. They are tired of political j
scandals, and want the government ad- j
ministered honestly and economically.
The young lady who a few days ago
was known as MissMoroslni, in the town
of Yonkers, N. Y., has returned to her
father’s house with her husband, the
coachman. It is not staged whether or
not the young lady has repented of her
folly. If she has not, it is probable that
she will. There can be little
in common between the couple on
which to found happiness. The woman
is educated and refined, and has been sur
rounded from childhood with everything
desirable that wealth could purchase.
The man has had no advantages, and
knows little beyond what is to be learned
in the stables.
Marriages of that sort seldom turn out
well. Men ana women are much more
likely to be happy by marrying in the cir
cle of society in which they were reared
than out of it. The family of young
Rhinelander, who sacrificed $1,000,000
to marry a pretty chambermaid, are
trying to put him in an iusane asylum
to bring about a separation between him
and his wife, and it looks as if they would
succeed. The Morosini girl will not find
the coachman so romantic and charming,
perhaps, as a husband as she found him
as a groom.
It is stated that Russia is determined
to achieve the honor ot being the first to
send an expedition to the North Pole.
The plan adopted is apparently a very
promising one, provided the natural
obstacles are not absolutely insurmount
able. The starting point will be north
eastern Siberia, or Jeannette Island, and
the explorers will go afoot over the ice in
several large parties, within supporting
distance of each other, and adequate sup
plies of food, boats, sleds, etc,, wil always
be kept within reach.
Why lngersoll Has not Been
Honored.
. V arious reasons have been advanced
why lngersoll, the well-known infidel, Is
taking no part in the present campaign.
He has always been and, perhaps, is yet,
a Republican of the strictest sort, and has
for many years taken a very active part
in national politics. Not long ago it was
sakl that he was not on good terms with
Blaine, because Blaine, when Secretary
of State, had reiused to introduce him and
his family into the best society at Wash
ington. This statement, however, was
not credited by those who were familiar
with Washington society. lngersoll is a
prominent figure at Washington, and his
wife and daughters; who are cultivated
and refined ladies, have never found any
difficulty in getting admittance into the
homes of the best people. The latest
report is that lngersoll has become
convinced that as long as he
entertains his present views with
respect to religion he can never
get an important office. It is said that
he wanted a first-class foreign mission
when Hayes became President as a recog
nition for his services to the Republican
party, but that no attention was paid to
the hints of his friends in that direction.
W’hen Garfield became President he even
went so far, it is said, to promise not to
accept il he were offered a first-class ap
pointment abroad. He was very anxious,
however, for the offer. Garfield, it seems,
ignored his claims as Hayes had. Inger
soll, having done so much for Blaine, ex
pected that Blaine would intercede for
him with Garfield, but he was disappoint
ed. The value of Ingersoll’s services to
the party were not understood, but it was
believed, so it is said, that no administra
tion conld withstand the indignation that
the appointment of so notorious an infidel
to a great office would create. Ingeisoll
may make money and Increase his fame
as an orator by attacking religion from
the lecture platform, and Le may
even gain some satisfaction from
his belief that his arguments cannot be
successfully answered, but the fame and
money that he wins and the satisfaction
that he experiences can hardly compen
sate him for the loss -of the respect and
sympathy of his fellow citizens and for
being shut out from the political honors to
which his talents and the services he has
rendered his party entitle him. England
will not allow Bradlaugh a place in her
counsels, and this country has no place ot
honor lor lngersoll. The time has not yet
come when avowed infidels can fill high
places in this country without protest,
and it is to be hoped that it never will.
Philadelphia is likely to follow Texas
in having a wire-cutting crusade. The
war has already opened by several own
ers cutting the telegraph wires off their
bouses. There seems no probability of
bloodshed, as the parties at interest will
fight it out in the courts. One case
has already been decided in favor of the
cutters, it being maintained that no tele
graph company has the right to attach
wires to a house, or to stretch them over
a house or lot without the consent of the
owner, expressly given. The old doctrine
that the ownership of land extends
from the centre of the earth indefinitely
upwards is confirmed.
The boys and roughs in Amsterdam, N.
Y., thought they xvould have some fun
mobbing the Salvation Army, one night
last week. The hall in which the army
was holding a meeting was attacked, and
the windows and furniture broken. The
mob was driven down the stairs, and one
of the roughs was fired through the door
aud bis arm broken. The army people
don’t seem disposed to turn the other
cheek when one is smitten.
The cashier ol the New Brunswick, N.
J., bank who squandered the funds arid
committed suicide was President of an
enthusiastic Blaine and Logan club. “He
was no deadhead in the enterprise” until
alter he was caught, and he found “many
ways in which to make himself useful.”
CURRENT COMMENT.
Not Entirely New.
Meto York World (Di oi. }.
Edison claims to have discovered anew
; electrical phenomenon in making a live fish
I in a tub of water swallow as bait a little in
| candescent lamp, so that when the current is
| turned on the lighted-up fish becomes trans
-1 parent. But there is nothing new in th s—in
the full light of the Mulligan letters the peo
| pie are able to see through even the magnetic
man of Maine.
Peculiarly Strong and Felicitous.
Boston Globe iDem.).
The New York Tribune says “that was a
strong ami peculiarly felicitous little speech
that Mr. Blaine made at Augusta on the
night of the election.” Yes, very; especially
when he said in substance; “I am a dodger; I
lielieve in prohibition, and always have been
a Prohibitionist, but lon’t say anything about
it until 1 am e'ected; then the Germans can’t
help themselves.”
Mahone’* Crown of Glory.
Richmond State ( Dem .).
Mali one wished to have all the glory (?) of
breaking up the solid South. That is, lie
wished to have ail the glory of leading the
Southern States into the Republican party,
liuftif course he wanted all tbe help he could
get. So Mahone drew Gen. J. U. Chalmers,
of Mississippi, a renegade, into his confidence,
and the two were to work together to deliver
the South over. Well, it turns out that Ma
hone and Chalmers, the two traitors, are com
ing to the end of their tether together. Ma
hone has lost his grip in Virginia. Chalmers
has lost his grin in Mississippi. The latter is
a candidate for Congress from the Second
Congressional district of -Mississippi. He is a
full-fledged Uepub ican, though it has not
been long since he was a profecsed Democrat.
