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4
Morning N*“vs Puldng. Savannah, Gi
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NEW YORK CITY
J. H. Bates, is Park Row.
O. P. R iwell & ' !o . 10 Spruce street.
AV. W Sha pA’ C ,21 Park Row.
Frank Kiernan A Cos.. 152 Broadway.
Da'Vuy A Cos.. 2? Park Place.
J, W. Thompson. 39 Park Row.
American Newspaplb Publishers' Association,
Pott-*r B i lilng.
PHf LADELPHI Y-
N. 'V. Ay eh A: Son, Times Building.
BOSTOs-
F R. Niles. 25‘i Washington street.
Purr- No i, ,fc Cos.. 10 State street.
Clil ’ AGO—
Lord t Thomas, 45 Randolph street.
C NITNNATI
Edwin Ai.de -■ 0 impart, 60 West Fourth street.
NEW HAVEN—
The H. P H beard Company. 25 Elm street.
ST LOUIS—
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ATL \NT V
Morning News Bureau. 3>4 Whitehall street.
MACON—
Daily Telegraph Ophce. 597 Mulberry street.
THIS ISSUE
-^CONTAINS —
TWELVE PAGES.
m\ TO iNEiV ADVERTISEMENTS.
Special Notices— Real Estate for Sale, W. G.
Woodfin; Kememtier the South Savannah Lots,
Rowland & Myers; Workingmen Atiemion, S.
Seiig, Dealer ii Cigars and Pipes; Lots at South
Savannah, Rowland & Myers; I am the Only
One. Townsend; Bottled Faust Beer at .las,
SlcGratn & Co.’s; Faust Beer on Draught at
Leva i's; Bottled Faust Beer, S. W. Branch;
Faust Beer on Draugnt at Win. Scheibing’s;
Faust Beer in Bottles at Moehlenbrock &
Dlerks’; Faust Beer on Draught at George
Schwarz's R ailing Room; Desirable Building
for Sa)e, Rowland & Myers; Empire Steam
Laundry; Savannah Steam Laundry: H. J.
Rud, Broker; Imported Cigars, E. L Byck; To
Builders. A. Hanley; The Printing Biz is Pros
perous, Robiiison Steam Printing Company.
$. all You Satisfied?—Tbe Globe Shoe Store,
169 Brouguton Street.
Will Open This Week Extraordinary
Yalce3 —G. Eckstein & Cos.
The Stovikr— James Douglass.
Shoals—B. H. Levy & Bro.
Dress Trimmings -At Gutman's.
TcßPEsriNs Mancfac roaKßs, Planters, and
Truck Farme is— alomon Cohen.
Another Great Sale—A. R Altmayer & Cos.
Leading Dry Goods Hocse—Morrison, Fove
& Cos.
Mattings— M. Boley & Son.
Just R : ;eivbd—L. &B.S.M. H„ M. and M.
M. Department,
Ocb Goods—A. Falk & Sons.
Adciion Sales— Plants, Furniture, Etc., by
C. H. Dorkett.
New Spring Embroideries and Laces—C.
Gray & Son.
Cheap Column Advertisements Help
Waatai: E nploy nent Wa nod; For Rent; For
Sale; Lost; Personal; Miscellaneous.
The Boston Herald freque itlv indulges
in bloody shirt pyrotechnics, and the Puila
delphia Press, in copying one of these out
bursts the other day, said t at it was the
utterance of a Ueruocra ic newspaper.
Why, bless you, the Bosto i Herald is not a
democratic newspaper. It appiars to be
half mugwump and half bloody shirt ia its
politics.
“Nellie Blv” is going to lec ure, and her
first appearance ou the lecture stage will be
In New York to-night. Her real name, by
the way, is Elizabeth Cockrane, and she
■was born in Pennsylvania. It has bee i
stated that she is an Ohio girl, but the state
ment probably grew out of the fact that
she is a girl who generally gets w hat she
goes after.
Foot pads ia New York are becoming
bolder. Two of them tried to rob Con
troller Jackson, of Brooklyn, while lie was
being driven through Twenty-fourth street.
New York, the other night. One of them
caught the reins at the horses' heads, ad
the other tried to < pen the carriage door.
Tbo driver applied his whip to each in suc
cession, ana succeeded in getting rid of
them.
Mayor Grant, of Now York, has sprung
a surprise by appointing his secretary, Mr.
Thomas C. T. Crain, to tbe office of city
chamberlain, to succeed Richard Croker.
Mr. Grain is not yet 30 years old. He is a
lawier, and possesses considerable ability.
As the may r’s secretary, ho received to.OOJ
a year, but as city chamberlain bo will get
s'3o,o(X), out of which lie must pay clerk
hire and incidontal expenses, leaving the
not income of the office about 318,000 a.
year. No one was more surpris and at the
appointment tliau Mr. Crain hi mself.
Mary Audcrson, it is announced, will
visit this country next fall, but not in a
profes ionsl way. She v. ill come as a bri 10.
Special cablegrams say that her step at or
frankly admits that si,e is engaged to Vr.
Antonio dn Navarro, and the New York
Mail and Express states that she lias writ
ten to Willia n B ack, the mvoiies , that
she is going to marry Mr. Navarro. It
could hardly lie exjiectad that Min Auder
•on would ho a old maid, but if, was uopod
that when sho concludod to marry she
would allo w hersolf to ho won by a southern
man. Perhaps, however, the recent rumors
aro as unfounded ss others of a like chnrac
tor that have beon circulated.
T e President's Southern Policy.
When the President was inaugurated
• here was area: deal f speculation as to
whit his s mthern do iev would lie. The
i npressi m see ne 1 •o be th it ha was de
sir msof i avingtheg ,ol w iiofthes uthern
pe pie, au I ti at therefore he woul i do n th
i ig that they could r gard as being again-t
their interests. When tne wb.te republican
movement in the sou h was started it was
j derstood that he favored it. He certainly
;aveit -o mu.'h t -cou a ement that black
i li icians in d.fferent parts of the soutu
denounced h m ia pretty stro g terms.
Many -f tbe white republicans in the south
told hi n t at hs had made a mistake, and
used whatever i .fl lenea tiioy possev-ei to
in luce him to pursue a:i aggressive, instead
of aco ciliatorv. policy to vai and tbe south.
