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CHEATERS OF WOMEN.
HOW THEY ARE SERVED BY THEIR
PROTECTIVE UNIONS.
Some of the Cases Undertaken by the
Union in this City—How Male Swin
dlers are Brought to Terms—An Em
ployer’s Letters.
From the New York Sun.
A pretty, dark-eyed girl, with a delicate
face which was not less attractive because of
some traces of sorrow upon it, entered the
office of the Working Women's Protective
Union, at 19 Clinton place, one day re
cently.
“Iwant to get my money,” she said to the
Superintendent. “Madam (and she
gave the name of a fashionable Fifth av
enue dressmaker) owes me SBB for work.”
“Oh, yes,” said the Superintendent.
“We know that dressmaker. You are
not the first one to complain against her.”
Then the dark-eyed girl told her story.
Her father was an Italian artist in Eng
land. She came to this country with her
brother, and he desert*-! her. She used her
needle to support herself in various places,
and finally answered the Fifth avenue
dressmaker’s advertisement for a finisher at
$lO a week. The dressmaker paid her a lit
tle at a time, but never ail she owed. She
wanted the S3B due her U> pay her passage
back to England, where her father was.
The dressmaker told her that she had
spoiled her work, which was not true, be
cause she had seen the work accepted by the
customers.
The Superintendent, believing the girl’s
story, opened her batteries on the fashiona
ble dressmaker by sending her the follow
ing:
“Madam : A complaint against
you has been left at this office by ,
who alleges that you owe her S3B which she
is unable to collect. If there is any just
cause why she should not receive this money,
you will please make it personally known to
us within three days, or elso we shall be
obliged to assume that vour silence is an ad
mission of the debt, and to place the matter
before the court for collection. Yours re
spectfully,”
“M. W. Ferrer, Superintendent.”
“We will have that money for you to
morrow, I think,” said the Superintend
ent to the girl, and turning to the repor
ter she said: “That madam has refused
several times to pay similar claims, but has
always done so when they were presented
by the union. We have collected about
SSOO from her in small sums for poor girls.
Very little difficulty is experienced in col
lecting these claims after employers thor
oughly comprehend that they have to deal
with a powerful organization, and not with
a defenseless working woman.”
“Against what class of employers do you
receive most complaints?”
“Against dressmakers, I think. Why, I
know of one doing business now who has
defrauded thirty girls at least, for we have
that many judgments against her! She has
a large house elegantly furnished with furni
ture obtained on the installment plan, and
that we can’t touch until the installments
are paid. She is a very shrewd woman,
and has fixed all her property so we cannot
get at it.”
The female employers, explained the Su
perintendent, always cause the union the
most trouble. There is a section of the
Code whereby a man against whom a
judgment has been obtained for unpaid
wages to a female employe, and who has no
property in sight to attach, can be arrested
and imprisoned for fifteen days. Necktie
makers, glove makers, and little manufac
turers are continually defrauding their
girls, but the wise girls who take their
claims to the union generally get their
money.
One class of these swindlers of women,
after so many operations in one city as to
make a continued residenco warm for
them, remove to another city and begin the
same business. But there are other unions
in other cities. Recently a man, a well
known milliner and dressmaker in Phila
delphia, swindled lots of his girls, and the
Philadelphia Women’s Protective Union
took proceedings against him. He picked
up his property and came to this city. The
f iris’ claims were turned over to the union
ere, and a judgment was obtained against
him. But the swindler, though very
shrewd, didn’t know of the clause in the
Code, and so paid no attention to the judg
ment. When he was told about the clause
by an officer of the law, he whistled, and
then paid the full amount with costs.
No claim is too small for the union to take
up. Suit for 2oc. has been brought several
times, and after going through the usual
process the money has been collected.
The excuses invented by these sharks of
the workshop are very numerous, and many
of them amusing. A common one is thift
the work which a girl has performed is un
satisfactory, though the work is taken just
the same. This excuse didn’t pass the
other day with a nimble-fingered girl,
skillful at fancy work. She had unuer
taken the embroidering of daisies on felt,
at the magnificent pav of one and a quar
ter cents each. She had finished 265 ot the
daisies, when she asked her employer, a
woman, who kept a fancy work store, for
pay for them. The employer had a bad
habit of finding fault with girls’ work, and
then deducting a certain amount from their
wages.
“Oh, those daisies are wretchedly
worked,” said the woman. “I can’t nav
you full price for these. A dollar is all they
are worth."
“Ail right,” said the girl, and she quietly
rolled up her daisies and went to the
Women’s Protective Union for advice.
“Go I>ack and tell the madam that if she
doesn't want to pay what she agreed for the
daisies you will keep them. They are
worth all you ask,” was the advice she
got.