His opponent is Judge J. B. Morgan, a staunch
Democrat and a manly man. From all ac
counts Morgan will be elected by a large ma
jority, aud Chalmers will, like Mahone, soon
sink out of notice.
ITEMS OP INTEREST.
Of all countries Germany is the one where
suicide is most frequent; anil in Germany,
again, Saxony takes the lead, though tlie
peooie are considered remarkable for good
spirits.
After careful inquiry, the Moravians of
Bethlehem, Pa., liare decided that the Es
quimaux of Alaska present greater obstacles
to conversion than any other people on earth,
and therefore have sent missionaries to them.
It is no joke that the Mayor of Brainerd.
Minn., lias issued an orderprohibiting Mother
Hubbard costumes in the street. The girls
wore them scant and thin, he says, and as a
guardian of public morals, he felt bound to
interfere.
Kent was not paid by the widow who lived
in a small thatched cottage at Shrewsbury,
England, and the landlady locked her in, fas
tened the windows on the out-ide, and set fire
to the inflammable roof. The prisoner’s
screams brought help barely in time, and the
house was destroyed.
The newly found Hebrew MSS. of several
books of the Old Testament have been care
fully examined and deciphered by Dr. Ilar
kaw. of St. Petersburg, who declares them
genuine. He was at first inclined to be skep
tical as to their genuineness, having the frauds
of the shapira manuscripts in mind.
AN interesting archaeological discovery has
been made in France, at Tulette, in the De
partment of the Drome. A small bronze she
wolf, which had evidentlv formed part of a
Roman military ensign, was found in a gravel
pit. Her head is turned as if to look at the
Roman twins, who arc, however, missing.
The Russian government has sought, thus
far in vain, to bring about the general use of
coal in that country instead of wood, in order
to save ihe forests. As though no such thing
as a good stove or heater was known, a prize
has been offered for the best apparatus for
utilizing coal in government offices.
The old question of a speedier moans of offi
cial killing than the blade or the noose is again
being discussed in England. The Lancet not
only think- that decapitation docs not cause
instant death, and that hanging is torturingly
slow, hut that neither prussic acid nor elec
tricity would be quick enough in fatal effect.
Warner Wilson deliberately got drunk
when about to die, at Vernon, Mich., because
he had observed, throughout his religious ex
perience, that intoxicaTion always aroused
him to especial fervor. His acquaintances
say that he was sincere in this, as he was
deeply impressed with the solemnity of the
occasion.
Shaw, a Colorado surveyor, reports that he
and his party of surveyors have found almost
a solid mountain of alum over a mile square,
some oLtbc cliffs of which rise to an elevation
of TOO feet above the bed of the Gila river.
Most of the alum is in an impure state, tasting
wry strongly of sulphuric acid. Some of the
cliffs show immense quantities of almost pure
marketable alum.
A few years ago what is now the great
onion tract of Chester, in Orange county, X.
Y., was a worthless piece of land. To-day it
would bring readily SI,OOO an acre. Last sea
son on these meadows 120,000 bushels of onions
were grown, which were sold for more than
$125,000. This season’s crop will be even
larger. There are no other equally large
onion tracts in the country. .
A Dutchman lately bought a kitchen stove
in Paris at an enormous price. When the
stove had to be fixed, after a long journey to
Rotterdam, the manufacturer who was en
trusted with that task declared the stove to
be one that had been made in his own factory.
The Dutchman, nothing daunted, pointed to
the French trademark, but was undeceived
when, after removing the little iron mask,
the metal trade mark of the Dutch manufac
turer appeared.
M. Pasteur sucks up the liquid containing
the microbes of rabies through a glass tube
to inoculate the unfortunate animals who
die from hydrophobia a few hours after the
poison is injected into their veins. This he is
able to do with perfect safety, for the rabid
virus is only dangerous when conveyed into
the system through inoculation. The scientist
is not vet certain as to whether artificial in
oculation applied to a subject who has already
been bitten by a mad dog would prevent the
appearance of symptoms of hydrophobia.
The first attempts to introduce gas as an il
luminator in the United States, says the New
Orleans Times-Hemoct at, were made in Balti
more between 1810 and 1820. They failed, but
it was successfully introduced into Boston in
Tbe next year the first gaslight com
pany was formed in New York, the “New
York Gaslight Company.” They began oper
ations with a capital of'11,000,000; but the
people were so slow to adopt the new illumi
nator that the company was not in full oper
ation until 1827, when the population was
about 166,000.
Clifford Lloyd has brought from Egypt
the Mahdi’s flag, captured at the battle of
Tamanic'). The ground work is red, the let
tering is worked in with white, and two cres
cents and two stars are on the side nearest
the staff. The inscription, in Arabic charac
ters. which read from left to right, consists in
praises to God and of Mahomet as his messen
ger and apostle, the names of the four Caliphs
who succeeded Mahomet, and the word
“Mirghamy,” meaning a religious teacher of
to-day, which is thought to refer to Osman
Cigna.
A little tragedy has recently occurred
in Paris, the victim being a snow owl from the
Iceland mountains, and the offender a stupid
Englishman. The owl was driven on board a
transatlantic steamer during a storm in mid
ocean. and, being carried to France, was pre
sented totheJardin d’Acclimation, where it
has lived six years. One day, however, the
Englishman appeared on the scene, bearing a
cane. He found the owl too dull to suit him,
so poked it, but in vain. He then lost his
temper, used more force, and killed the little
wa;f. The sequel is a suit for 1,000 francs.
The lost-key bureau—a scheme tiiatreacheß
the very acme of Yankee ingenuity—is being
established in Chicago. Membership in the
bureau costs twenty-five cents a year, and
each member is furnished with a brass tag for
his key ring, which bears the following in
scription: “The fluder will please return
this hunch of key* to the Central Police Station
and receive It reward” It is supposed that
whenever a bunch of keys is lost by a member
of the bureau the finder, following the direc
tion of the tag, will take it to the police sta
tion, where at a glance the name and address
of the owner can lie ascertained by coni par ng
the tag number with the corresponding num
ber on the book left in the custody of the police.
