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Morutiwr Stew e Building. t.v:. nn h. On
WEDNESDAY. JUNE 21 1893
*ri.t*TTßr-:i tintiMir’ i nrnißAV*N?< ti
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Now York Office - - - 23 Park Row.
We have to apologize for the Morning
Nrws this morning. Its different de
partments are not as complete us usual.
A majority of the printers left their eases
at an early hour las’, evening on an issue
between the proprietor of the Morning
News and the union printers.
Having seen the last of the unfought
duel, Macon will now kindly ‘ play ball,”
and let's see how far she can pet from
the bottom of the list by the end Gf the
first championship season.
An Increased Jewish emigration from
Germany is regarded by Berlin corres
pondents as one result sure to follow the
German election. The probable return of
twelve anti-semite candidates to the
KG* lis tag, and the large increase in the
popular vote in favor of that faction,
presage, the correspondents think*
a recurrence of hostile manifestations
against the Jewish race.
Capt. W. C. Miner, United States army,
retired, is on the pay roll of this govern
ment Snd his salary is regularly paid to
his representative, notwithstanding the
fact that the captain is serving a life sen
teni e for murder in an English prison.
Ambassador’Bavard will make inquiries
about Miner soon, not for the purpose of
cutting him off the pay roll, however, but
to be sure that this government is not
paying a salary to a dead man.
New York is complaining of a “eomer
In servant girls,” that is, the girls have
Vgomered” themselves and refuse to work
in private families if they can got places
In Chirico or in one of the numerous sum
mer hotels. Asa result, so a correspond
ent says. “whole communities are practi
cally camping out in their own houses.
Canned foods are taking the place of ordi
nary viands. Housekeeping is gradually
becoming an impossibility, and even board
ing houses are compelled to close their
donr.^.” In southern families the daught
ers are taught housekeeping and cooking,
as well as music and “fashion,” so that a
“comer in servant girls” could never affect
us as it has done our unfortunate and help
less friends in New York.
The report of a few days ago, to the
effect that Judge Sneed of Missouri would
go to Honolulu as consul general, was, it
appears, the resultof the judge’s grabbing
at a shadow and missing the substance.
Judge Sneed was a candidate for the con
sulate at Leeds, England. His interests
were in the hands of Congressman Pat
terson. When the Leeds place was filled
by the appointment of (mother man Mr.
Patterson wired the judge: "Leeds lost.
How would you like Honolulu?” His in
tent was perfectly plain; if the Judge con
sented, he would put in his application
for the Honolulu consulship. But the
Judge didn't read it that way, and replied:
“ Will Accept place. Express my thanks
to the President.” Then he told the
newspaper boys that he had been appoint
ed, and the news flew far and wide. This
incident is but an illustration of the folly
of a diplomat “going off half cocked. “
It is a favorite pastime with Harvard
students to visit Boston theatres and guy
the actors and actresses during the play
and spoil the enjoyment of other specta
tors. Four students begun such a game
at the Park theatre a few nights ago.
Actor Daly warned the young men that
such action would lead to trouble. But
they only laughed at the warning and
guved the more. Thoroughly exasperated,
Daly and another actor jumped from the
stage to the parquatte, and in two minutes
the two actors had polished off their four
annoyers to a Sullivan's taste. While the
onesided mill was in progress the audience
stood up and shouted, not in anger or fear,
but in applase of the impromptu realistic
show furnished by the actors. A Boston
correspondent says, the fighting actors
are now the most popular men in towi
Such a scene, by the way, could hardl
occur in a southern theatre: the police
would not wait for the theatrical com
pany to dis ipline obstreiierous persons
ih the audience.
The appointments to South Carolina of
fices made by President Cleveland day be
fore yesterday do not afford much of a
clew as to the policy he intends to adopt
•with rogird to the fa tions of the democ
racy in that state. It i> true that he ap
pointed W. Perry Murphy, a leading
“straightout,” to the office of district at
torney. But on the same day ho ap
pointed Josiah Doar to the pistmaster
sliip at Georgetown, and Mr. Doar is as
ardent and active a “Tillmanite” as Mr.
Murphy is a “straightout.” Theodore I).
Jervey, who will be remembered as the
solitary Cleveland man in the South Caro
lina delegation to the Chicago convention,
was a candidate for the district attorney
ship, and inasmuch as ho represented, to
s certain extent, the opinions of both the
South Carolina factions, it was thought,
in certain quarters, that he would be the
winner. Mr. Murphy, the appointee, is
one of the best known and most success
ful prosecuting attorneys in the state-
Mr. Doar, the new Georgetown postinas.
ter, has been a kind of local Pooh Buh for
. three or four years.