She went back and made the proposition
to the madam, who called her an impudent
thing, just because she would not be quietly
roblicd. The daisies were worth much more
than a cent and a quarter apiece, and the
Wily madam knew it. She paid what she
had agreed to pay for them.
But while bad Workmanship is a common
excuse, there is a variety of others urged by
unscrupulous employers. A bright-faced
young woman came to the office of the
Women’s Protective Union recently and
said that she had been employed ns
sales woman by a dry goods merchant at $2
a week. At the end of the week he dis
missed her, and wouldn’t give her any
money.
“Why?” asked the Superintendent.
“Couldn’t you do the work!”
“Yes. They said my work was all
right, but—”
"You were certainly not untidy or slov
enly in appearance?”
“No. They said nothing about that,
but—” and she hesitated again.
“Were you impudent, or careless, or dis
honest ?”
“No. They said I did not smile at the
customers.”
When the representative of the Protective
Union tailed on the dry goods man the late
ter urged the same excuse, as if it was a se
rious ofieusc not to smile. Doubtless the
girl carried a heavy heart. To smile on #2
n week is not easy for most people. The
employer, however, paid that #2, and the
union got the poor girl another and a bet
ter place, where smiles were not con
sidered necessary, and it cost her nothing.
It costs no girl unything to enlist the ser
vice* of the union. That Tu one of the prin
ciples on which it was founder). It is a so
ciety that does a great deal of good with a
Jery little money, not to protect idling,
frivolous women, but women who work.
Aersording to the Hecretory’s report, the
union has anwer<vi since Its isttabllshmeut,
in the time of the civil war and up # to Jan
uary, PW7, #10,415 application*, furnished
41,107 employments, prosecuflfi 10,128 com
plaints iif fraud, recovered and paid to
"orkmg women 57, in Mini* averag
ing 111 4U
Girls ot all sortsof vocation* go to the of
'hit to lodge tWr complaints. Typo
writers and stenographers go often to com
plain that the lawyers for whom they have
been working won’t pay them. But the
lawyers do pay after they receive that little
opening letter, which is simply an announce
ment that they will be dragged into court
and imprisoned if they'don’t pay. Actresses
who can’t get their pay from managers of
traveling companies, washwomen who
can’t get at the people they have washed for
to collect their dues, waiters in restaurants
who get on an average of $3 50 a week
when they get it at ml, fan and necktie
makers who more often than others work
for nothing, and sewing girls in many dif
ferent branches of trade are constant pat
rons and beneficiaries of the Women’s
Protective Union.
It often takes some time to teach a dis
honest employer that a poor girl ran collect
what he owes her, if he sets out to prevent.
Men are generally convinced, when they
see the prospect of fifteen days in jail star
ing them in the face. But the female em
ployers with no such sword hanging over
their heads are more inclined to fight.
The young man who serves the papers on
delinquent employers has many thrilling ex
periences. He is "a familiar figure to some
of them. A few days ago he went to the
house of a dressmaker to serve a paper, and
the latter, seeing him from afar, prepared
to meet him. When he knocked at the door
a pail of slops was showered on him from
an upper window, but he served the paper.
The Nun received this tetter recently:
“I have been notified by the Women’s
Protective Society of 19 Clinton place to
Ca certain woman a certain amount due
for employment. Now, if I should re
fuse to obey the summons from the court to
show cause why I should not pay it what
would be the result of default ? Could I be
imprisoned under the law of 1886, or any
other law? This woman has taken advan
tage of the above society and myself, as she
is not worthy of the amount claimed.
“M. D.”
If M. D. is a man, and he lets the case go
by default, he may meet an officer some
day who will invite him to board in Ludlow
street awhile. If M. I), will go to court and
convince the Judge that the woman does
not deserve the money, then he won’t have
to pay; otherwise he will. If a poor girl
works for a man honestly, the best thing he
caa do is to pay them.
MALIGNANT TUMORS.
The Horrible Disease that Killed a Res
ident of North St. Louis.
From the St. Louis Globe-Democrat.
Henry Ahley, a well-known saloon-keeper
of the northern part of the city,died in great
pain yesterday afternoon from the effects
of malignant carbuncle, a disease which,
wherever it has appeared, has puzzled the
doctors and baffled all the medical skill
which has attempted to stop its always fatal
progress. Ahley’s saloon was on the corner
of Broadway and Angelrodt street. He was
a man 40 years old. stout and healthy,
and had been a moderate drinker for yeai-s.