The scheme has already been tried and works
like a charm. A bunch of kevs left on the
sidewalk recently was returned to the Cen
tral Station within an hour afterward.
BRIGHT BITS.
The will of R sensitive musician in Wiscon
sin contained an injunction that the village
brass band should not play at bis funeral.
It is cow said that Bill Chandler composes
music. What a sweet little merman he would
make to sit on the rocks and lure the Ameri
can navy to destruction!— Lowell Citieen.
The Independent credits the late Speaker of
the British House of Commons with saying
that he would have wished to die in the ser
vice of the House, but his health forbade it.
A scientist has discovered that cats are
fond of cucumbers. Hereafter when you hear
them in the still hours lifting up their voices
in lamentation you should pity and not up
braid them.— Boston Globe.
The Globe, in enumerating the dodges of
Blaine from the time that he dodged his own
religion up to the time that he dodged the
prohibition clause in the Republican ticket,
yesterday, omitted Abigail Dodge, who wrote
his book and his letter of acceptance.—New
bury port Germ.
The Broadway Give-away.—Stranger—
“lf you please, sir, we want Broadway aDd
Tenth streets.” Newsdealer—'“Yez can’t have
Broadway; it’s meself has rid it *in thim pa
pers as how it’s been giv’ away; hut yez
moight get Tinth strait er ye’d hurry up an’
see the Boon! of Aldermin.” — Harper's Week
ly.
A test op Gallantry.—
Four gentlemeu riding alone in a car;
In tne car which has only four seats;
When there enters a lady, as bright as a star,
A lady—the sweetest of sweets.
Now Butler, or Cleveland, or Blaine, or St.
John
Don’t turn your heads off with a frown;
Get up, if vou ple.ase, ts the car rattles on,
Ana let Mrs. Lockwood Bit down.
—Nashville World.
The Intensely Moral Show.—Mrs. Jar
leyelkins—“This, ladies and gents, is the in
tensely American phenomenon, discovered on
American soil sandwiched between some
Mulligan letters and a little rock. He is re
markable for being capable suiting himself
to any one to whom he takes a fancy; half
Celtic and half Teutonic in front, his back
half Mongolian and half Ethiopian Ex-,
perts arc now at work on his sides, and we
hope to find ‘various channels’ which will
make him still more ‘useful’ to this entertain
ment.” — Harper's Weekly.
“Saw Smith to-day and he looks as if he
had lost eveiw friend on earth.” “What is the
matter?” ‘You remember what a bad char
acter lie has? Well, he wanted to get a di
vorce from tug wife and he thought if he ac
cepted a political nomination all his badness
would come out and Mrs. Smith would lie
glad to leave him. So he accepted a nomina
tion.” “I suppose they abused him too much,
eh?” “Not at all. The papers never men
tioned him He was entirely ignored.”
“That’s funny'. What ticket did he run on?"
“The Prohibitionist.”— Daily Graphic.
House hptner— “And so this is the Queen
Anne cottage you advertised?” Real estate
agent—“ Yes, madam. It is perfectly new,
and of the best materials.” House hunter—
“But the front door open 9 right into a big,
square space, which can’t be spared for a hall,
and must be used as a room; and here is the
parlor with the whole side wall out, not a
sign of a door, and the room next to it is the
same way. Whv. I don’t see any inside doors
at all! What'are we to do in winter,
when the furnace is not at a white beat?”
Agent—“l don’t know, ma’am. But this is a
genuine Queen Anuecottage, That’s the wav
they’re built, ma’am. You’ve heard of
Queen Anne, of course?” House hunter—
“ Yes, she was an eccentric personage who
died of a bad cold, I believe.”— Philadelphia
Call.
PERSONAL.
lIor.ERT Bonner isbeing urged to acceptthe
Mayoralty nomination in New York.
Harry Courtaine. not long ago a popular
American actor, is a ragged beggar in Lon
don. Rum ruined him.
Victor Iluao has written a short poem on
the experiment in Bteering balloons, which
was successfully made at Mendon recently.
Surgeon a mbs, of the Greely relief expe
dition, has lent three Esquimaux dogs to the
city of Baltimore for exhibition in Druid Hill
Park.
Count von Borcke, the ex-Confederatc
cavalryman, postponed his departure for Ber
lin and is the guest of comrades tn Western
North Carolina.
An American prodigy, Ernest Schelling.
aged 8, has, by the help of Ambroise Thomas,
entered the Paris Conservatoire to learn
pianoforte playing.
Mr. Mason, United States Consul at Mar
seilles. has been highly complimented by the
State Department for his rourage in remain
ing at ids post during the cholera epidemic.
Henry Cabot Lodge, one of “the coming
men of Massachusetts,” is only 30. the author
of several historical books, anil the Chairman
of Hie Republican State Committee. He wears
a No. 7% hat.
Israel Coe, of Waterbury, Conn., is nearly
90 rears of age and is still in the possession of
full mental powers. He is the only survivor
of the Legislature of 1824, of which he was the
youngest member.
Maj. Theodore H. Eckerson, U. S. A., the
“soldier poet.” will take up his permanent
residence in Washington this winter, having
been retired. Both his sons are army officers,
both his daughters the wives of army officers
Murat Halstead boasts the largest family
at Long Branch, ten small “co”-ing journal
ists.” Mrs. Halstead is described as a very
sweet lady, with an extraordinary head of
hair, near'y seven feet in length, of unusual
thickness and beauty.
Rev. Dr. Miner, of Boston, has enjoyed the
privilege of having seen seven generations
of his family—all but the last, a child 6
months old, in the same house, ilie house in
which his eldest sister, Mrs. William B. Par
ker, of Lempster, N. H., now resides and in
which his parents, grandparents and great
grandparents also resided.
