The morning news. (Savannah, Ga.) 1887-1900, October 17, 1887, Page 5, Image 5

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YAK KKE MISERS IN' CHINA GO t,d MU7E3 IN THE FLOWERY KINGDOM TO 3E REOPENED. Bow the Eagle Will Kelp the Dragon- A Party of American Mining Experts Leave San Francisco for t’ne Celestial Empire to Work Rich Mineral Fields in the Province of Shan Tung. From thf .Veto York Herald. v^ VN - Fs\-.'CISCO. Cal., Oct 5. —While tv'cplo ana wonderin'; what to make of the new Arabian Nights’ Entertainment by Counl von Mitkiewiez, a little expedition is departing from this port which may effect more for the Americanization of China than the day-dreams of all the Counts that have ever lieeu counted. Among the passengers who sailed last month, in tho City of Pekin for Yokohama were Mr. A. M. Ellsworth, a milling man of experience; Arthur E. Roberts, assayer; Frank J. Niel. machinist; Mark J. Lidstone, millman; Niel Diven, mining foreman; and Charles Taylor, pros pector. All these are in the service of the government of China, engaged under spe cial contract to reopen and work the gold and silver mines in the Providence of Shan Tung. 'i'o understand the new departure it is necessary to go back n long way. Gold and silver mining was at one time a flourishing industry in China. There is reason to be lieve that the Chinese used gold coins at a ueriod anterior to the date of those Greek and Parthian specimens which form the de light of numerisrnatists They- are said to have been cubes witho -t inscriptions. How ever this may be, the art ot mining died out. Tliis was due to several causes. In mining, as in other mechanical pursuits, the Chi nese reached a certain distance, and no fur ther. They learned how to mine ore and to separate mineral from rock, but they never discovered how to pump water out or pure air into underground workings. Hence in ail their mines there came a time when foul gases and water drove out the miners. . Still more fatal to the mining industry ■was the superstition of the Feng Shin. The Feng Shin were underground demons who were quiet and well behaved enough so long as they were unmolested in their subterreaneaii abode, but became trouble some and malignant if their rest were dis turbed. It was discovered that epidemics and famines followed the workings of cer tain mines, and it was demonstrated with out difficulty that the visitations were due to the justly irritated Feng -'bin. The controversy lasted som-> years, as sick things do in China. But it ended in ;he issue of an imperial rescript absolutely >ro li > ing the prosecution o* drifc-iniling iilc penalty of death. This edict is sup posed to have been issued about a ceitury before the du> sever rof America by CMum bus. It has never been strictly enDrced. Mining has always been prosecuted ti some extent in Shan Hi Yunnan and Hontn. On the Yang-tse Kiang and its conttnsnts, in the streams of Sze Chuen, and thuughout Mantehooria, gravel-mining ha- always been followed as a business by a p>rt;on of the people. Allusions to the miwra out put of the emp re are scatter* through the works of Puinpelly, Dav is, Do Came, and others. More recent witers, such as Williams and Von Richthofen, mention the fact that the pjecious met als are produced without entwing into de tails. Still, the disappearance of told and the absence of a gold currency Row that the edict, though not strictly carried out, had the desired effect of putthga stop to min ing as a regular industry It is only within a few years that the Oinese government resolved to reverse its policy ill this re spect The financial stuns in which the empire found itself during the French war satisfied its leafing men that China could not hold its owiin the family of na tions unless it providl itself with a gold currency. It was isolved to reopen tue mines. Goid, like coal, isJound i every one of the nineteen proving of China. But the largest and most aressible source of supply is to be found in t> range of hills which divides the Loess fairie of North Central China from the oofli slopes. Those hills can I* traced fronthe shore of the Gulf of I’ectuli, in the Prrinceof Blmn Tung,down intoQuangTung.lt is quite likely that they are mineral taring throughout. Mr. Ellsworth to id t'- Herald correspondent that Americans clld form