The morning news. (Savannah, Ga.) 1887-1900, October 26, 1887, Page 5, Image 5

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

A SIBERIAN TRIP. Picturesque Scenery, Pleasant Travel ing, Palat : al Steamers and Cheap Fares. p,om the St. James {London) Gazette. A lively French writer—l think it is pumas pere in that amusing and delight fully inaccurate book of his, “From Paris to •Vstiachan”— -compares his sensations on entering Russia to those of a prisoner ush ered into an immense prison, over which lirooded as head jailer the gigantic figure of ti. Czar. To rno the main sensation was of a negative description; it was a feeling of absence of jubilee. Iu St. Petersburg and Moscow, indeed, the painfully familiar word still haunted one in the newspapers and in the common talk of men, but beyond \ijni Novgorod the world was in the state of ignorance which characterized that very primitive church recorded in the Acts of the Apostles; they knew not so much as wiielher there boa jubilee or not. This was refreshing; refreshing, also, after the bent anil dust of railway traveling, were the 000 l breezes which blow up the Volga and tin' Kama as the steamer passes up and (lmvii these magnificent winding rivers. Indeed, a trip down the Volga or the Kama, oi- even the Dnieper, may be confidently recommended to those weary of the haclt neveil Rhine, the well-known Danube or the oft seen Hudson. l The scenery, though it cannot be called pratid, is picturesque throughout. The occasional villages and townships with the greenroofed churches, with their golden domes and crosses, which dominate the landscape: the immense broad reaches of water down which brightly painted barges and luce rafts of wood slowly lloat; the endless horizon, with its miles of forest and marsh, and its long stretches of cultivation; ell these form a picture which is unique in Europe, and which has a strange charm ami fascination of its own. The traveling a l so —if you speak Russian —is in the highest ,l, S ree pleasant. In the course of four or live days on a river people get thrown to gether, and there is no more genial and considerate fellow traveler than the Russian, ot steamers there is an immense variety. No fewer than TOO ply on the Volga: and the passenger boats which travel from Nijni to Astrachan, built on the American system, are floating palaces of comfort. Those which go only as far as Kazan, and thence up the Kama to Perm, are not of such ex cellence; though the cuisine is good and there is really nothing much to complain of. A captious critic might deplore the absence of baths, and might consider one basin, with a limited supply of water, hardlv sufficient washing accommodation for the whole number of first-class passen gers, l.ut the philosophic traveler may console himself by reflecting on the cleans ing properties of the Russian bath, which he will get at the end of his journey. We were not inconveniently overcrowded. A Siberian mine-owner and his family, a cultured and sympathetic professor from Jaroslav, traveling as special correspondent of the Moxkocxki Vyedomosti , two or three students, and a few business men belonging to the Ural region constituted the party, and an unfortunate Frenchman, unable to speak a word of Russian, who, by some mistake, had become possessed of a German passport, constituted, with his apprehensions of arrest and .Siberia, the comic element which is rarely wanting in a mixed shipload of passengers. There aro four passenger lines to Perm from Nijni—the Lubirnolf, the Kumenskeech (.he two best), the Kurbatoff, which also operates on the .Siberian rivers, and the tiregorieff. The competition between these lines has reduced the rates to the lowest possi lie figure, for the noble science of “pooling” as practiced by American railroad men appears not to have been developed as yet in Eastern Russia. The third-class traveler on the Kurbatoff line can get carried a di.