When Gen. Hancock was a candidate for the
Presidency, the venerable Hebrew philan
thropist, *Sir JMoses Montflorc, of London,
sent a gift of some beautiful wood carvings to
the General’s wife, a< companied by a grace
ful message. The gift and the communica
tion were transmitted to Mrs. Hancock by
Mr. Marcus, of Boston. The one hundredth
anniversary of the birth of Sir Moses Monte
flore will occur on October 24 next, and
the event will be extensively celebrated by
the members of his race, with the warm sym
pathy of other admirers of his life and char
acter. At the suggestion of Mr. Marcus, who
was aware of her talent for musical composi
tion, Mrs. Hancock has written the score of
an orchestral piece for performance on this
occasion. Jt is probable that the first public
rendering of the composition will be in Bos
ton, as application has been made for the
privilege of using it in a synagogue there on
the Jewish New Year, which falls on Sept. 20.
State Politics.
The Tenth Congressional district Republi
cans have decided to run no candidate.
Campbell county will nominate a Represen
tative at a Democratic Convention to ne held
at Fairburn to-day.
R. O. Levett, J. B. Heath, and Alexander
Lively are the Democratic legislative nomi
nees in Burke county. E. A. Perkins, F. L.
Brinson, and T. B. Cox were nominated by
the Conservatives and indorsed by the ne
groes.
A convention of delegates from the counties
of Camden. Charlton and Glynn is called to
assemble at Owen’s Ferry, in Camden county,
Friday, to nominate a Democratic candidate
for Senator from the Fourth State Senatorial
district.
Bill Chandler’s Indecency.
Rochester Union and Advertiser.
A ghastly act of indecency was com
mitted at the funeral of the late Judge
Folger. The solemnity of the occasion
was invaded by the receipt of a telegram
from James'G. Blaine to Secretary Chan
dler, announcing that the Republican ma
jority in Maine would reach 17,000, and
Chandler had the dispatch posted up in a
irominent place while the obsequies were
n progress, so that Blaine Republicans
present might read it and beedihed, while
consigning to earth the remains of one
whose death was hastened by the very
faction which now exulted over Blaine’s
alleged personal triumph in Maine 1 The
facts of the outrage are given in our local
columns. Ghouls could have done no
worse—those creatures with one auspi
cious and one drooping eye—
“With mirth in funeral, * * *
In equal scale weighing delight and dole.
EVANGELIZING CHINA.
How French Missionaries Can Do More
Than French Soldiers.
The following passages, says a Paris
letter to the New York Herald, are from
a letter written by a Frenchman many
years resident in China:
“It Is certain that two European powers
are regarded with respect at Pekin. They
are the two nations who have led their
victorious armies upon the soil of the
Celestial Empire and whose power the
Chinese have discovered to their cost—
France and England. The English cer
tainly have a trade with China worth
l,000,000,000f.; at Canton, as at Shanghai,
they rule the market. France does
business to the extent of, at
most, 20.000,000f. But China con
tains 1,000.000 Catholics and 500
priests and Bishops placed under French
protection. Let it be thoroughly under
stood that the French Ambassador has
not only to watch over the missionaries
of his own nationality; every Catholic
priest, be he Italian, Belgian, Spanish,
French or Chinese—all Christians, in
short, are confided to his care. It is his
duty to see that liberty of conscience is
strictly observed from one end of the im
mense" possessions of China to the other.
Whosoever becomes a Christian places
himself, by that very act, under the pro
tection of the tri-colored flag.
FRENCH MISSIONARIES.
“France has deserved this honor, since
no other nation has seDt into the Far East
either as many apostles or such large
material supplies to sustain them. Thus
—is it credible?—in spite of her inferior
commerce (for French traders are any
thing but numerous along the coast), in
spite of her terrible reverses during the
war of 1870, France has kept the highest
position in China. England takes the
second place. As soon as there is a
French Government (Republican or mon
archical matters not) which under
stands what a mighty influence it
possesses, France’s prestige in China will
he established to last for centuries. It is
not by conquests in tbe Far East, nor by
new trading stations that the French
government will consolidate its power.
What can result from the costly Tonquin
expedition? A few French traders will
establish themselves at Hanoi, but it is
certain that if a European town rises up
it will only be peopled by Germans or
Englishmen. Let the French government
thoroughly understand that its influence
in China has no other raison d’etre than
the protection of Christianity.
CHRISTIANS, NOT EUROPEANS.
“To uphold this cause it will not have to
sacrifice either soldiers or millions of
money in order to found along the coast
of China and Tonquin establishments
which, like the Indo-Chinese ones, are
sure to meet with almost complete fail
ure. On the other hand, it will enjoy
most important benefits. There is
no enmity against us among the
Chinese people, who are favorably
disposed toward Christianity. The
day the Chinese are convinced that
Europeans want to make them, not Euro
peans, but Christians; that they do not
come to destroy their nationality, but to
regenerate it by means of apurerlaith;
that it is not, in a word, the conquest of
China which tempts Europe—then the
Power anointed to the Christian protec
torate—that is to say, France—will pos
sess an immense, unheard of and incal
culable power, of which Europe shall be
jealous, but at the same time incapable of
doing or even attempting anything to de
stroy it.”
SITTING BULL IN TOWN.
The Big Chief Enjoying the Good Things
of a Gotham Hotel.
Sitting Bull, the famous Sioux chief, ac
companied by his wife and several of his
followers, says the New York Herald of
Sept. 12, arrived in this city trom the
Standing Rock Agency yesterday. They
were in charge of Col. Alvaren Allen,
who has a permit from Secretary Teller to
take the party through the country for
educational purposes. The wife of Indian
Agent McLaughlin accompanied the fe
male members of the company.
When the Indians got out of the train
they ranged themselves around their old
chief, and their brightly colored raiment
made the group look like a big buneb of
flowers. Sitting Bull looked much stouter
than when he surrendered at Fort Buford.
He wore a shirt of marvelous uncleanli
ness and a wide brimmed felt hat. Long
Dog, an old Uncapapa chief, was attired
in a green shirt and a pair of trousers one
leg of which was red and the other blue.
He chewed tobacco and tried to buy the
club which the policeman at the ferry
carried. Crow Eagle fanned himself with
the wing of a hen and gloated over a piece
of watermelon, and Spotted Horn Bull
nervously watched the engineer of tbe
train blowing off steam.
Besides Mrs. McLaughlin were Mrs.
