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UEECHEIt ON EVOLUTION.
A Scientific Theory in Accord witli the
ltest Development of Man.
New York, Juno 15.—Rev. Honry
Ward Beecher’s fourth sermon In his
furies on “Evolution” was delivered Sun
day in the presenoo of an assembly that,
despite the heat, packed Plymouth
Church to its doors. Ho based his re
marks on the seventh and eighth chapters
of Romans. Mr. Beecher said in part:
“1 believe that it is out of the power of
any man to give a connected and perfect
interpretation of these two immortal
chapters upon the substantial theory of
evolution. When the light of this more re
cent discovery of the method of God in
creation shall have been explored and
thoroughly understood, r think both of
these chapters will come out into a
prominence that they have never had,
though they have attracted the universal
attention of all Christian scholars. If we
consider man as a joint creature—a su
bold mate animal and a superinduced
spiritual l>eing at top—and the two
struggling together for supremacy, the
seventh chapter of Romans will tie very
thoroughly considered as a commentary
on the facts of science and history.
“If you enter into the eighth chapter
of Romans with the understanding that
men have advanced through a period in
which the shining out of the soul of God
upon their souls has given them a victory
over the animal nature that is in them,
you will begin to sound the depths of the
wonderful chapter, and you will see
flashes of philosophy strange to any He
brew mind, strauge in Paul’s, yet mani
fest here. It ought not to be supposed
that because the Divine method of crea
tion lias passed a period of doubt, and has
become the working theory of the whole
scientific world, all applications of it to
nature, to society, to religious questions,
are also solved and settled. There are
many spheres of uncertainty. The world
has almost infinite contents, and we know
comparatively but a portion of them. The
theory of evolution may be said to be in
the condition of an incomplete railway.
In its rude and yet unuseable conditions
it is the prophet of its own perfect state.
THEOLOGY AND KKLIGION.
“For a long time speculative theology
ruled man’s belief, and it has come to pass
that theology stands in about this state,
that those that understand it quarrel in
cessantly among themselves, and those
that don’t want to quarrel don’t under
stand it. In the popular mind this sys
tem of organized and systematic belief is
confounded with religion. It is not the
cause of religion; it is only confounded
with Christianity. The two things are as
wide apart as heaven and hell. The reg
nant systems of theology are artificial,
and philosophically they are imperfect or
false. It is such a' system which foresees
the danger to it from evolution and that
cries out.tvgainst it.
“Now lit us look at some of the critical
elements fcf Christianity. All the fore
most agnostic and atheistic reasoners on
the sublect propose to rename God, and
call him force or energy. 1 don’t care. If
by that they mean, as they will have to
mean, what we mean by ‘Jehovah,’
by ‘Lord,’ by ‘Christ,’ they can make
a name to suit themselves. The
nafnelg tint the thing; it is the quali
ties that are under it, and if there be one
thing that is to be triumphantly demon
strated it seems to me it is to be that the
whole life gf the world is permeated by the
life behind It of God himself. In human
nature tfiqre are elements which, when
stimulated and quickened by the Divine
Spirit, lift men up to such a relationship
with God as to give them, not only the
sympathy and understanding of God, but
also something of Divine power. Is that
taught by,evolution? It lives up to it.
Christ himself teaches us that it is in the
power of men by fasting and prayer to
rise to such a height t hat they can control
not only demoniac spirits but matter it
self.
“The sum of all this is that man is, at a
primary observation, an animal, a low
tets.Tl tfvd being; that it was not neces-
WytliatTfe should remain so, and that
when the rays of the Divine soul touched
his, and translated him to a higher sphere,
that he sJjQUId come into direct and per
sonal communion with God consciously,
and in this uninterrupted communion of
soul with its Creator, in this higher range,
he should have something of Divine power,
and might be called really set free from
all animalism and from the subverting
our fleshly conditions.
EVOLUTION AXr> CHRISTIANITY.
‘‘What is Christianity? Is not that
evolution?; Is not that the most glorious
a; plication that has ever been made of
that ascending scale by which inen stead
ily find out that God is their God, and
that they jyre His children by a successive
sarifa of unfoldings, by the doctrine of
evolution of forces iu life? Of all that
lies in human society by the gradual
stages of civilization ? Of all that belongs
hi morality by its steadier unfolding and
advance? And last and most glorious,
thf unfolding of a man so that hi'
bsnes part and parcel of God—not
as to efface individuality in him, but to
he related to God as love relates the lover
to loved? This is Christianity. Now,
what is there in the doctrine of evolution
that contradicts these sublime disclosures
of man’s nature and his relation to God?
Is not the whole tendency of tacts, as re
flected by the now light of God’s method
ol creation, in favor of this noble theology?
Man was born at the bottom on purpose.
It was the creative and organic decree
that he should begin at the bottom and
work his way un.