A ■umreetten.
farmers do not kne w how to make use of
incuts they cannot i* sent to distant liiar
k t* on account of the low prici ►
In every part of the state, in which at
tention is given to the raising of vegeta
bles, thcr* ought to Ist canning establish
ments which would a fiord a market for
fruits and vegetables that will not tear
shipment to distant cities. Such estab
lishments are profitable in other states
and they would pay well in this.
In the absen-'e of factories the farmers
themselves might can their surplus of
fruit sand vegetables. In sections of New
Jersey. Maryland and Virginia there are
thousands of farmers who make hand
some profits by utilizing their fruits and
vegetables in this way’, and not a few of
them have succeeded in making a reputa
tion for their goo is that is itself valuable.
For instance, Mr A's or Mr. B’s pickles
or canned tomatoes are worth more in
the trade than others because they have
his name upon them. His goods become
known far and wide for their excellence,
and hence command fancy prices.
Cans are now prepared so that a farmer
can 'put up” his fruits and vegetables as
cheaply as they can be “put up” at a
canning establishment. To do the work
no outlay is required except for cans.
Some practical knowledge is needed to
can fruits and vegetables successfully,
but that is easily obtained. Why couldn't
the experimental station furnish it. The
station is already doing a good deal of
valuable work, and it might undertake
the task of showing farmers how to pre
serve their fruits and vegetables. A few
days at the station would be sufficient for
an intelligent farmer to get all the infor
mation he would need. The experi
mental station should give this matter its
attention with the view of assisting
farmers in the way indicated.
The Summer Burglar.
Stockbridge, Mass., Is quite a fashion
able and nice place. A good many rich
an-J well-known people live there during
a part of the year, among them David
Dudley Field, the Stetsons and the
Swans,of New York. Stockbridge, there
fore, offered—the past tense is used ad
visedly—a good field of operation for the
proper kind of a burglar.
And a few nights ago he came along.
He knew his business, beyond a doubt.
Realizing that it would be unpleasant for
the aristocratic people upon whom
he meant to make a levy to
come into contact with a com
mon, every-day robber, he wont about
the job in style. Riding down to the
Swan mansion in a carriage he bade his
driver await his pleasure. Then he pro
ceeded to Mrs. Swan’s room, hatring
let himself in at the kitchen window.
Mrs. Swan was awakened, and had a
good, long talk with the burglar, who
wore a silk mask over his eyes and
damnsk towels over his shoes. A plebeian
burglar would hive worn woolen socks
over his shoes. Mrs. Swan says the man
was very polite and used excellent
language; but he insisted on carrying
away her revolver, $25 in money and a
SSOO-diamond ring.
Returning to his carriage the burglar
directed Jehu to drive to the Field resi
dence. There he had an interview with
young Mrs. Dudley Field, to whom ho
also gave evidence of his education and
refinement while he was stealing her
gold watch from under her pillow. Be
sides the watch he secured some other
valuables, and then drove away in his
carriage. Subsequently the town was
alarmed, and later the whole of
Stockbridge was bound together with a
network of burglar alarm wires.
The ongaging burglar with the carriage
is an interesting character. Possibly he
is the type of a coming class, the summer
burglar, who will be to criminal society
just what the summer girl and the sum
mer young man are to honest folks—the
envied of all the envious, the up-to-date
individual.
An Unoommon Insanity Dodge.
It will be through no fault of tiie law
yers for the defense if the Robert W.
Buchauan murder case, in New York,
does not become as notorious as was tho
Carlyle Harris ease. It will be re
membered that Buchanan, a physician,
was convicted a month or more ago of
poisoning his wife with morphine. At
the trial the prosecution proved that
Buchanan married the woman for her
money and killed her to rid himself of her.
The evidence precluded a reasonable
doubt of the man’s guilt, and he was
promptly convicted. Still, he has not yet
been sentenced to death. His lawyers
have moved for a stay of judgment and
for anew trial on rather uncommon
grounds—the insanity of a juror before
whom the case was tried.
