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SUICIDE BY
JOIIN H. FOHl), r ASHEY IUI..
KMS
I’ound Uoconflclui- H B HI ■> ll‘jX.l.
OrouiidH at a a __ _ ..
Morni E -H '* B **"
I>ltutn* tb* to You Ak"> The I. c
beconit AM ‘ h ‘ t IVo P l< ’ i
Jeclared I'ohll>l 1 Itles of
All em^ tfrßrent Bree( ii, u f Men.
Touud iIKVI ,_ IK c., July 25.- The Kev.
Bumrovr. DeWitt Taimago, i>. I)., is here at
summer watering place spend
,i! g and few days. Vast throngs from all
tr ic snirrounding regions came In to attend
tl * religious service to-day. After sing
ir f a/nd prayer and Scripture exhortation,
p r. 'I a linage preactied a sermon on tbe
si ibjfect, “Measured by Your Own Yard
8, Tbe text was from Matthew vii.,
*2. “ivVith what measure ye mete, it shall
bt a easured to you again.” Dr. Talmage
ha ilk
lb- |tlie greatest sermon ever preached—a
iefiiuiifc about fifteen minute* long, according
t ) tiii Erdin&ry rate of speech—a sermon on t lie
Bof Olives, the Preacher, sitting while
li**’ \t Ate, according to the ancient mode of
or the people were given to understand
thuuA same yard-stick that they empioyed
up triwmr* would be employed upon ihem
ael vt*p. HMoa*un* of hers by a harsh rule, and
you v ibe measured by a harsh rule. Me&s-
by a charitable rule, and you will
IntWwed by a charitable rule. Give no
mem ißpt hers, an tno mercy will he given
to*you ■With what measure ye mete it shall
lyetme > ■<*.! to you agatn.”
Tbei ■ a great deai of unfairness in the
cntioit-T Hif human conduct It was to smite
thatiutfwnesa that Christ uttered the words
of tbe t m. and mv sermon will ie n re-echo
of the ilnv sentiment. In estimating the
mi&bebavßr of others we must take into eon
eider atnwl the pressure of circumstances. It
is n£ver tight to do wrong, bnt there are de
grees of Uilpability. When men iniats have
or comnutyome. atrocious wickedness we are
disposed iuilßcrimlnHtely to tumble them all
over the ha kof condemnation. Suffer they
' ought and surer they uniat, but in difference
■of degree
* sfk the tirst place, in estimating the misdoing
Withers we must take into calcuatiou the
ditary tendency. There is such a thing
Jpa good blood and there is such & thing as bad
There are families that have had a
Bpnoral twist iu them for a hundred years ha< k.
!'•' They have not been careful to keep the family
r record in that regard. There have been es
aapades and maraudings and scoundrelisins
and moral deflclts all the way hack, whether
yoii cay 11 kleptomania or pyromama or dip-
whether it be in a milder form,
and amount to no mania at all. The strong
probability is, that the present criminal start
ed life wit’h nerve, muscle and hone contami
nated. aome si art life with ten
dency to nobility and generosity, and kind
ness and truthfulness, there are others who
st art life with just the opposite tendency, ami
they are borji liars, or born malcontents, or
born outlaws, or born swindlers.;!
There is iu Kugland a school that is called
the Princess Mary school. All the children
in that school arc the children of convicts
The school is supported by high patronage.
I had U^e'pleasure of being present at one of
their anniversaries, in ism, preridod over by
the Earl of Kin tore. By a wise law in Kng
laud, after parents have committed a certain
number of crimes and thereby shown them
selves incompetent rightly to bring up their
children,%hc little ones are taken from under
peruiciouPinfiuences and put in reformatory
schools, where all gracious and kindly influ
ence* shall be brought upon them, uf course
the experiment is young and it has got to be
demonstrated how large a percentage of tbe
Children of convicts may be brought up to
respectability and usefulness. Hut we. all
know that it is more difficult tor children of
bad parentage to do right than for children of
good parentage.
In this country we are taught by the decla
ration of American independence that all
people are born euual. Tnere never was a
greater misrepresentation put in one sen
tence than in that sentence which implies
that we are all born equal. You may as well
say that flowers arc born equal, or Luat trees
are born equal, or animals are born equal.
Why does one horse cost SIOO and anot iicr
horse cost $5(',000? Why doe* one sheep cost
SJuand another sheep cost 1500? Difference in
blood. We are w ise enough to recognize the
difference of bjootl in horses, in cattle, in
sheep, but we are not wise enough to make
allowance for* the difference in
the numau blood. Now 1 de-
imir'l by the law of eternal fairness,
that you be more lenient in your criticism
of those who were Dorn wrong, in whose an
cestral line there was a hangman's knot, or
wno came from a tree the Iruit of which for
centuries lias been gnarled and worm eaten
Ur. Harris, a reformer, gave some marvelous
statistics in his story of what he called "Mar
garet, the Mother of Criminals." Ninety
years ago she lived in u village iu upper New
York Stale. She was not ouly poor, but she
was vicious. She was not well provided for.
There were no almshouses there. The public,
however, somewhat • looked after her,
but chiefly scoffed at her, atui
derided her, aud pushed her far
ther down in iier crimes. That was
ninety years ago. There have beeu (12:1 per
sons in that ancestral line, two hundred of
them criminals. I none branch of tha! family
there were twenty and nine of them have
been in Slate prison, and nearly all of ibe
others have tnrned out badly. It is estimated
that that faniilv cost the county and Stale
SIOO,OOO, to say nothing of the property th y
destroyed. Are you not willing, as sen-ibfe
people, to acknowledge that it is a (earful
disaster to be born in such an ancestral flue?
Does it not make a great difference whether
one degeends from Margaret, the mother of
criminals, or from some mother in Israel?
■whether you are the son of Ahab, or the son
of Joshua? it is a very different thing to
swim with tile curreut, from what it is to
svyim agamst the curreut as some of von have
no doutit found in your summer recreation,
it a man ffnii himself in an ancestral
current where thero is good blood
flowing smoothly from generation to genera
stion, it is not a very great credit to linn it
he turn out good, and honest, and pure, and
noble. He oould hardly help it. But suppose
he is born in an ancestral liue, in a heredita
ry Hue, where the influences have been bad
and there has been a coining down over a
moral declivity, if the mau surrender to the
Influences he will go down under the over
mastering gravitation unless some super
natural aid he afforded him. Now, such a
person deserves not your excoriation, out
your pity. Uo not sit with the lip curled in
scorn, and with an assumed air of angelic in
nocence lookiug down upon such moral pre
cipitation. You had beticr gel down on vour
knees aud lirst pray Alinighly God fur their
rescue, and next thank the Lord that you
have not been thrown under the wheels of
that Juggernaut.