“All sin is*transgression of the law, but
ill transgression of the law is not sin. A
mail may break 10,000 laws and not sin
once. By far the greatest amount of sin
ln all ages has been infirmity, wherein
man through ignorance or bv imperfec
tions in the use of Dowers and faculties,
bus Mumbled and suffered. Why God
created the world on the plan lie did we
cannot tell, hut it goes far to explain the
problem of life if one sweep out with the
broom of indignation the hideous pit
wijii'h theology lias dug under t he world,
believe in the development ot the race
ail <l that God is plenary in justice and
gondneas, and will consign none to unmlti
gutdo torment. As for those who,
beginning high, go down steadily
jb'l lose the ability of renovation
<wre is an abyss' of nothingness
there are no groans, no pain, no
wnorse. The old theory is repulsive, un-
I •fniable, immoral and demoralizing. 1
httn It. It sets up a manufactory of dam
' Htion before and behind, and un every
, !*'■ t won’t (hi silent on this subject,
I' 11 Ia u a lover ol men. and I desire to
make the truth plain. The worst, thing in
“Id theory of sin is the theory of pun
"“Gent, and that incti were made to he
>t or bo dunned. I ay you aro
canined if you so believe It. It Is hideous
ml horrible, and malic* creation u shsm
im/mul God s slaughterer and men worso
. ' man animals. The theory of evolu
!*°n 'nukes more effective and far Imtter
"Pl'cals t, men than any other to live on
‘i" high ranges of emotion. It expands
""'I fortifies the tact of repentance and
lie miivci-Hal need of it.”
MICKomo inoculation.
* Uorrespomlnnt Tolls III* Eapsrlwnen*
to the London Authorities.
//rralii OtikUgrom.
' Don, .Juno 13.—Your correspond
who recently returned from Hpaln,
•vhlle there, in the Interests of the
1 >!ie and science, submitted bimseti to
1 Perron's system of mlcroblo jiiocula
fnii 4 ' lt ' , invited by Kir Charles
•’resident of I ha local Government
Wd-whence omanato alllhe sanitary
' "‘''Cation* for the metropoli—to appear
u "° crown medical advisers.
'Vending ms way through official, his
torical Whitehall, the correspondent ar
at the huge modern building,
Hselt like a whole rotv of Wall
sireet granite hunks. Entering
me severe official portico, the corre
spondent passed the vast corridor, whore
numerous flunkies, gaudy incrown livery,
were apparently very much on the alert,
probably on account of the late dynamite
scares. 1 hesc stately persons pounced
down on him, but the official letter from
Charles Dilkn produced a magical
change iu their demeanor, and immedi
ately he was courteously ushered into one
ot the many large rooms in the corridor,
where sat in full official solemnity Medi
cal Officers George Buchanan and Robert
Thorne.
Dr. Bucbanan—So you are the inoculat
ed correspondent? Take a seat. Tell me
what is the state of the eastern portion of
the peninsula of Spain? Are we to be
lieve the accounts from there, which
sound certainly vague? What is the
meaning of these so-called suspicious
cases? We are skeptical here, and know
some Spanish doctors do not stand very
high in the medical world.
Your correspondent theu repeated the
account of the discoveries made duriug
the lli-mld's expedition, published on
April -25 and “It.
Dr. Buchanan—Now will you give me,
as miuutely as possible, the appearance
and temperature of the patients you per
sonally visited ?
Correspondent—The things that struck
me most were the skiu drawn tight round
the face, the excessively high temperature
anil lustrous eyes.
Dr. Bucbanan—Such skin aud appear
ance would certainly indicate cholera,
but the intense brightness ot the eyes
which you observed would equally con
tradict that supposition. Your theory of
the absence of white mucus in the evac
uations regarded as a disproof of Asiatic
choiera is quite correct. Now do please
tell us about your own cholera inocula
tion—that is most interesting to us?
Your correspondent then gave a full
description of the symptoms as described
in the Herald of April 29, which the crown
doctors followed intently, making inter
locutory remarks.
Dr. Thorpe—Very strange, is it not, that
it should work with such rapidity?
Dr. Buchanan—Yes; it is unlike any
thing else we know of. If you would al
low us to examine yourarms perhaps that
would give us some clew.
Here the doctors examined each arm
separately, but appeared still unable to
satisfy themselves. “Tnere Is one fact,”
they said, “which Dr. Ferran ought to
clear up, but has not done at present. Dr.
Koch’s bacillus, as you know, are not
found in the blood, but in the evacuations.
Therefore they want to know how he can
reconcile the fact of introducing Into the
blood a compound which is foreign to the
blood. We look upon that as a vital miss
tng link, and in your place we would cer
tainly not have risked such a danger as to
allow the introduction of an unknown
substance into the system.”
Question—Can you tell me wbv the gov
ernment stopped Dr. Ferran? Did he kill
any ot his patients?