Seven weeks ago a swelling appeared on the
back of his neck, red, and very painful to
the touch. He supposed it was an
ordinary boil, and paid it little at
tention at first. The lump grew larger, and
the area affected by the soreness in
creased. He began to complain of shooting
pains radiating from the tip of the swelling,
and his whole neck began to stiffen and ache.
He then sent for a physician, who pro
nounced the boil a carbuncle and treated it.
Ahley’s condition, however, was uot im
proved by the medical attention, the appli
cations to his neck or the internal medicines.
The carbuncle increased in size rapidly, and
every day more of the neck became involved
in its painful growth. He could not sleep
at all, and all the functions of his body be
came disordered. The pains darting from
the centre of the swelling ran up into his
head and down into his back and chest, and
he had to be put into a condition of
complete insensibility before he could
obtain relief from them. Other phy
sicians w-ere summoned in consultation
with the first, and the disease
was pronounced malignant carbuncle. It
had obtained a deadly liold upon the system
of the saloon-keeper by this time, and his
progress toward Heath was sure. Swellings
began to appear upon his back and chest,
small lumps the size of a pea at first, ex
quisitely painful, each one the centre of a
circle of shooting pain. When lanced each
of these carbuncles showed a small, hard
core. They grew larger and their number
increased every day. The patient was con
stantly delirious and in awful pain. The
carbuncles on the back and chest grew to
the number of eighty, and then the ex
hausted vitality of the patient succumbed
to the disease, and he died. His body, when
death had ended his sufferings, was emacia
ted and his features sunken so that the ac
quaintances who came to the house to offer
the family their sympathy were unable to
recognize it.
Malignant carbuncle is a blood disease so
rare that nine of ten physicians have never
seen it. and it is rarely discovered and
treated intelligently until it has planted its
roots in the system of the patient. After
that treatment has always been hopeless,
and physicians have found that all they
could do was to alleviate the suffering of
the moribund person. Medical reports have
no mention of the disease attacking a
woman, and the men whose cases have been
noted are those of a full habit, nlegnmtic
disposition and the blonde type. The most
celebrated case which has been discussed by
the medical authorities in this country was
that of a Now York alderman, who died
last year. His symptoms from the begin
ning were precisely those of Ahtey’s, but
with him the disease ran its course in a
shorter time, and he died in less than a
month.
A WOMAN’S CONFIDENCE GAME.
Ingenious Device of a Parisian Wom
an to Rob Afflicted Persons.
From the London Telegraph.
A woman named Roy has just been con
demned to three months’ imprisonment for
larceny, committed under peculiar circum
stances. Hhe used to walk about the street s
of Paris in the daytime, and when she no
ticed a crowd around a chemist’s shop—an
inevitable sign that an accident had oc
curred—she went into the establishment to
see the victim. If the injured (icrson were
unconscious, the good Samaritan, Mme.
Roy, immediately claimed him or her as
her own, unless, of course, the object of the
chemist’s care had an aprearance of abject
poverty.
In this way she succeeded in getting the
victim put into a cab. He was her cousin,
her brother-in-law, or the husband of a dear
friend, and everybody lielieved her anil
praised her for her tender solicitude or deep
disinterestedness.
She got into the vehicle with her charge,
and during the drive to a fictitious address
she contrived to ease the insensible or half
dozed victim of watch, chain and money.
“Madame” then got out, told the cabman to
drive on to the address given, adding that
she would rejoin him after she had called
for a friend who was ulso interested in know
ing about the accident.
This able female was found out while she
was taking a person in an epileptic fit to a
false address. The patient became sudden
ly conscious while the charming Samaritan
was fumbling in his pockets, and the situa
tion feebly dawned uponJiitn. By exercis
ing a little duplicity lie was able to signal to
the cabman to stop, and the doods and do
ings of Madame Roy were later on revealed
to all men.
Consumption, Wasting Diseases,
And general debility. Doctors disagree as to
the relative value of Cod Liver Oil and Hy
pophovphites; tho one supplying strength
and flesh, the other giving nerve power, and
acting as a tonic to the digestive and entire
intern. But in Hcott’h Emclsion of Cod
Liver Oil with Hypophosphites the two are
combined, and the effect is wonderful.
Thousand* who have derived no jmrinanciit
i benefit from other preparations have
I Imm run* I by this. Scott's Kmul
slou is uerfentiy palatable and is easily di
. jsatirJL by thoyi who uuiuot tolerate ulahi
I Cuu Liver Od.
THE MORNING NEWS: WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER H, 1887.
A NIGGADLY PEER.
Lord Warwick Charging a Shilling for
a View of His Castle.
From the New York World.
