The morning news. (Savannah, Ga.) 1887-1900, October 20, 1890, Page 2, Image 2
2 thing by way of alleviation, because he and the wounded man belong to different na tions, wbich have abominated each other for centuries. The wounded man is an Israelite, and the stranger now coming on this scene of suffering is a Samaritan. They Del ng to nations which hated each other with oDjurgation and malediction diaho.ic. They had oppodlion temples, one on Mount Gei izini and the other on Mount Moriah, and I guess this Samaritan when he comes up will give the tallen Israelite another chp and say: “Good for you! I will just finish the work these bandits began and give you sne more kie. t jat wiil put you out of vour misery. And here is a rag of your coat that they did not steal and I will take that. tVhat! Do you dare t i apj>ed to me for mercy? Hush up! Way, your ancestors worshiped at Jerusalem when they ought to hat e worshiped at Gerizim. Now take that! And t a.! And that!" will say the Samaritan as he pounds the fallen Israelite. No; the Samaritan rides up to the scene of suffering, gets off the beast and steps down ard looks into the face of the wounded man and says: “This poor fellow does not belong to my nation, and our ancestors worshipped in different places, but he is a man, and that makes us brot ers. G and pity him as I do!” And he gets down on bisknees and begins to examine bis wounds, and straighten out bis limbs to see if any of his bones are broken, and says: “My dear fellow, cheer up, you i .elled l ave no more care about yourself, for I am going to take care of you. Let me feel of your pulse! Let me listen to your breathing! I have in these bottles two liquids that will help you. T'ne oue is oil, and tuat wi.l soothe the pain of ttteee wounds, and the other is wine, a id your pulse is feeble and you feel faint, and that will stim date you. Now I must get Sou to the i Barest tavern.” “O, no,” says le man, “I can’t walk; let me stay here and die. “Nonsense!” says the fa uaritan. “You are not going tidie. 1 am going to put you on this beast, and I will bold you on till 1 get you to a place where you can have a soft mattress and an easy pillow.” Now the Samaritan has got the wounded man on his feet, and with much tugging and lifting puts him on the beast, for it is astonishing bow stn ng the i-pirit of kindness will make one, a* you have seen a mother after three weeks of sleepless watching of her boy, down with scarlet fever, lift that half-grown boy, heavier than her elf, from couch to lounge. And so this sympathetic | Samaritan has. unaided, put the wounded man in the saddle, and at slow pane the extemporized ambulance is moving toward the tavern. “You feel better now. 1 think,” says the Samaritan to the Hebrew. •■Yes,” he says, “I do feel hotter.” "Hallo, you landlord: help me carry his man in and make him comfort able.” Tbat nigbt the Samaritan sat up with the Jew, giving him water whenever he felt thirsty and turning bis pillww when it got hot, and in the morning before the Samari tan started on his jouruey, he said "Land lord. now lam obliged to go. Take good care of this man and I will be along here soon again and pay you for all you do for him. Meanwhile here is something to meet present expenses." The “two pence" be gave the landlord sounds small, but it was as much as ten dollars here and now, consider ing w hat it would there and then buy of food and lodging. As on that December noon we set under the shadow of the tavern where this scene of mercy bad occurred, and having just passed along the road where the tragedy bad happened, I oould, as plainly as I now see the nearest man to this platform, see that Bible story re-enacted, and I said aloud to a group under the tent: One drop of practical Christianity is worth more than a temple full of ecclesiasticism, and tbat good Samaritan had more religion in five min utes than that minister and that Levite had in a lifetime, and the most accursed thing on earth is national prejudice, and I bless God that I live in America, where Gentile and Jew, Protes tant and Catholic, can live together with out quarrel, and where, in the great na tional crucible, the differences of sect, and tribe, and people are being molded into a great brotherhood, and that the question •wnich the lawyer flung at Christ, and which brought forth this incident of the good Samaritan. "Who is my neighbor?” is bringing forth the answer “My neighbor is the first man I meet in trouble,” and a wound close at hand calls louder t>an a temple seventeen miles off, though it covers nineteen acres I saw in London the vast procession w hich one day last January moved to Bt. Paul’s cathedral nt the burial of that Chris tian hero, Loid Napier. The day after at Hawarden, in conversation on various themes, I asked Mr. Gladstone if he did not think that many who were under tbe shadow of false religion might not never theless be at heart really Christian. Mr. Gladstone replied: “Yes; my old friend Lord Napier, who was yesterday buried, after he returned from his Abyssinian cam paign, visited us here at iiawarden aud, walking here in this park where we are now walking, he told me a very beautiful inci dent. He said: ‘After the war in Africa was over, we were on the march and we had a soldier with a broken leg who was not strong enough to go along with us and we did not dare to leave bim to be taken oare of by savages but we found we were compelled to leave him and we went into the nouse of a woman who was said to be a very kind woman, though of the race of savages, and we said: “Here is a very sick man, aud if you will take care of him till he gets well, we will pay you very largely,” and then we offered five times that which would ordinarily be offered, hoping by the excess of pay to se cure for him great kindness. The woman replied: “I will not take care of him for the money you offer. Ido not want your money. But leave him here, and I will take care of bim for the sake of tbe love of God.”’” Mr. Gladstone turned to me aid said: “Dr. Talmage, don’t you think that, though she