no idea of the quantity of gold i China: there was far more there than h e. In former daysvhen the Chinese mines Were worked, o> of the most active mineral fields iayiack of Che Foo, in the Province of Bln Tung. When Li Hung Chang andfrince Rung resolved in ISB4 to resume tJ working of the mines they selected tbivtot to commence onera- lions. The Viceroy ipliod to his friend, Sir Robert Hart, fo competent miner to di rect the works, fir Robert had a friend named Beecher, to was supposed to be a competent mintpecau.se he had relatives who had investemoney in Australia. On Hart’s rccomofdation he was engaged. He seems to ha; known enough about his business to ord/a twenty-stamp mill from this city, but lii't know enougU to -set it up. For thatfb Ellsworth was dispatched to Uriua froiime Union Iron Works. He is a quiet, taiini, business-like man, and just took tq Chinese fancy. They dis charged Boner and. put Ellsworth in his place. He iprrned them that if he was to run tiieCbefo mines he must have Ameri can machiiiy and American assistants. They gave pi carte blanche, and thus, as l said, he H sailed from San Francisco with a iff of live assistants and a completeftfit of steam engines, hoist ing mat-nary, pumps, air-compressors, drills, cagJrailroad track, and tools of all kinds. j The mi if which Ellsworth is going to ex ploit lie sp 140 miles inland from Cho Foo, abojoo milt's from Shanghai, and perhaps miles from Tientsin. The for mation is e same as in the Sierra in this State. 1 ore is found in the quartz. It turns oul tout $2O worth of bullion to the ton. In i ore are streaks of sulphurets which \v run $l5O and $2OO to the ton. But, in China 0 ore if there is plenty of it. and it can be si’y hoisted ami taken to the mill, is a ood a tiling as any mail need 'Sant. 1 ere are mines on the Comstock which ar landling $lO ore without loss, with mir s’ wages fixed at $4 a day by the cast-iron lets of the Miners’ Uliiou. Labor in China]worth not over 15c. a day and tile minJare not as particular about the length ope shifts as they are on Mount DavidsoJ In Chf the fee of all real estate is in the govennpt. Chinamen hold their land and houses llvirtue of receipts from the goy enimeiiJspecifying that they have paid their tap. Tims no legal process was ne cessary] establish the government title to the Clmoo mines. When it was resolved to worjhem Mr. Owyang Ming, a distin- Buisheclhinaman whose ancestors hail been in the Ihlie service before the Christian era, wJrecalled from the Consulate Gen ei alshlof Han Francisco and was placed in chargj It is probably to bis American ox perienj that the engagement of Mr. Ells wortbiid party is cue. It isretty difficult to sot a limit to the possil/ consequences of a general resump tion Jgold-nnning in China. Unless Mr. Elisd'th is much mistaken China Is richer hi gd than any other country known. Thcpople have been washing gravel for gold nr fifty centuries or more, but the veins (re comparatively virgin. And jjeverdd nation need gold so badly as China dees Uv, to pay for her fleet, her fort.i ikatiik her railroads and telegraphs, and ‘he (ior improvements which she must' have] It ytiid seom, however, that if the Chi nese lines are to be worked they must be worljd by foreigners. For manual labor mtlomnes Chinamen will answer very "eL Bit it will bo u long time before a Chinaman is found who is competent to manage a mine. And of all foreigners the most suitable are Americans. No Euro peans have the experience necessary to en able them to deal with ores like those of Che Foo. The most competent of the Euro pean miners ave the Freiberg graduates, but in practice outlie Comstock they have not been found worth more than Cornish shift bosses. Our great mines are all handled bj r Americans, or by persons who, though born abroad, have lived so long here as to bo really Americans. It would probably bo so with*the mines of China. If a few score mines in tho foothills of Shantung, Kiang Su, Che Kiang. and Fo Kien should begin to output $40,000,000 or $50,000,000 of gold and silver per year through American management and with tho aid of American machinery the event could not but lie followed by important commer cial and political consequences. ON MONT BLANC. An Interesting Account of the Three Days Sojourn of Two French Scien tists. From