In Great Britain and in the United States,
in every generation, there are tens of thou
sands of persons who are fully developed
criminals and Incarcerated, 1 say in every
generation. Then, 1 suppose, thero are tens
of thousands of persons not found out in their
criminality. In addition to these there arc
tens of thousands of persona who. not posi
tively becoming criminals, neveri lieless have
a criminal tendency. Any one of all those
thousands by the grace of Hod may become
Christian and resist the ancestral influence,
and open anew chapter of behavior; but the
vast majority of them will uot, and it become
all men. professional, unprofessional, miius
tersof religion, judges of courts, philanthro
pists and L'lmstian w orkers, to recognize tnc
fact that there are these Atlantic and t’.icillc
surges of hereditary evil rolling on through
the cunlur.es.
i say. oi course, a man oau resist this ten
dency, jurt as in the aucestral line mentioned
in the first chapter of Matthew. You see in
the same line in which there was a wicked
Kehoboam and a desperate Manasaes, (here
at ter ward came a pious Joseph aud a giorl
ous Christ. But,my triend*, you must recog
nize the fact that ihere influences go on from
generation to generation. 1 am glad to know,
however, that a river which has produ ed
nothing but miasma for a hundred mile-, may
after a while turn the wheels or factories and
help support industrious aud virlnoua popula
tions, and there are family lines which were
poisoned tnat are a benediction now . At the
last day it will he found out that then* are
men who have gone clear over Into ull forms
of tniiiuity and plunged inio other abandon
ment. who before tttey yielded to the lirst
temptation resisted more evil than mama
mm who has been moral and
upright all his dfc. But supposing now
that in this age, w lieu there are so mauv good
people, that 1 come down into this audience
and select fhe very best man in li . 1 do not
mean the man wiio would style himself the
best, for prdiablyhe is a hypocrite; but I
m an the man wiio before Hod is really the
nest. I will lake you out from all your < oris,
tian surroundings. I will take vou back to
boyhood. 1 will put you in a depraved home.
J will put you In a cradle of iniquity. Who
Is that bending over that cradle? An intoxi
cated mother. Who is that swearing in the
next room? Your father. The neighbors
come in to talk, and their jokes are unclean,
There is uot in the home a Bible or a moral
treatise, but only a few scraps of an old pic
torial. After awhile you areold enough to
get out of the cradle, aud vou are struck
ar ross the h r, ad for naughtiness, bnt never
in any kindly manner reprimanded. After
awnile •ou a• e old < nough to go
abro.td, and you are. sent, out with a
basket to steal. It vou come home without
any spoil vou are whipped until toe blood
c- lines. \t fifteen years of age you go out to
light you r ow n battles in this world, which
seems to care no more for .y ou than the ‘log
that has uled of a fit under the fence. You
are kicked and cuffed and buffeted. Home
day. rallying your courage, vou resent some
wrong. A man says: “Who are you? 1
know who you are. Your father had free
lodgings at Sing Sing. Your mother, she was
uj: for drunkenness at the criminal court,
lift out of my way, you low-lived wretch!”
My brother, suppose that had been the history
of your advent, and t he history of your earlier
surroundings, would you have been thef-hris
ti&u man you are to-day. seated in this Chris
tian assembly? I tell you nay. You would
have been a vagabond, an outlaw, a murderer
on the scaffold atoning for your crime. All
t hese considerations ought to make us merci -
ful in our dealings with the wandering and
the lost•
Again I have to remark that, in ourcstimate
of the misdoing of people who have fallen
from high respectability and usefulness, we
must take into consideration the conjunction
of circumstances. In nine cases out of ten a
man who goes astray does not intend any pos
itive wrong, lie has trust funds. He risks a
part of these funds in investment. He says:
“Now, if I should lose that investment I have
of my ow n property five times as much, and
if this in vestment should go wrong I could
easily make it up; I could five times make it
un.” With that wrong reasoning he goes on
and makes the investment, and it does not
turn out. quite as well a* he expected, and he
makes another in vestment, and si rage to say
at the same time all fiis other affairs get en
tangled and all his other resources fail, and
his hands are tied. Now' he wants to extri
cate himself. He goes a little farther on in
the wrong investment. He takes a plunge
further ahead, for he wauls to save his wife
and children, iu* wants Ins home, ho wants to
nave his membership in the cnurch. lie takes
one more plunge and all is lost. Some morning
at 10 o’clock the bank door is not opened, and
there is a card on the door signed by an officer
of the bank, indicating there is trouble, and
the name of the defaulter or the defrauder
heads the newspaper column, and hundreds
of men say: “Good for him;” hundreds of
other men say: ‘Tm glad he’s found out at
last; ’ hundreds of other men say: “Just as
I told you;” hundreds of other men say: “We
couldn’t possibly have been tempted to
do that —no conjunction of circum
stances could ever have overthrown
me;” and there is a sunernbun iance of
indignation, but no pity. The heavens full *f
lightning but not one drop of dew. If God
tr ated us as society treats that man we
would all have been in hell long ago. Wait
for the alleviating circumstances. Perhaps
he may have been the dupe of others Before
you let all the hounds out from their kennel
to maul and tear that man find out if lie has
not been brought up iu a commercial estab
lishment where there was a wrong system of
ethics taught; iind out whether that man has
not an extravagant wife who is not satisfied
with his honest earnings, and in the tempta
tion to please her he has gone into that ruin
into which enough men have fallen, and by
the same temptation, to make a procession
of many miies. Perhaps some sudden
sickness may have touched his bruin and
ids judgment may be unbalanced. He
is wrong, he is awfully wrong, and lie
must be condemned, hut there mav be
mltigatingrircuinstanceß. Perhaps under the
httme temptation you might have fallen. The
reason some men do not steal $200,000 is be
cause they do not get a chance! Have right.-
coils indignation vou must about that man’s
conduct, but temper it. with mercy But you
say: “I am so sorry that the innocent should
suffer.” Yes, lam too—sorry for the. widows
and orphans who lost their all by that defal
cation lam sorry also for the business men,
the honest business men.Vvho have had their
affairs all crippled by tiiat defalcation. lam
sorry for the venerable bank President to
whom the credit of that bank was a matter
of pride. Yes, lam sorry also for that, man
who brought all the distress; sorry that he
sacrificed borty, mind, soul, reputation,
heaven, and went into the blackness of dark
ness forever.