-tance of 1,000 miles and housed for four days for the small sum of two rubles, or about three and sixpence. He has, of course, to feed himself, but this ho would have to do anywhere else, so the mujik lies on his back ill a perfect paradise of idleness, drinks tea and eats pies till he feels the real rapture of repletion and repose. I know of no part of the civilized world where one can get carried at a cheaper rate. In rather less than four days after calling at about, twelve stations en route, Perm is reached, and there the Ural railway to Ekaterinburg and Trumen begins. The railway system is thus separated from the main railway system of Russia, by a distance of about a thousand miles; and it is characteristic of the neglect with which file Russian government treats its own valuable possessions, while feverishly coveting the possessions of other cities, that this absurd state of things should be allowed to continue. Perm, besides being the terminus of Siberian trade, is also the seat of the largest cannon foundry in Russia, a foundry which turns out about 200 guns a year: and that au important institution like this should uot be connected by railway with the rest of the empire, is certainly remarkable. But this is merely one more proof, if any were needed, of the entirely artificial character of the Russian advance in Europe and Asia, while the true line of national growth lies elsewhere. However, from Perm there is a railway to the mining regions of the Ural; this is something to be thankful for, the old road over the range involving discomfort of an appalling nature. The Ural range is certainly disappointing. The average height of the hills is insignifi cant, and the scenery hardly finer t han the scenery of Derbyshire, and not to lie com pared with the \V estern Giants of India. The line winds in a gradually ascending course through fir-clad hills and undulating country, dotted with lakes and traversed by rivers, scenery suggestive, though on a smaller scale, of that on the line from Batum to Tifiis. Tchussojskva, the seat of iron industries, Bisser and Nijni-Tagii are passed; and after crossing the frontier of Europe and Asia, a frontier marked by a simple pillar, in about twenty hours the golden domes of the Ekaterinburg cathodral are seen, and the large straggling town, with its white houses and green roofs, lies out iu panorama before one as the train slowly glides into the station. A Medal for a Woman. From the Few York Sun. Henry M. Smith, the Journal Clerk of the House of Representatives, has presented to Secretary Fairchild, on behalf of the citizens of Charlevoix, Mich., a petition praying that a gold medal or other testi monial be presented to Miss Mary Wake field, of Charlevoix, for her bravery in sav ing the life of a child. The story of Miss M akefield's heroic act reads more like sen sational fiction than solid facts, and such intrepid bravery is seldom met with. On the night of Juue 1(5. 1887, a terrible storm broke over Lake Michigan, and the steamer Champlain took flro near the mouth of Charlevoix harbor and burin'll to the water’s edge. There were nearly 100 persons on the steamer, and but a few were saved. Miss Wakefield, the light keeper’s daughter, put out in a small boat and arrived at the wreck just as Mrs. Keogh, the wile of the Champlain s Captain, was sink ing in the waves with a baby in her arms. Miss Wakefield snatch.si the child from the arms of the sinking woman, after leaping from her frail boat. She then grasped a fender which was suspended from the rail of the steamer but could find no final ing object to oling to. She therefore dcliber ately moved the fonder up to the flames and held it there until the rope by which it was suspended burned oil and the feud r fell into the water. Miss Wakefield then placed the baby on the beam, caught its dress in her teeth to prevent the child from falling into the sea, and coolly swam ashore. The •Secretary of the Treasury Is authorized by law to grant medals as a reward for brav ery in life saving, and the citizens of Charlevoix think that Miss Wakefield’s heroism should be recognized. Tho Engactine Bouquet, Atkinson s new perfume. This tuperb distillation sweetly recalls fragrant B'.' isn flowers. Bright jewels in a setting of perpetual snow. WHY FOR GORDON. “Ve Vas Weterans in de Var Mlt Us Togedder." From the Oglethorpe (Ga.) Echo. Mr. J. Phillips, of Sandy Cross, was a red hot Gordon man during the last gubernato rial campaign, and worked night and day for the success of his candidate, leaving nothing undone to