the Washington Star. The scientific world wiil be interested in the forthcoming facts with regard to his three days’sojourn on the summit of Mont Blanc, which M. Joseph Vallot, will lay be fore the French Academy as soon as he hits arranged his documents. Meanwhile the greater public will read with interest of the details of the perilous undertaking of M. Vallot and M. F. M. Richard, two French men who have pitched their tents en the fearful heights in order to make scientific experiments. M. Vallot. is one of the best known members of the French Alpine Club, whose observations on tho Pyrenees glaciers and on certain Alpine peaks have been of great value. For the purpose of making further observations he attempted to erect three temporary meteorogical stations on Mont Blanc, the first of which was situated at Chamounix, the second at the Rochers des Grands -Mulcts, and the third on the top of the mountain. M. Richard, who accom panied him, is a constructor of scientific in struments. Twenty-four guides had been retained to carry the necessary luggage, of which no man is to carry more than twenty pounds. Early at 5 o’clock the ex pedition started, but owing to difficulties about the luggage they did not arrive at tho Grand Mulets till 10 o’clock at night, wnich, as a rule, is reached early in the afternoon. No special incident marked the first day's journev, and at 11 o’clock all lay asleep in the little hut which serves as a shelter to mountain ! limbers. At 3a. m. the caravan started once more, th.s tuns on the most difficult part of the road. The asciit was made very gradually and caretul y; one guide became indisposed, ami both AIM. Vallot and Richard were suffering from an attack of mountain sickness. When they reached the summit ut last, at 2:30 p. ill., both travelers sat down on the snow, utterly worn out. The guides threw down their burdens and began to descend at once, and only two of the number remained with the scientists. They pitched the tent, lighted the petroleum lamp, and prepared the dinner, after which M. Vallot, who had regained his strength, went out and placed his appa ratus on the plateau in the biting cold. At 4 a. in. the energetic Frenchman was about again, calling his companions to view the sunrise. M. Richard, however, as well as the two guides, looked at the magnificent spectacle with mixed feelings, their state of health and comfort be.ng by no means per fect. After all the instruments were placed and several observations taken, a visitor, an Englishman, appeared on the peak, and speedily turned back Chamounix-ward. The second night was passed more comfort ably in heavy coats, liner, masks and fur linen snow-boots, the temperature still re maining extremely low. The following day was sjient in experimenting, but so great be came the weariness and weakness of the whole party that they couid only swallow a few spoonfuls of coffee or soup. At six next morning another Englishman arrived with letters from Chamounix. At 2p. m. a ter rible storm broke out over the peak, threatening every moment to carry away the tent. M. Vallot, on leaving the tent, noticed a curious phenomenon around him, he was in the midst of electric clouds, and all his clothes trembled with electricity. When the third day began to dawn the sky became clear; the last experiments’ were made, and the descent began, proving, after the storm, which had effaced all traces of a path, far more formidable than the ascent. At last, however, at 7 p. m., Chamounix was reached, and the whole population of the town, headed by the Mure, received the successful climbers with-gifts of flow ers and congratulations at having been the first to accomplish so dangerous an ex pedition. A Sudden Sensation Of chilliness invading the backbone, followed by hot flushes and profuse perspiration. We all know these symptoms, if not by experience, from report. What’s the best thing on the pro gramme? Quinine? A dangerous remedy, truly. Produces caries of the bones, only affords tem porary relief. Is there no substitute? Assured ly, a potent but safe one—Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters, a certain, speedy means of expelling from the system every trace of the virus of miasma. Use it promptly, persistently. The result—a cure is certain to follow the use of this beneficent