Savannah weekly echo. (Savannah, Ga.) 1879-1884, December 02, 1883, Image 1

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lULfej ECHO circulates in every State in the Union. With a sup ply of News and Job Type, a rioo Cylinder Power Press, and a ircrdon Job Press, we are pre wired to execute any style of Job Printing and Book Work, from a Visiting Card to a Testament, at rices to suit the times. The itronage of the public solicited. ive us a trial. Office Southwes irner Bay Lane and Jefferson treet, Savannah, Ga. NEWS OF THE WEEK. Eastern and Middle States. Three men were killed and five others in jured by the explosion of the boiler attached to a saw mill in Jackson township. Penn. A COLORED man 112 years old died a few days ago in Boston. Pere Hyacinthe, the well-known French minister, preached his first sermon in this country the other day in a New York Protes tant Episcopal church. In New York and other cities there was a general resetting of clocks and watches on the l“th to conform the local time to the new time standard recently adopted by the leading railroads of the country. A Pittsburg fPenn.) dispatch says that there !.’• unusual depression in the iron trade, and that several largo mills will closedown. V HEN a new gas well, recently opened in Westmoreland county, Penn., was lit the name shot upward 150 feet, and illuminated the country for miles. Its roar was terrific, and could be heard for thrre miles. By its intense action houses were shaken within the radius of a mile. The well was pronounced by experts to be the largest ever developed. A. H. Rowland, clerk of the county court at Pittsburg, Fenn., has l>een arrested upon the charge of having emliezzled nearly $47,- 000 during two terms of office. Twenty-nine horses were burned to death in a Philadelphia stable. Ihe schooner James Wade is rejiorte 1 tn have gone down in Bake Erie with her cre w of seven men. A marriage in high life is reported from Put-burg, Penn., where Patrick O'Brien, Erofessinnally known as the Irish giant, has eon united to Miss Christine Duerz. the Ger inan giantess. Both are on exhibition in a Pittsburg museum. A New York court has decided that the trii-te s of the Fr. mklyn bridge are not per sonally liable for the disaster on that struc ture, resulting from a ] anic by w hich several lives were lest last Decoration day. South and West. A convention called by the United States commissioner <>f agricu ture to consider the contagious disease's of domestic animals met in .Chicago. Government inspection of "ail cattle and dead meat exjwted. and of ex ported hog products, was advocated. A boiler in the works of the Coal Bluff Aiming company, at Fontanet. Ind., ex plode I, killing one man instantly, fatally inuring two others an 1 seriously scalding ten tn ore. \ i hy cold weather is reported from the Northwest, the thermometer varying from fifteen to forty degre s below zero'. John Smi rn, a colored man, was hanged at .. a...and. Aid.. for the murder of a whitejman nam«l Harden ; and on the tame day Perry Jeter, also colored, suffered a similar penalty at I iiion, S. C , for arson. A fire at Columbus, Miss., destroyed a warehouse with 2,000 bales of cotton, can sine a loss of $lOO,OOO. The first and only stone bridge across the Mississippi has just lieen completed a' St. Paul. Minnesota. It is a massive stone stru *- tun , a railway viaduct, t wentv-one hundre I feet long, twenty-eight feet wide, fifty fret high, with twenty-three arches and sixteen tect ea, 'h’ an d cost $990,- Senator Mahone has issued an address to the R< ad Ulster party of Virginia, attacking his political enemies and declaring that he will renew the contest in 1884. Three hundred masked , nea entered the jail nt Oxioro, mu., i ,ok .. - ’Vnga farm hand, imprisoned for the brutal an i un provoked murder of Ada Atkins >n, his em -1 i >v< r's daught> r «».t lvr.ei>- ’ • • .JV ' ns T««ch asserts that Anna ‘ .<*»rns. fi, Who several years ago left the 1 11 111 b’t’me stage, wfl lecturea'ain, and until ih ■ clo-e of the presidential election next e,r will spak in all the leading cities 1 o t . country mthe interests of the Kni -fits ’ of I-a ior Tm: Mississippi steamer S. 11. I’arisott. ■ from \ icksburg bound for New Orleans. I • .ii ht fro mar Natela z and was totally con- I ‘ l: " Included in the cargo were 3.-504 i 1 . of cotton. The total loss is estimated U at m-. than $'.’.50,0u0. (ine life was lost. ! ( b'Mt rr. Hemry, of Swanton. Ohio sh t ' 1 ', i-d his uife, and trie I to kill his 1 " > Yer, ''rs. Lilia. He then shot himself i " d a Th. y had been married about, a t ear i ' ;> ■ ' h. wilowofa Mr. Stevens when | 1 Immrv marr ed her. Washington. S'< i:iT.\>i¥ I in.LEI: his madenn imjiortaiit *■' 'on <■ is ruin;; ] Mansions to dejiendent i. h'-.-Hii b w.iv kiilel in the late I'. i ' -t.i’ute. siys the secretary, was ' :i ' I<d t ' Jve ileis-u.l. nt relatives some c in; ■ i :;t: for the llama ;<• they had sns t ■ tv i i- theln'sot the person on whom they 1 t'l mm ' n I < r might dejiend f- r their ■up; rt.ni.ihe decides ihat in all ordinary case-a mother is entitiedt • a jiension. , 1 J n thoptist iisc.d year the expenses of '' " mted ''trite diplomat!-’ service aggre t ■ : ? s| o;j Thee >nsularservice returned t.e amomitm- t-. ;• il4.SJ'.i, andexjendid m ■ • lurie-and other exjienses, sfiow i’i tha s.,rv ye is not only self-sustai i g bn' i:;i- > al i ia'o the tr-a-ury a revenue amoimtm; to sujillt. •It ”■ kCox. of the 1 • istriet of Columbia Circ i' co ir', has M‘t aide Hie verdii t for .iwa.’ded by a Ju.y tollall-tt Kil bomti. In I-.,'', Kilf. urn was )< eke lup forty trne for refusing to answer the quest .ns ~ f a eoiumitt e of the House of i :epi es 'tttative- concerning the t ransacti<>ns a ■ i it rial esta'e j o'>i in Washington. 1 1< rb. .ng rel ase Ihe br> mg lit suit against tin- ergc.tntat-ar.il- oi th.' House. Mr. 'ih epson. m d others, asking damages for ia ■■ :-i; ri'-o'm.ent. A verdict tor sUhi.