belonged to a race of savages, that was pure religion?” And I answered: “I do; I do.” May God multiply all the world over tne number of good Samari tans! In Philadelphia a young woman was dy ing. She was a wreck. Sunken into the depths of depravity there was no lower depth for her to reach. Word came to the miduight mission that she was dyirg in a haunt of iniquity near by. Who would go to tell her of the Christ of Mary Magdale i? This one refused, and that one refused, say ing, “I dare not go there.” A Christian woman, her white locks typical of her pu rity of soul, said, “I will go, aud I will go no -v,” She went and sat down bv tbe dying girl and told of the Christ who came to seek and save that which •was lost. First to the forlorn one came the tears of renentance, and then the smile as though she had begun to hope for the pardon of him who came to save to the uttermi st. Then, just bef re she breathed her last, she said to the angel of mercy bending ever her pillow; “Would you kiss me?” “I will,” said the Christian woman, as she put upon her cheek the last salutation I efore in the heavenly world, I think, God gave her the welcoming kiss. That was religion! Yes, that was religi on. Good Baraaritaos along every street, and along every road, as well as this one on the road to Jericho. But our procession of sight-seers is again in lire, and here we pass through a deep ravine, and I call to the dragoman: “David, what place do you cry this?” and he re plied: “This is the brook Cherith where Elijah was fed by the ravens.” And in that an-wer be overthrew my life-long notions of the place where Elijah waspvaited on by tne black servants of ihe sky. A bmok to me had meant a slight depression of ground, and a siream fordable and perhaus fifteen feet w.de. But here was a chasm that an earthqu .ke must have scooped out with its 1> ggest shovel or split with its mightiest battle-ax. Bix hundred feet deep is It, and the brook Cherith is a river, which when in full force is a silver wedge, splitting the mountains into precipices. The featherod descendants of Elijah’s ravens still wing their way across this ravine, but are not like the crows we supposed them to lie. They are as large as eagle*, aud one of them could carry in its beak and clinched claw at once enough food for a kelf-dozea Elijahs. No thanks to the ravens; they are carnivorous an 1 would rather have picked o n the eyes of Elijah, wh'm they found at the mouth of bis cave on the side of Cherith, waiting for bis breakfast, having drunk hi- in rning bev erage from the rusning stream beneath, than have been h.s butiers and pur veyors. But God compelled them, as he always has compelled and always will compel black and cruel and over sb sdowing providences to carry help to his childre i if tbev only have faith enough to j catch the blessing as it drops from the i seeming adversity; the greatest blessing j always coming not with wntte wings but black wings. Black wings of conviction bringing pardon to the sinner. Black wings ofj crucifixion over Calvary bringing re demption for the world. Black wings of American revolution, bringing free institu tions to a continent. Black wing* of Ameri can civil war, bringing unification and solidarity to the republic. Black wings of the J udgment day, bringing resurrection to au entombed human r-.oe. And in the last day, wheu all your life and mine will be summed up, we will find that the great est blessing we ever received ca ne on the wings of the black ravens of disaster. Blass God for trouble! Bless God for sickness! Bless God for persecution! Bless God for poverty! You never heard of any man or woman of great use to the world who had not had lots of trouble. Tne diamond must be cut. Ths wheat must be t. reshed. The black ravens must fly. Who are these near est the throne? "These are they who come out of great tribulation and had their robes washed and made white in the blood of the Lamb.” But look ! Look what at 4 o’clock in the afternoon bursts upon our vision—the plain of Jericho and the valley of Jordan and the Dead Sea. We have come to a place where the horses not so mneb walk as slide up on their haunches, and we ail dismount, for the steep descent is simply terrific, though a princess > f Wallachia, who fe 1 here and was dangerously injured, after re covery, spent ala >ge nmount of mouey in trying to make the road passable. Down and down! till we saw the white tents pitched for us by our muleteers amid the ruins of ancient Jericho, which fell at the sound of poor music played on “ram’s horn,” that ancient instrument which, taken from the head of the leader of the flock of sheep, is perforated and prepared to be fingered by the musical per former and blown upon when pressed to the lips. As in another sermon I have fully described that scene, I will only say that every day for seven days the ministers of religion went round the city of Jericho blowing upon those ram’s horns, aad on the seventh day, without the roll of a war chariot, or the stroke of a catapult, or the swing of a ballista, crash! crash! crash 1 went the walls of that magnificent capital. On the ovening of Dec. 6, we walked amid the brick and mortar of that shat tered city, and I said to myself: All this done by poor music blest of God, for it was not a harp or a flute, or a clapping cymbal, or an organ played, at the sound of which the city surrendered to destruction, but a rude instrument making rude music blest of God, to the demolition of that wicked place whioh had for centuries defied the Al mighty. And I said, if all this was by the blessing of God on poor music, what mightier things could be done by the blessing of God on good music, skillful music, gospel music. If all the good that has already been done by musio were subtracted troiu the world, I believe three-fourths of its re ligion would be gone. The lullabys of mothers which keep sounding on, though the lips that sang them forty years ago be oame ashes, the old hymns in log cabin churches and country meeting houses, and psalms in Rouse's version in Scotch kirks, the