Bull, Mrs. Spotted Horn Bull and the
Princess Red Spear, Mrs. Bull was
dressed in green and her hair was tied
with red 1- ather. She carried a sharp
knife in her left hand. Mrs. Spotted Horn
is Sitting Bull’s sister. Sbe wore a yellow
dress and carried a red fan. The Princess
is a beautiful Indian girl of sixteen years,
with coal black hair, snow-white teeth
and a ravishing smile. She does not chew
tobacco.
When the train was approaching Chica
go from St. Paul it collided with another
train. Gray Eagle stuck his head through
the glass window of the sleeping car to
see what was the matter.
The party went to the Grand Central
Hotel on their arrival in this city. Sitting
Bull and his friends were immediately
given a bath. Then they were told that it
was dinner time and squatted about the
velvet carpet in the corridor. As the party
started for the dining room Col. Allen
came up and shouted to Louis Primeau,
the interpreter:
“Tell the gentlemen to wait a moment;
♦he ladies are having a bath.”
Sitting Bull told the reporter that he did
not like the railways, but he would like to
have a hotel on his reservation. He de
clined to discuss the merits of Blaine or
Butler, on the ground that he could not
talk intelligently till he had had several
beefsteaks. Soon Mrs. McLaughlin, Mrs.
Bull and the others appeared, and the
company adjourned to a private dining
room. Long Dog spread his napkin on
his chair* and sat on it. After eating a
plate of ice cream Sitting Bull said:
“Bouka boota tookash lata nee-nee Joo-
robolala.”
Which means:
“That is a daisy of a dish: gimme an
other plate. Allow’ the Irishman to serve
me.”
A MELANCHOLY NOBLEMAN.
Count De Giverllte Nearly Starves In
New York on the Way to France.
The foreign gentleman who was sent to
Bellevue'Hospital from the Metropolitan
Hotel last Saturday because it was be
lieved that he contemplated suicide by
starvation, says the New York Herald of
Sept. 12, turns out to be the Count ue
Giverille. He has lived w’ith his wife for
sometime in St. Louiq in the family of
Alfred M. Waterman, whose wife is a
sister of the Countess.
The Count, who is a tall, soldierlr look
ing man, about 60 years of age, entered
the Metropolitan Hotel on Aug. 11 and
wrote in the register “D. de Serville, St.
Louis.” He avoided all society and
seemed never to eat any food.
A fortnight ago, however, tiffinkamber
maul, being unable to get in re
ported the lact at the office, ancW>etective
Dunne burst open the door and found De
Serville in bed, nearly unconscious. It
was found that he had eaten nothing for
five days except a little milk and toast.
Alter two more days of voluntary absti
nence from lood the manager of the hotel
had bint conveyed to Bellevue Hospital.
Dr. Wildman, who took charge of the
case, concluded at once that he was
suffering from melancholia, and did his
best to rouse him from his lethargy. Food
was torced into his stomach twice on
Tuesday and again on Wednesday. Vol
untarily he ate nothing until yesterday
morning. His silence was as marked a
trait of his disease as his abstinence from
food. Questions were addressed to him In
Spanish, French, German and English,
but he refused to utter a word.
The Count’s friends in St. Louis say that
he has been despondent of late, and that
when his wife advised him to go to France
and visit his relatives in the hope that he
might recover his health, he took her ad
vice but went no further than this'eity.
The Count was a Colonel in the French
army and had served under Bazaine at the
siege of Metz. The Countess was a Miss
Kingsberry, one of the heirs of the Kings
berry estate in St. Louis, and has been
living with her husband in St. Louis for
the past twelve years.
Warden O’Rourke, of Bellevue Hospi
tal, yesterday received a telegram from
St. iLouis from the Countess de Giverille
stating that she would arrive in this city
to-night.
The Origin of the Suez Canal.
That the Pope should have first con
ceived the project of cutting the Suez ca
nal, says the Brooklyn Eagle, was rather
a surprise to M. de Lesseps, when the fact
was recently communicated to him. The
holy pontiff, St. Pius V., whose name is
inseparably associated with the glorious
battle of Lepanto, had, according to all
documents discovered in the Piombino
library by Sig. Enrica Narducci, the
learned librarian and philosopher, con
ceived the project and began to prepare
for its fulfillment. The proposal of the
Pope was highly displeasing to the re
public of Venice, which considered that
:’ts prestige on the ocean would suffer it
the highway between the Indian ocean
and the Mediterranean were constructed.
Sig. Narducci conveyed his discovery of
the fact to M. de Lesseps, who admitted
that he had never known it previously.
ffuttrura RrttirDtro.
(jiticma
THOUSANDS OF LETTERS in our posses
sion repeat this story: I have been a terri
ble sufferer for years with Blood and Skin Hu
mors; have been obliged to shun public places
by reason of mv disfiguring humors; have had
the best physicians; have spent hundreds of
dollars and got no real relief until X used the
Cuticcra Resolvent, the new Blood Puri
fier, internally, and Cuticura and Cuticcra
Soap, the Great Skin Cures and Skin Beauti
fiers, externally, which have cured me and
left my skin and blood as pure as a child’s.
ALMOST INCREDIBLE.
James E. Richardson,Custom House, New
Orleans, on oath, says: In 1870 Scrofulous
Ulcers broke out on my body until I was a
mass of corruption. Everything known to the
medical faculty was tried in vain. I became
a mere wreck. At times could not lift my
hands to my head, could not turn in bed; was
in constant pain, and looked upon life as a
curse. No relief or cure in ten years. In 1880
I heard of the Cuticcra Remedies, used
them and was perfectly cured.
Sworn to before U. S. Com. J. D. CRAW
FORD.
STILL MORE SO.
Will McDonald, 2512 Dearborn street, Chi
cago, gratefully acknowledges a cure of Ec
zema or Sait Rheum on head, neck, face, arms
ami legs for seventeen years; not able to walk
except on hands tyjd knees for one year: not
able to help himself for eight years; tried
hundreds of remedies; doctors pronounced his
case hopeless; permanently cured by the Cuti
cura Remedies. _
MORE WONDERFUL YET.