It is i r bable that he never intended to
the s uthern people as if be felt a
friendly interest in them. He may have
aid seine things that crea ed the impression
hat he intended t j adopt a policy of that
tind, but he has never done anything to
justify an impre-sionof that sort. On the
contrary, his official acts have been in har
mony with the views of the most partisan
Ot tbe lepubhcan leaders. To show that
his is true it is not neces-ary to refer to his
fficial acts in all tbe southern states. It
iis.ffl lent to refer to those of this state
nd F.onda.
Ia this s ate he is rutting e ilored men i ito
some of toe most important i dices in hi - gift,
ilthough he ku >ws that they are not ac
ptable officials. Not long ago he made a
* lored man collector of the port of Bruns
v ck. and tbe colored man was not even a
esideut of t at city. Tht re are plenty of
•vhite repub icans in Brunswick who are
uiaiified t fill alincst any ■ dice, and aruo g
em a collector could nave been found who
would have give.i general satisfae.i >n.
The other day a colored mu was ap
pointed p ,s; master at Athe is. and a colored
man also has been appointed postmaster at
Auiericus. Both Athens and Amencus are
growing cites. The vast maj irity of tb ise
who have dealings \vi h the postoffice ia
those cities are white pe, pe, and they
object to c dored p stmasters. The Presi
dent, however, d< ies not listen to their o joc
tlons. He lias n i svmp ithy with the a. He
eems to desire to annoy, rathor than to
• ileise, toe soutuern pe pie. Tbe Was and lg
tou correspondent of the Now York Times
sivs that a colored man was anp dated p i-t
--master a Auiericus to punish Cos 'gre-sman
Crisp for his presumption dn oppo-i ig
-(leaker Heed. Ca i it be p s-ible that the
President would engage in such small busi
ess ?
Congressman Crisp Rays that the man
who has been appointed post na-tor a
Amencus is wholly u ifl: for tba position,
and and u dies* th • sirni thing could oe said
truthfully of toe app untee at Atnens.
IV hat has been the President’s c mrse in
Florida? He has appointed a ju lge and
marshal who have shown themselves
to be extremely zealous in doing par
t.san work, and it is notorious that
he upholds them in doii g such work.
Effor.s have bee 1 made to pack grand ad
p-i it juries with republicans for the hearing
and trial of political cues. Democrats
have been dragged 1 ng distances fr m their
homes to atis er changes that, there are
good reasons for thinking, have no found t
tion except in partisan hate. The Preddent
has been asked to dismiss the off n l ug offi
cials, but he has taken m notice of the re
quest. indeed, it is probable that their par
ti-an acts meet his approval.
Does it not appear from the foregoing
facts tha' the President is beut on pu lsu
ing the southern people for refusing to su -
port the llepubl.ea i par;y? There is c *r
tainly uotliing conciliatory in his uttitude
toward the south. In wha* northern city,
f r instance, has he appointed a colored
man p simasteri There are tens of thou
sands of colored people in New York, also
in Pennsylvania and Ohio, and ery intelli
gent ones, 'oo; but the President doesn’t
appoint colored postmasters in tho e stales.
Tuere is no neod for inqu ring what the
President’s southern policy is. It is ap
parent to every one w ho is acquainted with
his public acis in the s iutb.
Praised by His Enern es.
Congressman Charles F. Crisp ot this
state has ixtorted praise fiom the re übli
ca sby the forceful manner in which he
protested against Speeker Reed’s unconsti
tutional" rulings. The St. Louis Globe-Hem
oct at. one oi the strongest of the republican
newspapers of the west, in commenting on
the turbule it proceed! gs which took place
in tbe Hou e last week, said: “Crisp is 45
years of age, was aa officer .n the c nfoder
ate army, and is now serving bis fourth
term iu c ingress. For warfare like that
which has bee.i wagai in the ti mse in the
past few days, he is unusually well equipped.
He is one of the bri htest, most res mrceful,
ad m> st audacious of the democratic mem
bei-s of the popular branch of congress.”
M . Crisp has grow n steadily in popular
favor ever since be become a member of
congress. He is thoroughly acquainted
with parliamentary law, and in the Fiftieth
congress was frequently called to tho speak
er’s c lair. One of the reasons for his suc
cess is that he makes himself acquainted
with the subj c s upon which he in
tends to address the House. He commands
attention, therefore, because he always ha<
something to say that is worth hearing, and
what he has to say he say-9 well. He does
not take up the time of the House with
declamation in which there is m ro noise
tha i sense. Being a man of much more t an
average ability, and of excjile.it judgment
he is by general consent recognized as oie
of the most prominent of the democratic
leaders of the House.
Mr. Crisp is still a comparatively young
man, and it seems to be safe t > predict a
brilliant fu ure for him. It is quite etrtaiu
that Georgia will honor him, or any other
other one of her sons, to the full extent of
his merits.
Paul Scholz, who was killed iu the mine
explosion in Plymouth, Pa., a week ago,
would probably be alive but for the fac,
that a letter was missent. He recently
entered into a competitive contest for plans
of a government dgbilnuse, and his plan
were accepted. A government olfl nal
offered him 3120 a month to suDerinte.id
the construction of tho buil ting, and the
letter containing tho offer was a 1 Irossed t
Shona idoah. Pa. It was mi.se rried, and
in the meantime Scholz was compelled t
-eek employment else-vliero, an l he went to
Plymouth. The government could very
well afford to do something fur hit widow
and child,
Tho Chicago Mail has given Mr. Clove
land the uakiudost cut of all. It prints a
uiloged net ire of h.ra that might he taken
for a likouoss of Ben Butler. Mr. Cleveland
isn't very pre.ty, but he would come out
auoad of Butior every time in a beauty
show.
THE MORNING NEWS: SCNDAY, FEBRUARY 0. ISOO—TW'ELVE PAGES.
Peeking Brice's ash.