Correspondent—No; the reason is merely
that the government is afraid of any agi
tation among the people.
Dr. Buchanan thought it very likely
there might have been some fatality, and
that that was the reason they forbade in
oculation: “but in any case,” he said, “the
discoveries are full of interest to the medi
cal profession.”
A FORGER’S PLAN THWARTED.
Eilward Hall Arrested Again—How the
Illegal Printing of Guatemalan Bank
Notes was Prevented.
From the New York Tribune.
A tall, slightly-built mau, agedso,visit
ed the office of Schultze <fe Bcnedum, en
gravers and printers at No. 183 William
street, on Friday morning, and left two
plates with the required shades of ink and
1,200 sheets of paper partly printed, with
the request that the sheets be printed from
the plates. A bank note of 100 pesos, or
slllO. of E! Banco International de Guate
mala was left as a sample of the form in
which the completed work was to appear.
The plates were skillfully engraved. One
was to be used in printing the portions
that appeared in red ink, and the other
for the portions in black ink. The stran
ger gave the name of George Wilson, and
said that lie lived in One Hundred and
Twenty-fifth sireet.
As soon as Wilson had gone Mr. Bene
dum went to the oflice of Jacob Baiz, the
Consul of Guatemala, and with him visit
ed President Uoodall, of the American
Bank Note Company. The original notes
of the Guatemala Hank wore printed by
the American Bank Note Company. Mr.
Goodall at once began earnest efforts to
detect the person who bad ordered the
plates to be printed, which, it was de
clared, were forged imitations of the real
plates.
Chief Agent Drummond, of tbe Secret
Service, to whom a report of tbe case was
sent, ordered that the office ot Schultae A
Beuedum lie watched and yesterday morn
ing the man who gave the name of Wil
son was arrested as he entered the build
ing. He wus identified ns Edward Hall,
who has served terms of imprisonment
for forgery, and who has been several
1 imes arrested for complicity in great
schemes ot fraud. Hall refused to say
anything when arrested. He was hand
cuffed against his protest and taken be
fore Commissioner Shields. Mr. Drum
mond had made a complaint under the act
ot March fi, 1884, which makes it a felony
punishable with a tine of $5,000 or impris
onment for five years to bring into this
country or to possess with intent to use,
plates for printing counterfeit billet of cor
porations authorized by the laws of a for
eign government. Under this complaint
Hall was held in $5,000. Deputy Marshals
Bill# and Jeffries took him to Ludlow
Street .lull.
A man answering Hall’s description
took the same plates and paper to another
engraver for printing, two weeks ago, but
the engraver was unable, after several
efforts, to do the printing satisfactorily
and the plates were taken away on Thurs
day.
Chief Drummond, when asked as to
Hall’s career, said: “Hall has been mix
ed up in most of the principal iorgery
cases of recent years. He is a skillful
penman and his part of the work has usu
ally been the writing of the signatures.
Ho is not known us uu engraver and it is
not supposed that he made these plates
himself, but it Is possible that the signa
tures of the President and of It. 11. Btar
tin, the Cashier of the bank, wore to have
been written by hint. Hall has been long
known to the police. He came under inf
observation in IHTft, when bo wus arrested
with William K. Gray for the forgery of a
cht ok. In IH7i ho was charged with com
plicity In the forgery ot ths Greene county
bonds in this Mate. He was arrested In
IKSO and convicted in Heading, Pa., of
the iorgery of Reading Uallroed scrip.
One of hi* socompilms whs arrested in
Hooding by Ueteolivo Pinkerton, and an
other In this city by Inspector Byrnes.
Hull was sentenced to two years impris
onment. While he was in prison some
(urged omuls of the Albany and Husnu*-
bonua Railroad were tillered in Philadel
phia, and soon after Hall’s release ftlh.OUO
of these bonds wore set afloat. Hall was
accused of having been concerned in this
transaction with George Kngie, who Is
dead, and ,1. N. Columbinl, who is under
going' a long term of imprisonment. Hull
gave bin residence s .lersov City. He
|iVi% 1 iK’linvt*, In Hoboken, but I do not
know tits exact place of t-otdtit'uoe. 11c is
a native of New .jersey.
Hoitiroiu’if AuuTrtiosi'iiAfK
111 SftftMktk !!•■*
H, B. Ttirkor* WulHnifton, 0.,
“While crossing Lake Kile, I gave it to
some passengers who weru seoalck, ami
it gave Immediate relief. 1 '
•
SAVANNAH MORNING NEWS: WEDNESDAY, JUNE 17, 1885.
WEST POINT’S GREAT BAY.
Famous Alou u<t Pretty Women at tlie
Army Academy.
From Sunday's New York Sun.