H. E. Carpenter, Henderson, N. Y., cured
of Psoriasis or Leprosy, of twenty years’
standing, by Cuticcra Remedies. The most
wonderful cure on record. A dustpanful of
scales fell from him daily. Physicians and his
friends thought he must die. Cure sworn to
before a Justice of the Peace and Henderson’s
most prominent citizens.
DON’T WAIT.
Write to us for these testimonials in full or
send direct to the parties. All are absolutely
true aud given without our knowledge or
solicitation. Don’t wait. Now is the time to
cure every species of Itching, Scaly. Pimply,
Scrofulous, Inherited, Contagious and Copper
colored Diseases of the Blood, Skin and Scalp
with Loss of Hair.
Sold by all druggists. Price: Cuticcra, 50
cts.; Resolvent, $1; Soap, 25 ets. Potter
Drug and Chemical Cos., Boston. Mass.
A | |TV For Sunburn, Tan
DELAU I I and Oily Skin, Black
heads and Skin Blemishes, useCUTicuRA Soap.
lilitUwmi.
The Ladies Making
CRAZY HITS
Wohlil do well to take advantage of
dull times, aif Mrs. Power will stamp
at greatly reduced prices for the sum
mer season, having many new pat
terns suitable for qnilts.
Stamped Splashers, Tidies, Table,
Tray and Sideboard Covers will be
sold at cost for this month.
Macreme Cord 10 cents a ball.
Zephyrs, Silks, Canvas, Linen Mo
mie, Batcher, Imported and Artist
Linen can be had by calling at
168 BROUGHTON STREET.
MRS. K. POWER.
_ SSCCOO.
THORBURN'S
Fresh Garden Seeds.
IMPORTED BRUNSWICK AND WIN
NINGSTADT CABBAGE.
Imported CAULIFLOWER, various kinds.
Imported HYACINTH BULBS.
FLORAL DESIGNS, FLOWERS and
PLANTS.
J. GARDNER, Agent,
SEEDSMAN,
ONION SETS!
JUST RECEIVED BY
J. T. SHUPTRINE.
Drugs and Seeds,
186 CONGRESS STREET.
White and Red Onion Sets,
JUST RECEIVED BY
E. J. KIEFFER,
West Broad and Stewart streets.
West Broad and W.loorrg streets.
©tno and (Eitontro.
COTTON GINS,
SUUAR MIIIS AND PANS,
For Sale at Lowest Possible Figures.
OW. Massey’s “Excelsior” Cotton Gins,
• O. W. Massey’s “Griswold” Cotton Gins,
Elias Ilaimau’s “Whitney” Cotton Gins, Elias
Haiman’s “Horse Shoe” Cotton Gins, Frick &
Co.’s “Eclipse” Cotton Gins, Milburn Gin and
Machine Co.’s Cotton Gins. Also, on BEST
terms: Frick & Co’s, “Eclipse” Engine and
Saw Mills, Wood, Tabor & Morse’s Engines
and Spw Mills, Leffel’a “Bookwalter” En
gines. Send for catalogues, prices and terms
to the agent of the above goods.
GEO. W. PARISH
SAVANNAH, GA.
Nos. 193 and 195 St. Tulian and 200 and 201
Congress streets.
Ureomie 3aro.
HEADQUARTERS
FLY FANS.
—POE—
Preserve Jars, Kerosene Stoves,
Cream Freezers, Water Filters.
JAS. S. SILVA.
asiiovtmrn’o (600110.
Arms & AmmiinitioEi a Speciaity!
KING'S GREAT WESTERN
GUNPOWDER!
GUNPOWDER!
SPECIAL PRICES TO PARTIES BUYING
IN LOTS.
P. O. KESSLER A CO.
Urtt WonDs*, githfL gtr.
FELGODDSATECKSTEIN’S !
G. ECKSTEIN & CO. WILL OPEN THE FALL SEASON THIS
WEEK. An entire NEW STOCK OF ELEGANT FALL GOODS has Just been
opened, and an inspection by the Ladles is respectfully solicited. Our line of BLACK
and COLORED SILKS is very large, and excels any In the city both for excellence
of quality and reasonable prices,
200 Pieces of NEW SILKS !
BARGAINS! NEW BLACK DBESS SILKS. BARGAINS!
BARGAINS! NEW RADZ Mlrt SILKS. BARGAINS!
BARGAINS! NEW SICILIENNE SILKS. BARGAINS!
BARGAINS! NEW COLORED ItHADAMAS. BARGAINS!
BARGAINS! NEW BIACK SILK VELVETS. BARGAINS!
BARGAINS! NEW COLORED SILK VELVETS. BARGAINS!
BARGAINS! NEW BROCADED VELVETS. BARGAINS!
FINE STOCK DRESS GOODS!
Black Camballa. New Plaid Goods. Black Armure.
Black Cremona. New Dress Flannels. Black Ottoman.
Black Fatima. New Silk Mixtures. Black DeLame.
Black Carmelite. New Colored Tricots. Black Tamise.
Black Cashmire. New Deßaiges. Black Basket.
Black de Albia. New Ladies’ Cloths. Black Camel’s Hair.
Black D’Alma. New Velveteens. Black English Crepe.
Bllack Balmoral. Fancy Dress Goods. Black Silk Henrietta.
GRAND BARGAINS ITS BLANKETS I
WE ALSO OFFER AN ENTIRE NEW STOCK OF TABLE LINENS, TOWELS,
NAPKINS, SHEETINGS, FLANNELS, HOSIERY, CORSETS,
AND ALL KINDS OF FANCY GOODS.
JUST OPENED —NEW KID CLOVES !
C. ECKSTEIN & CO
£3o 010 and Sljoro.
A NEW SHOE STORE!
Messrs. GOLLAT BROTHERS
RESPECTFULLY announce to the public that they have leased the store 149 Broughton
street, recently occupied by Mr. H. C. Houston, and that they will open on Sept. 1 next
their new store, with an entirely new stock of
Sloes for Lais, Ciildren aid Mleiei
THEY WILL ALSO CARRY
An Elegant Assortment of Gents’ Hats and Trunks.
We ask for a share of patronage for the following reasons:
1. We open with an entirely new Stock of Goods, selected with the utmost care of the most
celebrated manufacturers.