You defiantly say: “I could not be tempted
in that way.” Perhaps you may be tested
after awhile. God has a very good memory,
aud He sometimes seems to say: “This man
feels so strong in ids innate power and good
ness he shall be tested; lie is so full of bitter
invective against that unfortunate, it shall be
shown now' whether he has the power to
stand.” Fifteen years go by. The wheel of
fortune turns several times. And you are in
a crisis that you never could have antici
pated. Now, all the powers of darkness come
around, and they chuckle, and they chatter,
and they say: “Aha! here is the old fellow
who was so proud of his integrity, and who
bragged he couldn’t beoverthrown by tempta
tion, and was so uproarious in his demonstra
tions of indignation at the dcfuleati.m lifted)
years ago. l.et us see.” God ltHsih** man go.
God, who had kept that man under Ills pro
tecting care, lets the man go, and
try for himself the mnjesty of his in
tegrity. God letting the man go, the powers
of darkness pounce upon him I *ee you some
day iu your office in great excitement. One
of two tilings vou can do. Be honest, and be
pauperized, and have your children brought
home from school, your family dethroned in
social influence. The other thing is, youeau
stop a little Hside from tiiat w hich is right,
you oan only just go half an inch out or the
proper path, you can only take a little risk,
and then you have all your finances fair and
right. lou have a large property. You can
leave a fortune for your chiloren. and endow
a college, and Imilq a public library In your
native town. You hall and wait, and halt
and w lit until your lip* get white. You
decide to risk it. Only a few strokes of the
peu now But, oh, how your hand
trembles. bow dreadfully it trem
bles! The die is nod. By the
strangest and most awful conjunction of
circumstances any one could have imagined,
you are* prostrated. Bankruptcy, Commer
cial annihilation, exposure, crime. Good men
mourn and devils Hold carnival, and you see
your own name at the head of the uewspnper
column lu a whole congress of exclamation
points, aud while you are reading the anath
ema in the reportorial and editorial para
graph, it occurs to you how much thi* story is
like that of the defalcation fifteen years ago,
and a clap of thunder shakes the window-sill,
saying: “With what measure ye mete, it shall
be measured to you again!”
You look in another direction. There is
nothing like an ebullition of temper to put a
man to di-advantage. You, a man with calm
pulses and a line digestion and perfect health,
cannot understand how anybody should be
capsized in temper by an infinitesimal annoy
ance. You say; “I couldn’t be unbalanced
in that way.” Perhaps you smile at a provo
cation that makes another man swear. You
pride yourself on your imperturbability. You
say with >ur manner, though you have too
muchgoit iaste to say it with your words:
“I have a great ileal more sense than tiiat
man hss; 1 have a great deal more equipoise
of temper than that man has; I never could
make such a puerile exhibition of myself a*
that man has made.”
My brother, you do not realize that that
man was born with a keen nervous organiza
tion; that for forty years he has been under a
depleting process; that sickness and trouble
have been helping undo what was left of
original healthfulness; that much of Ills time
it ha* been with luo like filing saws; that his
nerves have come to be merely a tangle of
disorders, and that he is the mo*t pitiable ob
ject on earth, w ho. though lie is very sick,
does uot look sick and nobodv sympathizes
Let me see Did you not say that you could
not be tempted to an ebulhtiou of temper?
Some September you cmne home from your
Hummer watering place, and you have
inside, away back in your liver
or spleen, what we call in our day ma
laria, but what t he old folks called chills and
fever. You take quinine until your ears are
first buzzing beehives aud Hen roaring N ia
garas. You lake roots aud herbs, vou take
everything. You get well. But the next day
you feel uucomfortabie, and vou yawn, and
you stretch, and you shiver, mid vou consume,
and you suffer. Vexed more tnau y >u can
tell* you cannot sleep, you cannot cat, you
cannot bear to *ee anything that looks happy,
you go out to kick the cat that is a-lcep in the
sun. Your children’* mirth was once music
to you; now it w deafening. You say: “Boys,
stop tiiat racket!” You turn bo k from June
to March. In the family and in t ic neigh* nr.
Hood your ponularily is t*s per cent. off. The
world sav*: “What is the matter with hat
disagreeable man? What a woebegone coun
tenance! I can’t bear the sight of him.”
You have got your pay at lasi—got your pay.
You feel just a* the man felt, that man for
wnom you had no mercy, and my text comes
in with marvelous appositeness: ‘With what |
measure ye mete, it shall be measured to yon 1
again.”
In the study of society I have come to this
conclusion, that the most of the people waut
to be good, but they do uot exaetlv know how '
to make it out. They make enough good reso
lutions to lift them into angelhood. The van
umjorit.v of i eople who fall are the victims T
Circumstances; they are captured bv :,iul>u<
cade. If their temptation* should come mm
in a regiment and tight them in a lair field,
they would go out in iHe strength and ihe . ri
utnph of David against Goliath. But they di
not see the giant* and they no led *ee thr
regiment. Suppose temptation should conic
up to a man and say: “Here is aleolm ; him*
three tuhlespoonfiiis of it a day until you
get dependent upon it: then after that
take half a ►las* three times a day until
you set dependent upon that auiouut; than j.o
SAVANNAH MORNING NEWS: MONDAY. JULY 26. 1886.
on increasing the amount uuttl you are sat
urated lroin morning until night and from
night until morning.” Do you suppose any
man would become a drunkard in that way ?
<>h, no! Temptation comes and says: “Take
these bitter*, t.ikc this nerving, Dike this aid
to digestion, take this night-cap.” The vast
majority of men and women who are de
stroyed by opium and by rurn take them
as medicines, in making up your dish of
criticism in regard to them, take fr rn the
castor the cruet of sweet oil and uot the cruet
of cayenne pepper. Be easy on them. Do
you know how that physician, that lawyer,
that journalist became the victim of dissipa
tion ? Why, the physician was kept up night
byonght on professional duty. Life and death 1
hovered in the balance. His nervous system
was exhausted. There came a time
of epidemic, and whole families
were prostrated and his nervous strength
was gone. He was all worn out in the ser
vice of tbe public. Now he must brace him
self up. Now he stimulates. The life of tins
mother, the life of this child, the life of tins
father, the life of this whole family must be
saved,and of all these families must be saved,
and he stimulates, and he does it again and
again. You may criticize his judgment, but
remember the process. It was not a selfish
process by which he went down. It was mag
mllcent generosity through which he fell.