anthem in Euglish cathedrals, the roil of organs that will never let Handel, or Haydn, or Beethoven die. the thrum of harps, the sweep of the bow across viols, the song of Sabbath schools storming the heavens, the doxology of great assem blages—why, a thousand Jenchos of sin have, by them all, been brougut down. Seated by the warmth of our camp-fires that evening of Dec. 6, amid the bricks and debris of Jericho, and thinking what poor music has done and what mightier things could be accomplished by the blessings of God on good music. I said to my sell: Min isters have been doing a grand work and sermons havo been bloused, but would it not be well for us to put more emohasis on mu sic? Oh, for a campaign of Old Hundred 1 Oh, for a brigade of Mou it Pisgahs! Oh, for a cavalry charge of coronations! Oh, for an army of Antiochs and St. Martins and Ariels! Oh, for enough orches tral batons lifted, to marshal all nations! As Jericho wa3 surrounded by poor music for seven days and was conquered, so let our earth be sur rounded seven days by good gospel music, and the round planet will all be taken for God. Not a wall of opposition, not a throne of tyranny, not a palace of sin,not an enter prise of unrighteousness could stand the mighty throb of such atmospheric pulsation. Music! It sounded at the laying of crea tion’s corner-stone when the morning stars sang together. Music! It will be the last reverberation when the archangel’s trumpet shall wake the dead. Music! Let its full power be now tested to comfort and bless and arouse and save. While our evening meal is being pre pared in the tents we walk out for a mo ment to the “Fountain of Elisha,” the one into which the prophet threw tbe salt, be cause the waters were poisonous and bitter, and lo! they became sweet and healthy; and ever since, with gurgle and laughter, they have rushed down the hill and leaped from the rocks, the only oheerful object in all that region being these waters. Now on this plain of Jericho the sun is setting, making the mountains look like balustrades and battlements of amber and maroon and gold; and the moon, just above the crests, seems to be a window of heaven through which immortals might he looking down upon the scene. Three Arabs as watchmen sit beside the camo-flre at the door of my tent, their low conversa tion in a strange language all night long a toothing rather than an interruption. I had a dream that night never to be for gotten, that dream amid the complete tuins of Jericho. Ita past grandeur returned, and I saw the city as it was when Mark Antony ?;ave it to Cleopatra and Herod bought it rom her. And I heard the hoofs of its swift steeds, aud tbe rumbling of its chariots and the shouts of excited spectators in its amphitheater. And there was white marble amid green groves of palm and bal-ain: cold stone warmed with sculptured foliage; hard pil lars cut into soft lace; Iliads and Odysseys in granite; basalt, jet as the night, monnted by carbuncle flaming as the morning; up holstery dyed astnough dipped in the blood of battlefields; robes incrusted with dia mond; mosaics white as sea foem flashed on by auroras; gayeties which the sun saw by day, rivaled oy revels the moou saw by nigbt; blasphemy built against tbe sky; ceilings stellar as tbe midnight heavens; grandeurs turrsted, archivolted and inter columnar; wickedness so appalling that es tablished vocabulary fails and we must make an adjective aud call it Herodic. Tbe region round about the city walls seemed to ine white with cotton such as Theaius describes as once growing there, aud sweet with sugar enue, and luscious with orauge and fig* and pomegranates, and redolent with such flora as can only grow where a tropical sun kisses the earth. And the hour came back to mo when in the midst of all that splendor Herod and ed. com manding his sister Salome immediately af ter his death to secure the assassination of all the chief Jews whom be had brought to tne city, and snut up in tt circus for that pui nose, and tbe news came to the audio..ce in the theater as someone took the stngo anil announced to the exceed multitude: “Herod is dead! Herod is dead!” Tuen iu my dream, all the pomp of Jericho vanished | and gluom was added to gloom, and desola- I tion to desolation, and woe to woe, until | perhaps the rippling waters of the fountain of Eli ba suggesting it—as sounds will sometimes give direction to a dream—l thought that the waters of Christ’s salva tion and the fouctai s “open for sin aud uucleanliness” were rolling through that THE MORNING NEWS: MONDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1890. plain and rolling aernas that oontineot, and rolling round the earth, until on either side of their banks all the thorns became flow ers, and all the deserts gardens, and all the hovels mansions, and all t..e fu.erals bridal pr'>c ssiocs, and all the blood of war was turned Into dahlias, aid a 1 the groans became anthems, and Dante's “Inferno” became Dante’s “Divina Corn media,” and "Paradise Lost” was submerged by "Paradise Regal ed.” and tears became crystals, and cruel swords came out of foundries g.istenicg ploughshares, and, in my dream, at the blast of a trumpet the prostrated walls of Jericho rcae again. And someone told me t at as these walls in Joahua’s tim at the a u .ding trumpets of doom went down, now at the sounding trumpet of the gospel they come up again. And 1 thought a man appeared at the door of my tent, and I said: “Who are you and from whence have you evomef’ and be said: “I am the Sa maritan you heard of at the tavern on the road from Jerusalem to Jericho, as taking care of the man who fell among thieves, and I have just come from healing the last wound of the last unfortunate in aij the earth.” And I rose from my pillow ,n the ten: to greet biro, and my dream broke, and I realized it was only a d’eam, bat a dream which shall become a glorious reality as surely as God is true and Christ’s gospel is the world’s catholicon. “Glory be to the Fatser, and to the Son, and to the Holy Ghoet. as it was in the beginning, is now, and ever shall be, world without end. Amen.” LOVB LAUGHS NOT AT BLACK SMITHS. The Daughter of Mr. Cammick Elopes With a Forge Master at W'ashing ton. From the New York Herald. Washington, Oct. lfl.