Warwick Castle, which is one of the
great feudal castles of England, affords a
very handsome revenue to its present occu
pant, the Earl of Warwick, through shilling
admissions being charged to view all ex
cept the private living apartments. Up to
within a few years ago there was no admis
sion fee. Then the butler and the house
keeper were jx>rmitted to show people
through at certain hours of the day, and
they were permitted to pocket the fees paid
them. The results was that these two peo
ple accumulated a fortune during their
twenty years' service, and have now set up
as magnates of county kitchen circles. To
quote the language of one of their rural ad
mirers, they have “an ’ouse of their h’own
nearly as big as the cahrsle, and more
’orses and carriages as the h'Earl ’itnself.”
The present Earl now takes this revenue to
himself.
At the porter’s lodge you are told that
tickets can be bought at the little humble
house in the feudal row, under the lofty
battlements of this most aristocratic abode
of one of the greatest peers of the realm.
You visit this house and there your money
is taken through a little wicket, and in ex
change you are given a ticket which en
titles you to be shown through the castle.
Commissionaires are on duty there, and
they display the treasures and the beauties
of the place with the same business-like
method and manner of people in charge of
any of the show places in London. The
money deposited by the visitor, finds it way
to the bank to the Earl’s credit, affording
him at the present time a clear net income
of fully $15,000 a year.
Sound Travels 2,000 Miles.
{from the Youth's Companion.
Many readers will call, to mind the red
sunsets of two or three years ago, and that
these were accounted for by many persons
upon the supposition that the upper air was
filled with fine dust from the eruption of
Krakatau, in Java. This eruption occurred
in the month of August, 1883. Whether it
was the cause of the red glow in our sky or
not we may never be able to show positively.
But the distance to which the sound of that
explosion has been heard was found to have
been remarkable.
That same year the English yacht Mar
chesa was cruising in the Malay archipelago
as far east as New Guinea. Mr. Guillentard,
who wrote the journal of that cruise, re
lates an interview with a Dutch missionary
in this latter island, from which it appears
that the sound was heard at that great
distance.
“Mr. Van Hasselt was eager to learn
what news we could give the civilized
world. We had little to tell, with
the exception of the eruption at Krakatau.
Of the appalling amount of destruction it
had caused we were unaware, but we gave
him the few particulars which had reached
Gorontalo.
“He at once told us, greatly to our
astonishment, that the noise of tno explo
sions had been audible at Dorei, and, going
into the next room, brought his diary, iu
which, under the date of Aug. 27, an entry
had been made to the effect that sounds as
of distant cannonading, which they had
imagined to proceed from a volcanic erup
tion, had been heard that day.
“The natives, we were told, had also
noticed it on the previous day—when, iu
fact, the outburst was at its height.
“By the missionaries the volcano at
Ternate or in Some part of the Moluccas
was supposed to be in action. It enables
one partially to realize the terrific nature of
the eruption when the map shows Dorei to
be distant 1,710 miles from Karakatau.”
PAIN
fholer&Morbus
■Jrajnps
I o * l e
gjiarit\oe^
Complaints
jlYSentery
cWll Cured by-&
teaspoon ful of
PerryDavisPm filler
in a little fit ilk; or
Suprar and Water
Au. Druggists seu.lt.
FURNISHING GOODS.
Go to Lite New Store
AND SEE HOW CHEAP HE SELLS
Summer Hats.
11AVE your measure taken
At the same time, and
r \ RY a.set of his excellent
Shirts made to order..
WHILE THERE INSPECT HIS LINK OK
UnLAUNDRIED SHIRTS,
Monarch dress shirts,
Boston garters in silk and cotton.
Rubber garments ok all kinds.
Kmbroidered night shirts.
I JINEN HANDKERCHIEF'S AT ALL PRICES.
IvIHLE THREAD UNDERWEAR
A KINK ASSORTMENT OF SCARFS.
Shawl strains and hand satchels,
Anew fine of HAMMOCKS, with PILLOWS
•rid SPREADERS, pint in; olio a kit of NEW
BATHING SUITS, m
si Kar’ k ,
2U BULL STREET.
1K Y GOODS.
ECKS TEWS!
A BOLD STATEMENT.
Every one of the prices given below wero 10, 15 and iu some instances 25 per
cent, lower than the same goods can be bought in any other house.
DRESS GOODS.
54-inch All Wool LADIES' CLOTH, in the new
shades, 65c.
TRICOTS.
54 All Wool, new color, TKICOT CLOTHS,
FLANNELS.
White, Red and Blue All Wool FLANNELS,
27 inches wide, 36c.: worth 50c.
CANTON FLANNEL.
A few hales of Bleached aud Unbleached at
10c.; worth 12)d)c. a yard.
SHEETINGS.
10 4 Unbleached, 19c.; 10-4 Bleached, 19c.;
regular 25c. goods.