The enemies of t-enato--elect Brice, of
Ohio, are giving him as much trouhie as
they po si ly cm. While h - was a auii
date f r s- a or they tried to defeat him by
circulating st ries that he was bniiug
memb rs of the legis ature to vote for l im,
but they were never able to find any evi
dence to support tne stories, a id after he
was trium n antly elect-d they were giad to
•badon t e coarges cf c irrupt on wuci
they had brought against him. Indeed,
some of them were apprehensive that they
would be Laid respjnsibie for slandering
him.
Another method for persecuting him has
now been ad pled, but there is not much
prob ib. ity tnat it will cau-e him to lose
any sleep. His residence is Luna, Allen
| county, Ohio, although he spends the most
j of Lis time in New York, and the uu titor
of that county l.as call-d upon him to pay
J taxes on nearly 13,000,0d0 of pe sooal prop
j i.-rty. The auditor asserts ti at. Mr. Brice
j has avoided the payment if taxes for about
j five years, and that there is due
j from him in city, county and state
1 taxes $455,000, and penalties a nounting
' to $217,500, making in all $732,5 )0. It seems
I that Allen county has an official who is
known as an inquisitor, a id his busi mss is
to fi id out who avoids the pay
ment of taxes. He has spent some
time in New York finding out
wha' pro- erty Mr. Br.c? has in iho shape
of stocks, bonds and other securities, lie
gets 2J per cent, of whatever amounts he
recovers, a id he thi ks t iat he has a good
thing in the case against .Mr. B'ice.
It is hardly probable that Mr. Brice would
have avoided tne payment f such a>esa
he is liabi ■ for in Lima. He is too shrewd
to do anything of th t sort, even though he
were disposed to shirk his resp usibilities as
a citizen. Tbe pr -ceedi g that has been
begun by the auditor of Allen county a:i
pea sto be an atiempt to bring him into
bad re iute with his pa: ty a id his neighbors.
The result of the effort to collect
about three-quarters of a millio i
dollars from him for back
tases will be watched with a good deal of
interest. It may be pretty safely pre
dicted, however, that he will meet this last
effort to discredit him squarely and defeat
it. His enemies are m iking his road to
tbe Sena e a very hard one, but tbe prospect
is that he w ill reach ti e goal of his ambi
tion, i otwithstanding the efforts of his
enemies to prevent him.
Bad for Ball.
Our dispatches yesterday stated that the
suit of the Rev. Dr. Ball of Boffal >, N. Y.,
against ihe Ne v York Evening Post for
libel, had i esultsd in a verdict of no cause
of action. The Rev. Dr. Ball is the min
who furnished the republica i press with
tbe scandalous and slanderous stor.es
about Mr. Cleveland when the latter was
a candidate for President The Evening
Post handled Dr. Ball very severely—so
severely, in fact, that the finger
of scorn was pointed at
hint bv people who knew him, and had
once respected l im. This t unis rnent was
more ti an Dr. Bull was willing to stand
without an effort to get comoensatiou of
so no kind, and he sued the Evening Post
for $25,000 damages. That newspaper
didn’t deny any hing. It simply pleaded
that it gave Dr. Ball no more than he de
served, aid tha jury agreed with it. He
wasn’t able to show tuat any one of the
charges that he had made against Mr.
Cleveland w s true, aid he was forced to
ad mit that some of them had no founda
tion wim ever.
One of them was that Mr. Cleveland and
two companions were returning to B iffalo
on one oocasi. n from a near-by summer
resort, and tuat ail of them being drunk
toe carriage was overturned, and one of
them wa. killed. On the witness .-tand Dr.
Bail admit ed that Mr. Cleveland was not
in tne party at all. It i- quite s ife to say
that in future Dr. Ball wul atten Ito his
duties as a ini lister of the gospel, and will
not play the part of a gut er-snipe in po
litical camp ligas. The sigma that a jury
of his townsmen has put upon him will be
a mark by which be will distinguished
during the remainder of his life.
No Federal Electloa -*aw.
The 5\ ashington Post, which is a repub
lican newspaper, savs that the enfranchise
ment of the clucks was the blunder of tho
R -publican party. It insists tuat this con
gress will not pass a federal elect.ou law,
aad says: “Mr.-Ingalls and M . Chandler
both know that there are enough republican
senators who will not vota for a federal
election law or for a force bill to de
feat such a measure, and hence the fool.sh
ness of la lling out hope with a ladle ’filled’
with holes.” It decla es that prior to au
election tne “north is made to ring with
blood-curdling tales of s uthern outrages.”
Here is au admission from a republican
newspaper that the atleged southern out
rages are made to order, and aro into ,ded
for political effect. There aro sensible re
publican se ni ors who take uo stock in
them, and, hence, they will not be parties
to legislate in tuat would disturb th > peace
aud quiet ot tne south and check her pr s-
P rity. Now let a few more republican
newspape s talk the same way, and tnere
will be a public sentim - t in the north that
will force Messrs I galls aud Chandler to
cease their bloody shirt talk.
Mr. Wilson L. Bissell, who was Mr.
Cleveland’s law partner iu Buffalo, was
married the other and iy to Miss Louise Stur
gess, of Geneva, N. Y., aid a uong the
guests were Mr. and Mrs. Cleveland, who
received an ovation upou their a rival in
Geneva. Somethi ig quite amusing occurred
just as Mr. Bissell was about to letve
Buffalo. As he was getting on the train,
he was served with a notice to appear as a
witness in a libel suit. Looking at. the
officer iu a half amused, halt angry w ty, he
said: "You go to the devil. I’m not gsing
to put off my wed ii ig to testify ii a lioel
suit. I’ll get married to-night if I go to
jail for it.” Then the train moved ff, and
the officer put his ua ids in his pockets and
whistled in a way that indicated astonish
ment.
The successor of Judge Kelley m cdigress
will probably be State Senator Rayburn,
who l-.ns been nomi. ated hv ihe republicans,
hut he may be opposed by Mr. William M.
Ayres, who has been asked by twe ty-five
Pmtadelphia republica: sto run. These re
publicans v -ted for Harrison last yea , hut
they want raw materials put on the fr, e
list. Mr. Ayres is a de i ocrat, and was de
feated 1 y Judge Ke.ley in the last election
by more than U,( 00 m jori y.
.Speaker It_<ed need iut feel that ho has
been vindicated beoaus? the repunlican
ominati .g c uventioa of tae law Julge
Kelley’s district indorsed his infamous rul
ings. He will he sweetly rep .siug along
side of the late Mr. McGi ity by tne time
all the people are heard from.