assure his election. In talking over the campaign the other day, one of a party of gentlemen asked Mr. Phillips how it came that he was such a Gordon man. “Ve vas weterans un de var mit us toged der," was the quick response. “You were What command did you be long to and where did you enlist*” “Vie, dere vas some of us poys vhat had just come over from Jurope, vat vas oud in Texas beddling. Ve vas all at von boarding house veil comes along von of de povs and says let's ve all enlist in de army for sixty days. Ve hash a good time, gets our rat ions and no vightin ve vould haf to do. AH right we says ail, and \ e all vents an’ enlisted to a soldier to be. Vel, ve lay erroundt dere for several days, and den ve vas inarched down on the Rio Grande river, and ve drill some more several days vit sticks for guns on nur shoulders, Ven ve been dere bout tree days maype long comes a man-of-var boat und ve vas all daken prisoners and ve had to (give up our arms to de boffieer vhieli vas along mit de ship. Dey took us all on de board of de boat and ve vas treated just as nice like ve vas bassenjus on dere unctil ve gots to New Orleans vere dey geep us ver some days and tells us if we Uake de oath of allegiance ve might be our own seifs vonce more again. Ve von dat so quick as ve gould, and den dey durn us loose.” “Didn’t get into no fight!” “Naw, sir; ve dought ve could get us some goots and go back to Texas vonce more again und sell dem for big money vhat vas oud dere, nut ven ve try to go vay dey say naw, sir, you no go ter vere de rebe s vhas, and dere ve vas in dat city all with usselfs und nodding to do ter make some money. Vo had little money, and last von dey me an’ von udder vellow ve go buys us some goots und ve slip board a boat vot say it was going back to Texas and ve pays him big price to take us avay without ever let ting de jankees knows vere ve vas. Ve got off all right and ven ve got oud on de land vonce more again vere do ju recon ve vas ?” “Don’t know; wherever Gordon was I reckon.” “Naw, sir; ve vas at Guataumala, vay down dure in Zentral Merica, vid our goots. A vine gountry dat vas. Ve sell our goots und dries to git some more, but ve couldn't do it, and dere de vas dill dey quits vight ing iu the Junited States. Goi-dou vas a goot General, he vas himself, sure, und all us poys vhat vas in de var mit him must loves him und we just mustn’t gould help vot’ng for him ve gould not. Vas ju in de var mit him like me vas?” ’Twas an old soldier addressed, and he gave both an affirmative and a negative answer, while Phillips continued to say “someding boud how much he vas loved ter jheneral because he vas mit him along in de var all de time a brave soldier, and vas so kind to us vhat under him vas vhen de jankees vould pe right mit dere muskets at us punched in de pack mit.” And nobody can blame Jake for being a Gordon man. A Prolific Tree. From the Americus ( Ga .) Recorder. Yesterday afternoon Mr. Tobe Cobb brought into the Recorder sanctum some specimens of apples and blossoms off of a most prolific tree, which grows in his yard in East Americus. The tree is about five or six years old, this being its second year of fruiting, and began blooming early last July. Since then it has blossomed and grown apples without intermission, there being full grown apples and fresh blossoms on one limb of the tree very often. Last year the first year of its fruiting, it had fruit on it to near Christmastime. Mr. Cobb brought us in three twigs, one having a full blossom, one three small, perfectly formed, apples and a b'los som, and the other had five small apples, just turning into the ripening stage. These all came from the same limb. He also showed us an apple, perfecly ripe and mellow, though small, which came from another part of the tree. To the best of his knowledge the tree has never been grafted, and is of the ordinary kind. The tree may prove of interest to those who take an interest in these things. Rough on Rats,’ Clears out rats, mice, roaches, flies, ants, bedbugs, beetles, insects, skunks, jack rab bits, sparrows, gophers. 