DOYLIES.
500 dozen Checked White Damask, Colored
Border and Turkey Red at sc. each.
TICKS.
A Mattress Tick, 614 c.; a Feather Tick, 12tee.
Tlie Biggest Bargain o±
560 dozen .GENTS’ PURE LINEN HANDKERCHIEFS, Hemmed and Laundried, ready for
use, at 16 2-3 c.
ECKSTE I N’S.
SWIFT’S SPECIFIC.
Tried la the Crucible.
- ■■WHS .
About twenty years ago I discovered a little sore on my cheek, and the doctor* pew*
Bounced it cancer. I hare tried a number of physician*, out without receiving any perma
nent benefit. Among the number were one or two specialists. The medicine tuey applied
was like fire to the sore, causing intense ;>am. 1 saw a statement in tbc papers telling wbat
S. S. S had done for others similarly afflicted. I procured some at once. Before ( ban nsed
the second bottle the neighbors could notice that my cancer waa healing up. My general
health had been nod for two or three years—l had a hocking cougn ana spit blood contin
ually. I hrd a severe pain tn my breast. After taking six bottles of S. S. S, my cough left
me and I grew stouter than I had been for several years. My cancer has healed over all but j
a little spot about the size of a half dime, and it Is rapidly disappearing. I would adviM ‘
every one with cancer to give S. S. S. a fair trial.
Mas. NANCY J. McCONACOHKY, Ashe Grove, Tippecanoe Cos., Ind.
Feb. 16, 1886. m
Swift’s Specific is entirely vegetable and seems to cure cancers by forcing out the imp*
ritlee from the blood. Treatise on Blood and Skin Diseases mailed free.
THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., Drawer 3, Atlanta, Qa.
IRON WORKS.
KEHOE’S IRON WORKS.
Broughton Street, from Reynolds to Randolph Streets,
- - Georgia.
CASTING OF ALL KINDS AT LOWEST FOSSIBLE PRICES.
- tr.M.i THE RAPIDLY INCREASING DEMAND FOR OUR
SUGAR MILLS AND PANS
m M TTAS induced us to manufacture them on a more extensive scale than
J L ever. To that end no pains or expense has I men spared to maintain
their HIGH STANARD OF EXCELLENCE.
■ These Mills are of the BEST MATERIAL AND WORKMANSHIP, with
heavy WROUGHT IRON SHAFTS (made long to prevent danger to the
S ■■ operator), and rollers of the best charcoal pig iron, all turned up true.
Tney are heavy, strong and durable, run light and even, and are guarau
teed capable of grinding the heaviest fully matured 1 11 mi
All our Mills are fully warranted f..r ..ue v. ar w
Our Pans being cast with the holt.uiis down,
wfinflHßll possess smoothness durability nml unitumiitv of
gTJpgHHHyp thickness EAR SUPERIOR TO THOSE MADE IN
Having unsurpassed facilities,
WE GUARANTEE OUR PRICES TO BE AS LOW AS ANY OFFERED.
A Large Stock Always on Hand for Prompt Delivery.
Wm. Kelioe Sz Cos.
N. B —The name “ KEHOE'S IRON WORKS,’ is cast on all our Mills and Pans.
LITHOGRAPHY.
THE LARGEST LITHOGRAPHIC ESTABLISHMENT IN THE SOUTH.
THE
Morning News Steam Printing House
SAVANNAH, GEORGIA.
THIS WELL KNOWN ESTABLISHMENT HAS A
Lithographing and Engraving Department
which is complete within itself, and the largest concern of
the kind in the South. It is thoroughly equipped, having
five presses, and all the latest mechanical appliances in
the art, the best of artists and the most skillful lithog
raphers, all under the management of an experienced
superintendent.
It also has the advantage of being a part of a well
equipped printing and binding house, provided with every
thing necessary to handle orders promptly, carefully and
economically.
Corporations, manufacturers, banks and bankers, mer
chants and other business men who are about placing
orders, are solicited to give this house an opportunity to
figure on their work, when orders are of sufficient mag
nitude to warrant it, a special agent will be sent to make
estimates.
J. H. ESTILL.
SASH, DOCKS, BLINDS, ETC.
Vale Royal ManutacturingCo.
SAVANNAH,
MANUFACTURERS OF AND DEALERS IN
Sasi, Ill's, Ills, iankls, I’w Ends,
Ajkl Interior Ktniob of all kind*, Moulding*, MaJufttnr*, ,\>wH Pott*. limit/**, IYicw 1 .ixt*. MouM
iuu IkxtkM, ami Htiy Information In our itn furni*h‘ , | on application. Cypr”**, Yellow l*lno, Oak.