restorative of health. Dyspepsia, liver complaint, nervous ailments rheumatism and inactivity of the kidneys and bladder, are also among "the maladies permanently reme diable through the genial aid of this wholesome botanic medicine, recommended by the medical fraternity. PORTRAITS. The Great Southern Portrait Company, SAVANNAH. GEORGIA. L. B. DAVIS, Secretary arid Manager of the Great South ern Portrait Company. VN inspection of samples of our Portraits at our office, with Davis Bros., 12 and 4i Bull street, will greatly interest those who contem plate having small pictures of themselves, their friends, living and deceased, copied and enlarged in OIL, WATER COLOR, INDIA INK, PAS TELLE and CRAYON. We guarantee a per fect likeness anil excellence of work. We have about TWENTY DIFFERENT STYLES AND GRADES IN SIZES OF ENLARGED POR TRAITS from SxlO to 50x00. and our prices are from JO to J;i00 ench. EMPLOY FORTY ART ISTS: been twenty-six years in the business; have a6,000 candle-power ELECTRIC LIGHT, and are fully prepared with all proper expedi tion and skill to execute all orders promptly and satisfactorily. We respectfully solicit your orders. L. B. DAVIS, Secretary and Manager The Great Southern Portrait Cos. Stoves am* furnaces. STOVES. -yyE are now in our new quarters on Brocob to.v. near Barsari>. Our quantity, quality and variety of STOVES are unsurpassed by any flrm in the city. If you want a good article at a reasonable price call on Cornwell & Chipman, 167 BROUGHTON STREET. ESTABLISHED 1845. t *7"E have a lot of very celebrated STOVES and RANGES, and will take special pleasure in showing them and their quotations to our friends and customers. If you have a Stove to buy go to LOVELL & LftTTIMORE, 158 AND 157 CONGRESS STREET, Savannah. * " • Creoraia. THE MORNING NEWS: MONDAY, OCTOBER 17, 1887. MEDICAL. OH OF SORTS? Yes, Sick all Over! Liver torpid, bowela costive, Mood sluggish, stomach weak and full, your digestion is im paired and the organs inactive, your perceptions are dull and stupitied, your temper irritable and peevish, you are unfit for business or com panionship. What you need is to Regulator] “I have used many remedies, for Dyspepsia-.- Liver affection and' debility, but never nave found anything to benefit to the extent that Simmons Liver Regulator has. 1 seht from Min nesota to Georgia for the remedy and would have sent further for such a medicine. I would advise all who ave similarly affected to give it a trial as it seems the only thing that never fails to relieve.”—P. M. Jankxy, Minneapolis, Minn. Demand the Trade Mark Z in red on front of wrapper. Best guarantee for the buyer. Effervescent, I Economical, Efficacious. rj Beware of Indigestion's pain And Constipation's cruel reign; For often in their wake proceed The sable p ill and mourner's weed; Then these troubles er* an hour. In TARR AWTTft BBLTZBII lies the power. CURE DEAF 1 JECK S PATENT IMPROVED CUSHIONED 1 EAR DRUMS perfectly restore the hearing and perform the work of the natural drum. In visible, comfortable and always in position. All conversation.and even whispers heard distinct ly. Send for illustrated book with testimonials FREE Address or call on F. HISCOX, 853 Broadway, New York. Mention this paper. BROUS INJECTION. HYGIENIC, INFALLIBLE & PRESERVATIVE. Cures promptly, without additions! treatment, all recent or chronic dißobaives of the Urinary ore-ana. J- Forre, (successor to Broil), Phirruacien, Pan®, bold by druggicitb throughout the United States. GAS FIXTURES,AIOSE, ETC. JOHIIICOLSOI, Jr. DEALER IN das Fixtures, GLOBES & SHADES. PLUMBERS’, MACHINISTS’ AND M ill Supplies. ENGINE TRIMMINGS, Steam Packing, SHEET GUM, Hydrant, Steam ul Sactioa HOSE. IRON PIPES AND FITTINGS, Lift and Force Pumps. 30 and 32 Drayton St. ICE. ICE ! Now is the time when every body wants ICE, and we want to sell it. PRICES REASONABLE! 20 Tickets, good for 100 Pounds, 75c. 140 Tickets, good for 700 Pounds, $5. 200 Tickets, good for 1,000 Pounds, $7. 50 Pounds at one delivery 30c. Lower prices to large buyers. I O E Packed for shipment at reduced rates. Careful and polite service. Full and liberal weight. KNICKERBOCKER ICE GO. 14A BA \ ST. "REAL ESTATE. ' W. J. MABSHU.T,. H. A. M’LEOD. MARSHALL & McLEOD- Auction and General Commission Merchants, —DEALERS IN— Real Estate anil Stocks and Bonds, 116J4 Broughton Street, Savannah, Ga. ATTENTION GIVEN TO RENTING OF HOUSES AND COLLECTING RENTS. Tibs KISH PELIGHT* Fill Mill, A FINK CONFECTION IMPORTED FROM CONSTANTINOPLE Try a Small Box, at A. >l. & C. W. WEST’S, i ■■■— 11 GROCERIES. Canned Goods. 