- 1,1 w>i- ren b red in his favor, but a new trim was granted, and the verdi ’t in tha- has ton "u e a de, Judge Cox holding that > '?“>() an m c sdve sunt. •’ s 1 Harlan, of the United States Su preme court, ia. til-d an opinion in which > i '<r withh.s a-s. i sates in thecas- af- Je. tmg e vil lights of coloreel l*er mis. •Justice liar an, in his lengthy argument. 1 'lds tha* < "ongTess was fully etnitow -re i t> U“ s the civil rights acts, that they are con st t n il and should be sustained. I ' ,-tmaster (it neral Gresham has for bidden postmasters to aid tension attorneys I furnishing them with lists of soldiersand oth- e- sm |K»e«l to lie entitled to pensions. 1 Hi: animal report of the register of the tr> i-'. v shows that the total tonnage of the c in.tr;, . xhibits an increase of (>'J,.V>4 tons. t tun Brooks, of the United States Secret service. reports that during the ]>ast fiscal year his division made 37ti arrests, obtained ninety on., convictions, and the inqiosi tii'n <>f tin ’s aggregating £14,9711. The total iq«n<lrn- was sOl.-ilo. Only one really dan; ..use nterfeit coin appeared, that of th-- s’ r-1 dollar being almost identical within- v>-r nine tn weight, ring and aj> . <■»< in yet having only about .JU per cent, of s: ver. \ • I'n r- y i.oo i,(io i has been brought at Sai. ir ;. gainst the Quicksilver Mining C' :i ; i y : >’• w Almaden, by the heirs of Grttv. 1 ■ t o original proprietors of the mil . h tion is Kise-l ujmn the alleged fri. d I ministration of the property by i< 1» ' ! . Walker, whohadlieena partner of Gr.-iy an v:is until recently the chief rep rest ntative of the company. Foreign; A Tito inau whom the doctors declared alun itic arrested in the French senate Cliamlier w hile flourishing a revolver and in quiring for Prime Minister Ferry. 1 iiWard Mi Mahon, a follower of Parnell, has I«.ii ejceti to the British parliament from Limerick. A 1'1) F rear the City of Mexico destroyed a large colton factory, burned five opera tives >o death, and caused a pecuniary lom O f AUK),UO". Foreh in Kits in China are uneasy because th< A Lite Lily society, a powerful secret or.ranization, is reported to be again active. In a si>-«-ch at .Manchester, England. M. de ly-W’j® said the Panama canal would be fin -hel in five years. Rebels in Egypt attacked an Egyptian for i <>( '"*• men and kill«l every man ex Ci 11 fourteen, including Commander Mon cm tf The whole movement in due to the sic e traders in Vpjs-r Egypt, who profess to act in the name of the Mahdi, the False Prophet. Dur'no a heavy gale two British steamers —Uw Condor and the Hymettus— ware wrecked oflt the ooMt of Holland. Eighteen HARDEN BROS. & GRIFFIN, Publishers and Proprietors. VOL. V. NO. 2. of the persons on hoard the Condor were lost, and but few of the crew on the Hymettus were saved. Three lenders of the revolt in Servia have been sentenced to death. The Ameer of Afghanistan has caused to be executed a number of persons snsnected of favoring the projects of Avoob Khan, and has expelled a number of others from the country. A schoolmaster and a peasant have been shot in Servia for lea Jing the revolt. Sheik Obeidullah, the notel Kurdish chief, has died of eh >1 raat Mecca. In France decrees have been issued appoint ing Prime Minister Ferrv minister of foreign affairs, in place of M. Challemel-Lacour, re signed on account of ill health, and M. Fallieres minister of public instruction in succession to M. Ferry. Great loss of life and shipping occurred during the recent sever - gale off the coasts of Newfoundland and Nova Scotia. The coasts were strewn with wreckage, and manv bod ies were washed ashore. At Green Island a Norwegian bark was driven on the rocks, and out of twelve men on board ten were drowned. Dr. CharlesW. Siemens, the celebrated German scientist, engineer and electrician, died a few days since in London from the ef fects of a fall. Eighteen workmen were drowned while crossing the river at Donarneuz, France. Fifty persons in Thorn. West Prussia,have been attacked by trichinosis. Joseph Poole, the Fenian, was convicted in Dublin. - f the murder of Joseph Kenny, an informer, and sente ced todi-ath. The Prussian diet is in session. Scattered ban 1- of Chinese pirates, sup posed to lie “ b ack Flags,” have lieen com mitting outrages in Tonquin. Four villages were destroyed by them. Further particulars from St. John’s. N. F., regardingthe recent disastrous storm say that the brigantine Bonnie Lassie was lost at Cape St. F.ancis. Captain Hogan, First offi cer Prang and Steward Tohey perished with her. The bark Helois, the brigantine Creole, the schooner Western Packet and the brig antine Guelph were also lost during the gale. Their crews were saved. A cyclone destroyed every house in At lanta, Mexico. Several persons were killed or wounded. . Bandits are committing great depreda tions in Culia. PROMINENT PEOPLE. Ruchonent.—The president of the Swiss republic is L. Ruchonent. Swinburne.—Swinburne, the English poet, will read his poems in this country. indom.—Ex-Secretary Win lom ls now in Paris, where he expects to remain for some time. Toombs.—General Robert Toombs, of Georgia, ha> recently become a member of the Methodise church. Southworth.—Mrs, E. D. E. N. South worth, the story writer, still lives in Wash ington, where she taught school thirty-tive years ag-. . King.—Ex-United State, Senator John P. King, of Ge -rgia. who was prominent in the dais of Jackson, is now in excellent health at th'* age of eighty-four. Stanford.—Ex-Governor Stanford, of California, has ten thousand acres of grape vines under cultivation, and is making addi tions to hi, vineyard every year. Huxxey.—The son of Professor Huxley, A:!‘/-P h scientist, is attracting booke I to succeed Tennyson as the laureate. ’> n .-Aiin.— Mr. Villlard, president of the Northern Pacific railroad, is having a grand mansion built on Madison avenue, New York, 21M feet front, corner fifty-first street patterned alter the ] alace of Cancellaria a’ Rome. ’Con Moltke.