CURRENT COMMENT.
The McGintye of the Bouse.
From the Z, u will* Courier-Jou-nal ifVtn.y
According to Mr. B'am-, toe House republi
c.i -a. e stan iin -on t .e tnas of a volcano. Is
t u-re r. • republ can stales .an in congress to
ra.se his voice to save these reckless McGintys?
Bis Greatest Effort at Last!
From a Speech by the H n. llViinm Marirell
pin ts.as Repo ted ny the .Yrir York Herald.
if running from tee ey-s and nose is an indi
cation o: tne grip, tb, n the liemovranc mem
bers of the Hou-e mu-: n \v oeen Mifferiuz
fr. in u v ry severe attack. Tiey hvve been
rum,ing from the ayes and uoes for over a
week.
Might Go a Step Farther.
From the Philade chia ledger t Hep.).
Lieut. Gov. Rickards of Montana has been fol
lowing tbe example of Speaker Reed ia count
ing t.e democrats present ii.i.l not vutin so a
t<> make up a quorum, nut tn y ave ad more
seu-e than to say in Helena to be counted, and
lave biov.ked all legislation by getting out of
reach of the sergeant ai ar t s T e li utenant
governor might as well go on* step farther in
hi* arbitary course, however, aad count taem
present anyhow
The Progress of T vriff Reform.
From tie A etc York World (Dem.).
From Penn-ylva ia and Massachusetts come
new and earnest deman is from anufacturers
—ma iv of them republicans—for free raw
materials. Tiventy-tive suoo who voted for
Harrison at the la*t election now petition an
advocate of free raw materials to sand as a
ca.uii la-e for the seal in tne House made
vacant by the death or Representative Kelley.
The "campai n of edueali n" is progressing
finely, with experience as a schoolmaster.
BRIGHT BiTa.
“" hat’s the matter with that man over there?
He looks down in t.,e in iutb.”
"ile on.hi. to. He is a taroat specialist.’’—
Clothier and t uni.sher.
Missed a Good Chance.—Kind Gentleman
(picking up boyj—fiia; wa- an a viul hard
fa 1, my young man. Way di.ln t you cry?
Small Huy—“l didn't know anybody was look
-111—.” /he Sun.
Macd— Don’t you think those horrid cigarettes
are r lining you. health?
C-oily—x don't ih.nk the eigawett s aw so
harintui as the—aw— ietuabs, don t you know ?
—Tene Haute Exp els.
Honest, Anyway —Turner—That Sampson
is a mean man
Draw y—Yaw*, by Jove; he slid the othavv
nieht t.iat I weminded hi u of Baunu u's What
is it. But I will sav oi bi n, he’s as honest
as the day is long.— ii e.
I l':'i T Kit tha - Webster's.—“l felt so nervous,
mamma,’* said a little girl, referring to an acci
dent ou t e ( revious ay.
“What do you mean tiy ‘nervous,’ my dear?’’
“Why. mamma, it's just being in a hurry all
over.”— Springfield lit publican.
The Logic of Impeccmosity.—Trovers (in
hot store)—l wish you w .u.d charge me for this
hat.
' lerk—But we don't know you, sir.
Trovers—That’s ail the more reason, then,
why you s. o ild lie willing to charge it.—Clutn
ler and Furnisher.
Female Physician—George, is there any pros
pect Oi it clearing off very soon?
George —Notirt ich; w ~y?
Female Phys cian— ilrs. Smith sent for me to
pay her a prof ssio a. vi -it tuive davs ago,
ad 1 ha e been waiting ever since lor it to
clear off. I’m sure she will be exjiectuig me.—
Epoch.
Watchman (breuliless’y'—'Tbe boys’ dor ni
torv is on fire, and if t ey md it out tuey’ll
stop to save their footballs, bats and thin s,
an i perisj.
Boarding School Principal (quickly)—Notify
the oyys that all wlO a e not down-stairs i.'i
two miuutes won’t get any pie. —.,ew York
Hee iu.
What We May Expect —R-porter—l am with
the Hiiz o, Miss til-land, ami have called for an
iut -ri iew.
Miss Bisland—l have nothing to say. You will
fin lau ex-steamboat mate in the next room
vv.iom I have hired to express my feelings.
I’f ase dose the door tigutly when you go in.
Terra Haute Express.
Winter Racing.—Mrs. Highfly—My denr,dur
ing Ihe simmer you .said t e only reason you
wcnttotherkeJKwasbecau.se tha co tu ry uir
was s i cool aid pleasant. Why do you go now
when the t erhiometer is almost at zero?
Mr. llig liy—U ii—er—l go now. my dear,
became tue exciLem nt of the races warms me
up.—.■ ttr lurk Weekly.
Chronic Borrower—Can you lend me S2O for
a few days?
Weary Fiiend-dWhy don’t you pawn your
watch?
"Because it is a keepsake from my dear
motiier, and I don’t like to part with it.”
“My money is a k epsase f-> m my dear
fatln r, and i don’t like to part with it, either.”
Texas Sittings.
A Sure K msdy.—Did you ever call upon Dr.
Banquet profession lly?
■'\es, o iCj. I was drowning.”
“Dr -wu ng!”
'Yes. He diagnosticated my case on the in
stant, and wrote a pre criptlou on a chip, which
he tnre x iuto the naic-r w .ere I could get it.”
“What v.as tiie prescription?”
“Swim,”— Life.
In the Equitable BciLmso at 1 o’Clock p
m.—Lawyer Coke nan —You ought to call some
day at lunchtime, Uncle. I should like to nave
you meet some members of the La w vers’
Club.
Uncle Deaks (from Way back)—^What time
d’yer feed?
Lawyer Cokeman—Well—ahem!—well, er—
oh, usually at about 4:30 o’clock.
The F.en 1 of a Caterer s Boy—Your luncheon
is served, sir!— Turk.
PERSONAL.
Kiss Han key. the first woman ever gradu
ated at Columbia, is to be cou memorated by a
window in the college library •
The first cash John D. Rockfeller ever had
was twenty-five cents, wb eh he earned by
workin r for a farmer so that he migat go to
the circus.