The insanity of the person committing
the crime is a plea frequently made in
murder cases, with effect. And it is also
a plea that has frequently been carried
to ridiculous lengths. But in this instance
it is a'Juror, who agreed with eleven other
presumably sane men, whose insanity is
! lleged. The ground upon which the
'egation is built is"the fact that Juror
Paradise was taken suddenly ill at the
supper table on the night that the verdict
was made up. He had heard all the evi
dence and had sat through the whole trial
with no more suspicion of madness at
taching to him than to the other jurors.
At the time of his illness he was uncon
scious for a short while. But when he
signed the verdict he was in full posses
sion of his mental faculties.
There is no charge that Mr. Paradise
was previously insane, or that ho is in
sane now. But it appears to have been
the purpose of Buchanan's lawyers at a
hearing a day or two ago to convince the
trial judge, by expert testimony, that
Paradise whs momentarily insane, and at
exactly the proper time to vitiate the
verdict. The decision of the trial judge
was reserved. From a distance it looks
as though tho insanity dodge as a means
of saving a criminal has been carried to
the extreme in this instance.
The officials of Hillsboro county, Fla.
are pointed to the prompt and vigorous
handling of a mafia thug in this county
recently as an example to be followed by
them in dealing with the murderer of
Camporito, at Tampa. The mafian who
operated here missed killing his man and
had one eye shot out by his intended vic
tim; nevertheless he was sent to the
mines for six years. The mafia must go.
THE MOHXTXO NEWS: WEDNESDAY, JTNE 21, 1 Xtt.
Th* Constitution's Kuo(*
We fi*.i in the Savannah .V .MVtn
News what we must assume to la* a re
•nlitder to the <Ymtitutton's comments
on Its remarks about ihe Indian rupee
< >:ir readers will reniemtsT that the \i*
dtH'lared’it had “exreUcnt authority” for
a-.M-r'inif that the silver rupee had depre
eiatcd in India, where It is the legal U*n
dcr unit of value. to all the
rules of evidence, it was incumbent on
the Nows to produce its “excellent au
thority " and set it over against the argu
ments of the Constitution Instead of
this, howvver. the News merely asserted
that the rupee had depreciated In India,
and called on the Constitution to show
that it had not. This we did, producing
the testimony of men who are recognized
as authorities.”
There are several things in the foregoing
to which we desire to call attention The
Morning News made no rejoinder to any
article in the Constitution in answer to
the Morning News’ request for informa
tion about the Indian rupee, which the
Constitution had said was “persistant”
and had not depreciated Tho paragraph
to which the Constitution calls attention
was published in reply to some paragraphs
in the Constitution, which seemed to indi
cate that it did not intend to pursue the
subject further. The article purporting
to give information called for concerning
the rupee was not seen by the Morning
News, as the paper containing it, of the
date of June 11, did not reach the Morn
ing News office. Inquiry for that issue
was made at the news depot, but there
were no copies of it on hand. The para
graph of the Morning News, which the
Constitution assumes was a rejoinder,
shows that it was called out by para
graphs in the Constitution.
Seeing the article in Monday's Consti
tution, from which the foregoing extract
is taken, a file of the Constitution was
hunted up and its article of June 11 read.
In the foregoing extract the Constitu
tion says the Morning News asserted
that the Indian rupee had depreciated,
and that according to the rules of evi
dence it ought to have given its authori
ty, The facts are these: The Consti
tution asserted that “the Indian rupee
had never depreciated.” The Morning
News questioned.this, declared, accord
ing to its information, that the rupee had
depreciated, and called on the Constitu
tion for authority for its statement. Tho
rules of evidence required it to substan
tiate its statement.
In its article of June 11 the Consitution
supporting its statement quotes, among
other authorities Hon. Hicks Gibbs, Ex-
Gov. of the bank England and Morton,
Fewen an English financier. Mr. Gibbs
Admits that the rupee is worth less in gold
than it was, which is an admission that it
has depreciated. Mr. Fewen says that an
ounce of silver willTiuy as much produce
or labor in the up country markets as it
ever did, which is admission that it will
not do so in the markets of the low country,
that in the low country of India the rupee
has depreciated.
So mueh for the Constitution’s support
of its statement that the rupee has not de
preciated. Our own “excellent authority’,
is business men in this city, whose busi
ness makes them acquainted with the
value of the rupee in Bombay and Cal
cutta. They say that in those commercial
Centers Che rupee has depreciated to
about ifs bullion value. As they are con
nected with houses that do' business in
India they ought to be excellent author
ity.