—Field-Marshal Von Moltke, no.v eighty Pur years old. is in the habit of rising early. He works till the hour of Pis simp]- dinner, laving always his snuffle near him. as was th-*<*ust<>m of Frederic , th Great. He smokes some too, hut usuallv only in the foremen. His afternoons ar given to paying or receiving visits, and h evenings to whist, a favorite pastime whic.. the-J i soldier did not intermit even in the smoke of the Frnnco-German war. Next t the emperor, the field-marshal is the most, popular n an in Germany. Buttes.—The poetry of William Y. Buttes, known as the “ cowboy poet," ha< atti acl-d some attention. The iiistorv of Buttes is ro mantic. He never went to school a day in his life. He is more than thirty years of age, and all his life has l>oen sjient on the plain-. He was discovered by David Graham Adee, while visiting Coloral i ia,t summer, friendship grew up b tween them during a tornado one night, which deprived both ot shelter. Buttes conlid-ii to Adee that he son etimes wrote “lines," as he described his poetry, and Adee learned the story of the c wlioy’s life and obtained many of his poems. BANKS AND BANKERS. Annual Report of ll»c { onip.'rojier of Hie C'nrkcncj'. ■ The Unite I State-comptroller of the cur rency has made his annual rej> >rt. Referring J to the affairs of banks, tru-t c anna lies, and : savings banks which are organized under the laws of the different States, he-avs that re turns of such institutions -have during the ■ pa-t year been recivvd from twentv-four I States. The returns from 7M Mate banks ■ and trust companies show: Loans and dis ■ counts, $4‘12,.;50.55‘i; deposits. $ V ().::7 L 21 7; sp.-eje. sd',2.legal tenders, bank notes, etc.. .'2',25!».0<; i .i: capital stock, sl'Js,2;kJ,n3'i; circulation. $187.07'; surplus fun 1. .<74,575,- +‘d. The returns of <i:JO savings banks show: Loans on real estate. <'25,1 , .17,555; Joans on personal and collateral security, $155,571,.522; deposits. s 1.024,i'7; surplus fund. $72,- 7M.1,\5, This includes returns fr m six New ' England States, f rom four Middle States, not including Delaware, and from Ohio. Indiana, , California. and the District of Columbia. The aggregate of loans in the New England States is $2 i 2.112.554. and of deposits. $4 b.i“‘i>. Jn the Middle States the aggregate : of I ans is slti‘.i,loi. The returns from 74!* private bankers for I the six months ending November 50, IS'2, when the a t rejicaling the law requiring such returns went into <lf let, mid the tax on capita! and dej osit- ceased, show the follow -1 ing totals: Capita). st;i'i.-4'i : deposits, $101,445,:- s ; invested in United States bonds, ■.<»-. The returns from the ,’>o6 private bank, rs in New York city show: Capital, $51,75-.575; deposits. sss,*■♦»'>,"4 : invested in United States b in Is. $~,!W,545. huntincT’casualties. i John Weatherby, of Constantine, Mich.. I had his lower jaw torn off by the accidental discharge of ins gun. i Jay Hollywood, of Ix'aton, Mich., was killed ■ by the a- "identa! dis h urge of his gun as he I junipe ! iijmn a log while hunting. W h ie try ing to creep under a liarbed wire fenc > with a gun in his hand. N. ah Harmon, of Mon t Joy. Fenn., was fatally shot. J. H. Hersjierger, of Nicholasville, Ky., firedata th ck of birds and hit his friend George Hughes, shooting the top of his bead off. DaringMiiler, of Gouglersville. Fenn., went hunting, and after wounding himself in the abdomen rrawled 300 yards toward home. He was found dead. John Droester, of Brockto ■, Mass., carried his gun over his shoulder, Both barrels were ac i lentaliy discharged, killing Droster's brother, age I seventeen years, who was be hind him. Charles Celia. forty-eight years old. entered a store at Commercial Point, 1:1., after hunt ing al! day, an 1 brought his gun down with a bang upon the floor. It was discharged, kill ing < Vila. As Ira Etnnions, of Eureka, Nev., was carrying a shotgun with th- barrels down, the pin connecting the barrels with the stock fell out. and the gun was discharged, blowing Emmons' leg off. Albert Lee. of Minneapolis, lived four hours after being accidentally shot by bis friend while hunting, ihe charge of shot was lodged under the kneecap, severing an artery. and he bled to death. As David Cramer, of Rawiinsville, Penm, w is walking through a cornfield with his gun, the hammer caught on a stalk and Mr. Cra mers little boy received the charge of shot in h b body and arm. Hu will rw >wr. SAVANNAH, GA., SUNDAY MORNING, DECEMBER 2, 1883. WHOLE NUMBER 210. LITER NEWS Commodore John M. Berrien, a retire officer of the United States navy, died th other day in Philadelphia. He was a mid shipman on the frigate Constellation, ovei fifty-eight years ago. NN ili.iam McWilliams/ a NVaterfon (Penn.) octogenarian. awoke the other nigh and iound th'* cold arms of his dead wifi clasjted around his neck. Forty ma-ked and armed men took pos session of the mine at Marshall Basin, Colo rado, and made the workmen quit aftei shooting and killing one. A statement of the recent gales on ih< great Jakes shows a loss of fifty-five lives an< sixty vessels. Twenty-six vessels, represent ing a value of A-toi..)0;», are total losses. 'i nt: Nliss'ssippi \ alley tank, of Vicksburg. Miss., has suspended. Gi .m hai. a< gustus C. Hodge, formerly 1 nitei States S ' tator and minis', r to Spain for eight year:-, dial in Burling ,-n, lowa, a few days since, aged s yenty-two years. Ex-Sen xtor George E. Spencer, of Ala bama, was j’.xstel at Austin. Nev., bv order of Attorne. ' - neral Brewster for con i' nipt of Aourt in not appearing as a witness in the st ir route eas Spencer denied e’u ding th“ ■ .'l'cers, He left Austin with two deputy marshals for NVashington. During a sever rain storm a dozen house; at Piedmont. Mo., were swept awa b. t e r.sin: waters of a . reek, and two woimna al three children were drowned. The prop Iler Manistee, from Duluth. Minn., bound for Ontonagon, foundered i i Lake >ii|x n r during the recent heavy gab ■ and tweniy-flve jurs -ns on board are sup p ise 1 to have bee :i lost. Edward Payne, cashier of the First National bank at Rushville. Ind., was shot dead by a burglar, who had entered bis house for the evident purpose of robbery. 