Anew picture was trained in Ihe beau
tiful setting of mountains and verdure at
West Point yesterday. Jutting out on
tbe level plain was a big tout roof spread
between tour huge elms that served for
corner poles. Under it, in the centre, sat
the white-legged cadets, and all arouud
them, a veritable baud of human flowers,
sat their admirers, the ladies, gay in sum
mer silks. Scattered around the outside
of the congregation were the plebes—the
new comers who want to be cadets. In
every State some community or other bud
been interested iu tbe examinations lor
their place, and great have been the re
joicings of the friends of the triumphant
boys. But no one need envy them now,
for life will be made a burden to them
before tin y are considered broken in. and
already they have had bitter mouthfuls of
the fruit of the system which produces
good soldiers.
In front of the petted cadets and the
smiling ladies is a raised piattorm bril
liantly draped with that flag to which
every army officer raises his hat when he
meets it fluttering over the heads of
marching soldiers. On the platform sit
many more or loss famous men, with Gen.
Merritt, Superintendent ol the Post, the
central figure, and Mr. Endicott, the ju
dicial-locking, mild-eyed, handsome Sec
retary of War by his side. These are
notes taken about the distinguished per
sons on the stage:
“Senator Joseph It. Hawley, growing
white-haired, but still with a ruddy, full
round face. He looks as if the boom for
the Presidency was a weight on bis mind,
but it did not interfere witli bis making a
good speech at the reunion of the
West Point graduates on Friday night.
“Senator Beck, of Kentucky, much the
biggest man in West Point, a giant with
aiaeelike that of John Kelly. He is
dressed in blue flannel, and is in a hurry
to get to Sheepsbead Bay aud see the races
He has not recovered from his aston
ishment at being told by Gen. Fltzhugb
Lee that Apolliuaris is the ouly beverage
a man ought to drink.
“The Hon. John Bigelow, silent and ob
servant; unaware that many eyes are
turned toward his handsome, intellectual
face, which seems detached from a
former age and left by itself in this
one.
“Gen. FitzhughJ.ee, who has just tast
ed Apolliuaris straight for the first time,
and wonders what it was made for, sepa
rated from the ladies, who have put his
gallantry to a strong test without strain
ing it, by persistently seeking him out
during a whole fortnight. He does not
know' that the entire iwist has been talk
ing all day of his eloquent, ardent, poeti
cal speech of tbe night before. In it be
told of his cadet life before the war, when
his uncle Robert E. Lee was in command.
He said since the rebellion hud to be, it
was better to have it behind than to have
it coming, as the boys did in his day.
Virginia, and the whole South, said he,
are Interested In preserving the glory and
unity of the nation, aud realize that to
have a healthy whole all the parts must
be healthy.
“Congressman R. Q. Mills, of Texas
dark-skinned, round-laced, and genial—
associated in Ihe miiul with a Panama
hat that has been seen exploring every
hill and dale, fort, classroom, and place
of interest at the Point for two weeks.
An inveterato, uncompromising free
trader, w ho went half way with Morrison
once, but is going the whole way after
this, if lie goes it alone.
“W. D. Kelley, popularly associated
with pig iron, who emits sparks when
ever he meets Mills, as if he was steel and
Mills was flint; a protectionist to the mar
row—a small, bent, delioate man, whom
everybody at West Point both respects
and admires.-
“Congressman Blount, of Georgia,
smooth-taeed, bronzed, wide-awako, and
looks like Calhoun’s pictures; made a
ringing speech to the veterans about the
true chivalry and forgetfulness toward
the South shown by army officers.
“Gen. Tapnan, the Arkansas Traveler,
and the third ex-Conledorate on this
year’s Board of Visitors; was chief of the
Western array in the Confederate service;
a gentle-looking, happy mau, with a big
attire of the eloquence peculiar to South
ern public men; looks like ex-Superlnten
dent Walling; wore a swallowtail for the
first time at the hop; won’t wear it
again.
“Gov. Iloadly, of Ohio: a slight, par
tially bald, thin, and pale-faced man, who
looks like a persistent student. A lady
who met him yesterday said ol him: ‘He’s
so modest I don’t see liow he ever got to
be Governor of Ohio.’ Ilis wife and
daughter are with him, and all three have
captured the hearts of the West Pointers.
“Col. Charles K. Codman, chief of the
Massachusetts mugwumps. Ho reminds
one of a retired New Bedford sea cuptain
who has grown fond ot good shore din
ners: a tine-looking man with an expres
sion of firmness and a solidity of appear
ance unlooked lor in a mugwump; in clo
ver at West Point, where the boast has
always been that there are no politics,
but where each man now says the other
is a mugwump.”
SHE SUES FOR A MILLION.
Mary Irene Hoyt Turns on Her Uncles
aud Doctors.
From the Few York Sun.