Ami an*l Walnut MrMUh.lt on Land and in any quantity, ruroinhod promptly
VALE ROYAL MANI/EaCTUKIRU COMPANY. Suvaunali. Gu
DRESS GOODS,
27-ineh Wool Filling, Plain, Colored and
Fancy styles, 15c.
SILKS.
A Big Drive in BLACK GROS GRAIN at $1
and $1 25.
BLANKETS.
Rich Fancy Colored and 10-4 WHITE WOOL
BLANKETS at $4 75; worth $7.
TABLE LINEN.
25 pieces Blenched and Unbleached Damask,
new patterns, 45a.; worth tlse.
TOWELS.
2,000 Pure Linen, largo size, TOWELS at 15c.;
worth 25c.
SPREADS.
114 WHITE SPREADS, very handsome pat
terns, heavy quality, at 75c.
LACE CURTAINS.
Closing out 125 pieces from $1 a window up.
■EDUCATION AL.
For Full Information of the Above Schools
('ALT. ON OH ADDRESS
HOENSTKIN 4te MAC CAW,
104 Bay Street, Savannah, Ga.
Ti OGLETHORPE SE\IINAIIY‘
FOR
YOUNG LADIES AND CHILDREN.
TTI7ILL be opened on TUESDAY, Oct. 11. at
ff l!i8 Drayton street, facing park exten
sion. Mrs. K \\\ Barnwell will assume charge
of the Boarding IV|>artim*nt. It beingexpedient
to have a resident French mid German teacher,
the services of Milo Marie Engelhard, a teacher
of large experience, have been secured. For nil
desired information address
MRS. L. (J. YOUNG, Principal.
Corner of Barnard and Bolton streets, Bavan
nah, Ga.
Univereity of Georgia.
P. H. MELL, D. 1)., LL. D., Chancellor.
f THIE 87th session of the Departments at Ath-
I ens will begin Wednesday, October f>, IMB7.
TUITION FREE, except in Law Department.
LAMAR COBB,
Secretary Board of Trustees.
GAINESVILLE, GA.
I^B7-IHHH,
FOR LADIES ONLY
Prof. C. B. Lailatte President.
Prof. Lament Uoruou, A. M., ITesidcirt of
Faculty.
Prof. Edward Tugwell, A. M., Vice
Miss A. IV Whaley, M. H., Lauy Principal.
Miss G. Bramley, A. W., j
Miss E. Montross, A. 8., - Assistants.
Miss M Hooker, A. 8., I
Miss F. Dawson, M. M., Music.
BEGINS WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 7.
Thorough education, healthy location, terms
low, good home, unequalled advantages, teach
ere all graduates. Apply early. Bend for circu
lar.
WESLEYAN
FEMALE COLLEGE,
Macon, Ga.
THE FIFTIETH ANNUAL SESSION BEGINS
OCT. B, 1887.
Location beautiful. Life home like. Eduea
lion thorough. Health, Manners and Morals
carefully guarded.
The best instruction in Literature, Music, Sci
ence and Ail. Twenty experienced officers and
teachers. Low rates. Apply for Catalogue
W. C. BASS, President,
or (v Wsm nil. Secretary
School for Boys—Oglethorpe Barracks.
JOHN A. GROWTHER, Principal.
CHAH. A. L. MASSIE, A. 51., Assistant.
"VTEXT session begins Oct. Bd. Carefnl and
II thorough instruction in all the departments
of a first-class preparatory school. Special
attention to Mathematics and English Natural
Philosophy, with apparatus. Principal refers
h3 f permission to following patrons: Cant. John
Flannery, ('apt. W. G. Raoul, Rev. Thomas
Boone, Dr. Osceola Butler, Messrs George C.
Freeman and W. E. Guerard. Catalogues at
offices of Morning News, Daily Times, at K,still's
News Depot, Butler's, Strong's and Thornton's
dnig stores. For further information address
the PRINCIPAL, Savannah Ga.
EMORY COLLEGE;
OXFORD, G-A.
r pHE INSTITUTION enters upon It* fifty first
1 session October 12, 1887, with enlarged fac
ulty and Increased facilities. For Catalogues
and Information write to
ISAAC B. HOPKINS, President.
Miss Randolph’s School
1214 EUTAW PLACE, BALTIMORE. MD.
TWO or throe vacancies ure still open for the
coming session, which commence* SEPT.
20th. Applications should be mode to the
above address.
Edgeworth Boarding and Day School for Girls
138 West Franklin Street, Baltimore, Md.
AI Its. H. P. LEFEBVRE, Principal. This
II School will reopen on THURSDAY, the
22d of HEPTEMBEK. The course of instruction
embraces all the studies included in a thorough
English education, ami the i'reueb and tiermau
languages are practically taught.