Likct. James D. Gray, who was the first man
to carry a ail nortu irorn Wa imi rtm at the
outbreak of tue war, has petitioned oongress
for a pension.
Gov. Campbell of Ohio says that Mr. C eve
land is the s'longest man in the D mocratic
p.ir.y. and that all of the little booms will
wither ami die bef re 1892.
Rev. Dr. Edward Everett Hale preached an
installation s-T.no the other day at the First
Unitarian church at Berlin, Mass., where his
own first ser.i.on was delivered in 1842.
Mr. Cl vet.ano has sold t i Donald C. Sweet,
a real estate deal rof that city, his valuable
property ou Lexington avenue, Buffalo, which
he buugnt some years ago for a nominal sum.
H. A. P. Carter, Hawaiian min ster at Wash
ington, denies thai a house has been fitudup
for Kalakaua at Wasidugton, and savs the
Sandwich Island ki..g will not visit Washington
this year.
William Pryor, a negro aged 114 years, lives
at Whn.es de, Mo. He is the father of twenty
children—five by his first wife and fifteen by his
second. T e oid man is in excellent health,
and has used tobacco all his life.
Oliver Wendell Holmes once wrote to Mot
ley of Lmers u: “If you have seen a cat pick
ing her lootsteps in wet weather, v ou have s en
th picture ot Emerson’s exquisite intelli ence
feeling for a word or for an epithet.”
Henrik Ibsen’s name is not pronounced
“Eyeb en,” as Bostonians insist. It can be
sta ed ou t ie authority of a Norwegian gentle
man, now in P ,i,ad -lonia, an intimate friend of
the dramatist, that the “1" is pronounced short
as in "it.”
Postmaster Tan Cott of New York has ap
pointed his son, Richard Yao Cott. to tbe eashi.-r
--shp made vacant by the deatn of George H.
L> i --berry. He is 27 years of age, and until
recently his bevii part proprietor of the Bre
▼oort house stables.
Edward Gorqonza. treasurer of the Spanish-
Amer.c u C mmereiil Uni n of New York,
says: "Twenty spa dard- speak English w..ere
one American speaks Spanish. This is one of
the eason why America has not succeeded in
inaki g more headway in gettiug a foothold in
South America."
The Sultan of Turk ey has sent three hairs
fr in the beard f t.ie prophet by a sptciui
messenger as a present to the town of Alepoo.
Wherever ,he messenger appeared during his
jo rnev he was received in stale, a.id Hie gov
ernor of Aleppo came to meet him before the
gales of the town.
The Dowager Emprrss of China wanted to
have he p oto ravihs of all the distinguished
Englisu.n n wuo have s rvel O.iina, a.ni the
Cui.iese govv-rnrao.it lias ju-t procured th ougu
Loud m pho -igrapners for s-r two portraits of
“Chines " Gor .on. uch five feet higu, one
sho.ving him in his English He other in his
Chinese uniform. Th - portraits were obtaineu
by enlarging oil photographs.
For coughs and throat troubles use "Brown's
Bronchia! Troches.”—“They stop an attack
of my asthma cough very promptly.”— C.
Ealcti, itiamivMe, Ohio.
In tha Barber - hop.
FV-om the ’ etc Y rfc World.
Sometimes the lowest worm will ri-rn This
was democstra ed when Jacob Pt Is.-Isff went
into a Gram) street carb.-r shop yesterday to
have his hair cut. The barb r ran nis fingers
Ihroug i t.e victim’s Ic .nt locks, and. after
viewing tue n wim a critic’s eye, asked, witn
the usual scorn:
"Who cut thru hair last?”
Mr. PfaL.raff was mad clear through in a
m.nute, and replied:
"Dot vos col some ov yo-ir pishness who cud
do; hair der last dime, ofer wnocu Is him der
first and me, uei ler. I haf got m - Lire .y money
tobsytor cud tin’ iin tnis dime, un j 1 e enu
py your chair I-coa :se alder re-t ov der bar
bers vis busy. Maype I hat dot hair cud py
der Pa-is exposition, uud maype 1 cuds him
minesel .’’
Tn • barber was crushed, aud could only find
words to a*k:
"ijo-v will you have it cut?”
‘Yuost like you cud* him der last dime.”
Ii "as st this instant tnat the bar’>er recog
nized in Mr. Pfa.sgrnff a forme - customer, and
the word- fed ou the dull, cold ear of a barber
who had tainted.
Bad Fmanciermar. in One Light.
FVom the Detroit Free P ess .
On the Michigan Central train going west the
.'tner day. the conductor came to a passenger
wuo had no ticxet and wuo owned to also being
dead broke.
"How uid you pass the gates at Detroit?" was
asked.
“Bought a ticket to the last station back
here."
"Well, you’ll have to get off.”
“Before vou make up your mind let rae show
you some figures. Here they are. Tuistramis
now on tini . You must stop dea 1 -till to put
nie off. To stop, start aud get u der t..e same
hea iway wul co same lour minutes, bee? It
is an figured out here by a statistician.”
“Ticket or money!”
“The extra tuel consumed is placed at 94
cents, and you must report to the t ain dis
patcuerata cost of 35 c.-n s. The de.ay 1 1
sevculy-ave passengers ls out at $25. The stop
ping and starting and extra strain to ma e up
lour miuutes, damages the tram $.20 worth.
-So.v, tii n. 1 only Want to go thirty m les tur
tuer ”
"Can’t doit, sir!” replied the conductor, and
he tmlied tne bed rope, i a.ted tue irui.i, and
e.-corted the impecunious passenger to tue
Steps.
"Ad right, old chappie!" said the latter, as he
dropped into the ditch. ”i’h railroads of tins
country don t pay 2 per cent., aud it s no w on
der. t\ lien you'll sjie.iti SSO to save 90 cents u’s
a wom.er any siockuolder - v.*r smells a divi
'(end at ah. Go ahead with your old caravan
tue poor house isn’t over six miles down the
track!"
At a ymphony Concert.
From, the Washinqt >n Post.