15c. At druggists. “Rough on Itch.” “Rough on Itch” cures skin humors, erup tions, ring-worm, tetter, salt rheum, frosted feet, chilblains, itch, ivy poison, barber’s itch. 50c. jars. MILLINERY. OUR GRAND FALL OPENING OB’ lilerjiijM fIAKES PLACE Monday & Tuesday, Oct. 24 & 25. Great Creations! Marvels of Fashion! And the latest productions of London, Paris, and our own Metropolitan Centres. WATCH THE DATES AND BE SURE TO VISIT. NEVER WILL SUCH A SIGHT SE SEEN AGAIN. PLATSHEK’S, 138 Broughton Street. Watch local columns this week for fur&er uuuuuucemoutd. THE MORNING NEWS: WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 2G, 1887. MEDICAL. How’s Your Liver? Is the Oriental salutation, knowing well that good health cannot exist if the Liver is out of order. Loss of appetite, bad breath, Bowels costive. Headache, with dull, heavy sensation. Pain un der shoulderhlade, often mistaken for Rheuma tism. Fullness after eating, disinclination to exertion of body or mind. Irritability of temper. Low spirits (or the bluesi. Restless ness and a sensation of having left undone some thing that ought to have been done. Weariness, Dizziness, dots before the eyes, highly colored urine, fitful dreams. Constipation, etc. N t all, but always some of these symptoms indicate want of action of the Liver, and for a safe, re liable remedy that can do no harm and never known to fail VnvMi.trtm PREPARED BY J. H. Zeilin & Cos., Phila. Pa. # NATURE’S REMEDY Disordered Stomach, Impaired Digestion, Constipated Habit. A Remedy which quickly charms The Infant in the mother's arms, While drooping age will strive to drain Each drop the goblet does contain. This EFFERVESCING SELTZER fine A blessing proves to me and mine. CURE thle DEAF I DECK'S PATENT IMPROVED CUSHIONED I 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, 85.1 Broadway, New York. Mention this paper. ZOXWEISS ( REA M. ZONWCIM HUM FOR THE TEETH fs made from Ne'r Materials, contains no Adda, Bard Grit, or injurious matter It is Pub*, Refined. Perfect. Nothing Like It Ever Esowk. From Senator rogareftliall.—"ltakepteftS uru In recommending Zoiiweiaa on account of Its efficacy and purity.” From Mrs. Gen. T.ocran’s Demist, Dr. E. S. Carroll, Washington, 1). C. “I have had Zonwelss analyzed. It is the most perfect denti frice I have ever seen.” From Hon. ( has. P. Johnson. Ex. lit. Gov. of Mo.—‘‘Zonwelss cleanses the teeth thor oughly, Is delicate, convenient, very pleasant, and leaves no after taste. Sold by all druggists. Price, 35 cents. Johnson & Johnson, 23 Cedar St., N. Y. J * D M"- 1 tJWTHP"" For sale by LIPPMAN BROS., Lippman’* Block, Savannah. SAUCE. SAUCE (THE WORCSSTERSHIBK) Imparts the most delicious taste and zest to EXTRACT SOUPS, of a LETT Till, from ril a MEDIC AL . tltJi - 5 -** A \ IES, TLf.MAN at M..J- j M ra., to his brum r a 11511, at IV JR .’ESTER, J .if May, 1361. * HOT.VCOI 5! -eyi i AJiAW. LEA ft TESP.I: .HEATS, that their p.r.ce i?. '' .. . I.'*; i.:,- y e.: • (jJ, ■„ U ITTE, Inin, and is ju my ... ' „ opinion, the cvwt Ft!,.*" TJTE.SM. palatable, wc'l V os the newt wh-’. - J.... ' ” • r ;r.ItlTS, tome sauce that :s ■ ‘ ~t, 1 V made.” An . te Ac. /S’ •* / g Signature Is on every bottle of the genuine. JOHN DUMCAN S SONS, N.Y., AGENTS FOP. TT'F TNE-ED STATES. CORSETS. bms foTsITe everywhlbe**^ STOVES. TO THE PUBLIC. S Is always our aim every winter, we have tried to got the best variety in HEATING STOVES, and think that when our assortment is examiued this wifi he conceded us. AU winter goods connected with the Stove trade can be had from us In abundauee. LOVELL & LfIUIMORE. ELECTRIC BELTS. Electric Belt Free. rpo INTRODUCE it aud obtain Agents we will 1 lor the next sixty days give away, free of charge, iu each county in the United States a limited number of our German Electro Golvanio SupeiiHory Belts—price, $5. A positive and un failing otire for Nervous Debility, Varicocele. Emissions, tin potency, Etc. ssuo reward paid if every Belt we manufacture does not generate a genuine olectrio currant. Address at once ELECTRIC BELT AGENCY P. 0. Box 178. Brooklyn, N. Y. DRY GOODS. After the Fire! The undersigned respectfully begs to announce to his many friends and the public at large that we will RE-OPEN (1 MIS AT THE OLD STAND 153 Broughton Street -ON- Wednesday, October sth. WE PROPOSE TO SURPRISE THE PUBLIC IN SHOWING THEM V . ’ >Ui 1 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. We 