—The latest sensa tion in a matrimonial way is the elopement of Misi Annie Cammack, the only daughter of Mr. John Cammack, a wealthy retired florist of this city, with a blacksmith who kept a small rhop Dear her father’s man sion. The blacksmith bears the aristocratic name of Arlington Hardesty. The couple went over to Baltimore last Friday and were married by the Rev. Wil liam Clapp. They speDt tbat nigbt in Bal timore and the next day at the happy groom’s humble lodgings near Mr. Cam macu’s mansion. On Sunday morning the bride pegged over home, and announcing that they had just returned from Baltimore, took up her home life where she had loft it off. On Monday morning a letter was received by her father from a Baltimore friend de tailing the circumstances of her stay there with Hardesty, and when he confronted her witn this story she promptly denied the whole thing. Mr. and Mrs. Cammack, bent on satisfying themselves, went over to Baltimore and found the marriage in the books at the recorder’s office. That night Mrs. Hardesty went home with her husband again to his modest quarters over a neighboring little shop. LEFT A HAPPY HOME. Mr. Cammack retired from business cares years ago with an ample fortune, and bis home on the Seventh at: eet road, just about the Soldiers’ home, Is one of the finest suburban residences about this city. His first wife, the mother of the eloping girl, has been dead some yoars, and his present wife, a most estimaable lady has been a kind stepmother to his only daughter. The young lady has had her own way pretty much, having plenty of money with which to entertain her friends, and was a great favorite. Her father doted on her, but he did not spoil her. When sho left school a year or two ago she was highly accomplished. Since then she has had all the advantages of pleasant society and lively company. Her gowns were perfection in number and style. She is tall and graceful, a blonde and possessed of pleßty of admirers. LOVE IN A SHANTY. She is already in possession of a small for tune left her by her mother and uncle, and with what her father may leave her she will be wealtny. The blacksmith shop whioh Hardesty opened three years ago is the last place in the world that even the most romantic girl should become enthusiastic over. It is a little dingy shed just opposite the grounds of the Camunack mansion. The lusty youug blacksmith had plenty of work, but seems also to have had abundant time to excite sparks of love in the h -art of the heiress. Vv’hen he began throe months ago to walk boldly up to the front door and spend his evenings in the splendid drawing room talk ing to his beloved one, Mr. Cammack mildly remonstrated and finally forbade his daugh ter to receive the mail’s attentions. The opposition made stolen interviews a necessity. Miss Cammack’s fancy for the anvil whacker increased, and when he, striking the iron while it was hot, proposed a runaway marriage In Baltimore she was only too willing to comply. Mr. and Mrs. Hardesty are now residing at their humble home, a stone’s throw from the Cammack mansion, and business at the forge, after the sensational developments of the past few days, will probably be remun erate ad brisk. Mr. Hardesty has quanti ties of information on the extent of his beautiful young wife’s present income and future prospects, and they will look about shortly for quarters more in keeping with what she has been accustomed to. Mr. Cammack has not much to say about the matter, feeling keenly the publicity whioh his daughter’s unwise act has oc casioned. It is quite probable that the young people will be given every encourage ment, and if the blacksmith has as much sense as strength his wife may not regret her step after all. At present they are both intensely happy, and their dreamsof life are as bright as t ie sparks from the anvil. The Cammacks are an old Washington family, nearly all of whom have gained and held large fortunes. CRAMPED FOR ROOM. Tbat Is the Condition of the President’s Family. ■> Washington, Oct. 19.—Other Presidents have got along very comfortable in the white house, but President Harrison, it seems, finds the executive mansion too small for his family. His present household consists of himself aud Mrs. Harrison, their daughter, Mrs. McKee, and her two child ren: their son, Russell, and his wife and one child; Mrs. Harrison’s sister, Mis. Diin mick, and her father. Dr. Scott. This is a large number, but not so large by two children as were in the house in Presi dent Johnson’s term, yet the latter made no complaint of cramped quarters. Indeed, it is doubtful whether any Presi dent’s faraiiy, in the strict sense of the word—that is, whose membership was con fined to those who had no proper home elsewhere —has been very greatly incom moded in the white bouse; for, while the rooms are not particularly abundant, they are large and airy. But the Harrisons began their complaints with the red ants, and wind them up with the close quarters, because all the relatives, on both sides ot the family, cannot be comfortably packed away under the roof of the old mansion. It is quite possible that larger quar ters are needed; but, in the opinion of a good many observers, there is an opening tor reasonable doubt whether the h use was ever intended as a haven for the iatiiers and mothers, bro hern and sisters, sons-in-law and daughters-in-law of the chief exocu tiie; and the question of extending its area might well be met with the alternative question of reducing presidential house holds to something like the proportions con templated by the fathers of the republic in providing a dwelling for them rent free. Italian Gunboat Foundered at Sea. Rome, Oct. 19. —The loss of the Italian torpedo boat which left Naples for Spezzia some time ago has been confirmed. She burst her boiler, and foundered at sea. Throe officers and fifteen sailors were