That attorney at the bar for weeks lias been
s andtug in a poorly ventilate i court
listening t<> the testimony and contesting in
tlie dry technicalities of the law, and now ihe
tune has come for him to wind up, and he
must plead for the life of his client, and his
nervous systern is all gone. If he
tails in that speech his client
perishes. If lie have eloquence in that hour
his client is saved. He stimulates. He must
keep up. He says: “I must keep up.” Hav
ing a large practice you see how he is en
thralled. You may criticize his judgment,
hut remember the prooess. Do not be hard.
That journalist has had exhausting midnight
work. He has had to report speeches and
oration* that keep Inin up till a very late
hour. He lias gone with much exposure
working up some case of crime in company
with a detective. He sits down at midnight
to write out his notes from a memorandum
scrawled on a pad under unfavorable circum
stances. His strength is gone. Fidelity to
tnc public intelligence, fidelity to his own
livelihood demand that he keep up.
lie must ke*p up. He stimu
lates. Again and again he docs that,
and he goes down. You may criticize his
judgment in the matter, but have mercy. Re
member the process. Do not be hard
My friends,this text will come to fulfillment
in some cases in this world. The huntsman in
Fannstcen was shot by some unknown person.
Twenty years after the soil of the huntsman
was in the same forest, and lie accident ally
shot a man, and the man in dying said : “Qod
Is just; I shot your father just here twenty
years ago.” A Bishop said to Louis XI. of
Franc**: “Make sn iron cage for all those who
do not think as we no— an iron cage in which
the captive can neither lie down nor stand
straight up. ,v It was fashioned—the aw ful
instrument of punishment. After awhi'e the
Bishop offended Louis XI, and for fourteen
years he was in that same cage, and could
neither lie down nor stand up. It is a poor
rule that will not work both ways. “With
what measure ye mete, it shall be measured
to you again.”
Oh, niy friends, let us be resolved to scold
less and prav more! That which in the Bible
is used as the symbol of all gracious influ
ences is the dove, not the poicupine. YVe may
so unskilUully manage the lifeboat that we
shall run down those whom we want to res
cue. The first preparation for Christian use
fulness is warm-hearted common sense, prac
tical sympathy for those whom we want to
save. What headway will we make in the
judgment if in tin* world we have been bard
on those who have gone astray? What head
way will you and I make in the last great
judgment wheu we must have mercy or perish?
The Bitile says: “They shall have judgment
without mercy that showed no mercy.” f
see the scribes of Heaven looking up into the
face of such men, saying: “What! you plead
for morev, you, whom in all your life
never had any mercy on your fellow*?
Don’t you remember how hard you were in
your opinions of those who were astray?
Don’t you remember when you ought to have
given a helping hand you employed a hard
heel? Mercv! You must mis-speak vourself
when you plead for mercy ho re. Mercv for
others, but no mercy for you.” “Loo-,” say
the scribes of heaven, “look at that inscrip
tion over the tl<rone of judgment, the throne
of God’s judgment.” See it coming out letter
by letter, word by word, sentence by sentence*,
until your Htariied vision reads it and your
remorseful spirit appropriates it. “With what
measure ve mete, it shall he measured to yc
again. Depart, ye cursed!”
CHI N ATO\VN \S N OVKIjTY.
A Joss House Established in Mott
Street, New York.
Nkw Y’okk, July 24.—Pedestrians up
and down Chatham street, or, as It is
now known. Park row, have noticed an
unusually large number of Chinamen
arrayed in holiday attire passing in and
out ot the narrow hallway of 202 Mott
street, it is not an imposing looking
entrance; it opens directly upon a steep
stairway, and the only suggestive feature
is a strip ol red paper over the doorway,
which looks as if it was a label torn off a
package of tire crackers, it bears the
name of “Joss,” and tells the devoutly
inclined Celestial that the temple is up
stairs. Early last week the new interior
lUtings of the temnle, the altar, tables
and chaiis, arrived here from China and
were put in place. Now the unpretending
third floor of 202 Mott street contains
some of the finest specimens of Chinese art
in this city. The altar is of carved ebony,
practically a large frame for the picture
of Joss aud his attendant deities, ex
ecuted on satin in the most elaborate
style of Chinese art, and a heavy table for
eolding the incense burners and votive
offerings. Asa whole tbe carvings repre
sent the universe; along the bottom,
under the table, is the sea, with tish,
aquatic plants, and the huge turtle upon
which, according to Chinese mythology,
the earth is supposed to rest. From each
side rise trees, shrubs and heavily carved
foliage, with birds and animals among
the branches. The branches interlock
over the top, and the whole is backed
with heavy plate glass mirrors, represent
ing the heavens thickly studded with
golden stars. The chairs and tables are
iu the same style of rich Oriental carving,
and the room is lighted by carved lau
terns hanging from the ceiling. The walls
are hang whlth Chinese mottoes, the air
is heavy with incense, and it is hard to be
lieve that we are in New York and not
in Cathay.
The whole affair cost the Chinese resi
dents of New York between SII,OOO and
SB,OOO and is entirely self-supporting.
They havequeer feature sin their religion
which was quaintly explained to me by
the old priest in charge. 1 noticed that
a large proportion of the worshipers
would come lu, make their obeisance to
the altar, burn a few prayer sticks and go
out. Some, however, remained a longer
time and gave the priest sums varying
from 25 cents to sl. lu response to my in
quiry he said:
“A man can say all he wants to in three
minute , so he have three minutes for
nothing; if he have good deal to say, ho
pay 2f>o. for next three minutes, uOe.
tor next three, and so on. No
good to pray too long.” Then he added
after a moment’s reflection: “In Molican
church man talks an hour and everybody
pray two hours or two hours and naif,
then make collection beg to pay nunis-
Mi. Chinese way, 500 or 000 people pray
two hours; we make two or thiee thou
sand dollar.”
The system strikes me as a good one. It
pays the expenses of the temple and dis
courages garrulity. With its dingy ex
terior the Chinese or New York have now
one of the most richly furnished places of
worship iu the city.
Allan Forman.
A Bookkeeper $!H,000 Short.