Miss Mary Irene Hoyt, who Is contest
ing her father’s (the late Jesse Hoyt)
will, has brought a suit for $1,000,000 in
the supreme Court against three execu
tors of the will, Samuel Hoyt, Alfred
Hoyt, and James W. Jackson, and her
cousin, Jesse Hoyt, and Dr. H. 11. Millard,
the Hoyt family’s physician. Dr.
Selden H. Talcott, Superintendent of
Middletown Insane Asylum, and Dr.
George W. Dillon. She alleges malicious
conspiracy and persecution. Miss Hoyt
desired to begin this suit when the pro
ceedings to contest her father’s will were
begun, but her counsel delayed. When
Gen. Benj. F. Butler was employed by
Miss Hoyt as senior counsel Miss Hoyt
renewed her suggestion. Gen. Butler
consulted with Gen. Roger A. Pryor and
Frank J. Dupiiniac. and it was decided
to begin tbe suit. It is understood that
all of Miss Hoyt’s counsel, both present
aud )iast, have advised her to bring the
suit, but there has been adlylsionof opin
ion among the counsel as to the time it
should bo brought. The reason for
bringing tbe suit while the deeds,
ion In the will contest is pend
ing. one of the counsel for Miss Hoyt said,
yesterday, is that if the suit should be de
layed, and a decision unfavorable to Bliss
llovt should be made by Surrogate Rol
lins, the criticism might lie made that
Miss Hoyt was actuated by revenge. In
Gen. Butler’s opinion, if the suit had lieen
tried two years ago, when the will contest
was begun, a victory for Miss Hoyt would
have been obtained, with a question as to
the amount of damages, because, Gen.
Butler says, there la no doubt that Miss
iloyt baa never suffered from chronic or
incurable mania, and the beat medical
testimony to Is* had so declares.
The Sheriff received a week ago the
summons to tie served on the defendants.
Only Knovals and Ransom, counsel for
(Superintendent Talcott, have responded.
One of Miss Hoyt’# counsel said yester
day:
“The facts have l<eon brought out in tb
will contest, and all that we rely on has
been sworn to by credible witnosar*.
This is the story, as our complaint sets it
forth: When tbe late Jesse Hoyt was on
his deathbed, and bis brother#, two of the
defendants, thought he could not live, hr
the purpose of getting Miss Hoyt out of
Um way, so as to be free to influence Mr.
Hoyt in the .preparation ol a final will,
they, with Dx. If. B. Millard, tins family
physician, procured two certificates ot
insanity to be made by Dr. Dillow And
Dr. Talcott. which falsely certified
that Miss Hoyt was a chronic ma
niac. They persuaded both Mr.
Hoyt and Mrs. Hoyt, by deceiving them,
that Mary Irene was hopelessly insane,
and they signed a request that she should
be confined as a chronic maniac. The
complaint nrocceds to sot forth that Miss
Hoyt was thereupon unlawfully torn from
her father’s house and shut up In a mad
house in Frankfort, Pa. Mr. Hurt, having
been persuaded that his daughter ws an
incurable maniac, he was procured to
execute a will by which Miss Hoyt was
to get nothing, thereby revoking a former
wili by which she was to have bad the
bulk of Ids estate. She was bis only
child. Misn Hoyt was Jurat in confine
ment until alter her lather's death,
and thereupon Mr. Hoyt’s brothers
procured her to be brought to
New York iu charge of keepers of
the asylum, and placed in the
Windsor Hotel, in order that she might in
served with papers citing her to appear
before the Surrogate. This was done on
the day alter the luneral of Mr. llovt, and
then the keepers took Miss Hoyt buck to
tho Pennsylvania asylum. She had no
opportunity ot seeing counsel in New
York or in the asylum. She was kept iu
the madhouse until the return day of the
citation t-elore tho Surrogate lor the pro
bate of the will, when she was released.
Then tho brothers of Mr. Hoyt set to work
to persuade Miss Hoyt to go to Europe
for a year or more, and finally got her to
agree to go. She did not go. Tins effect
would have been that the statute would
have deprived her ol the power of con
testing the will of Josso Hoyt.”
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free to unite our testimony in favor of its real
value and merits as a chemical preparation
for use In and about rooms where there an
sick persons; in cases of an offensive or di*
agreeble character; for removing 1-ad odors;
for cleansing and healing ulcers, sores and
burns; for counteracting tho effects of any
animal or vegetab'e poison such as bites,
stings, etc.; for removing vegetable stains or
ink spots from clothing; and for such Internal
administration as sore mouth, bad breath
arising from decayed teeth or disordered stom
ach, putrid sore throat, salivation and inflam
mation of the stomach or bowels, etc. It could
not have come into such general use in our
common it jr during tbe last three years and lie
now held in such favorif it did not accomplish
what was claimed for it. We know it is not a
“quack medicine” made to deceive the people,
and we thuik you will confer a general gooil
by using means for its more extensive intro
duction and use. Knowing that a gentleman
of your scientific attainments would not risk
his reputation as a chemist upon anything of
doubtful merit we heartily commend DAR
BYS I'RUl’il V LA< TIC FLU ID to our friends
and acquaintances and wish you abundant
reward for your effort*.