drowned. KNIGHTS OF TBB GRIP. The most innocent man on the road— The Drummer. Ever si: ce the inimitable Curtis appeared before American audiences with his “Sam’l of Posen.” the above sentence has been a familiar cne in all sectups of this country. It seems, moreover, to lose none of its pop ularity and appropriateness with age. The drummer is a great institution: he is a necessity under the present conditions of commerce and business. The number of drummers on the road regularly in the United S ates is put down at 250,000. Their salaries and traveling ex eases annually am uut to f1.000,000,000. Tnis vast body cf commercial travelers support and keep up two-thirds of the hotels and livery sta bles in this country. Fully one-third of the passenger rtoeipts of the railroads comes from the drummers. • * * * * * The knight of the grip generally feels his important; he is a thorough man of the world, and appears to be "at home” where ever be is thrown. He recognizes the fact that he is no theory—in business —but a condition, and a very necessary one at that. He is omnipresent on railway lines, on the steamers anl around the hotel s . He is well posted on all subjects, and a first-class talk er. Your true drummer knows everything —or pretends to know it. During the great Mav week in Savannah last year the Hon. P. W. Meldi itn made a brilliant speech of welcome to the visiting drummers who had gathered thore from all quarters. Two of the hits he got off are worth reproducing. Speaking of some of the characteristics of the “drummer, ’’ he said: “Hi self-control is wonderful. He takes a drink whenever he feels like it—and generally feels like it! His powers of endurance are proverbial. He can go without food or drink, can travel days and nights without rest or sleep, can endure exposure to all sorts ot weather. I:i short, gentlemen, the drummer cun stand everything, except his own expenses!” ***** * * A few evenings since a party of commer cial men were sitting on the piazza of the Gulf house, in Thotnasville, enjoying the cool breezes which are nightly waited ovor the “City among the Pi es” from the ds tant gulf. As usual with a crowd of knights of the grip stories were being told, and jokes freely exchanged. An Atlanta drummer led off: “Not long ago,” said he. "my house de cided to employ a stenographer and type writer, as businoss in the office was getting too heavy to be handled by the old methods. “Everything worked well for awhile, and the boss took kits of pride in dictating letters and signing them up when they had gone through the type-writer. It huppeaed, however, that shortly after that I ’sold a bill of goods to a regular customer of mine, an old fellow down in county, who is as good as gold, financially, but shockingly illiterate. The old chap can hardly write his name, and would have hard work reading a circus poster: but he is very sensitive on that point a id don’t want any man to allude to or notice his de ficiencies. Now, when the house sent the invoice of his bill of goods, they wrote him a letter on that aforesaid type writer hop ing the goods would reach him safely and open up satisfactory, and hoping to have his further valued orders, the usual chest nut iu such cases. “The old fellow received the letter in due time, and he decided it was something new—not having seen anything of tbe kind before. He worried with it a while and finally read its contents. Then it dawned upon his benighted mind that my house, being aware ot his edacitioual shortcom ings, had gone to work and had the letter printed, so he could read it better. That made him hot, and the mo e he studied over it the more his "Irish r se.’ “So in less than a we9k after the goods were shipped wo received a money package containing tbe amount due for tbe bill, and a letter from the old fe’low, saying: "Messrs. &, Cos.. Atlanta , Ga : “Dears Sms—Yore goods is to hand, allso yore lettur which is in print. I will hav you to no I kin rede ritin, and it aint nossasary fur you to hav yore letturs printed fur me to rede. I alwais pays my dets, and I sen you in cloze what I ow you, as I doant Tow no ntan to make fun of me. Nothin moar at prezent. “Yores respectfuly, .’ "The boss was paralyzed when he got that, and didn’t know what to say to the old man. He wrote me to go down soon and see our old friend and try to straighten him out. lamon my way now, but don’t know what luck I will have.” * * * * * * * “During my last trip home,” said a well known Savannah drummer, “one of our good customers was in the city buying fall goods, and I took him around to the thea ter in order to show him some attention. Ho was from the wire-grass section of Georgia and lived a good ways back from the railroad. lam morally certain he had ne er been inside of a theater before. “It was the opening night of the season and the play was McCarthy’s Mishaps. Ow ing to its being for the benefit of our Sa vannah branch of the S. T. A., the house was literally jammed. A larger crowd was never seen ia the building, I don’t think. “We had two good seats down in the or chestra, and us tve were early we sat there &nd watched the people pour into the tboa ter in a steady stream, while the ushers had their hands tull of business assigning ticket holders their seats. I enjoyed tbe rustle and confusion, also enjoyed my country friend’s amazement and eemi-cousternaticn as he watched crowds filing down the aisles, aud occasionally glanced around or upward as the stamping of many feet aud the whistling of the gallery g> ds betokened im patience for the performance to begin. "Finally, the seats were all filled and the ‘standing room only was being rapidly utilized, when the orchestra came out a.’d took their places, arid the footlights were turned up preparatory to the raising of the curtain. I turned around mmy seat and surveyed the vast crowd which filled the theater from pit to dome, and I could’nt help feeling good as I thought of the fact that a goodly- share of the receipts would go into our* branch treasury—thanks to clever Jim Shaw. Leaning over to my yokel friend I said with considerable enthu siasm: ■Magnificent bouse, isn’t it? “He did not answer for a moment, but slowly turned himself about and carefully surveyed the big structure from floor to ceiling, and then, in an awe-struck tone of voice, ho replied: ‘Finest building I ever seen. I wonder what she cost!’ ” * * * * * * • The Columbus drummer was next on deck. Said he: “I was down in Apalachi cola several years ago and attended a mur der trial which was going on there at the time. They had right smart trouble in getting up a jury, as a good many of those summoned had expressed opinions one way or the other, or were challenged for good cause. When they had gotten ail the jury except one man lhey called up a merchant of Apalachicola, a Frenchman, who hadn’t I een in this country very lo g. He couldn’t speak English the best iu the world, and ho got pretty badly mixed up by the lawyers as they put him through the usual course of sprouts. At last he seemed to pass muster and they were abo_t to put him in the jury box, "hen the old iudge, who had l een watching the monsieur pretty closely all the whi.e. said, says he: ‘Mr. M—l would like to ask you a ques tion or two betore you take your s a:.’ The Frenchman bo wed politely, and twirled the euds of his mustach as l.e si r n fled hi* readiness to be questioned. “ ‘Are you opposed so o ipital punishment? asked the judge. “*O, no!' replied Mr. M., decidedly. The judge looked thoughtful a moment, and then au idea seemed ~i strike him. “ ‘Mr. M.,do you understand tbe meaning of capital putti hme it?’ “ ‘Searteenly I do!’ said the Frenchman “‘Well,’ said the judge,‘please exp aii to the court your understanding of tne suoject of capitnl du isnment.’ “ ‘Veil?” said he.poinling toward the pris oner, ‘eef ze man va3 geeity I vould hang : him. bat eef he vas not geelty I vould send | him to ze penitentiary for life! 1 “I don’t think tbev took Frenchy on that | jury.” J*** * * * * “I bad a little experience in thia town about a year ago,” said a Savannah drum ! mer, **w icb made me leei very cheap. In fact, for about ten or fifteen minute* you could have bought me for a half dozen copper cents. I got on the Albany train at 8:30 o’e'ock in the morning, intending to go to Pelham to see J. L. Hand. I walked into tne smoker as the train pulled out, and in there I met a brother drummer who was also going up the road. I took a seat by him and he asked me where I was going. I told him Pelham, and he asked me if I wanted to see Hand I replied yes, that be was the only man I sold to up there. “‘Well,’ says he,‘you wont find him home, as he went to Atlanta yesterday.’ •The ilea then fiashei over me that I would lose a day under the circumstances, and as I knew I put in the time to good advantage dowii"in (Quitman or Yral doeta I was sorry I had left Thomasville. VV e were rounding the loDg graceful curve which the Albany division of this road makes as you go out from here, and had Gotten about half a mile from toe depot. ust then Capt Ward—one of the beet and most gentlemanly conductors in the south—came In, taking up tickets, I stated my casj to him and begged him If possible to let him off. We were not running very fast and he kind ly consented to stop for me. The bell line was pulled and as the train slowed up I went baek in tbe first-class coach and gath ered up my sachel and sample case, and as we came to a stop 1 steppes to the ground from tne rear platform. The brakemau assisted me off with my things, and imme diately the train resumed its journey. • I picked up mv duds and struck out for the depot. Tne place where I got off was among those negro cabins which line both sides of the right of way out there beyond the oil mill. I hadn’t gone fifty steps down the track before I became aware of the fact that I was an object of great interest to the colored population inhabiting those houses. Numbers of women and ohildren stood in the doom, or came out to the gates, heads were posed out of the windows, and I realized that I was the center of observation. I could not com prehend what the coons were staring at me for with so much interest, until finally a young pickaninny at tne gate of the nearest cabin yelled out, in tones of the greatest delight: “ ‘Dey put de buctra off de train! L>ey put him off de train!” ■‘Tne cry was taken up all along the lie . and from a cabins came the cry: ‘Dey put de bucltraoff! He didn’t hab no money!’ “In an instant I realized tbe absurdity of my situation, and my face turned red as fire. I felt cheap as thunder one minute, then I got mad and stopped. I glared at the coons who were laughing (as they supposed) at my expense, and I started to say some Sunday school words to them. But 1 concluded that uppearances were dead against me, so I quickened up my speed and soon got past those cabins. For about five minutes—while I was running that gaunt let—l could have been bought cheap, dirt cheap!” DBIVHN TO BHAME AND CHIMB. Misfortune Caus es a Wife’s Fall and Sends Her Husband to Jail. Cincinnati, Oct. 19.—A stubborn legal oontest is in progress in the common pleas court here over Florence Evaline Virgien, a bright girl 10 years of age. The progress of the suit is eagerly watched by two per sons now in Bt. Louis—tbe mother, an in mate of a questionable house, and the father from behind tne bars of the four courts. The story of the father's crime and the mother's sin entail a romance. Three years ago F. W. Virgien, an ex-lieutenant of the German army, who had been promoted on the field of Sedan, arrived in St. Louis with his wife and child Florence. He was employed i y M. Ebret & Cos., but lived extravagantly and was soon arrested and convicted of embezzlement. He went to the penitentiary, aid his wife, left penniless, struggled for a v.