2Aiin CASES this season pack. TOMA .UUUtOES. CORN, OKRA and TOMA TOES, PINE APPLE-, ere. ——roa S.U.EBV — C. M GILBERT & CO„ WHOLESALE GBOCEItS. BOYS’ CLOTHING, CARPETS, ETC. ~\ | B V-Q 1‘ Daniel flop, __ 0 BOYS' CLOTHING. We will place on sale on MONDAY MORNING 500 as handsome Boys’ Suits as can be found south of New York. Prices of tailor-made and per fect-fitting suits are for better grades $0 50, $7 50, $8 50, SO and $0 50. Also a large variety, fully 500, just as durable, but not as fine, at the following prices: $1 75, $2 25, $2 50, $3, $3 50, $4, $4 50, and $5. SPECIAL SALE OF Tapestry and Ingrain Carpets DURING THE ENSUING WEEK. One lot Tapestry Carpets at 05c. per yard. One lot 3-Ply All Wool Car pets at 86c. per yard. One lot All Wool Extra- Supers at 00c. per yard. One lot Ingrain Carpets at 55c. per yard. One lot Ingrain Carpets at 50c. per yard. One lot Ingrain Carpets at 40c. per yard. One lot Ingrain Carpets at 22 k. per yard. 500 Smyrna Rugs RANGING PRICE FROM 85c. Each to $lO. CANTON MATTIN6. 100 rolls fresh Canton Mat ting, ranging in price from 20c. to 50c. per yard. Special Barps Will also be found in the fol lowing goods during this week: Silks, Satins, Dress Goods, Cloaks, Shawls, Lace Curtains and Curtain Goods, Flannels, Blankets, Bed Com forts, Underwear, Hosiery, Gloves, Corsets, Ladies’ and Gents’ Silk Umbrellas, etc., etc. Daniel Hap. IRON WORKS, icMoegii & Balityie, IRON FOUNDERS, Machinists, Boiler Makers and Blacksmiths, • IUHUrACTfIIBB* OF STATIONARY anti PORTABLE ENGINES, VERTICAL ami TOP RUNNING COHN MILLS, SUGAR MILLS and PANS. AGENTS for Alert and Union Injector*, the xiinplext and most effective on the,market; Gullett Light Draft .Uognuli* (jotUM Uhl, the best in the market. All order* promptly attended to. Send for Price List. CONDENSED MILK. Highland Brand Condensed Milk. A Pure Milk condensed to a syrupy consistency. TOR SALE AT STRONG'B DRUG STORE, 1 Corner Bull uuU Perry street lane. DRY GOODS. After the Fire! The undersigned respectfully begs to announce to his many friends and the public at large that we will MB ■ 808 AT THE OLD STAND 153 Broughton Street, -ON- Wednesday, October sth. WE PROPOSE TO SURPRISE THE PUBLIC IN SHOWING THEM The Handsomest, The Most Elegant, The Newest, The Most Stylish GOODS EVER SHOWN IN SAVANNAH OR ELSEWHERE, AND AT PRICES SO LOW As to enable every one almost to wear the BEST GOODS IN THE MARKET. PLEASE REMEMBER We Have No Old Stock to Work Off. Wo respectfully ask the public to pay us a visit, whether they wish to purchase or not, and we will take pleasure in proving to them that we have not exaggerated. David Weisbein. FURNITURE AND CARPETS. iiu! mum This is an opportunity which a good many people would like to take advantage of. We think there is one or two in our store who would. We cannot offer this kind of an opportunity, but wo can offer you the opportunity to save money by purchasing from our varied stock. We desire to call your special attention to our line of ornamental goods, consisting of Ladies’ Desks, Plush Rockers, Rattan Rockers, Easy Chairs, Easels, Cabinets, Mantel Lambrequins, Table Covers, Piano Covers and Scarfs, and the finest line of FRINGES in the city. AVe invite you to come and see us often, as we are getting in something new all the time in Furniture ana Carpets. LINDSAY & MORGAN. MILLINERY. KROUSKO IT IT’ © Oping #!' Ik fall Season 1881. However attractive and immense our previous season’s stock in Millinery has been, this season we excel all our previous selections. Every manufacturer and importer of note in the markets of the world is represented in the array, and display of Millinery goods. We are showing Hats in the finest Hatter’s Plush, Beaver, Felt, Straw and Fancy Combinations. Ribbons in Glacee, of all the novel shades. Fancy Birds and Wings, Velvets and Plushes of our own im portation, and we now offer you the advantages of our im mense stock. We continue the retail sale on our first floor at wholesale prices. We also continue to sell our Celebrated XXX Ribbons at previous prices. TO-DAY, 500 