Louinvillk, July 25.—C. I>. McKinzie,
bookkeeper for the Ashland Coal and Iron
railroad, of Ashland, Ky„ is missing and
has written President John Means that he
is short in his accounts SIB,OOO and has
been making false entries lor months to
conceal the crime. He oilers to straighten
out the books but refuses to make known
his whereabouts. He is supposed to bo
In Canada.
Constkunation illicit every breast in slum
tytown when the left, ilelderof the second nine
snouted inun i lie <■ ■■ 10-urc w here i lie bail had
been list ted: “Yer'll have to rail iter game,
fell vs; Fi liberty'., pig has swallowed the ball!”
l'ittuhmu Cotiiwti corf.
MU. CUTTING’S CASE.
Particulars of His Arrest *>y the
Mexican Authorities.
Washington, July 23.—The arrest of
editor Cutting at Paso riel Norte, Mexico,
and the relusal of the Mexican authori
ties to release him has caused so much
excitement, that all the facts pertaining
to bis arrest have become of general in
terest. A special to the Baltimore Sun,
from El Paso, Tex., says that the circum
stances that have given rise to the pres
ent controversy wito tbe Mexican repub
lic, fully and accurately stated, are as
follows: Mr. A. K. Cutting, a man of
about 40 years of age, formerly a resident
of El Paso, Tex., has for some time pub
lished at Paso del Norte, Mexico, just
across the Rio Grande, a Spanish news
paper called “El Centinela.” In that pa
per be published certain personal re
flections upon a Mexican. Spaniard, whose
name is Emiglio Medina, who has
issued the prospectus of a rival publica
tion. Mr. Cutting published a card in
both English and Spanish in the El Paso
Sunday Herald June 20. in which he says:
“in a late issue of El Centinela, pub
lished in Paso del Norte. Mexioo, I made
tbe assertion that Emiglio Medina was a
fraud, and tiiat the Spanish newspaper he
proposed to issue in Paso del Norte was a
scheme to swindle advertisers, etc. This
morning said Medina took the matter to a
Mexican court, where I was forced to
sign a reconciliation. Now 1 do hereby
reiterate my original assertion that said
Emiglio Medina is a fraud, and add dead
beat to the same; also that his taking ad
vantage of the Mexican law aud forcing
me to a reconciliation was contemptible
and cowardly and in keeping with the
odious reputation of said Emiglio Medina.
Should the said Emiglio Medina desire
American satisfaction lor this reiteration,
1 will be pleased to grant him all he may
desire at any time in any manner.”
For writing this card and circulating
copies of it in Paso del Norte, Mr. Cutting
was arrested upon Mexican soil, and until
Wednesday, July 21, he was not offered
even the privilege of giving bail. At an
unseasonable hour he was hurried to tbe
court, and by authority of the Supreme
Court of Chihuahua, was offered his free
dom upon bail, but, on the advice ot the
American cmnsul at Paso del Norte, he
declined the offer, and said: “1 am now in
tbe hands of my government, and ignore
vour court altogether.” lie is still con
tined in the low adobe iail at Paso del
Norte. The people of El Paso do
not all approve the course at
tirst pursued by Mr. Cutting, but they
agreed that, our government ought to pro
tect its citizens in toreign lands. The
fear ot an unauthorized aituck upon the
jail, and reports of diplomatic correspon
dence led the Mexicans to pa rol Paso del
Norte on thenightof Wednesday, July 21,
and at the same time to forward troops
from the interior to the Rio Grande.
There are now about 200 Mexican soldiers
at Paso del Norte. It is now said ou the
authority of the Santa Fe employes that
the Mexican Central railroad is bringing
2,000 Mexican soldiers Irom the capitol.
Thus far no extra United States troops
have arrived at El Paso. Un the contrary,
one of the three officers at Fort Bliss is
preparing to start, to-morrow with some
of them tor tbe scene of the Indian dis
turbances. A single company is now sta
tioned at that post, it is reported, how
ever, that 300 United states troops in
tended tor tbe Indian war have been
ordered to El Paso, and will arrive during
the night. Ou Tuesday Consul Brigham
received the following aispatch Irom Gen.
Jackson, the United States Minister to the
Republic of Mexico: "Peremptory de
mand has been made for Cutting’s imme
diate and unconditional release. Tele
graph me if complied with.”
On Wednesday nicht the following mes
sage was sent from tbe City of Mexico:
‘•Hon. T. F. Bayard, Washington: The
Mexican government refuses to give up
Cutting. W'tre further instructions.
[signed.] “Jackson, Minister.”
Consul Brigham has this evening sent
the loilowing dispatch to Washington:
“Hon. Thomas F. Bayard, Secretary of
State, Washington: The authorities here
refuse to release Cutting, and take no no
tice of the demand made at the City of
Mexico. The Mexican government is
massing troops on the frontier, and there
are apprehensions ot violence.”
A Baltimore gentleman who has just re
turned fmm a journey through Northern
and Central Mexico, and who has made
special inquiries oonoermne the treat
ment of American citizens at the hands
of the judiciary of tbe Mexican Republic,
says that citizens of the United States
arc frequently subjected to unjust im
prisonment,that good bail trends are often
retused, only cash being accepted, as in
the recent case ot Mr. Merkeley. the rail
way station agent at Chihuahua, and t hat
there ts usually exasperating delay in
bringing such cases to trial, ltoccasion
ally happens that prisoners out on bail
are never brought to trial. The bail is
forfeited when the prisoners leave
Mexioo, and the authorities
know that patience on tbeir part
will he rewarded by the return of
the prisoners to the United States.
Tne gentleman already quoted says that
the Mexican Consuls of the United States
are too often bankers, merchants and
mine owners, who are too busy to give
proper attention to their Uonsuiar duties,
or are so anxious to gain or to retain the
personal favor of the Mexican govern
ment, that they are incapable of inde
pendent and courageous action worthy of
official representatives of the United
States of America. He says that the pre
vious indifference of our government to
clear cases of injustice has begotten in the
Mexican mind a contempt for the Ameri
can flag and a reckless disregard of the
rights of American citizens in Mexico.
There is an unmistakable prejudice
against the people of tbe United States,
it is creditably reported that the Mexican
Consul at El Paso, in a letter to a Chihua
hua orator, oompliinented him for having
said that he would like to have all the
American heads in line that wittione bee
cut he might sever them all. It is well
that the Washington government has
been brought to realize tbe necessity of
protecting the citizens of the United
States whom businessor pleasure may call
into the neighboring republic of Mexico.