-htle and then fell. The little girl was legallv adopted by Louis L. J. Koch, a traveling man of that city. Virgien never learned the iacts abjut his wife and child until two weeks ago, when he was released. The double shame drove him to desperation and he was again arrested, this time for robbery, and is now in jail. Mea.i time his mother died in Europe and left the daughter Florence 85,000 for educational purposes. Viegien’s sister in Brooklyn brought suit for possession of the child, which is resisted by the Kochs. Virgien’s mother loft a large astute, but hearing of her son’s conduct disinherited him. They Knew All About Her. Gossip about women as a commodity is in hot demand. An instance occurred the other day when three young women fell to discussing Mrs. George Gould and comparing notes about her. One had seen her when she was summer ing near Rye, another stopped at the same hotel with her up in the Catskills for a week or two, and the third had seen her at her town house None of these ladies had the slightest acquaint with Mrs. Edith Kingdon Gould, and their gos sip was in no sense malicious, yet they talked for two hours about the wife of the famous young millionaire, and covered nearly every thing conceivable in her physical and mental make-up. It would seem from th ir observation that Mrs. Gould never uses powder in any form, and that hence her face is somewhat slimy at times; that she drives a pair in the park with her hands down just like a man—a difficult feat for a woman ami that when she lived in Westcnester county she was so fond of yachting that she went aboard her husband’s big schooner every after noon at 2 o’clock and waited till he came up from the city, when he rowed out to her from the shore. Three men would discuss, adjust and dismiss the Gould family in five minutes, but when the three pretty gossipere tore them selves apart from luncheon the other day, it was with the impression that they had still left a great share of the important Information that they had gained about Mrs. Gould untold. Electric Oars Collide. Augusta, G v.,Oct. 19. i’wo electric cars collided in front of the Arlington hotel this morning. No serious damage was done, but passengers were all shaken up. MEDICAL. " Peculiar Peculiar in combination, proportion, and preparation of ingredients, Hood’s Sarsapa rilla possesses the curative value of the best known rcme- ■ * vegetable *IQ O w S kingdom. Peculiar in its strength and economy, Hood’s Sarsaparilla is the only medicine of which can truly be said, “ One Hundred Doses One Dol lar.” Peculiar in its medicinal merits, Hood’s Sarsaparilla accomplishes cures hitherto un wSSarsaparilla-uS the title of “ The greatest blood purifier ever discovered.” Peculiar in its “good name at home,”—there is more of Hood’s Sarsa parilla sold in Lowell than of all other blood purifiers. Peculiar in its phenomenal record ~,1; _ m sales abroad no othe rw* 6CUII £*■ preparation ever attained so rapidly nor held so steadfastly the confidence of all classes of people. Peculiar in the brain-work which it represents, Hood’s Sarsaparilla com bines ail the knowledge which modern research-™ _lf in medical science has ■ O S ISc 11 developed, with many years practical experience in preparing medicines. Be sure to get only Hood’s Sarsaparilla Sold by all druggists. j?l; sixforg.V Prepared only by C. X. HOOD & CO., Apothecaries, Lowell, Mass. 100 Doses On© Dollar FTNERAL INVWATION?. NTTNGEZEP. -The re!ativ*s and friends of 1 Mr. C. O. NrsoiZEß are invit-d to attend his funeral at 330 o'clock T.ilS AFTERNOON from hJs father s residence. No. 93 Henry s.reet. EHLEN. —The friends and acquaintance of Joseph Ehlyn are requested to attend his funeral from his late residence. 42 Jones street, at 3 o'clock THIS Monday AFTERNOON. Interment at Bona venture. MEETINGS. CILI.VTO.V LODGE NO. 54. F. 4 .4. M. A special communication ol this lodge A will fc* held at Masonic Temple THIS JV. (Monday) EVENING. Oct. COtti, at 8 o’clock The M. M. d-gree will be con- _ _ ' ferred. Members of sister lodges and visiting brethren are cordially invited to mee with us. FRANK H. MORSE, W. M. Waring Rcssell, Jr.. Secretary. OE KALB LODGE NO. 9, I. O. O. P. A regular meeting will be held THIS (Monday! EVENING at 8 o'clock at Odd Fellow*' new building. The Second Degree will be conferred. Members of other lodge* and visiting brethren are cordially Invited to attend. By order of H. M. REEVE, N. a John Rilzy, Secretary, CITIZENS' SANITARY ASSOCIATION. Office Citizens' Sanitary Association, I Savannah. Ga., Oot. 19, 1890. j A meeting of the Executive Council Citizens’ Sanitary Association, open to all members, will be held MONDAY EVENING. 20th. inst. at 3 o’clock p. it. at the office of the association, 7 Drayton street. JAMES B. READ, President. Denis J. Morphy, Sec'y. LESTER CAMPAIGN CLUB. There will be a meeting of the club MONDAY EVENING. Oct. 20, 1 890, at Catholic Library Hall at 8 o'clock. A full attendance is desired. Ail favorable to the election of Hon. Rufus E. Lister to next congress are invited to enroll themselves as member* of the club. HENRY C. CUNNINGHAM, President. J. Randolph Cooper, Secretary. MEETING TO ORGANIZE A Cotton Factory Association! A meeting of the citizens of Savannah who wish to interest themselves in the formation of a MUTUAL CO-OPERATIVE ASSOCIATION to build a Cotton Factory here, will be held at Catholic Library Hall, on TUESDAY, the 28th inst., (October) at 8 o’clock. It is hoped that every individual in the city, those of small as well as of large means, will interest themselves in this most important enterprise. John Schwarz, Henry Hohensteia, G. W. Umar, J. L. Whatley, R ; B. Harris. C. H. Oimstead, Wm. Garrard, Wm. Rogers, D. G. Purse, F. S. Latbrop, St. J. R. Yonge, R. H. Tatem, Jordan F. Brooks, Gen. n. Nichols, H. C. Davis, H. T. Moo-e, B. H. Levy & Bro , J. S. Collins. W. K. Wilkinson, W. B Mell. W. L. Wilson, Wm. N. Nichols, A. Fernandez, Rowland <£ Myers, Emil Newman, Waring Russell, Fred Grimm, S. .1. Wheaton, Hugh Logan, Robt. M. Hicks, John R. Dillon, S. K. Platsaek, Peter L. Constantine, J. G. Yonge, Marcus S. Baker, John D. Gould, E. J. Kennedy, Dryfus Bros., J. K. P. Carr, Wm. E. Mongin, Louis Alexaner and many others. SJPECIAL NOTICES. On and after Feb. 1, 1890, tbe bruit of meas urement of ail advertising m Hie Motiving News will be agate, or at the rate of $1 40 an inch for the first insertion. GO TO FRIED A HICKS’ RE3TAURANT, THE FINEST IN THE SOUTH. 