2. Our stock having been purchased for Spot Cash, we have been enabled tosecure our goods
at very low prices.
3. Being desirous of deserving the patronage of the people, we are determined to sell our
goods at the very lowest possible prices, thereby giving the very best of goods at the most
moderate prices.
4. Our store will be furnished in an elegant manner, and, being located in the heart of the
Dry Goods trade, we will be enabled to make it the most convenient place to trade in, especi
ally as we shall leave nothing undone to deserve the good will of the public. Respectfully,
COLLAT BROTHERS,
149 Broughton Street.
JAPaitliro atiD
REMOVAL.
Mr. M. STERNBERG
Desires to inform his many patrons and the public generally that he has secured
the store
NO. 157 BROUGHTON STREET,
Recently occupied by Mr. JOHN A. DOUGLASS, and is now furnishing it in an
elegant manner and expects to occupy it on about Sept. 1.
Mr. STERNBERG further has to say that he has selected in the Northern
markets as handsome a line of all kinds of
Jewelry, Diamonds ai Watches
As can only be found Nortn of the Mason and Dixon line, and invites all to call on
him at his new store, whether they desire to purchase or not, as he will be very glad
to show his fine and elegant selections.
NT. STERNBERG.
• Hum- llltllo.
Flour, Grain, Hay and Provisions.
FOREST CITY MILLS.
HAYNES & ELTON, Proprietors.
SAVANNAH, GA.
Manufacturers of GRITS, MEAL, and the celebrated brands:
Haynes’ Patent & Oglethorpe Half Patent Flour.
Send for Price List. One per cent, off for Cash.
W urnituve, Carpcto, etc.
’F'Yn e" ELECTED
W, J. Lindsay’s Furniture and Carpet Stores,
169 AND 171 BROUGHTON STREET.
OUR buyers having just returned from the Northern and Western markets we are prepared
to exhibit a full and well selected stock of
FURNITURE, CARPETS. SHADES,
And anything needed in the
UPHOLSTERY LINE!
FLY TRAPS.
Special Drives: CHAMBER SUITES. PARLOR SUlTES—every piece different color,
sold in Five, Six, Seven or Eight-Piece Suites; SIDEBOARDS, BOOKCASES, LOUNGES.
We are agents for THE PATENT UMBRELLA RACK; just the thing for Offices, Halls
and Hotels. Each Umbrella Safelv locked up.
See our new shades C ARPETS, OIL CLOTHS and CRUMB CLOTHS, POLE CORNICES
ana LACE CURTAINS.
We are Prepared to do All Work Promptly.
W. J. LINDSAY.
3rott lUOIUO.
KEHOE’S IRON WORKS!
(FORMERLY PIICENIX IRON WORKS).
SAVANNAH, GEORGIA.
■ WE desire to call particular to the SUGAR MILLS
AND PANS of our manufacture ’ These Mills are made in the
W best possible manner, with heav<?rought iron shafts, and rollers
D of the best charcoal pig iron, Ml turned up HBgjjggwiK.
m If true. They are strong and durable, run per
v r| fectly even, and are guaranteed to grind the
heaviest, fully-matured cane. Our Pans being
USaMgSttcMMCcast with the bottoms down possess smooth
& • ■ 'JCWnB .ruoB nn ‘“‘i durability and uniformity of thickness
■tftMßWff superior to those made in the usual way. ' '- r ‘ :
i, X3 All our Mills are fully Warranted for One Year, and our
II || OFFERED RE GUARANTEED T 0 BE AS LOW AS ANY
WM. KEHOE A CO.
MM" N. B.—The Name Kehoe’s Iron Works is cast on all our Mills and Pans.
Stlantfß.
STORE WANTED, on Abercorn and Wald
burg streets, or near aboil ts; or would rent
one if party will build. Address P., car# of
Morning News office.
YT7 ANTED, a competent anil reliable but-
V ler. Apply at 132 State street, between
9 A. u. and 12 M.
\YT ANTED.—Everybody to know that I
TV have Rough Lumber, Flooring, Ceiling,
Weatherboarding and Shingles for sale at
reasonable prices, at my retail lumber yard,
in the S., F. & W. R’y yard, foot of Tavlor
street. K. B. KEPPARb.
JTin* sS*t.
1X1 R RENT, two houses on East Broad,
1 Nos. 53 and 58’*; No. 53 has a store at
tached, and splendid stand for grocery store.
Apply to D. B. LESTER.
FOR RENT, brick residence, two stories on
basement. No. 170 Bolton street; posses
sion given Oct. 1. Apply at E. S. ABRA
HAMS’, 170 Bay street.
TO KENT, small house, with four large
rooms. Apply to VTM. BOUHAN, Hun
tingdon and Mercer streets, near East Broad
street.
ITiOR RENT, one front ball room, furnished
or unfurnished, very pleasant, with every
convenience; also, two rooms facing on Presi
dent street will be for rent on Oct. 1 next
Apply at 37 Abereorn street, opposite the
square.
IT'OR RENT, that desirable residence south
west corner Jones and Whitaker streets
from Nov. 1 prox. Apply to ED. F. NEUF-
V ILLE, Real Estate and Insurance Agent 2
Commercial Building.
TO RENT, store and two floors, 25x90.
J. H. RU WE,
HPO RENT, rooms, furnished or unfurnished
at 182 Liberty street.
I7OK KENT, a desirable office in Stoddard’s
L upper range and a ground-floor office in
Commercial building. J. F. BROOKS. 135
Bay street.
TT'OR RENT, a store, with three rooms at-
A tached, in a good locality lor a retail gro
cer V- €. 11. DORSETT.
li'OK KENT, office on the uorthea t corner
of Bull aud Bryan streets; possession gives
Oct. 1. For terms apply to GEORGE W.
OW ENB, No. 1 ilu 11 street.
FOR RENT, two-story on basement bouse
with garden attached, No. 67 Charlton
street. For terms apply to GEO. W. OWENS
No 1 Bull street.
lor ssair.