GEN. I,EE’S OLD ACCOUNT.
Annoyed By an Old Error of 1 he War
Depart incut.
Washington, July 20.—Geu. YV. If. F.
Lee, son of Itobert E. Lee, will, it is sup
posed. receive tbe nomination for Con
giessin the Eighth Virginia district, now
represented by Mr. Barbour, who has de
clined re-election. In order to enable
him to become a candidate his political
disabilities had to be removed. Gan. M.
C. Butler, ol South Carolina, and Gen.
Lee served side by side during the war as
commanders of cavalry divisions, and
have always been warm friends. Senator
Butler presented Gen. Lee’s petition for
removal of his disabilities in April last,
but for the reasons stated below the
act to relieve tins only within a few
days passed both houses. Gen Lee was
formerly a lieutenant of Infantry in
the regular army, but was appointed from
civil life, as be was not a West Pointer.
He resigned in IH51), nearly two years be
fore tho breaking out of the war. When
his petition was sent to tbe Judiciary
Committee, Senator Fdiminds, the chair
man. following the usual custom, sent to
the War Department to inquire whether
the accounts ni Lieut. Lee had been prop,
eriy adjusted. A reply came back that
Lieut. Lee owed the United States $177 jo.
Senator Butler communicated mis in
formation to Gen. Lee. who in much won
der came to Washington to find what It
meant. On going to the War Department
he was show n the charge, which was—for
teamsters, SSO 1(5; barley, sllß. It seettis
that .’to years ago or mme Lieut, Lee was ,
i with the comma ml of Albert Sidney Joan-1
ston on the Utah expedition, and the ex
penditure was incurred at that time (or
his soldiers. Gen. Winfield Scott Han
cock. at the time a Captain, was also
with the command, and acting as (Quarter
master. Lieut. Lee had settled his ac
counts fully with Hancock, but through
some error the items, instead of being put
on Hancock’s account, were charged up
against him on the books of the War De
partment, and there remained through
all these long years, to his entire igno
rance. The matter being satisfactorily
explained, his accounts were balanced,
the Judiciary Committee notified of the
same, and the bill lor the removal of his
disabilities disposed of.
IDIOTIC KING OTTO.
The Emperor’s Visit Makes the King
Imagine He is au Eagle.
Munich, July 10.—The Kaiser’s visit
has had a most extraordinary effect upon
the insane King Otto. On Saturday he
overheard one of his servants talking
about the Kaiser coming t.o Munich.
The King said: “What Kaiser is com
ing?”
The servant replied: “The German
Kaiser, your Majesty.”
The King said: “Say that again, it
sounds good,” and after a pause he added:
“Oh, you mean Barbarosaa. I bad forgot
ten him. However, I am greater than
Barbarossa. I am the great German
double eagle, and my two heads are now
aching and aching and aching.”
The King tnen uttered sharp cries and
chirps like a bird. He spread out his
arms like wings and tried to flv. For
over an hour the King hopped about in
the garden on one leg at a time, flapping
his arms like a bird and trying to fly.
Saturday night he built In his bed
room a large nest of straw, twigs and
dried leaves, resembling a huge eagle’s
nest and sat In it all night.
On Sunday morning the King was com
pletely prostrated with a severe nervous
attack, and the gravest fears of a fatal
ending were felt by all about him.
in the evening he regained his strength
and with the cunning device common
with lunatics managed to elude the vigi
lance of his attendants and escaped from
the palace. He got Into the deer park ol
the adjoining palace of Nymphenbourg,
and, running at lull speed, nearly reached
Munich beiore he was captured. At a
late hour of the night he was conveyed,
iu an exhausted condition, back to his
palace.
An Oleomargarine Explosion.
Chicago, July 25.— A terrific explosion
occurred in Armour’s oleomargarine fac
tory this morning. A large tank became
overcharged with steam and exploded
with frightful force, sending the boil
ing contents over four men, while two
others thirty yards distant were injured
by flying debris. Thomas Dolan died from
the effects of his injuries and James
Bailey is not expected to live.
A 05% l*ounci Melon.
Fort Gaines, Ga., July 25.—A melon
weighing 05 % pounds was raised by John
T. Jones, a successful and prosperous
melon grower of our county. It was
bought yesterday by E. E. Lutz, of Mont
gomery, Ala., who paid sl. The melon
crop in Clay is turning out some of the
finest melons seen or heard of anywhere.
We learn of several weighing from 47 to
65 and 65% pounds.
Sutmnrr l\ ponrto.
Smnier anJ_Wlnter Resori
Battery Part Batel,
ASHEVILLE, N. C.
r |"'IIE city of Asheville is located on the high
A brokeu pln'eau between the Blue Ridge
and Apalaehian chains, is accessible by rail
Iroin all points or the compass.
The Battery Park is anew hotel just com
pleted. with all the modern appliances for do
ing a first-class buwines-. Hydraulic elevator,
electric light, heated by steam and open fires.
Electric belts connecting every room with
theotlico. The house is built on a hill over
looking the town and a stretch of country fifty
miles in extent.
Climate delightful, scenery magnificent,
prospect extensive.
The Battery Park will be open JULY 12th,
Kates from $2 50 to #3 50 per day.
For descriptive pamphlet and any Informa
tion pertaining to the business address
C. H. SOUTH WICK,
Proprietor.
Montvale Springs
BLOUNT COUNTY,
LAST TENNESSEE.
T'HIS GREAT HEALTH RESORT IS NOW
OPEN. The most celebrated Dyspeptic
Water known. Elegant hotel and grounds.
Excellent table. Telephone connection with
Knoxville. Kates: Board 530 to #35 per month,
♦Bto #lO per week, |2 per day. Halt price for
children.
J. C. ENGEL,
Proprietor.
MANSION HOUSE,
BROOKLYN HEIGHTS.
DIRECTLY OPPOSITE Wall Street, New
York, four minutes’ walk from Fulton
or Wall Street Ferries and the Bridge termi
nus. Superior accommodations at reasonable
rates. Large shaded grounds. Coolest loca
tion iu the vicinity of New York. Select
family and transient hotel, 200 rooms. De
scriptive circular.
PKKII A VAN CLEAT. Proprietors.
BT. DENIS HOTEL
AN D
Taylor’s Restaurant,
Cor. Broadway and Eleventh street,
NEW YORK.
On the European plan. Rooms 51 per day
and upward.