1 HE attention of the United States govern ment has been invited to the International Forestry exhibition to be held in uAnburgh in the summer of 18M. The exhibition will be ojien to contributors from all countries, and is designs! to include everything con necte 1 with or illustrative of the forest prod ucts of th< world. Moody and Sankey, the evangelists, are holding largely attended meetings in Wads worth, Engl nd The Chinese government is reported to have issue.. a call for 150.000 troops, in an. tie patiun of n war with with France, , The American ship Thomas Dana airive I nt I aval having on board twenty-one men whoha , formed part of the passengers an 1 n ew of the French brig Rocaberg, sunk bv a collision. The remainder of the passenjert uni crew, numbering eight,-eight, perished. Ja'ie- Davis, secretary of the Lon ion and San Francisco bank, absconoed from Ixmdon with >250,000 of the institution's funds. Spanish Republicans threaten a revolt it universal suttrig is not granted at the nex> fco sion of th.- Cortes. Im i, ■■ . . . JU, Fight Person* Killed by a Frightful Accident in Illinois. A dispatch from Streator, 111., gives the following particulars of a terrible railr. ad accident, by which eight passengers, mclu dinga lady and her daughter and a minis er. were kil-.-d, and seven < th- r persons injured: The C hicago, Burlington and Quincy mail train from Chicago was due here at a quarter to 1 r. m. It was within three miles ol th • city when it was signaled t . stop by a switchman who was unloading balk .st along the track- from a train of fiat cars attached to the switch engine The passenger train stopped. “an 1 the rear brakeman went 1.a.-k to flag any thing that might b<- following the pass, n-er train, but he had not got more than "ne’er two car lengths when an extra freight train r -un fed ti.e curve and wasdown uj«>n them in nn in- ant. The freight engine, N. 211, struex the rear pts-eng r conch and com p'-teix- tel.-scojiel it. There were about twenty (ersons in the ear and few escajied with -ut ;n ury. Th - engine completely im peded itaeif in the ear. the ] a-engers lieing thrown forward, and th >n its boiler exploded and one p.ece ot its head was forced entirely through the car. One of the passenger- said that the train had just barely stopped when the collision occurred. I heard,” said he, “a terrible crash as th-- < n ine struex the car. The ex phrdoii immed ab ly foil- we 1, filling the car with s'-a nan 1 lioiling water. I did not h ar a sin r e cry for at least a minute, when I discovered tint the two ladies sitting in front<;f nn were struggling in the agonies of d nth. The-- were calling for assistance, but th re w is no help for them, as they jierished alm st instantly from the inhalation Of steam. The switch engine t hat was unloading the ba last came at once into this citv, and gath ering up a relief corps starte I with a caboose anu tw-'d ■■ t ■ - for the scene of t h<-nc-ddent. Meanwhile all that could jxissibly be done for the as-—tan -e of the wounded and dvin» and care of the dead was d ne. MUSICAL AND DRAMATIC, Mrs. Langtry is playing in Canada. Edwin Booth ha: been drawing crow le 1 houses in Boston. The drama. “ Hazel Kirke.’’ s » “holds the stage,” that it ha- been ' booked” for tno . season of 1'54-5. A female tenor, Signora Harlanidi, is cre ating a sensation at Venice in “11 Trot afore” and “La Favorita.” Henry I'. Giulio, of the American ex change, London, st nt es that < >y- r t wo t h< u-.n id American professionals visited Europe the ] ast spring and summer. > I’he J a-ip, ig Signale states that Director Pollini, <4 Hamburg, has mad • Rubinstein an oiler of -li i.oo i t<r a five months'tour in America, during which lUoconcerts are to br given. Anna Dickinson was so much helped by the benefit giv u her at Detroit after her man ager deserted her that she has gone upon the l oad again, and, she thinks with a promising outlook. Sir Arthur Sullivan is about to write a asericus opera, which may be produce t at Covent Garden, London, next year. The blot will introduce the life and misfortunes of Marie Stuart. Manager James E. FenneSsy, of Houck’s new ojiera-house, Cincinnati, has engaged the Mapleson ojieri company as a counter at traction to the opera festival which occurs in that city during February, I'Bl. Tommaso Salyini, the great Italian trage dian, writes to the Boston Herald to -av that he does not pr<>poso to retire from the stagea yet, and tlia' he is in hopes of again j mying a professional visit to this country. THE NATIONALGRANGE. 'M'lventy-sKiveii Mates Kcpresesilcd nt tlie Annual Convention. The annual convention of the Nationa Grange was opene I in Washington, D. C. twenty -seven States being represented by masters of State ranges. William Saunders of tlie agricultural department, who was the first master of the national gmi-o. delivered an address of we'come to the d<Bp echos were made b. <-x -( v. r . r Robie, of M:iin<-. J. R. Tliomps n, <>l lii < ity, and Mr Hiird»>n, of Alabima. They di cussed the question of the strength i fiuence <4 the agricultural cl.i-s, its w ••• t o' representation in the executive b ch < f th<* government, and the growth of uat i I grange organ ration. Worthy Maste-- J. J. Woodman, of Michigan, deliv < ri- 1 his annual addre-s, reviewing the j rog r< sof ibe order. He assert- i that the grange oi .auizat i'm is in ann re prosjier >us < ondition nov. than it lias been for many years, and that itarauks are rapidly filling up. ONWARD AnVD UPWARD. LIFE LEAVES. The day. with its sandals dipped in dew, Has passed through the evening’s goldei gates, And a single star in the