dozen‘’Felt Hats, in all the new shanes and colors, at 35 cent.' S. EISKOFFS MAMMOTH MILIIBI iBSfl ’•ituuom'oN tmu'di'. DRY GOODS, ETC. SPECIAL iioimmi! OPENING OF Fall and Winter Goods —AT Crolan 4 fiwr’s, SUCCESSORS TO B. F. McKenna & Cos., 137 BROUGHTON STREET. ON MONDAY MORNING We will exhibit the latest novelti s in Foreign and Domestic Dress Goods, Black and Colored Silks, Black Cashmeres and Silk Warp Henriettas, Black Nun’s Veiling, Suitable for Mourning Veils. Mourning Goods a Specialty. English Crapes and Crape Veils, Embroideries and Laces. Housekeepers’ Goods Irish Table Damasks, Nankins ami Towels of the beat manufacture, ana selected especially with a view to durability. Counterpanes and Table Spreads, Cotton Sheetings, Shiruugs and Pillow ('as.ugH in all the best brands. Hosiery, Gloves, Hundkerckdefs-Regularly made French and English Hosiery for ladies and children, Bulbriggau Hosiery, Gentlemen's and Boys' Half Hose, Ladies’ Black Silk Hosiery. Kid Gloves. I Julies’ and Gentlemen’s Linen Handker chiefs in ft great variety of fancy prints, aud full lines of hem mod-stitched and plain hem med White Handkerchiefs. Gentlemen's Laundried and Uulaundried Shirts, Bays’ Shirts, Gentlemen's Collars and Cuffs, Ladles* Collars and Cuffs. Corsets -Imported and Domestic, in great variety, and in the. most graceful and health approved shapes. Vests- !Julies', Gentlemen’s and Children’s Vests in fall and winter weights. Parasols The latest, novelties in Plain and Trimmed Parasols. Orders—All orders carefully and promptly executed, ami the same care and attention given to the smallest as to the largest commis sion. Samples sent free of charge, and goods to be fully up to the quality shown in sample. Bole agent for McCALL'S CELEBRATED BAZAR GLOVE FITTING PATTERNS. Any pattern sent post free on receipt of price and measure. orphan & Doom COTTON SEED WANTED. aT^OENTi Per Bushel ($l4 per ton) paid for good corn seed Delivered in Carload Lots at Southern Cota Oil Cos, Mills -AT— SAVANNAH, GA., ATLANTA, GA., COLUMBUS, GA. Price subject to change unless notified of ac ceptance for certain quantity to be shipped by a future date. Address nearest mill as above. HOTELS. NEW HOTEL TOGNI, (Formerly St. Mark's.) Newnan Street, near Bay, Jacksonville, Fla. WINTER AND SUMMER. rpHE MOST central House In the city. Near 1 Post Office, Street Cars and all Ferries. New and Elegant Furniture. Electric Bella, Baths, Etc. $5! 50 to $5 per day. JOHN B. iOGNI, Proprietor.^ DUKSSCREVEN HOUSE. r | "'HIS POPULAR Hotel Is now provided with 1 a Passenger Elevator (the only one in the city) and has been remodeled and newly fur nished. The proprietor, who by recent purchase is also the owner of the establishment, spare* neither pains nor expense in the entertainment of his guests. The patronage of Florida visit ors is earnestly invited. The table of the Soreven House is supplied with every luxury that the markets at home or abroad can adord. THE MORRISON HOUSE. One of the Largest Boarding House* in tha South. AFFORDS pleasant South rooms, good hoard with p>ire Artesian Water, at prices to suit those wishing table, regular or transient accom modations. Northeast corner Broughton and Drayton streets, opposite Marshall House. PAINTS AND OH* JOHN G. BUTLER* TiriUTE LEADS, COLORS, OILS, GLASS, W VARNISH, ETC;: READY MIXED PAINTS; RAILROAD, STEAMER AND MILL SUPPLIES, SASHES, DOORS, BLINDS AND BUILDERS' HARDWARE. Sole Agent for GEORGIA LIME, CALCINED PLASTER, CE MENT, HAIR and LAND PLASTER. 6 Whitaker Street, Savannah, Georgia. 1865. UHite. MORPHY, 186a House, Sign and Ornamental Painting I EXECUTED NEATLY and with dispatch. j Paints, Oils. Varnishes, Brushes, Window Glasses, etc., etc. Estimates furnished on ap plication. CORNER CONGRESS AND DRAYTON STS, Rear of Christ Church. BANKS. KISSIMMEE CITY BAN k Kissimmee City, Orange County, 11a. CAPITAL - - - $50,000 a regular banking business. Give i particular attention to Florida collection*. Correspondence solicited. Issue Exchange on New York. New Orleans, Savannah and Jack sonville, Fla. Resident Agents for Coutts X Cos. and Melville, Evans & Cos., of London, England. New York correspondent: The Seaboard National Bank. PLUMBER. l. a. McCarthy, successor to Chas. E. Wakefield, PLUMBER, HAS and SItAM FITTER, . .*rd street, SAVANN AH, GA. d*!UVrU*. 5