In tho June number of the Political
Science Quarterly Review, in an article
on “The Monetary Conference,” Mr.
E. BenJ. 1 . Andrews, who, if wc are not
mistaken; is a member of the conference,
says : '‘The Indian government lias to
pay to England each year some £15,000,000
in terms of gold. The actual payment is.
of course, made in produce, of which
50 per cent, more is required than suf
ficed twenty-five years ago to liquidate
the same amount of indebtedness—a great
hardship to India.” If the rupee bad not
depreciated in India, that is, if silver
coin still maintained the ratio to gold
coin of 15 to 1, the Indian government
would not have to send to England one
half more produce tfian it did 25 years
ago to pay its annual indebtedness. It is
because the rupee has depreciated in
India as well as in England that India
has to send so much more produce to
England than formerly to liquidate 'its
indebtedness. The amount of produce a
rupee will buy in India now in proportion
to what gold will buy is much less than it
was a few ycai-s ago.
To what the Constitution has to say
atbut ignorance of financial matters we
have no reply to make. We might res
pond, as tho Courier-Journal responded
recently to some of tho Constitution’s
financial deliverances, but we think no
pood comes from such methods of, dealing
with public.questions, and are willing that
the Constitution shall have a monopoly
of them.
There is some what of a romance con
nected with the life of Minnie Brocks,
who was married a day or two ago at Lit
tle Ro k. Ark. She was the daughter of a
Mason who' died when she was a
child. She was bouud opt to a Louisiana
farmer, who put her to work in a cotton
pat ch. Minnie appealod to the Masons for
assistance. The order in Arkansas and
Louisiana took charge of her and she was
placed in a school at Fayetteville, where
she graduated last fall with high honors.
At each meeting of the Grand Lodge of
Arkansas her name was called and she
usually answered present.
The letting of contracts to build the
Atlantic Coast Line cut-off from Rimini
to Denmark to be completed in seven
months, indicates how anxious the Coast
Line people are to get into Savannah, and
that anxiety in its turn indicates how
level headed is the Coast Lino manage
ment.
OS^SPowder
The only Pure Cream of Tartar Powder.—No Ammonia; No Alum.
Used in Millions of Homes— 40 Years the Standard.
Pa4w thr KfW Inmutrut L.
Alt of*Vr h bsih leauafl by the treas
ury wnder ihf immi
grant law. to the effts l mat hereafter ail
first .ink socoads laaa alum passengers on
steamships arriving at American ports,
and intending to remain permanently in
this country, shall be subpvt to the same
regulations as are flnfotved on steerage
passengers
The new law provides that all cm*
igrants embarking for 1 'nited Slates )rts
shall be entered in blocks of thirty on
standard manifests. These manifests con
tain nineteen questions, designed to'
discover the passenger's physical, mental
and financial condition, and every emi
grant is required to answer under oath.
Among other things, the questions ask if
the'passenger has ever been convicted of
crime, if he has ever been the inmate of
an alms house or otherwise supported bj*
charity; whether he is a polygamist, and
if any person or persons except himself
paid his fare.
Some of the steamship companies ob
ject strenuously to tho treasury order,
and say it will have bad effect on trans
atlantic travel, coming as it does during
the world’s fair season They say foreign
tourists of education and refine
ment will regard it a pie* e
of monumental impudence to be
asked if they were ever in jail, or the
poor house, and if they have more wives
than one. But it does not appear that
there is any necessity for them to be
asked such questions. If they are not im
migrants—if they do not intend to remain
in the United States—all that is requir* and
of them is to enter upon the manifests as
“tourists.” The questions are intended
to apply to immigrants, whether they
come in the first, Becond or third cabins,
and are designed to keep out undesirable
additions to our population. In consider
ing the steamships’ protest it must be
borne in mind that they know no “unde
sirable” emigrant whose fare has been
paid.
The verdict in the Lizzie Borden case
was precisely what the evidence presented
by the prosecution warranted. No other
verdict, according to the evidence, could
have been returned. The mystery of the
murder is now, indeed, greater than ever
before. But the jury’s business was not to
say who committed the murder. What it
had to do, and had only to do, was to say
whether Lizzie Borden is or is not the
murderer. They concluded that she is
not. The public long ago reached the
same conclusion.