cloudless blue For the rising morn in silence waits ; While the winds that sigh to the languic hours A lullaby breathe o’er the folded flowers. The lilies nod to the sound of the stream. That winds along with lulling flow, And either awake, or half adream, I pass through the realms of long ago ; While faces peer, with many a smile, From the bowers of Memory’s magical isle. There are joys and sunshine, sorrows an. tears, That check the path of life's April hours, And a longing wish for the coming foam. That Hope ever wreathes with the fairest flowers ; There are friendships guileless—love as bright And pure as the stars in the halls of night. There are ashen memories, bitter pain, And buried hopes, and a broken vow; And an aching heart by the reckless main, And the sea breeze fanning a pallid brow t - And a wanderer on the shell-lined shore, Listening for voices that speak no more. There are passions strong and ambitions wild. And the fierce desire to sta id in the van Of the battle of life; and the heart of the child Is crushed in the breast of the struggling man; But short are the regrets and few are the tears That fa 1 at the tomb of the banished yean There is a quiet and peace, and domestic lovf, And joys arising from faith and truth, And a truth unquestioning, far above The passionate dreamings of ardent youth; And kisses of children on lijis and cheek, Aud the parent’s bliss, which no tongue c| > sj eak. There are loved ones lost: There are little graves In the distant dell, 'neath protecting trees* Where the streamlet winds and the violet waves. And the grasses sway to the sighing breere: And we mourn for ths prssars of liidcr lips. And the light of eyes darkened in der til’s eclipse. And thus, as the glow of the daylight dies, And the night’s first look to the earth is i cast, I I K az e, ’neath those beautiful summer skies,> At the pictures that hang in the hall of the past: Oh, Sorrow and Joy, chant a midnight lay When to memory’s wild wood we wandc r away: RECLAIMED. How slowly he walked! Poor ch i man! Joe Pollard, ex-president of tn,, was poplin. gray, his hat greasy and quaint-nat terned. Only three years ago, and no more stately, vigorous, hale gentleman walked the streets than Joseph Pollard, Esq.; now he was “old Joe,” and sometimes “poor old Joe.” When he failed, he was living in great splendor. People to this day point out the Pollard mansion, and tell you of its fanner greatness. Happily, there was no dishonor attached to his name. He had given up all; home, horses, carriages, everything that could be dispensed with. His only daughter her name was Jo sephine. hut all her friends called her Jeddy gave a birthnight party only a week before the trouble came,* on her eighteenth birthnight. Never a happic. or lovelier girl than she. Universally ad mired and respected, bright as a sun beam, witty, merry, generous. In all that throng of beauty, amid the flowers ami the feasting, that man would have been bold indeed who could have pres aged coining ill fortune. Only one week later, and the dreadful news came. Joseph Pollard was bank rupt. The cashier had been dishonest, several large firms had gone down, and the run on the bank had completed the ruin. Die father found a place as an assistant bookkeeper, but he had formed the habit of drinking at his own table. Little by little lie sank at last into what seemed an utterly hopeless state, lost his business, his pride, and almost his wits. “My dear," wrote Aunt Prue, when lhe heard of this misfortune, “put your father away. 'I here are plenty of places; and come and live with me. Enough for one is enough for two.” “Aunt Prue,” wrote Jeddy, indig nantly, “I am ashamed of you* What! counsel me to put my own dear father in the poor-house, for what other place is open to him? No. I will share his mis fortunes if I have to work my fingers to the bone.” ' Jeddy, Pm useless. I’m broken down and good for nothing,” whined poor Joe,- day alter day, as Jeddy sat and stitched her life into the work she had under taken. “Father, you are only fifty-eight years old.” was the answer. “Many a man has begun life anew at your age.” “Ah! if I only could!” he would make reply, and drink again to drown his misery. Jeddy had carried much of her fine wardrobe with her into the poverty of her surroundings. Of course, she made over and toned down the material, but “the look of the lady,” as one of the coarser neighbors said, was upon her “and couldn't be mistook.” Everybody pitied her when old Joe came reeling home; but few knew how patiently she put up with his infirmity, how she soothed and coaxed him, w’ith what tenderness she anticipated his wants, and even when it would seem that he was scarcely entitled to her re spect, honored him. To her, under all his wretched dis guises. he was still father. But her constant duties wore heavily upon her. She grew pale and thin, then feverish and hectic ; but still she workedfon. Three times a handsome carriage and pair were seen before the door of her plain little home. The first time a rich aunt came to re monstrate with her and offer her a home. She found her preparing the poor meal over the tiny’ cook-stove. “Jeddy, you are the best girl in the world, but you must go back with me, if only for awhile, and leave that man to take care of himself.” This was after a most affectionate greeting, for Jeddy was her favorite niece. “I couldn’t leave father,” was the re sponse. “But I can’t see you killing yourself by Inches. What does he care? One pcr soji is as good as another to one who has Jost.xl his finer sensibilities, as he has.” |. “Oh, no; at times father is his old self p—even —even at the worst,” she faltered, I “he don't forget that he is a gentleman. Pie never was unkind to me.” i “Fiddlesticks? Your ideas of duty lare exaggerated. Come, now—don’t Idasappoint me—take a little rest. I have Icome all the way from L on purpose |tO carry you back, and the last words your cousin Kitty said, as I