Signed by more than fifty citizens of Au
burn, including ail the physicians, lawyers
and clergymen.
TUTTB~
ii —rmwi-tf
251 YEARS IN USE.
Tke Oreataet Medical Triumph of the Age!
SYMPTOMS OF A
TORPID LIVER.
Loss uf u ne (i to, Bowels costive. P*Uu la
the head, with n Sell sensation in tbe
hack hurt. Ruin under tho shoulder*
binds, FuUncus after outing, with a dis
inclination to exertion of body or mind,
Irritability of tsmper, Low spirits, with
• feeling of fanvlmr neglected sonic duty.
Weariness, DI/.at u css, Fluttering ttl tbo
Heart. Dele b,.10r0 tbo eyes, lit,nduebe
ever tbe right eye. Restlessness, with
htluldeMsts. 111* blj colored Uritte,ttad
CONSTIPATION. r
> TUTT’b fILU arn especially adapted
to such c ases, OtlO doxo effects ouch
shnnifsoffosltng'astoesiottUli thoeulfcrnr.
They lucres** tbs A t>ps*tts.snd asus* the
body t> Take uu riesh.thu* tbu MMwn Is
sionrfshsit. and by thuh Toulo j
Ui.< l>ltririi-e®rp“e,p**rwlrf*te.uir.
pn t'li Price afec. At IWnrfwy
TiITT’S EXlflsCt SflaSiPißiLlA
Renovates tin" Irsly, inak.w h.-ailliy fksdL
■trongtheiis tbo soak, r|silrs tbo west** of
the system Wtth pure Mood sud h*rd muscle;
tones tho nervous system, invigorates the
brain, and imparts Us, vigor of manhood,
fI. Sold by <1 rugged*
•rribK 44 fllurrsj 11., New ¥eriu
ttloUlUtQ.
Yes, 139 Congress 31
CLOTHING IS GOING VERY FAST.
The prices are so very low that it can’t
help going. The season has conic that we
must get rid of it. Our Clothing at cost.
We waut it converted into money, and so
we will sell it so very low that the prices
make it go. Understand, we do not allow
any house in the city la undersell us.
Going! (.Joins! (Join};!
A'lotliiup;! Clothing! Clothing!
Halft! Hats! Huts!
Furnishing Goods!
Furnishing Goods!
—FOB—
lon, Youths, Hoys and Children.
I’RICES WAY DOWN, DOWN, DOWN.
Chas. Logan & Cos.
THE SAVANNAH
Clothinsand Hat Store
180 Con serene St reet.
JsUVßUOtjiUrt ($00(10.
LOOK! LOOK!
-AT-
LaFAR’S
BOYS’ HATS,
At 25c. and 50c.
Men’s Fine Mackinaw.
DUNLAP’S FINE RATS a specially.
CHINESE HELMETS,
The best Sun Hats made.
GAUZE UNDKRV ESTB at 500., fine JEANS
DRAWERS $0 per dozen.
Lisle Thread Underwear.
IIALHRIGGAN SHIRTS and DRAWERS.
LISLE THREAD and BALISRIUGAV HALF
HOSE.
HEMSTITCHED IIANDKK BCHIEFB,
plain and fancy bordered.
WHITE Tl ES, 15c. to 25c. per dozen.
Extra Long SUSPENDERS, Extra Largo
HATS.
Hammocks! Hammocks! Hammocks!
From $1 upward; tbe lieHt made at
SATCHELS, VALISES and HAND-BAGS,
SUN UMBRELLAS, BUGGY UMBRELLAS,
WHITE VESTS. LINEN DUSTERS, any
thing needed by Gentlemen, at
LaFAR’S;
STAMPING DONE!
ON ANY MATERIAL USED INI
FANCY WORK
And guaranteed not to rub off.
EMBROIDERY!
Silk bunch of 25 saeiaa, 18c.
Chenille,
Crewels,
Silks and Wool.
EMBROIDERY COTTON.
ALL COLORS.
ZEPHYRS, good weight and hast
wool iu the city.
Nurses’ Caps and Aarons.
MRS. k 7 POWER,
ION BROUGHTON HTKKKT.
A. 11. HUBB,
WABLIIOISKMAN k COMMISSION
MERCHANT,
- DE ALIK IN—
Flour, Hay, Corn, Oats, Bran, Etc.
A CHOICE LOT Of
NIXED AND CU<> WI)KR PKAS.
’ ALL AT BOTTOM PRICKS.
Hperlitl Inducements mi Car-load Lots.
Warehouse, No. 4 Wndley St,,on Hue C. R. K.