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: ini op mm i 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 we 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. Wo invite you to come and see us often, as we are getting in something new all the time in Furniture ana Carpet^. LINDSAY & MORGAN. CLOT HING. 158 BROUGHTON STREET, Jf CLOTHING HOUSE ! CLOTHING FOR MEN. CLOTHING FOR YOUTHS. CLOTHING FOR BOYS. CLOTHING FOR CHILDREN LATEST STYLES AND BEST QUALITY Hats and Men’s Furnishing Goods. CUSTOM DEPARTMENT. SUITS MADE TO ORDER AND SATISFACTION GUARANTEED. MENKEK & ABRAHAMS, InTcw York Office, 050 Broadway. THE GREAT IN FAILING SPECIFIC FOR Wer disease BOOTS AND SHOES. We Would Like to Fiod n Man (And We Doubt That We Can) Who has over bought a pair of SHOES from BYGK BROS. Who never received satisfac tion Irom them, or if there is a man who lias seen our Shoes and does not know a good Shoe when he secs it, to him we say that he will hear of SOMETHING TO IIIS ADVANTAGE if he will call on us. Every body finds our stock of Boots and Shoes just the thing— Fashionable, Durable, Season able, Reasonable, Perfect Fitting, Wear-Resisting Foot wear for Ladies, Gentlemen, Misses, Youths, Boys, Girls, Babies, Children, Old People, Professional Men, Merchants, Mechanics, Workmen; in fact, to everybody we come with our INVINCIBLE ARGUMENT ill the way of STERLING GOODS of proven merit, at the keenest close cut prices in the mai-- ket. We have been tried in the balance and not found wanting, as testified by our steadily increasing business, which can be accounted for only by solid merit in our goods. BYCK BROS. 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 C E Tacked for shipment at reduced rates. Careful and polite service. Full and liberal weight. KNICKERBOCKER ICE CO. 144 BAY ST. BLACKBERRY JUICE. SAMPLE BOTTLEoTkEE. mm SSI ■ !W omencmild ßEa |, P. MIHMOVITO'VS ■ | „ : ’> ' r i ; r ’ J 'ft Imported and Bottled by Mihaiovitch, Fletcher &. Cos., Cincinnati,Ohio —FOR SALE BY A. EHRLICH & BRO., Sole Agents, Savannah, Ga., and all wholesale and retail Druggists, Liquor Dealers and Wine Merchants everywhere, PORI RAH 5. The Great Southern Portrait Company, SAVANNAH. GEORGIA. L. 13. DAVIS, Secretary and Manager of the Great South ern Portrait Company. AN Inspection of samples of our Portraits at . our office, with Davis Bros., AZ und U Bull street, will gieatly 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 and excellence of work. We have about TWENTY DIFFERENT STYLES AND GRADES IN SIZES OF ENLARGED POR TRAITS from Bxlo to COxOO, and our prices are from $2 to i each. EM PI .O Y I* OIITY A RT -1ST8; been twenty-six years in the business; have a 0.0 *> candle power ELECTRIC LIGHT, and ai>* fully prepared with all proper oxpetlj tion and kkill to execute all orders promptly and satisfactorily. We respectfully soli, it your orders. L. B. DAVIS, Secretary and Manager The Great Southern Portrait Cos. WATCHES AND JEWELRY. THE CHEAPEST PLACE TO BUlf WEDDING PRESENTS Such on DIAMONDS, FINK BTERIJNG SIL VERWARE, ELEGANT JEWELRY. FREN CH CLOCKS, etc., m to be found ti A. I. Desbouillons, a BULL STREET, the 8010 aernt for the celebrated ROCKFORD RAILROAD WATCHES, and who alao uiulces a specialty of 18-Karat Wedding Bings AND THE FINEST WATCHES. Anythin# you buy from him belli# warranted as represented. Opera U lasses at Cost. LOTTERY. |a q I CAPITAL PRIZE, $150,000. “H> do hereby certify that tw supervlse thn arrangement* for alt the. Monthly and Semi’ Annual Drawing* of the Louisiana State Lot tery Company, and m person man/xge and con trol the Drawings themselves\ind that the same are conducted with honesty, fairness, and itt good faith toward all part.es, and we authorize the Company to use this certificate, with fac similes of our signatures attached, in Us adver tisements.'* Commissioners. H> flie nrter*fi7nerf /Junto* and Banker* ton pai/ a!