left her, were: “Mother, don’t fail to bring .Teddy back, I want to see her.” Tears came to .Teddy's brown eyes, as »he reiterated: “I cannot leave father.” “And here you are, losing all your leauty—all your advantages, and even y>ur health—l can see it! For your /.ther's sake, you ought to go. It would | make a new creature of you to see old t sights, and old faces, and to live a while like a Christian. Why, child, the walls are damp; how do you live?” ; “It isn’t living, aunt, it’s only stay ing.” said Jeddy, trying bravely to smile; “but that 1 can't help, while father lives. There's nobody in all thi* wide world to care for him but me. y I know I might live in ease and comfort ;if I went with you; ami oh, sometimes j my heart does long so for a little of the ' old-time joy! It would be like looking ] into Paradise—but—l can’t leave father.” t There sounded a heavy sigh. Both j women turned round to see the old, | gaunt man in the doorway, the tears I streaming down his cheeks as he held , forth his trembling hands as if in bene- I diction. “Go, Jeddy, go, angel —don’t stay for me—l'm not worth your care,” he said, pitifully. But Jeddy thought otherwise. Long after the splendid carriage had gone, she sat there holding the gray head against j her shoulder, soothing ami petting him j and lending a willing ear to his promises I of amendment. The second carriage brought a stylish ! young gentleman, with whom her friends had often coupled her name. He came with an offer of marriage, but Jeddy gave him the same soft but determined answer, “I couldn’t leave father,” and I he.-ten, went away, disconsolate, i The third carriage contained one whe i had always been a friend, also a young ; gentleman, who had lately returned from a foreign tour. He asked no questions and expressed no surprise, though the change he saw affected him painfully. But, like a tru< : friend, he resolved to aid both fathei i and daughter. To this purpose he followed the for- I mcr, and quietly tried to hinder him from the abuse of his appetite, and gradually gained his confidence. • Then he told how sadly the change it I his daughter had troubled him. “Change!” exclaimed old Joe, “how is she changed?” I ‘ls it possible you do not see that she is t r death's door?’’ —my child—my ’ange/« mt’.' What have I but her?” “You have God, and He will help yon to redeem yourself. If you do that, youi daughter will live, if you do not, she will die.” 1 hat night old Joe went home full o: doubts and fears. He watched his child sick at heart from the news he heard. “I can make her live—and I will!” h< said, resolutely, to himself. “I am noi an old man yet"—lifting his bowed head "with God's help I will be a new one!’ He went to the curb outside and broke his pocket-flask in a hundred pieces. Th< next day he came home sober ; tke next, he had found a place -a small one, it wat true, but in the old bank where he had once reigned master. Everybody saw the change. Old Joe had new clothes, ht was respectable to outward seeming. Once more he became a man among men. His knowledge of the business, his integ rity, gained him a better position. Day by day he took steps upward—dav by day the color and brightness came intc his daughter’s face anti her step grew light and her tones joyful. It seems like a miracle, but is not, that old Joe rides in his own carriage again He is Mr. Pollard again, cashier of th< bank, and a power among his fellows. Il was just trustingin God and God helping him as he helped himself. But the best of all is, his glorious daughter bysacrific ing herself, by her noble fortitude, byhei patient care, has won a place in his heart ami in the hearts of all who know her, prouder and more enduring than th< throne of a queen.— Denison, ii Youth's Companion. A Baby Adopted by a Bear. The Oxford (Idaho) Enterprise says that an eighteen-month-old baby of James Vaugn, of Gentile Valley, was playing around with its mother, who was engaged close by the dwelling in doing her washing. At last she missed the baby-, and a search for it proved unavail ing. Some of the neighbors discovered immense tracks of a bear, and followed the trail until dark. At daybreak it was taken up and followed into the bear range of the mountains, and about 10 o'clock a. m. they found the baby curled up in a bunch of weeds and grass in the bushes, sound asleep, with its little tat tered and torn dress thrown over its head while close beside the sleeping child was the warm bed of what must have been a very large bear, which had abandoned its captive on the approach of the men in search. With the exception of a slight scratch upon one foot, the child was un injured, though it had been carried several miles into the mountains over rough places and through brush. A. Ward’s Courtship. The following is Artemus Ward’s de scription of why he courted Betsy Jane: “There were many affectin' ties which made me hanker after Betsy Jane. Her father’s farm jined ourn; their cows and ourn squelched their thirst at the same spring; our mares both had stars on the forehead; the measles broke out in both families at nearly the same time; our parents (Betsy Jane’s and mine) slept regularly every Sunday in the same meetin’ house, and the neighbors used to observe: ‘How thick the Wards and the Peasleys air.’ It was a sublime sight in the spring of the year to see our several mothers (Betsy’s and mine) with their gowns pinned up, so that they couldn't sile ’em, effecktionately bilin 1 soap together and aboosin’ their neigh bors. ” We may never be called upon to beat arms, to plunge into flames, or to face a wild bull; but the same courage which would serve us in such emergencies we need as a daily companion, tc guard us from harm and wrong-doing and to in spire us with moral heroism to embrace the good. Virtues thus developed through courage become at length in stinctive, and require it no longer. A SONG OF TIME. How worn a theme fa that jf time , Then why do I begin to rhyme Upon It now I Because to night the air i« filled ’ With voices that will not be stilled— They will not ceaaa And always sing the saint efrain Of Time that ne'er will coine again, Of Time that fliea, Of all that Time sweeps in his flight. The voices sing to me to-night, Time cures all care. That is what I would fain believe, My heart therewith I do deceive, With faith in Time. Oh , voices singing, be you mute, You touch a chord on my heart’s lute But seldom played; Yet filling the air around With a sweet melancholy sound, A song of Time 1 Of time that was, of days so fair When all was young, and love was there— Long days ago I Be still ! be still ! that sad refrain ! I dare ot listen once again To that same song ! Maybe I hold those days to 3 high, And yield them far too oft a sigh, Those long days since ! Yet as they were the fairest yet Of all my days, then why forget That happy time 1 Though if it still should be my fate To live yet happier days, the date Of that sweet time. I’ll bury, then, within the grave Which holds all things forgotten, save The present time. Nor heed a voice which whispers low, “The sweetest song is that you know Of long ago.” So with the voices in the air I mingled mine, and, 10. was there A song of Time —London Society. HUMOR OF THE DAY. An oat is better than a wink to a blind horse. The age at which many marry—The parsonage. A sweet thing in bric-a-brac—Ai Egyptian molasses jug. •‘Why are you so distant?” said i tramp to a beefsteak in the restauran window. The generous give according to theii means, others give according to theii meanness.— Picayune. A n> w style of writing paper is callee “Dude ” We infer that is a kind o fools-ca . — Statesman. If yoq cannot rest for an hour rest foi thirty minutes. Half a loaf is better that ’>one - Philadelphia Call. ■ bv nhvsicians. Cincin m. i is enabled to boast oi • finest cemeteries in the world. Who wrote Shakspeare? queries a con temporary. Probably some fellow whe wanted Williatn’s autograph.— Bostoi Courier. “I have been exploring the waisi places,” remarked Dr. Duday, on return ing from a late visit to his darling.— Derrick. Miss (uncertain age)—“l pride myeeli on my descent; one of my ancestors came over in the Mayflower.” Detimith —“Was it your father or mother?”— The Judge. H-annless. —Sportsman (who ha.« missed again): “1 say, Mumbles, the birds seem to be afraid of me." Keepei —“Well, sir, they didn’t ought to be, foi you never ’urt any on ’em.”— Punch. “Maud” wants to know if it is immod est to speak of night-caps. We certainly cannot see anything immodest about it, but at the same time it is better to avoid slang and frankly say “hot-toddy.”—Phil aMphia Call. Nnw the comely blue-eyed maiden, With her pa(ia’sgreenl>acks laden. To the store proceeds, the winter styles to scan; “I have got the real best reason To look charmingly this season. For I must book a husband if 1 can.” A German writing in one of the Berlin papers of his campaigns, gives the follow ing interesting item: “In this battle we lost the brave Captain Schule. A cannon bad took off his head. His last words were: ‘Bury me on the spot where I fell.” ” The remark of Lord Coleridge to the effect that “John Bright built himself up on Milton,” suggests to the Arkansas Traveller that if Mr. Bright had been an American, and an Arkansas man, he would have “built himself up on Bacon.” ile was a lover of the lugubrious, mel ancholy sort, and as they sat in the par lor he drew up to the piano and thum medover “When you and I were Young.” So rapt was he in his own performance that he didn't observe her flush with in dignation, tear off his engagement ring, and leave the room. “I cannot sii ' the old songs,’’ She raspingly did toot, While at an asthmal organ Her fingers she did shoot. “Thank Heaven!” growled the parent, With manifest ado, “An" pray they’ll tix the new ones Just so you cannot, too.” Yonkers Gazette. An Arkansas editor announces that he is compelled to retire from his paper “on account of being so afflicted with the gout. ’ Tho excuse won't be generally accepted, as everybody knows that an editorial position is an-ti-gout in its workings, tending to a plain diet of crackers and cheese washed down with water. Nobody ever got the gout on such fare.— Peck's Sun. No Boudoir for Her. A young lady in St. Louis sent the fol lowing application for a position as book keeper: “Sir: Having noticed your ad vertisement in yesterday's paper I hasten to reply. lam 22 years of age; have had four year’s experience in bookkeeping, and for two years past have been receiving $75 a month. I should expect an office nicely carpeted, with two or three easy chairs, morning and evening papers, and not to go to work before 8.30 A. m., have an hour and a half at noon and quit work at 5 p. m. My figures are unexcelled, and I never made a mistake in my books yet. Can give all the references you can read. Hoping that I will suit, and in the expectation of being engaged by you, I remain, most respectfully yours.”" We regret to say that the brute of a business man replied: “I can’t afford to fit up a boudoir just yet. Have engaged a young man who is willing to sit on a high stool, resting on a bare floor, ten hours a day at $5O a month. ” $2.00 per Annum, 5 cents per Copy. THE NEW STORE! Cor. South Broad and East Broad Sts. Is worthy of your patronage. You will always find there a well selected stock of .SHOES AND DEY GOODS, AT THE LOWEST PRICES. Ladles' Shoes, Misses’ Shoes, Men’s Shoes, Boys’ Shoes, Infants' Shoes, Fancy Shoes. Opera Slippers, Patent Leather Slippers. Embroidered Slippers, Velvet Siippers ! Ihe celebrated RAILROAD SH< )E we are selling in large quantities. They are good TIN DRY GOODS, You will save money and time by buying at THE NEW STORE. This is a fact, and don’t I you forget it. We have just received a nice and well selected stock of Fall and Winter [ Goods. ( ome and see us. No troub.e to show goods. Ue can show you a