Building and loan STOCK.-For
sale, 5 shares of stock in the Jasper Mu
tual Loan Association paid up to date; and 10
shares of stock in the Workman’s and Tra
ders’ Loan Association, paid up to date. Ad
dress "LOAN STOCK," care of Morning
News. “
f'OR SALE—HORSE. BUGGY AND HAR
NEsS. Apply corner Bay and Abereora
streets Monday, Sept. 15, or at Harmon’s t ta
bles same day. T. HOLCOMBE.
TT'OR SALE, Gardi, No. 3%, on Macon and
X 1 Brunswick U. R., together with 4,000 ai res
of good fanning land immediately surround
ing, on which there ai e several small improve
ments. Also, a good turpentine farm, con
sisting of 13 crops of virgin and second year’s
boxes; also, a good still, mule team and every
thing necessary for carryiugon the turpentine
business. A good store aud a good stand for
merchandising; free from all encumbrances:
a post and express office in the place; location
perfectly healthy. lor further particulars
apply to E. HARPER, Gardi, Ga.
T>HESSES FOR SALE.—To make room for
Anew machinery, I offer for sale the
following Printing Presses: 1 Super Royal
Hoe Cylinder; 1 Medium Hoe Cylinder; I
Half Medium Liberty Press; 1 Quarto Me
dium Liberty Press. The machines are in
good order, and can be seen at work in
Morning News pressroom. For further par
ticulars, apply to or address J. H. ESTILL,
Savannah. Ga.
foot.
LOST, a sorrel mare nmle, with white spot
on back, where saddle wore. A reward
of |25 will be paid for her at the Barrel Fac
tory, Savannah.
5 ottrrti.
THE DRAWING
OF THE
LITTLE HAVANA LOTTERY
WILL TAKE PLACE
TO-MORROW,
TUESDAY,
SEPT. 16, 1884.
WHOLE TICKETS, $2; HALVES, sl.
22,000 TICKETS; 863 PRIZES.
CAPITAL PRIZE, *9.000.
fitotiri} to loan.
CLEMENT SAUSSY, Money Broker,
No. 142 Bryan street.
LOANS made on Personal Property. Dia
monds and Jewelry bought and sold on
commission. Cash paid for Old Gold, Silver
and Mutilated Com.
MONEY to LOAN.—Liberal loans made
on Diamonds, Gold and Silver Watches,
Jewelry, Pistole, Guns, Sewing Machines,
Wearing Apparel, Mechanics’ Tools, Clocks,
ate., etc., as Licensed Pawnbroker House, 187
Congress street. E. MUHLBERG, Manager.
N. B.—Highest prices paid for old Gold and
Silver.
(SDurattonal.
Georgia Military Academy,
SAVANNAH, GA.
INCORPORATED and governed by a Board
of Trustees. A full and able corps of Pro
fessors. Location unsurpassed for beauty
and liealthfulness. Discipline equal to that of
the best schools of the country. A separate
Preparatory Department.
The fall session begins Oct. 8.
Catalogues can be procured at the News
Office, city, or of
Maj. B. .1. BURGESS, Superintendent.
SWARTHMORE COLLEGE.
FOR BOTH SEXES.
UNDER care of members of the Religious
Society of Friends. Thirty minutes from
Broad street station. Full College Courses—
Classical, Scientific and Literary. Also a
Preparatory School. Location unsurpassed
tor healthfulness. Extensive grounds; new
and costly buildings and apparatus. Acade
mic year commences 9th month (Sept.) 9th,
1884. Apply early to insure admission. For
catalogue and full particulars, address
EDWARD H. M A GILL. A. M„ President,
Swarthmore, Delaware Cos.. Pa.
MRS. SYLVANUS REED’S Boarding and
Day School for Young Ladies, 6 and 8
Ea*t Fifty-third street. New York.
Best professional talent in all classes. Special
students admitted. Thorough Collegiate
Course. Primary and Preparatory classes
separate. French the language of School.
Full course m German, Latin and Greek.
That she may be enabled to give more of her
own time to class-rooms, Mrs. Reed will be
aided by Miss Meta D. Huger, well known as
■ a successful aud sympathetic educator, and a
woman of scholarly attainments and exalted
principles.
go trio auS jjttuimrr £ll*oollo.
SPRING LAKE BEACH,
Monmotb and Uarleton Houses.
SEA. GIRT, IV. J.,
BEACH HOUSE.
Houses Open June 25.
New Hotel Lafayette,
(American and European Plans),
PHILADELPHIA.
Applications for rooms can be made at any
of the above houses. L. U. MALTBY.
BELVEDERE HOUSE,
Cor. 4th Avenue and 18th St., New York,
JOS. WEHRLE, Proprietor.
On the European and American Flan.
INIRST-CLASS for
families and the traveling public, recom
mendable on account of its healthy and con
venient situation in the centre of the city, in
close proximity to Union Square. Its pro
prietor, of old American and European repu
tation, has made it a point to make his guests
feel comfortable and at home.
“Haynes’ Prepared Flour,” a Specialty.
JO mintgPello, (Etc.
RIVEN WELLS
put down and Y Uni
material for same fur
nished. Points 1%, I]4
and 2 inch of extra
quality and make al- f|l
ways on hand. Cu
cumber Pump and all
other kinds and re- l p
pairs to same, at A.
KENT’S, 13 West 0
Broad street, Savan- fff
nab, Ga., Horseshoe- mJS 4
ing. Carriage Painting NjMf
and Repairing Estab
lishmcDt. Price* to suit.
gaott anb jpooro.
Mantels, Mantels, Mantels.
C WOODEN MANTELS
before purchasing elsewhere. k
I am offering at very low prices a full swe*
of DOORS, sashes: bllnds, mould
ings, STAIR KAILS, BALUSTER <
NEWEL POSTS, PAINTS. OILS, 'Alt
NISHES, RAILROAD, STEAMBILAT, SIl
and Ml£,L SUPPLIES, WINDOW GLASS,
PUTTY, BRUSHES, ETC-, ETC RD .
Also, a full line of BUILDING HAu
WARE, LIME, PLASTER, HAIR and C
MENT. PLAIN and DECORATIVE WAIA>
PAPER.
ANDREW HANLEY,
Cor. Whitaker, York and President streets.