/ Prize* drawn in thr Lauiiriana State Lof lerirt which wn./hc jtrrtcr trd at frur 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. UNPRECEDENTED ATTRACTION'. U Over Half a Million Distributed. LOUISIANA STATE LOTTERY COMPANY. Incorporated in 1868 for 3T> years by the legis lature for Educational and Charitable purposes —with a capital of $ 1.000,000- to which a reserve fund of over $.YX).090 has since been added. By an overwhelming popular vote its fran chise was made a part of the present State con stitution, adopted December 'id, A. D. 1879. The only lottery ever voted on and indorsed by the people of any State. it never scales or postpones. lit (iirnnd Single Number Drawing* take ftlace monthly, and the *eml- Annual Draw, iign regularly v\ery U mouth* (June and December). A SPLKMIID OPPORTTNITY TO Wit A FORTUNE. ELI V] NTH GRAND DRAW ING, CLASS L, IN THE ACADEMY OF MUSIC. NEW ORLEANS, TUESDAY, Aotembcr H. IW7—2lUlti Monthly Drawing. Capita! Prize, $150,000. S3B~ Notice —Tickets are Ten Dollars only. Halves, $5; Fifths, $2; Tenths, sl. LIST OF I’RIZES. 1 CAPITAL PRIZE OF $180.000... .$150,000 1 GRAND PRIZE 07 50,000.... 50,000 1 GRAND PRIZE OF 20,000.... 20,000 2 LARUE PRIZES OF 10,000.... 20.000 4 LARUE PRIZES Off 5,000... 20.000 20 PRIZES OF 1,000 ... 20,000 50 PRIZES OF 500.... 25.000 100 PRIZES OF M 00.... 30,000 200 PRIZES OF 200.... 40,(XX) 500 PRIZES OF 100 ... 50,000 APPROXIMATION PRIZEB. 100 Approximation Prizes of S.'SOO $30,000 100 “ " 200. ... 20.000 100 “ “ 100... 10,000 1,000 Terminal “ 50.... 50,000 2,179 Prizes, amounting to $535,000 Application for rates to clubs should be made only to the office of the Company in New Or leans. For further information write clearly, giving full address. POSTAL NOTES, Express Money Orders, or New York Exchange in ordi nary letter. Currency by Express (at our expense)- addressed M. A. DAUPHIN, * New Orleans, La. or M. A. DAUPHIN, Washington, D. C. Address Registered Letters io NEW ORLEANS NATION AL B \N'R, New Orleans, La. DCMCMRFR That the presence of Gen rt L. IVI L. IVI Dun erals Beauregard and Early, who are in charge of the drawings, is a guarantee of absolute fairness and integrity, that the chances are all equal, and that no one can possibly divine what number will draw a Prize. It KMEMBER that the paymentof all Prizes Is GUARANTEED MY POUR N ATIONAL IIAAHK of New Orleans, and the Tickets are signed by the President of an Institution whose chartered rights are recognized in the highest Courts; therefore, bewuro of any imitations or anonymous schemes. GLOVES, HOSIERY, F/I t . H. A. Dumas’ ARRAY OF BARGAINS. Ladies’ Collars and Coda 1oc., Indies’ Colored Collars and Cuffs, in seta, 30e. set. Ladies’ Mourning Collars and Cuffs 30c. sot. Ladies' Merino Undervests 35c. up. Ladies’ Camel’s Hair Undervests $1 25 each, $2 25 pair. Corsets at 35c., 50c., 7He., $1; good value. Chemise and Drawers and Skirts at 4Sc, Braided Sets, Black and Colored, $1 50 each. Braided Panels, Blaek and Colored, $1 75 each. Beaded Kress Trimmings, all prices. Fancy Kress Braids, Black and Colored, sc. yard up. Misses’ and Boys’ Hof ), full line, sc. to !>(£e. Stitched Back Kill Cloves $1 pair, warranted. Job lot Black and Colored Silk Ribbon Velvet 25c. yard. Also, full line of Gents’ Furnishings. H. A. DUMAS’, 2.1 BULL ST. — Li'na FRUIT AND GROCERIES. 75'BARRELS APPLES' 2r BARRELS EATING AND COOKING PEARS, 30 Barrels HEBRON POTATOES, 26 Sacks RlO.and JAVA COFFEE, LIQUORS and WINES of all kinds, SUGAR, BANNED MEATS, Choice FLOUR, CANNED GOODS, NUTS and RAISINS. New TURKISH PRUNES, New CITRON. BUTTER. CHEESE, LARD, SUGARS, SOAP, STARCH. CRACKERS, BROOMS, PAII.S, CRANBERRIES, GRAPES, etc. F’or sale at lowest prices. A. H. CHAMPION. New Goods I \URING our annual visit to the Northern * market* this year we have added many new Delicacies, and now offer a stock which for Its variety and excellency of goods cannot be surpassed South. Our prices will be satisfac tory. and the best attention given to all who favor us with a call or their patronage. A. M. & C. W. WEST. NVOOIX. A. S. BACON, Planin'; Mill, Lumber and IVuod lard, Liberty and East Broad sts.. Savannah, Ga. ALL Planing Mill work correctly nnd prompt ly done. Uimml stock Dressed nnd Rough Lumber. FIRE WOOD, Oak, Pine, Lightwood and Lumber Kindlings. ■BjaaTYLER DESK CO • \ ST. LOUIS, HO. ' ; M.,u.*cTUHiasor fin* DESKS, BANK COVSTEM ■aliVtoSlgga RANK, COURTHOCSS, A FIU<S OFFICE FITITNO3, RV .--I A** 1 --TdcilL——* Beat Work anri Lowest PricM •SQli-i— -* Guaranteed. ICO pagellk.t’d CaUlogue^iy^verjjyitcdjjuj^^j^r^ojjt^jj/ai 5