Moreland ' park -
ILITARY ACADEMY.
Near Atlanta, Oa. Clias. M. Neel, Supt.
~NO~TRE DAME OF MARYLAND.
CXOLLEGIATE INSTITUTE for Young Yadles
J and Preparatory School for i.ittie Qirls,
Emilia P. 0., three miles from Baltimore, Md.
Conducted by the Sisters of Notre Dame. Send
for catalogue.
SOUTHERN HOME SCHOOL FOR GIRLS.
913 and 917 N. Charles Street, Baltimore.
Mbs. W M. Cart, i Established 1843. French the
Miss Cary. f language of the School.
MAUI'IN’S UNIVERSITY SCHOOL
PUlioott Oity, IVtd.
SIXTH SESSION o|>ens l.'itli September. For
catalogues address CHAPMAN MAUPIN,
M. A., Principal.
PAINTS ANI) OKA
JOHN G. BUTLER,
-\XriIITE LEADS, COLORS, OII.S, GLASS,
H VARNISH. ETC.; READY MIXED
PAINTS. RAILROAD, STEAMER AND MILL
SUPPLIES, SASHIiS, DOORS. BLINDS AND
BUILDERS' HARDWARE. Sole Agent for
GEORGIA LIME. CALCINED PLASTER, CE
MENT. HAIR and LAND PLASTER.
6 Whitaker Street, Savannah, Georgia.
No. (THUS. MORW, ilfc
House, Sign and Ornamental Painting
T7 1 XECUTED NEATLY and with despatch
I j PalnM, Oita, Varnishes, Iruahaa, Wuidow
Glasses, etc., etc. Estimates furnished on ap
plication.
CORNER CONGRESS AND DRAYTON BTB.,
Rear of Christ t.bureb.
” P. J. FALLON,
BUILDER AND CONTRACTOR,
01 DRAYTON STREET, SAVANNAH.
Ij-BTIMATKH promptly fuiiiitduel for buUding
-i of *mj uLssa
LOTTERY.
LS.L.
CAPITAL PRIZE, $150,000.
“B> do hereby certify that we supervise the
arrangements for till the Monthly and Semtr
Annual Drawings of the Louisiana State I/ot*
teru Company, and in per non manage and con
trol the Drawings themselves, and that the same
are conducted with honesty, fairness, an/I in
good faith toward ait parties, and we authorize
the Company to use this certificate, with f'U>
similes of our signatures attached, in its culver •
tisenunts. ’ * #
CnmmiNslonere.
U'r the t mderstoned Hank, and. Hanker, will
pay all Pi-ires drairn in the fyOHiniana State f-nt
teriei which way be presented at onr counter,.
J. H OGLESBY, Pres. Louisiana Nat’l Bank.
PIERRE LANAUX, Pres. State Nat’l Bank.
A. BALDWIN. Pres. New Orleans Nat’l Bank.
CARL KOHN, Pres. Union National Bank.
I ’ NPRECEDENTED ATTRACTION'
(j Over Half a Million Distributed.
LOUISIANA STATE LOTTERY COMPANY.
Incorporan I in 18'N for 2*> v*a.rs by the Legis
lature for F'iduontional and Charitable purposes
wu h a capita! <f ! ,(NX>,OOO to which a resarva
fund of over k.w *M) has since ln*en added.
By Hti overwhelming |opular vote its fran
chise was mode a part of tho present State con
stitution, adopted December 2d, A. I>. 1879.
The only ledlery ever voted on and indorsed
by the people of any State.
It never .r iles or postpones.
Ip Grand Him;h* Number Drawing* take
place monthly, ami the Seuil-Annual Drnw
in regularly every mix month* (.June and
December). .
A MIM.I Mtin OPIVmTIA’ITV TO WIN
A KOII'fIAE. T 1 NTH GRAND DRAWING.
CLASS K. IN Till' - . M'ARKMY OF MUSIC,
NKW OKI.KAN'S. TUESDAY, October 11,
IW7—lD.flli .Monthly llruttliis.
Capital Prize, $150,000.
t3/~ Notice Tickets are Ten Dollars only.
Halves, $5; Fifths, $2, Tenths, $l.