It was at the concert, where do-mi-sols were
ttutte in*; liKe baiteril.ea oi sonni a.nuug great,
gardens of poetic imagination. Maude and
Mamie are tuere. Maude and Mamie always
ai oi.ige to atteni any public affair tuat is
l ively to be particularly interesting. T.e hall
viorales with tue notes ot the urc.iestra. ani
me leader has his baton p ised iu air ready to
give the final stroge which is to plunge the
place in siience, wueu Ma ine breaks in .nth:
-ay, Maine, look ho .1 longue bus held his
arm up that way. I should think it would
make him tired."
“ (Veil, it ought to,” is Maude's response. “He
makes me tired.”
“Do you like this kind of music?”
“No. Ida great deal ratner ue.tr Liz Thomp
son play tue piano. Did you ever near her?
sbe can play tne 'Fisaer s Horn ipe’ wit i one
hand ’Yankee Doodle' with the ot.er, aud sing
a song all at the same time.”
"U-Um! Can she? Say, Maine, you know
Charley Banks?”
“Yes.”
“Yon know he savs so many clever things.
He Said yesterday tuat Will Jones wore Wag
ue ian they were so loud.”
"The idea. Nobody but Char.ey would ever
have thought of tuat. Got auy more cara
meis?”
“Are all of yours gone already? Here's a
whole lot.”
’There, they're going to play again.”
“00, tuey’re not it’s ever. Don’t you see
the people going out. ”
“6>o it is Come on. Wasn’t it lovely?”
“Perfecily divi,el”
The Eeauty of the World,
From the St. Louis Republic.
We know our wo der world is full
Of secrets, strange nd beautiful;
it our near-sighted eyes could heed:
If we coul i only learn to read
Christ’s luok, as widespread open now
As when in gel. le accents low
He bade us watch the lilies grow.
His wonder-book, with leavs wind-blown.
Good in ad tilings: truths writ in sto e:
With Gilead’s balm for man’s sad hours,
lis every page illumed ith flowers
That toil not, neit er do they .min,
Yet Solomon his glory in
\\ as not arrayed like one of these;
Consider, too, the stately trees.
And whither goes the healing breeze
Tuat bri gs tne still, s.ua 1, patient rain,
Wuo heard the thirsty eartu complain?
And tuat vast secret .-f the s .ies
When, all unseen by our dull eyes
Across the sky from cast to west,
Ne’er making haste, ne’er seeking rest.
Slow march tieuin-t the s n’s white bars
The gr at army of tne stars,
On y the eagl 's eye can trace
Each star to its app i ted place;
’Tis only wuen tne night comes dowD
Our earth can see her starry crown.
And all earth’s joy is ’round us yet,
As when he talked from Olivet;
a t,reasure-bo k, t sar now, a- then,
Is richer than the books of men.
So like these secrets ot the sky
And ear b, that ail aro nd us lie.
May come some dra., long-vanished face
And b iiding near, with tender grace.
Some loved ha and wipe our tears away
And point us to the fairer day.
Hustings Paid It.
JiVont the Philadelphia Inquirer.
Gen. Bastings tells an excellent story on him
self. The incident occurred at Juh stowa
wni.e ha was iu command of the place aider ihe
reat flood. Oue day a man came into the
headquarters and wanted to see "the gineral ”
“Wtt.it can I do for you, my mau?" asxed
Hastings.
“Weil, sor, I live down to Morrel ville,” be
said, “an’ me cellar is full of mud and water
an’ the c.iildt en are all down with t ,e sickness’
an’ won’t ye have the place cleane i out?” ’
“Certainly and will,” sa.d the general.
“An’ whin w ill ye 'tend to it?”
“Tnis alter, oon.’’
The general kept his word. He was almost
cons antly in the saddle, and early in the af
ter oon he rode to Morrellville, two or three
miles down the Conemau.h. and after a g, od
deal of difficulty tound the house. The aupli
cant for relief was waiting.
“I’ve come to look at tnat cellar," said the
general, "if you will hold my ho s a lew
minu.es I’ll i un in and see tvtiat can be done.”
Tae cellar was in a most fi thy condition
filled witu the and bris of the flood. w nt
down tne -tans as far as he couid go, to os note
of the sunxu uiings, and the same day -ent a
gang of men to the place and put the house in
good condition once more.
The days wore by a.id at lait the time came
when, ins work over, he was to b.d farewell to
Johnstown. There was an immense throng at
tue little siation to see him off. Men were cheer
ing him and women were crying over him. A
delegation of workingmen from the mills pre
s.-nted Him wiih a wreath of (lowers, to wh ch
was attached a note of thanks for all he had
done for them and the kind words he had
spoken. The general was deeply affected uy
tue tokens of esteem and love in the midst of
it all the mau from MorreUville pushed his way
to the front.
"Are ye goin’ away?” he demanded.
“I am.”
“Well ye are not goin’ till ye pav yer honest
debts, be ye?”
"Well, now, if I owe any debts I am right
here ou the hurricane deck ready and anxious
to pay them.”
“r en give me the dollar ye owe me.”
“What do t owe you a dollar for?” asked the
gen-ral.
“Didn’t I hold yer hoss fer ye down in front
of me house ter more’n a half an hour? Do
ye think I’m goin’ ter hold yer hoss for
nothin?”
The general was somewhat startled at the
demand. He was surrounded by members of
the staff. Kush Hvidekop r, who was tamiliar
with the case, was so indignant t. at he drew
back liis tt-t.and the mau from Morre.lvi.le,
w o bad had his cellar cleaned out. was in im
minent da g r of ia dug a flying trip dowu me
rail oad , muankuient, but tne general re
strained him.
’Tue man is right. He held my horse for
m said tn.- adjutant, with an amused s nil •
“and if he thinks 1 owe hmi a dollar I will pay
him ”
the do lar was handed over, and that was
General Hasting's final transaction iu Johns
town.
If health and beauty you’d maintain,
And keep your breath a perfect charm,
Use SO/ODON'T with might and main;
For it alone prevents ti.e harm
That mars a woman's teeth and breath,
Anil loaves her mouth as dark as death.
ITEMS OP INTEREST.
A DIME museum in Chicago advertises a
woman who has not been Known to say any
thing except “yea'’ and “no" for over three
i years.