9. 11 and 13 Market. ROW LIN SKI, Pharmacist, Prescriptions. Ships' Medicine Chests filled and labeled in French, German, Swedish, Nor wegian or Danish. Broughton and Drayton Streets. Telephone 465. SAVANNAH DENTAL PLATE CO., NO 133 CONGRESS STREET, Between Bull and Whitaker Street*. DR LANIER Will visit rooms daily from 12:80 to 1:30 o’clock, to administer Gas and extract Teeth. PRICES VERY REASONABLE. DK. T. F. lIOBEKoON, ’ DENTIST. ODD FELLOWS BUILDING, Corner Barnard and Slate Streets. SW ISS ALPINE FLOWERS as a delicate perfume, combined with the best materials known to scienc9 for the teeth and gums, makes ‘EDELWEIS DENTIFRICE” —A— perfaot artiole for the boudoir. Only —AT— BUTLER’S PHARMACY, Corner Bull and Congress streets DON'T BE “SHORT” OF “MONEY." For if you are, “Uncle Adam," at No. 20 Jeffer son street, between Congress and Broughton streets, will advance you on your Jewelery, Diamonds, Clothing, Etc., Eto. Open, 7a. m. to 9 p ” ADAM STRAUSS. Manager. DON’T GIVE UP IN DKSPAIRL Dyspeptics, you will find a reliable remedy in DR. ULMER’S LTVER CORRECTOR. It is a faultless vegetable preparation, and indorsed by prominent medical men. Silver medal and diploma awarded over com petitors. Prepared by B. F. ULMER, M. D.. pharmacist. Savannah. Ga. Price, $1 per bottle. Sold by an druggists. NOTICE. Neither the master nor consignees of the British steamship GLADESTRY, Wilson. master, will be responsible for any debts contracted by the crew. a. MINIS’ SONS, Consignees. FOR RELIABLE MEDICINES* FANCY ARTICLES, PURE CANDIES AND FRESH SEED, PATRONIZE HEIDT’S DRUG STORE. CIGARS AND TOBACCO. THE TSTIEjZXIT TIME 1 Yon Want to ©rnok* PURCHASE 1 El Triunfo Cigar* THEY RECOMMEND THEMSELVES. IS* -A.ll Dealers Sell Tlier ! B S. GUCKENHEIMER &, SON* WHOLESALE AGENTS. |SJ! SPICIAL NOTICES. TWO BEAI TIEUL “I II,DING LOT> V~T PRIVATE PALI:. Those two beautifully located lots on Whitaker, between Hail and Gwinnett, each mrasuring 38 feet fro ' with a depth of 111 feet from Whitaker to H ward streets q- es lots, fronting as they do ou the Park Extension commend th- mselves to those who are looking for a first-class location, always ooen to tne coo'ing breeze of the southeast, and haie'an unol-strueied view of our beautif I park and extension. These lots are about the only one in the entire city that offer such advantages ’ f " building a really first class resid-nee. ’Beside having the above named alvautnges haie a street in rear instead of a lane. Lots can he treated for either separately or togeta- r For price, etc. call or address HARMON, WALKER & McHARP.IE, Real Estate 156 Broughton street DR. HENRY 6. FOLDING WILL RESUME PRACTICE THIS MORNING. AMTJ 9E M EXT SAVANNAH THEATER^ Mcndavand Tuesday, Oct 20 and 21, Matinee Tuesday Afternoon The reigning favorite of the comedy stage The charming and gifted comedienn- MISS VERNONA JARBEAU IN HER BRILLIANT MUSICAL COMEDY STARLIGHT, Replete with all THE LATEST OPERA GEMS! PRFTTv FACES! EXQUISITE TOILETS! A company ot acknowledged Comedy Artisis CATCHY SONGS! ORIGINAL MUSIC: New Gavotte by handsome girls, beautifully Costumed. Witty sayings! Funny situations' THAT’S ENOUGH, DON’T YOU THINK’ JEFF. D. BERNSTEIN, Prop’r and Manager Seats at Butler's Oct. 18, 9 a. m, “Warde-Dower*” Combination Oct. 90~-d .v* Savannah Theater. An Unusual Event. Two Nights OCTOBER 22 AND 23. Remember the date ns it will become Historical THE EMINENT TRAGEDIAN FREDERICK WARDE, Aocompanied by tbe Distinguished Artiste ' MRS. D. P. BOWERS, And his Excellent Coterie of Accomplished ’ Players. Wednesday Night, Oct. 22, Shakespeare's MACBETH. Thursday Night, Oct. 28, Shakespeare's PIENRY VIII COSTUMES, ARMOR, SCENERY. ETC. Are Rich. Accurate and Appropriate Prices 25, 80c., Si. Reserve Seats2k: extra Sale of seat3 begins Oct. 20 at BUTLER’S Drug Store. The importance of this attraction and tbe great artistic reputation of the stars, will at once commend this engagement to all theater goers. Respectfully, T. F. JOHNSON Next Attraction—THE GREAT METROPOLIS Oct 25. THE CIRCUS. King & Franklin's New Colossal Show will meet with large patronage during its exhibition here, for it* reputation is of the best and the public are confident of being delightfully enter tained. All amusement-goers know it to be one of the standard oaDvas shows of the country, with nothing of the catch-penny or clap-trap about it. The show will exhibit nere. afternoon and evening, corner of Whitaker and Second avenue, Monday and Tuesday, Oct. 20 and 21. BANKS,. josTTTwf.ed. 1 " j^TT.’lt'ATb-'Nii President. Vice President JAB. H. HUNTER, Cashier. SAVANNAH BANK A TRPST ft Savings Oep't ailo "' 4% Deposits of Si and Upward Received. Interest on Deposits Payable Quarterly. DIRECTORS: Joseph D. Weed, of J. D. Weed & Cos. John C. Rowland, Capitalist. C. A. Rsitze, Exchange and Insurance. John L. Hardee, Capitalist. R. G. Erwin, of Chisholm, Erwin & dußignon Edward Karow. of Strauss & Cos. Isaac G. Haas, General Broker. M. Y. Maclntyre, of M. Y. & D. I. Maclntyre John Lyons, of John Lyoas & Cos. Walter Coney, ot Paterson, Downing & Cos. I). C. Bacon, Lumber. “PRINT,3sG AND BOOKBINDING. 1890-FALrai'trows' PRINTING AND BINDING, BLAS3K BOOKS. Establishment fully furnished with all necessary TOOLS and MACHINES-. PAPERS and MATERIALS. Compe tent Workmen. Established Repina I tion for Good Work. Additional or - I ders solicited. Estimates furnished. I BAY STREET. GEO. N NICHOLS. COTTON* FACTORS. John Flannery. John L. Johnso* JOHN FUNNER! & CO., Cotton Factors, SAVANNAH, GA Bagging and Iron ties furnished, at I market rates. Prompt attention K lven ' I business entrusted to us. Liberal casu ad * ' | made on consignments of cottou. _ I FISH AND OYsTfiBS. I ESTABLISHED 1858. M. M. Sullivan & Soil Wholesale Fish aoi Oysier tot I 150 Bryan st. and 152 Bay lane. FfavsnnaE ■ Fish orders for Punta ftorda receive a have prompt attention. mirr MORNING NEWS | H |-| every part.J the<r.ty,a. [ ‘ J lllj five cents a week pays^tortcjgj