1,1 HT OR PRISES
1 CAPITA!. PRIZE OF #150,000.. $150,000
1 GRAND PRIZE OK 50,000.... 50,000
1 GRAND PRIZE OF 20,000. . ai.ooO
2 LARGE PRIZES (IF 10,000 30.000
4 LARGE PRIZES OF 5,000 ... 30,000
SO PRIZES OF 1,000. .. 30,000
50 PRIZES OF 500.... 35,000
100 PRIZES OF 300. . .'lO,OOO
300 PRIZES OF 300.... 40,000
500 PRIZES OF 100 . . 50,000
APPROXIMATION PRIZES. -
100 Approximation Prizes of $:|00 $30,000
100 “ " 300.... 30,000
100 “ “ 100... 111.000
1.000 Terminal “ % 50 50.000
3,170 Prizes, amounting to $535,000
Application for rates to club* should be mads
only to the office of the Company in New Or
leans.
For further information writ.e clearly, trivinff
full address. POSTAL NOTES, Express
Money Orders, or New York Exchange in ordi
nary letter Currency by Express (at our expense)
addressed M. A. Otl PlllN.
Sew Orleans, La.
or M, A. DAUPHIN,
WasliiiiKlon, O. V.
Address Registered Letters io
ft'KW OItLKAAS AATIOAAL II \\K.
tVew Orleans, La.
RPMPMRFRTI'ftt the presence of Oen
r\L_ Vll- IVI DLn ©ral Beauregard and
Early, who are in charge of the drawings, is a
guarantee of absolute fairness and integrity,
that the chance* are ail equal, and that no one
can possibly diviiio what number will draw a
Prise.
ItKMKMRKIt that the payment of all Prizes
is UK AB V\TKKO BV K>t It YMIOVAL
llit .VRS of New Orleans, and the Tickets are
signed by the President of an Institution whose
charter*#! rights arc recognized in the highest
Courts; -therefore, beware of any imitations or
anonymous schemes.
DOORS* SASH, BTC.
ANDREW HANLEY,
• DEALER IN
Doors. Sashes, Blinds,
Mouldings, Etc.
All of the above are Best Kiln-Dried White Pine*
ALSO DEALER Ilf
Builders’ Hardware, Slate, Iron and
Wooden Mantels, Grates, Stair
work, Terracotta, Sewer
Pipe, Etc., fctfl.
Paints, Oils, Railroad, Steamboat and
Mill Supplies, Glass, Putty, Etc.
Lime, Plaster, Cement and Hair.
Plain and Decorative Wall Paper, Frefjcoeing,
House and Sign Painting given personal atten
tion and finished in the best manner. j
ANDREW HANLEY.
IKON PIPE.
RUSTLESS IRON PIPE.
EQUAL TO GALVANIZED PIPE, AT
MUCH LESS PRICE.
J. D. WEED & CO.
11 V" 11 " LI", ■■ ‘_j!i
OITICUL.
” QIARAKTIKK ISOTICE
Office Health Officer, i
Savannah, Ga m Aug. 29, 1837. (
From and after this date, tho city ordinance
which specifies the Quarantine requirements to
!>• • observed at the port of Savannah, Oa., will
be most rigidly enforced.
Merchants and all other parties interested
will be supplied with printed copies of the Qua
rantine Ordinance upon application to office of
Health Officer, and are requested to keep copy
of this publication.
From and after this date and until further no
tice all steamships and vessels from or having
touched at South America, Central America,
Mexico, West Indies, the Bermudas, Italy.
Sicily, Malta, Marseilles and the Guinea
coast of Africa, direct, or via Ameri
can ports, will be subjected to Quaran
tine detention und be treated as from infected
or suspected ports or localities, viz.: Section y.
Quarantine liegulations. Captains of such
vessels will havc to remain at the Quarantine
Station until their v seels arc reli**-
All steamers and vessels from foreign ports
not included above, direct or via American
ports, whether seeking, chartered or otherwise,
will Is* required to remain in quarantine until
Istarded and imssed by the Quarantine officer.
Neither the captains nor any one on board of
midi vessels trill he allowed to come to the city
or land until the vessels are inspected and
paused by the Quo routine Officer.
As ports or localities not herein enumerated
are reported unhealthy to the Sanitary Authorl
■t same will
be enforced without further publication.
The quarantine regulation requiring the ./tying
of the Quarantine flay on vessels subjected to
detention of inspection will be riqxdly enforced*
Notice is hereby given that toe Quarantine
Officer is Instructed not to deliver letters to ves
sels which are not subjected to Quarantine de
tention, unless the name of consignee and state
ment that the vessel is ordered to some other
port appears upon the face of the envelope.
This order Is made necessary in consequence of
the etiormoiis bulk of drumming letter* sent to
the station for vessels which are to arrive.
Whip chandlers are informed that provisions
in large quantity cannot. Is* received at, the
Quarantine Station. unless foi; veuaels ordered
from this |srt. and it must then be sent dowa
by the tug boat it tin* time when vem*l is to be
towed to sea. J. T. McFA&LAMp, MD ,
Health UfUoer.
5