WILLIAM TAYLOR, Proprietor,
THE STOCKTON
Cape May, N. J.
/ \PENEI> JUNK noth, under the mnnage
x t ment of HENRY CLAIR, late of Grand
Uultra Hotel, Saratoga springs.
4U>irfttoin(j.
newspaper”
ADVERTISING
V< * Pays Best
WHEN PROPERLY DONE.
Wr AIM TO AND DO GIVE TO ALL CUSTOM E BS.
Lowest Prices---Prompt Transactions-.-
Judicious Selections---Conspicuous Posi
tions-- -Experienced Assistance Unbi
ased Opinions and Confidential Service.
AovennvcMCNTa Dcsionvo. Pnoora Shown and
Estimate!, or Coat in ant Niw.pa.iiis,
Fuan,*heo to Responsible Pasties
FREE or CHARGE.
The H. P. Hubbard Cos.,
Successors to H P. HUBBARD,
Judicious Advertising Agents and Experts,
Established 1871. Incorporated 1885.
New Haven, Conn.
49~0ur 200 P*of Catalogue or Lcaoino
N1 .wsiß*_ " Sent Fmcc on Application.
Itlrrttnaa-
DeKiilh l otlge >'o. 9, I. 0. 0. F.
A regular meetinz will be held THIS (Mon
day) EVENING, at 8 o’clock.
Members of other Lodges an<l Tisiting
brothers are cordially invited to attend.
By order W. E. SWAXSTON, N. G
.Jons Riley, Secretary.
Georgia Tent No. lot, I 0. of R.
Attend a very important session of your
Tent THIS (Mondav EVENING at 8 o’clock.
The C. B. requests the attendances every
member, as business of a vital nature will
come up.
B. H. WEBSTER, C. R
Attest: C. O. Godfrbt. R S.
Sinamiali Floral and Art Association
An important meeting of the Savannah
Floral and Art Association will be held on
WEDNESDAY EVENING, July 28, at the
residence of Mr. F. Eugene Durbec. No. 73
Gwinnett street, at 8:30 o’clock. Sub-commit
tees will be appointed to arrange for fall ex
hibition. A full attendance is requested.
C. Y. RICHARDSON.
Secretary.
Special lloticco.
Potatoes, Onions and Apples.
In store and arriving:
2 CAR LOADS EXTRA FINE EARLY
ROSE POTATOES, in flour barrels.
50 barrels Silver Skin Onions.
50 barrels Choice Apples.
Prices low. Bpecial inducements to the
trade. J. A. H. UMBACH,
Market square.
Notice.
There will be no steamship of the Boston
and Savannah Steamship Company sailing
from Savannah Thursday, July 2b.
RICHARDSON & BAUNABD,
Agents.
Notice.
DR. J. W. BRADY has returned to the citv
and will resume the practice of his profession.
Chatham Real Estate and Improve
ment Company.
Savannah, Ga., July 22, 1886.
The Board of Director have this day de
clared a dividend of forty (40) cents a share
from the prollts of ihia Company for the fiscal
yer ending dune do.
Same will be payable at this office on and
after MON DA Y, Aug. 9.
Stockholders who are entitled to interest on
advanced payments will collect same on and
after MONDAY, Aug. 2.
M. J. SOLOMONS,
Seeretary and Treasurer.
Dividend No. 3.
Office Mutual Gas Lioht Cos.. >
Savannah, Ga., Julv 1", 1*66.1
A dividend of ONE AND ONE HALF PER
CENTUM has this day been declared from
earnings of last quarter, payable at this office
on and after August. 16th next,to stockholders
ol record this day.
LEWIS C. LILLIE,
Secretary,
ELECTION NOTICE.
Savannah and Tybee Railway Com
pany.
The subscribers to the stock of the above
named Company are hereby notified to con
vene on the 28th DAY OF JULY, inst., at 12
m., at the office of I). G. Purse. No. 11l Bav
street .for the purpose ol electing seven (7)
Directors to manage the affairs of the said
company for the ensuing year.
D. G. PURSE,
Chairman Incorporators Savannah and Tybee
Railway Company.
Savannah, Ga., July Sth, 1886,
To The Public.
I am running in connection with my drug
business a complete and full stock of paints,
oils, varnish, glass and putty, paint, varnish
and whitewash brushes of all kinds. My
linseed oil is strictly pure. The above to be
had at either of my stores, where you will
find a complete stock of pure and fresh drugs.
Proscription department in charge of compe
tent druggist. Night calls promptly an
swered, 1 am, respectfully.
EDWARD J. KIEFFER,
Pharmacist.
Corner West Broad and Stewart, and corner
West Broad and Waidburg.
Timer’s Liver Corrector.
This vegetable preparation is invaluable for
the restoration of tone and strength to the
system. For Dyspepsia, Constipation and
other ills, caused by a disordered liver, it can
not be excelled. Highest prizes awarded, and
indorsed by eminent medical men. Ask for
Ulmer’s Liver Corrector and take no other.
#1 00 a bottle. Freight paid to any address.
B. F. ULMER, M. D.,
Pharmacist. Savannah, Ga.
THE MORNING NEWS
Printing:,
Lithographing and Binding: Depart
ments,
MORNING NEWS BUILDING,
No. 3 Whitaker Street, Savannah, Ga.
The largest and most complete establish
ment in the South, and one of the ino6t exten
sive in the United Slates.
It has every facility for the prompt execu
tion of all kiads of work in
BOOK AND JOB PRINTING,
LITHOGRAPHING, BINDING,
RULING AND BLANK BOOK
MANUFACTURING.
There is no order too large for it to handle,
and none too small to receive careful atten
tion.
Estimates promptly furnished to parties in
the city, or by mail.
J. H. ESTILL, Proprietor.
Jllarltlc 10 or lie.
T. UUiITEB,
Mail ills,
Broad street, near Lower Market,
AUGUSTA, - GA.
MONUMENTS, TOMBSTONES
AND
MARBLE WORK
Generally always on hand and made reorder.
An work for the* country '•artfully bnxeit and
YullviriMt at tlie railroad depot id Aiirubi&
fi* of rhnrgn
ttperlnioun of the work cau bo 6eea at tne
tnamif icti.ptr.
&mternttnto.
BASE BALL TO-DAy]
NAHllyu.i,.
WAV IN au
Cxruroiono. 5S5s
FOR TYBEE!