Thomas Ward assigns the cause of subsi
dences which have taken place at Norwich,
Eq eland, t • the pumping of brine for the manu
facture of salt.
ihe 30,0.6 men and boys employed at coal
mining ia Illinois in 1889 produced 11.597,963
tons iif coal, valu-d at $12,496,885. against a pro
duction of 29,410 employes in 18od of 11.855.168
tons, valued ai $13,3 9.030.
The new* cruis *r Baltimore has for her first
honorable duty the carriage of Ericson's bxly
to Norway. Once acr ss the sea she will 6how
h*r pretty self in the ports of the 1. world—toe
fastest cruiser of her class made by human
bauds.
Robert Cushing, the sculptor, is at work
upon a figure of the Madonna, which is being
made for Miss brexel. It is to be pat in a chapel
in Puiiade phia. Mr. Cushing will be remem
bered as the artist who made the well-knowu
bust of the late Cardinal ...cCloskey.
Zeitung, thi man who raveled from Vienna
to Paris in a box as luggage, is now, it seems,
reaping the rewar 1 of his adventurous feat.
" ® rea d tat he has -a n *\v ands iry hat,"
and “is installed in a comfortable room In a lit
tle hotel, *'hi, services as a “allow" novelty
being meanwaile t..e subject of much compe
tition.
Col. Pevtsoff. the leader of the Thibetan
expedition, has discovered a convenient pass to
northwest Thibet, and has mounted to the great,
taolela id of Thibet. He describes the country
rou and as desolat and uninhaniteJ. but the
southern portion of t e plateau is well watered
and wooued. Tue tableland is 12,C0d feet above
the level of the sea.
During the pa<t five months as many as 850
persons have been under treatment at the
1 asteur institute, and it is a f ct which speaks
v.mines in favor of the n-w system that n *t
one of the S ' patients has died. Some slight
modifications have been made in the treatm nt
followed, and, as fresh xpe. ience is gained, the
results are more and more satisfactory.
While out hunting, CoL Standifer and Billy
duller, of Dennison, Tex., came across a large
dead tree, tbe stump of which was full to over
flowing. so to soeak, with mice. The coionel and
ms co npunion pulled off strips of tue decayed
out *r gro \th of the uve. and every time a strip
WA ' Phile I, myri ds f mice ran for th i- lives.
Jr t;lndifer kiU and 380 • f the mice, and Muller
418 £1 he n xt day the tree wai visite t witu two
blip:*- nd-tan terriers, the bark was removed,
an 1 the umber of mice killed is estimated at
over 1,000.
A lodging house eeeper in London named
Fo.*, who was so poor tuat he had been able to
get xe :sed even fro n rate paying, received
iiorn tue nands of hisdving wife t le gift of her
stays. After her death he cut t em up and
discovered over 6600 secret 'd in them. He gave
h.s wife t ie most elegant wake ever seen in tue
neiguboruood, an t wails he was under it< influ
ence a iiia i named Fryer stole t ie balance of
the rnonev from him. He had Fryer arrested,
and in tue police court tae story of the hidden
treasure came out.
Mr. Page, the father of the four girl babies
whose arrival created sue i au excite me ut
some time ago, was in Texarkana, Ark., the
other day. Tue little ones are now more than
a month old, an i are rowing rapidly. Page
has received many letters of con iolence and
congratulation, some proffer.n : fluanci 1 assi t
ance. A lad , said to be an old maid li.un out
west, writes that she ha seen the newspaper
rep rts. ad on proper proof be ng ade that
it was a i ac ual occurrence, she will send a
check for $ 00. She wisnes t understood, how
ever, that the gift is a token of sympathy’ for
the mother.
The keeper of the New York Central park
m nagerie is training an elep ant to carry peo
ple on its back. A i owdah loaded wit i eight
children is to be placed on the docile beast.
The camels, dromeda tes and elephants that
torin part of the re, dent, staff of the "Zoo" in
Regent s p rk, Loado \ are made to earn some
ot their bread by strolling abu it witu cargoes
of i ifants, at a tariff of 4 cents a uead The
dead Mr. Jumbo must have carried hu dredsof
tons of small B itens in his time, and might be
carrying them yet had it not been for the tact
that his keepers feared he would mutiny aud
kill a cargo or two.
A Swede, Charles Peterson, had a curious ex
pe; ienc with a bald eagle w*hile going to his
work one morning near Woodst >ck, in Wind
ham county, Conn., recently. He was trudging
aloug the Ne v Boston cannery road, ue
saw a big, sleepy -looking bird perched on a
branch ot an >ak b/ the roadside. To P *t* r on
the brd 100 ed as big a ac mu >r. It pa l no
attention whatev rto the Swede, who walked
up to the tre *, aid with a club xnoexed it off
the branch, w ich wa a ow one. With a second
blow the Swede Killed the bird and took it horn •
ami a ne ghbor, a hunter, told him that it was
an Ymor.cun eige. its wi.igs measured six
feet and six iuches.
“A LOVE jubilee” is the latest celebration
devised. Oa the occasion of “tne sixth cen
tenary of the loves of Dmteand Beatrice” a
grand demonstra tou in honor of the tender
p iSSion will be held at the Politeamo at Flor
ence, and will ba kept up fo • five weeks, be ;in
nitig with ay 1. foere will be an exuibition
ot the gr,-. t works of the greitoit woman: a
senes or taol-aux vivants, reproducing the
princ.pal scenes of tha “Vita Nuova;” and a
conferenc • on love, at which papers will be
re id. A . prize is offered for the m .si eloquent
discourse, and the competition is open t < all
comers. Of course, tnero will be portraits of
Dante and Beatrice, and a complete collection
ot book. about them.
M. Tmvru .it, a workingman, elected as
such to th • present Chamber of Deputies In
France, wears ali the time in public the blouse,
which is t le badge of a laborer in that country.
M. Thivrier began wo k in the coal mines at
Commentoy, Fra ice, when 12 years old, and for
tw nty ye irs remain and in t em, handling tue
pick. Afterward he became a wine gr over and
dealer in wines. He is. a s cialist, but not a
c .mmuniouist, ‘‘for, liav.ng,” as a French pap -r
p us it, "acquired his capital bv his own hard
wok, he cannot e sily un lers and h> v that
capitals o, 1 i belong to ail the world.” Through
all his car er he has stuck to his work.ngmau’s
blouse, and it was largely upon the strength of
that pec jliarity tmat he was elected a deputy.