OFFICE. BAY STREET.
ftturiirrrt.
M AOKEBEL!
In Quarter Hnrrel* now Lauding
unit fur sale by
C. M. GILBERT Sc CO.,
WHOLESALE GiII>CKRS,
noutbenet comer Bay ami Barnard atreeta.
Pro <&00Do. J
IT IS NO MYSTERY!
Hut a fact known to Everybody in or about Savannah, that at
Weisleiu’s Poplar Dry Goofisflouse
Everybody gets tho Very Beat Goods at the Lowest Prices, and always receive#
courteous attention. It is well kuowu that we never deceive the iiublio, never mis
represent goods, aud always ouiuo up t,o our advertisements. The Spring season i#
about ended, and we have determined to close out our entire stock of seasonable
good*, and to accomplish the result, we have made such immense reductions in prices
that it is absolutely necessary for you to see it, for we admit it almost looks impossi
ble. Yet wo have made these heavy reductions and moan to sUok to it, as wo are
lully determined to soil off the bulk of our immense stock.
t
No Nonsense, Solid Facts!
Our DRESS GOODS iu low grades we bavo redncod 25 per cent.; in line grades 50 per
cent, from former prices.
Our Black DRESS SILKS wo have roduced 25 per cent.; our Colored DRESS SILKS 50
per cent.
Our S ATINS and BROCADES wo have reduced 40 to (Q pur cent.
Our I' AUASOLS and UM HRKLLAS we have reduced 26 to 60 per cent., according to their
desirability.
our line LINEN DAM ASKS, line NAPKINS, DOYLIES ami TOWELS we have reduced
88 per cent.
Our Staple LINEN DAMASKS, NAPKINS and TOWELS w have reduced 25 percent.
Our M A ItSKI I.LRS UU I l/TS ami Fancy HEDHI’RK A DH we have reduced 40 per cent.
Our SHEETINGS, SHIRTINGS, PILLOWCASE COTTONS aud DIAPERS we nave ra
il uced from 25 to 50 per cent.
Our LINEN HANDKERCHIEFS for Ladle* and Gouts wo have reduced fully from 88 to
50 per cent.
Our LACKS and EMBROIDERIES are reduced, the low grade* 25 and the line grades 5<J
per cent.
Our ALL OVER LACKS and EMBROIDERIES for Yokes aud Sleeve* we mill at any
price, almost at one-half their former price*.
Our Ladle*’, Misses’ ami Gents’ GOSHAMHR RUBBER (’OATH ro reduced 88 per l ent.
Our Ladles’, Mime*’ and Gent*’ HOSE we offer at extraordinary bargains, more especially
in fine good*.
Our GLOVE DEPARTMENT is imuqtutled in the oity, and our price* are reduced toone-
Our FANS nro now and novel, as well a* staple, from the lc. Palmetto to the finest and
choloont.
Our EMBROIDERY STLKS wo continue to soil at Ittc. for 25 assorted Skein*.
Our line of JERSEYS are Immense, we are celling them at any price to clear tho stock.
Our CORSETS are our pride. We have 75 of the beat atylq* in ue, and give the bust fof
the money.
Our INDIA LAWNS at 5c., Bc., 10c. and are beauties; our 12Wc. LAWNS aro equal
to any at 20e.
Our WHITE GOODS stock cannot be excelled in quality, nor approached in prices.
OUK PRICES ARE UNAPPROACHABLE!
Y/e Will Make a Few Quotations:
Yard wide SHEETINGS, which were Bc, now He; WAMBUTTA SHIRTINGS, worth 12Wo,
nowV; 8 4 UNBLEACHED SHEETINGS, worth 200, now Uu: 8 4 BLEACHED SHEET
INGS, worth 20c, now 12Uc; Host Standard CALICOES, worth Bc, now sc; Beat Mourning
CALICOES, worth 80, now 5Uc; Fa*t Colored UNION LINEN LAWN, worth HV.C, now kUc;
INDIA anil VICTORIA LAWNS, worth He, now sc; one job lot of perfect Gento’HALF
HOSE at lc; a largo lot of Ladies’ Fancy HOSE, worth HUc. now sc; Ladies’ CHEMISE,
worth 25c, now Be; Ladie*’ sKIR I’S, worth 50c, now 25c; Cliildrsn’* DRAWERS, worth 400,
now 15c; CORSETS, worth 40c, now 26c; PILLOW CAKE COTTONS, worth tic, nowSJio;
CREI’E VEILS and CREPE by the yard alone-half value.
Do Not Delay, But Secure the Bargains at Once.
David Weisbein,
I.VJ BROUGHTON STREET, SAVANNAH, GA.
i ii ininnw
Atiljialtiro.