T HE steamer ETHEL will make
J. trips every Monday and Thursii,, r>l0 *
meneing Thursday, .July 8. Csi 7 Co ®-
wharf on arrival of steamer •*
engers to the hotel. Schedule roll 1 1 ' 1 -
Monday, leave oity 10 A. M., leave T"vhi IB !f'
M.; Thursday leave city 3r. M . leaved l’
BP. M. Fare for round trio 1„
Music on board by the Guards String
w.t.gibsqVmSih
(fDurational.
"WESLEYAN ""
FEMALE COLLEGE
MACON, GA.
T H “h Oc.ober a ‘ SeB " OD ° pena
Elegant accommodations, with ever,
rangement for health and comfort y
Best advantages in Literature,'Musics
Art at moderate cost. USlCj ti
First applicants have choice of room,
Apply early for catalogue to
w, C. BASS. Presolent.
ALBEMARLE
Female Institute,
CHARLOTTESVILLE, VA. ’
FULL corps of superior teachers; rt> an ,.
instruction thorough and extensive'W.
tion healthful and accessible; scenery beieiti
fu>: surroundings most attractive; termsv,™
moderate; order catalogue. ’
W.P. DICKINSON. Princiml
Bellevue High School
BEDFORD CO., VIRGINIA.
The 21st Annual Session opens SeDtemh,,
15th, 1886. *
For catalogue or special information aor',
to W. K. ABBOT. Prinoipai,
Bellevue P. (>,, V,
WASHINGTON AND 1
I JIIVERNITT, Lexington, Ya.
Instruction in the usual academic studiot
and in 'he professional schools of LAW s <
ENGINEERING. Session opens Sept, lit
Address
G. W. C. LEE, President,
John C. Green School of Science.
College of New Jersey, Princeton, S. J.
t> KGULAR four-year courses, as follow!
TV I. For the degree of Bachelor of Science,
a general course; also elective courS'. :n
Chemistry. Biology, Geology, MathomMf!
and Physic,. 11. For the degree of Civil la
flineer, Including, beside the u-ual nroics!.
onal studies, applications of Electricity to
the Arts, Post gra tuateinstrnctionm Hist,
er Mathematics, Graphics, Analytical ant
Applied Chemistry and Assaying, Bio’gy,
Physics and Astronomy. Entrance examina
tions Sept. 14th and 15th, 1886. F..r ipecH
courses and other information apply ;o itn
College Treasurer.
r pHE College of Letters. Music and Art,w'tH
I seventeen professors and teacher,,Svi
of them in music, two of them graduate! 4
Leinsic. l ull apparatus, with monrtet le'ts
scope. Exercises begin Sept. 29th. Forests
logues, with particulars, address
I. F. COX, President.
FREEHOLD INSTITDTE,
FREEHOLD, N. J., 43n YEAR,
VJREPARES Boys and Young Man for anj
1 college, or lor business. Backward Roji
privately taught. Place healthful, groan.!
ample, base ball, foot ball, military drill
bowling alley, gymnasium.
Rkv. a. G. CHAMBERS, Principal.
VIRGINIA FEMALE INSTITUTE,
STAUNTON. VA.
Mrs. Gf.n. J. E. B. STUART. Principal,
Next session of Nine Mouths opens sei'l
16th. with a full corps of superior teacher.
Terms reasonable. Apply early. Sum™
limned. Catalogues sent upon application M
principal. .
CHARLESTON CLASSICAL SCHOOL.
16 Pitt street. Charleston. S. C
THE distinguishing feature ol this school '
study in school hours and In school, * n *
only in part at night. Its record for the I'*‘*
year is; Throe assistants, forty-two and
scholars, nine boarding pupils from Or too:
to July, and ten boarding pupils at Flat Rocs,
N. C. (a superb climatoi, during July, f*”
gust and September. Charge $5 50 a week™
he time a pupil remains, prepaid. Gjaiens
st Flat Rock. N. C.. BENJ. A. SlTplJ*Y^__
Episcopal High School,
NEAR ALEXANDRIA, VIRGINIA.
L. M. BLAC KFORD. M. A., Principal;
L. HOXTON (West Point), A-sociatc 1:
el pal. . ,
Founded in 1839. The 17tli ye r
present Principals opeos Sept. 'Z~ '
Caialogue, with particulars, on son' l ' 11
NOTRE DAMEOF MARYLAND.
Collegiate Institute for Young had'c, / 1 ' 1 '
Preparatory School for Little Girls,
P. 0.. throe miles trom Baltimore, r. ‘.‘ „
ducted by the Sisters of Notre Dame, e
for catalogue. ■
SHENANDOAH VALLEY ACADEMY,
WINCHESTER, VA ,
"PREPARES for University, College, Army
L Nay or Business, send for eatsics ..
C. L. t MINOR, M. A. (Uiiiv. of ’> a. ±
Edgeworth I ton riling itnd DiiySchtnV
ITUiR Young Ladies and Little G'rls M-,
II P. LKFLBVRK, Principal. N". •
Franklin street. Baltimore. M l
school wear will begin on Thursday.’"'l
her 17. 1885.
Southern Home School tor Gird
197 and 199 N. Charles st„ Ballunore- ..
Mrs. W. M. CARY.
Established 1842. French the langu a
the school.
O TAUNTON FEMALE SKMINA I*' 1 *'
O Staunton. Va. Rev. Jos. Willis
Principal. Beautiful and |i-aH li lul ! “‘' t
Superior teachers in every depart™
French and German spoken. Send for
lngue.
CUtiytt Sell#-
Electric Belt Free
To introduce it and obtain agents
the next 6u days give au ay. free 0 ' ; ”,
each county In tlm U. 3. a JitnltoH uin r ,
onr German Electro Galvanic , lls * cuP
Belts, price 55; a positive and
for Norvous Debility, Varicocele, _ever
linpotency, etc. 180000 reward pal' l ”, [c ,
Belt we manufactnre does not g®“® ||J(<
feniunc electric current. Address * .
ILECTRIC BELT AGENCY, P. O. Bov
Brooklyn, N. Y
MARSHALL HOUSt,
SAV AN NAll, GEO RGI A; rie ir,
GEO. D. HODGES. - - 1r P 1
Formerly ot ibe Metropollisn *
New York, and the Grand Lb l '
of -aratoga springs- f . )C rl!
Reduced prices for summer nn“ c L,m
rales t > buarders. Tbo Best Tables,
Wnnm m nnrl Mot r<n*ral I^u*'**"