He is su.d to be a man of ui.usual iute iigence
and a cool speaker. When he came to Paris to
take his seat, his b ouswhich he wore not
only at the chamb r. but at receptions and all
otner functions wuich he attended, made him
at once fam us.
That was arrange sentence in our Paris cor
resDondenl's letter of last week, -ays a London
news; a or, which stated, from observi tg that
those addicted to alcohol did not take influenza
the physicians had advised the use of warm
alcoholic drinks. In three davs no less than
15,000 eople were taken up tor drunkenness in
tue stre t- of Paris, of whom 1,200 said they
were simply following the treatment prescribed
ft'i iiitl.jenzii. \Ye cannot say tuat there ia any
such exemption or advantage iri t.iis country in
t ose who take alcohol. But the indiscriminate
advice to tb.e public to drink war n alcot.de
drinks see :is to us a very questionable prescrip
tion. Certainly wo thiuk ttiat, so far, resu.ts la
England compare very favoraliy with those of
Paris, and the reve itire efficacy of warm alco
holic drinks is no part of the creed of English
physicians. The great points to observe, both
ior preventing the disease and pas ing throug 1
it la orably. are to live naturally, soberly aud
s ns.blv. to mnule fresa air, takiu ; wholesome
and simple food and a sufficiency of sleep. If
alcohol in eded in a disease with so sh rt a
pyrexia, it is in small quantity, and in the stage
of sweating aid convalescence.
The German press is discussing at length the
merits of anew French repeating air rifle
called the “miracle gun.” The rifle was in
vented by M. Paul Giffard in Paris, the original
projector of the Parisian pneumatic post It is
described thus: "T e weap .n is light,’ much
lignter tea i any of the army rifles now. in use.
It res ntbles the magizine gun in that a steel
cartridge about a span and a half long and as
tmek as a man's t-.umb. is attached to on bar
rel by means oi a screw. This cartridge con
tains 3JU shots, w.nc i can be discharged as rap
idly or slowly as a man desires. Since neither
powder nor any other explosive, but only com
pressed and liquefied air s. pplies the expelling
fore* 1 , no smoke an I no tla n accompany tne
discharge. Only a short, suarp, low report is
heard as the ball leaves the cartridge. At the
r cent trial the ball traveled with wondeifu
accuracy an t penetrated de p into the wall of
tue snooting room. As soon as one cartridge
is emptied of its 300 shots another cartridge
can he >cr<*weu on the gun in tue twinuling of
an eye. -VI. ■ .lflord sa s that th.* 300 shots in a
cartrid e can he* produced at a cost of about
‘..Mj c mts lhe gun itsel can be manufactured
for about $5.”
Read Bros., London, bottle none but Bass' E.
B and Guinues' Double Superfine Dog's Head
brand, these being the exact terms employed
by the brewers to designate their choicest and
most expensive pale ale and stout, respectively.
Lippman Bros, and ftL Lavin's Estate, agents,
Savannah, Ga.
OR AY <fc *ON
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120 BROUGHTON ST.
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MEDICAL.
THEia LORY OT MAN
STRENGTHiMTAtITJfif!
How Lost! How Liegainod,
r°^0 I,FE i
KNOWTHYSEIf JB§k
THE SCiEftCE OF LIFE
A Scientific and Standard Popular Medical Treatise
on the Errors of Youth,Premature Decline, Nervous
_aud Physical Debility, Impurities of the Blood.
ExKAusjEDVITAtIT?
Miseries
Resnlting from Folly, Vice, Ignorance, Excesses or
Overtaxation, Enervating ah l unfitting the victim
for Work, Business, the Married or Social Relation.
Avoid unskillful pretenders. Possess this great
v 'rk. It contains 8)0 pages, roval Svo. Beautiful
finding, embossed, full gilt. Price only SI.OO by
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ceived the OLD AND JFAVFLLED iIIEDAL
from the Niitional Medical Association for
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THE PEABODY MEDICAL INSTITUTE*
No. 4 Bulfinch St., Boston, Mass., to whom ail
orders for books or letters for advice 6hould be
lirected as above.
PETERMAN'S^ROACH^FOOD.
The people who have used PETERMAN'S
ROACH FOOD highly recommend it to
their friends and n ighbors. It has no equal in
the world, as it attracts th • Roat es and Water
Bugs as a food which they like better than any
!£ ln K e * s **- They all eat it any die. P.it up in
25c., 50c. and 75c. mailable cans. Sold by all
the principal drugrists in the United States.
W >f. PETERMAN, M’F’G CHEMIST,
Office- No. 6 East 14th street, N w York.
Lli PM aN BROS.. Agents, Savan a i.
SOLOMONS & CO,
D-KTJGr GUSTS,
Market Square. Telephone 144.
BRANCH STORE: 92 BULL STREET.
Telephone 390.
Prescriptions Put up in Either Establish
ment can be Repeated at the Other.
HEADACHE
if qY i\ USE HOFFM vN S
ftr YIAV” Harm ess Headache
■ Uj Powders,
Inj f/riiSsg' yv&r ' they area specific,
8k lURrSsi— Containing no opium,
RA. VJ. bromi es or narc ties.
rc*R. rOlVv- They are n t a cathar-
WaSM ' ' tic. i’r ce, 25 Cents.
- —For Sale by Druggists,
The lloffiQan Dnn Co* International BriJge,Ont
CHICHESTER’S ENGLISH
PENNYROYAL PILLS
RED CROSS DIAMOND BRAND.
Safe and alway* reliable. Ladle*. A
sk for Diam<nd Brand, in
red. metallic boxs, a aleil with blue jWtV>
YCily ribbon. Take no other. All pills
wvy pasteboard boxei. pink wrappers, are YSf
nf (SttOfttrouM counterfeits. S'-:. 4c.
Jr (Mauijts) for particulars, testimonials anr
£v '‘Belief for Ladles,* in Utter, by returx
Vtall. A 'a me Paper.
C Chic beater lkwu'l SUdiaon B<j., PbiLa.. F