nice line of I Shawls, Spreads, Wool Shirts; n 1 Drawers, Wool Socks. DRESS GOODS in all the new I colors. Dark Prints Hose, Socks, Handkerchiefs, White an 1 Fancy Shirts, Jean Pants, ' Cottonade Pants, Moleskin Pants, HATS and CAI’S, and a large stock of Domestics. J. HA KT. WANTED 10,000 HOUSEKEEPERS TO SAVE MONEY BY BUYING THEIR GROCERIES, PROVISIONS, CANNED GOODS I ii it h, i’roservos. Etc., AT HEADQUARTERS 21 BARNARD ST., Also a full stock of wine ; liquors & cordials lIEXRY MILLER. JONES’SHOE STORE ATTBITTIOIT. Mens', Boys', Youths', Ladies'. Misses' and Children's Shoes. For Fall and Winter at greatly reduced prices No trouble to nhow good*. The latent styles and best qualities fiotn ths loading manufacturers in New Verb, 80-ton. Rochester, delphiaand Newark, cor itai.tly on hand. Hand Sewed Shoes a specialty at JONES POPULAR SHOE STORE 149 CONGRESS BTBEET. Electric Lamp in front of store lighted every Saturday night. RYAN’S PHOTOGRAPHS AND FERROTYPES, 13OA CDong’vessss SStireet, TT T » n TZs PERUVIAN CURt. The Great Destroyer ur ohills and Fever. A never-fail ng Specific tor Chills and Fe e -. Ague, Dumb Ague, Persistent Intermittent and Remittent l evers, General Debility, An emia. Nigh- Sweats, and all ether Diseases cause! by Miasma or Malaria. In presenting “ KIEFFER S FERI VIAN CURE ” to the public, I fee’ that I supply a need h ng felt, Cm b ning. as it docs, two most :m •< rtant essentials for its success :—un equak d anti-period c and tciiie properties: and i s cheapness that juts it in the reach of all. Ido not claim for ii th it it is an antidote ’■ for all the ills that flesh is I eir to.” but confidently assert that it will completely and effectually eradicate from the system the rat.ee of Chi b and Fever. Ague, and all that train of diseases caused by malarial and mi a-malic poison, It a ng all the vital functions natural, healthful and vigorous. This prep aration, being purely vegetable and free from all poisonous minerals, is perfectly harm le b. and can be ta' eint a l times without any ill efects. We ) articulariy caution those eufe ng, against tl e worthless preparations- advertised under h gh-sounding Greek and Latin r amts, as 25-cent cures for diseases resulting frmn miasma, and not to have foisted upon them so calk d antit Oles of unprincip'ed nostrum dealers. Ask for “Kieifek’s Pebuvian Cube.” and take no other. Price, 25 cents a bottle. For sale by all druggists and country dealers. Prepared by .I. Druggist, Cor. West Broad and Stewart Sts., SAVANNAH, GA. CICARS! CIGARS! CIGARS! I have a nice stock of Cigars that I wi':i | sell as low as any house in the trade. Give ' them a trial. FRUITS AND VEGETABLES. 1 have in stock and am receiving by every i steamer from New York Apples, Potatoes, Onions, Cabbages. Beets, Turnips, etc. PEjARS. All varieties of Pears. FANCY GROCERIES. A full supply of Fancy Groceries, etc. PEANUTS! COCOANUTS! NUTS! J. B. REEDY, j GROCER AND IMPORTER OF FRUIT, Bay and Streets. nn m pmG - Hhuj Self-lnking from $5 upward. Type*, Gate, Oases, etc. Send two 3c. stamps for Address B. O. WOODS A CO., Boston, Mass. FRANKLIN F. JONES, STALL No. W! MARKET. Choice Beef and Mutton Fresh Daily. THE “BOSS” BARBER. When you wish an easy shavp, As good as barber ever gave. Just call on in*' at my saloon, At morn, evp, or at noon. I cut and dress the hair with grace, To suit the contour of the face. My room is neat an I towels clean, Scissors sharp and razors keen : And everything I think you’ll find To suit the face ami please the min I; And all my art and skill can do, If you just call I’ll do for you. DERBY Me NEIL, the live and popular barber, may Im* found at his new stand, cor. Tatnall and Wayne Sts Don’t fail to give him a call. A first-claas shave torlo cents. Smith’s Baggage Express and Street Wagon Headquarters. Parties having baggage, furniture, or anv kind of packages and bundles to bo hauled or moved, will save time, money and trouble by engagin ' Smith’s Baggage Express or street wagons. special and careful attention will be wiven to all onlrm left at the Echo office, No. 5 Jefferson street, or James Smith, proprietor, cor. East Br >ad ami Puffy streets . The patronage of the public is earnestly solicited. ANDREW HANLEY HAS REMOVED TO HIS New Store, Corner Whitaker, President and York Sts., where he has more room and better facilities for his large stock of OILS, Railroad & Steamboat Supplies, HASHES, DOORS, BLINDS, Etc., Etc- THE ECHO is a live paper, published, printed, owned and managed Uy Colored Men, in the intere: 1 of the people. The news of the week boiled down for hasty readers. Read by all classes, in city and coun try. Largest circulation of any colored paper published in the South. The leading journal of its class in the State. Office, Southwest corner Bay Lane and Jeffbrson Street. MEATS! MEATS! .MEATS’ Friends and Patrons, look at the foliowin ; PRICES! This is your chance for NOW Pi STORE, 0/1 Boxes Dry Salt Side Aft-ata, I x£V 7^, ■ >"C 4 I Tierces Smoked Shoulder, OV 5, Gand 7.. 1 ; *7 Tierces Smoked Hams. , »* 5, 6 and 7c. I .) Tierces Smoked Bess’, I 3 and ~c. k)f iAA Pounds Mix*., at -VW per pound. , THE AB( )VE WITH A kUJifiE ASSORT ED stoos or GROCERIES I —AND— LIQUORS Are hereby presented and will be dispose! of on their merits. CALL AT THE CAPTAIN’S OFFICE AND BE COMFORTED. M. J. DOYLE, MAKKF.T SQUARE. MRS. R. M. BENNETT, Unman Hair and Hair Jewelry, Hair Cutting and Shampooing a specialty. Curls and Switches. Combings made up and roote 1. Ladies attended to at their resi dences. Kid Gloves and Slippers cleaned. Cor. Whitaker & Hull Sts., Savannah. Ga. The Resort. est Broad Street, opp. Minis. C. H. H AYWOOD, Proprietor Fancy Groceries, Cigars, T< ba?co, Fruits, Vegetables and Confectioneries always on hand. Headquartets in Curry ovn lor ICE. K. J.MILLFR, Wheelwright. Blacksmith. Horseshoeing A-ND GENERA!. JOBBING. BUGGIES AND WAGONS Bl ILT AND REPAIRED. All work executed with promptness. ST.,