SE E H E 11E f
Owing to flio fuel that xcvcrkl dealers have afteniyited to palm off upon
their cuHtouier# an inferior article of Liquor, nnd calling; it “GIBSON’S
WHISKY,” i take thin method ol advertising the name* of my
customers who sell the GUNUINK GIBSON WHISKY, and thus
PROTECT THE PUBLIC AGAINST IMPOSITION:
MOORE & SINNOTT,
SUCCESSORS TO
JOHN GIBSON’S SON & CO.
CELEBRATED WISHES!
FOB HA. I* Id BY
Ban non. E.,ThunderiKiH.
Harbour Bro*., New Houston nnd Barnard.
Bruaiiau, John, Maraliali Uoum.
Boidridgn. George, Price and Broughton.
Cole, William, No. 21 Drayton itroet.
Cooley. Martin. Bryan ami Farm.
Churchill, T. K., WTnt Bluff.
Done her, Eat. of J., Price and South fßro&d
lane.
Farrell, Mr*. K., Bay street.
Grehan, J„ Bryan, second cast Barnard *t,
Hickey, J. TANARUS„ i6(i Bryan street.
Harm*, C. IF, Lilierly and Randolph.
Hart roan, C., 24 Margaret
Haases, C., Thunderbolt road and Lover*’
lane.
Harnett limine, Bryan and Barnard.
Ham, K. ¥., Dravton and York street lane.
Helmken, J. I)., East Broad and Chariton,
lieimken, J. 11,, Uiver aud Bull and 54 Whit
aker.
Hussey, O. W.. Cotton Kxchsngc Restaurant.
Ilelmkt it, M. 11, Whitaker and Anderson.
Ilclmkcn, Martin, East llroad and South
Broad.
flea**, llarman, 42 Montgomery.
Ilcunwsy, W,, River aud Lincoln.
Hickey, J. TANARUS„ l Bryan.
Horrignii, Mr*. C., Itryun and Houston.
Jsnko A Cos., F., No. 22 McDonough.
Johnson, Jo*., No. 5 Ku*t Broad.
Johnson, J. 1... Zuhly arid Ann.
Kuck, John, East Broad and Taylor.
wm. m. davidso^,
158 & 160 Brvan st,, Wholesale Depot.
Ilottrrn.
W. (J. HTKVKNM. J, U. ST EVENS. \VM. STEPHENS,
Sparta, ua. <
Stevens’ Pottery,
HKHDQUiRTERH FOIL
SEWER AND CULVER PIPING,
Well Curbing-Something Everlasting.
Tile fof Drying Laud, Double Ulazctl Vitrified Water Pipe.
FIRE BRICK,
linentiah-d tn quality nod price. liOUDKIt ft till K, the very thing fnr the ornamentation of
vsrds. GRATA itltlUK, something nino and that will never born out. kLOWMt POflJ
W A LI. POTS, nod tIUNH. Plain mid Kanev. W I, sKI.I, NONE BUT KIICOT-CLASH tIOOIKS,
and for 15... OMNMf ISSN |SI hstsf) Ol tile Son I hern Stales.
To ( tty Corporations sod lladways mo otter epsciiil iiiduoemuuU. Write tor prta IlsU suit
Mnd ue roar orders and they will tie flllml with pimnptnra# amt rare.
NTKVKNH Mi I tO. C<
STEVENS’ POTTERY, OA.
Keenan, Tlion,, No. ltd Congress ami No. ltd
Bryan.
Kuck, 11. K.. Hull and Price.
King. K., Jones and Price.
Leuahnn, Daniel, Price and Bay.
tame, James, Huy and Uuberstism.
lamcy, jilrs. E., No. # liny street.
Limn, John, Huntingdon and JutTersoa.
Magee, Thomas, N. 4 Habersham.
McNeill, William, Indian street.
Murriti, J. J., No. 4 Prtee street.
Monblcnbrook A Dterlu, Whitaker and Jones
street lane.
Murphy, Thomas, No. It Price street.
(I’oriM oil. Mrs..!., Hay and Kut hroad.
Prerht. Ifeury, No. ill Price street.
Plunder, 11., Broughton and East Boundary.
Kunkeu, George. Anderson and Bull.
Heuken, 11., Indian aud farm sw.
Kindi, Mrs. V ..tunes and Habersham.
Stamm, A., Ilryun, opposite Market.
Hpeuuer, Mir. K., Pn. 43 Price.
HtilUvun. John, No. US Congress street.
Tleljen. J. K., West Hroad amt New si rest.
Umhoch, U. A. If,, Broughton street.
Utnbaeh, J. A. if., Barnard aud liryaa.
Walt, T.. No. 5 Lincoln.
W. rm, K.. No. IN) Bt. Julian.
Wooltjen A; liro., .Jefferson amt Wayns.
Wilson. It.. Thunderbolt.
Jilinng, i has., Hull aud West hroad.
A.G. i bancs, W Uay street.
3