An Ohio law recently affirmed by the
supreme court says that the convict who
is sent to the penitentiary the third time
shall stay there for life. Dave Blackburn
had been to the penitentiary twice when
he burglariously entered a Dayton house
and stole three chiokens, so the law was
applied to him the'other day and he was
given a life sentence as tho price of his
fondness for fowls. Ohio is probably
•alone in her proud distinction of having
sent a man “up” for life for chicken
stealing.
Since Edwin Booth’s death Joseph
Jefferson is probably the foremost
living American actor. Therefore
the report of a few days
ago, that he was seriously ill, filled all
admirers of American high art on the
stage with regret and apprehension. But
it turns out that his ailment was only a
harmless attack of indigestion, and that
there is no immediate prospect of the
friends of “Fighting Bob Acres” being
called upon to mourn his 1 oss.
A Long Island church has deposed its
pastor for a peculiar offense —he insisted
on living in a hotel instead of in a private
family. The women Of the congregation
complained that, whenever they wished
to see the pastor they were compelled to
inquire at a cigar stand adjoining a bar
room door, to which they objected. And
the congregation said the preacher could
leave the hotel or the church, and he
chose to leave the latter.
A woman who gives her name as Mrs.
Dora S. Hampton and says she is a niece
of Gen. Wade Hampton, has been arrested
at Trenton, N. J., charged with the theft
of a diamond ring. It it? not believed that
Gen. Hampton lias a niece of that name.
Ignoramuses.
Sensible people sometimes make very odd
mistakes, which a little reflection would have
enabled them to at oid, while people who are
not sensible take very startling views of
things generally, says Harper's Young People.
At the Centennial exposition two country
girls stood before a copy of the Flemish artist,
Paul Potter s, great masterpiece, undone of
them read from her catalogue, “The Young
Dull, after Potter."
Yes.” said the other, "there's the bull, but
where’s Potter?"
“Don't you see him,” asked her companion,
pointing to the figure of the herdsman, “be
hind the tree?'’
'1 wo others were admiring a statuette of
Andromeda, which was labeled “Executed in
terra-cotta. ' “Where is Terra Cotta?" asked
one of them, with probably some vague idea
of Terra del Puego.
"I'm sure I do hqt know." was the reply,
"but I pity the i>oor girl, wherever it is.”
A man. after razing at a photograph of the
ThreeUraccs, exclaimed: "What fools women
are' Those girls have not got money enough
to buy themselves clothes, yet they spend the
little they have in having their photograph
taken.'’
Two boatmen on the Ohio river were talk
ing about cold weather, and of a certain se
ver*'winter. "It was just, awful." said one of
then* “At Cincinnati the-river was frozen
tight, and the thermometer went down to 20 c
below Cairo. "
“Below which? " asked Ills puzzled com
panion. •
Below Cairo, you blubber-head: You see.
when it freezes at Cairo it must be pretty
colit—so they say so many degrees below
Cairo.”
Hut light was bursting In upon the other.
“No. they do not,” he exclaimed, eagerly.
“You'vegot it all wrong -it s so many degrees
below Nero. I don't know what it means,
but that's what they say when it's dreadful
cold.”
He gives up his seat when she enters the car.
Though he knows his politeness she'll sforn;
But it's plum that in this way he's safer by
far—
If ho doesn't,she'll tread on his corn.
—Washington Star.
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OIL AND GAS STOVES.
mwmmMmmmmmmm
30 BARNARD ST.
JAS.DOUGLASS
" IVAU PAPER.
WALLPAPER!
Latest styles, all new elegant
DECORATIVE
CORNERS, BORDERS, CENTERS, EX
TENSIONS, ETC.
PAINTING
In all Its branches. High-class
work guaranteed.
HANLEY’S,
Whitaker, York and President.
ROOT BEER. ° ~
® r Any
is the right time
>r everybody to
Hires'id
A temperance drink. I
A home-made drink. t
1A health-giving drink. 1
A thirst-quenching drink. /
A drink that is popular everywhere. /
Delicious, Sparkling, Effervescent. I
A as cent package makes 5 gallons of this!
delicious beverage. Don’t be deceived ifadealer,!
for the sake of larger profit, tells you some other I
kind is “just ag good”—*lis false. No imitation /
| is as good as the genuine Hires'.
_ BAKERS JCOCOA.
Unlike the Dutch Process
Qs No Alkalies
Other Chemicals
TE'esJ*/ffiaSfc are used In the
preparation of
W. BAKER & CO.’S
I ilßreakfastCocoa
fH j €|ln| which is absolutely
Pif ! I&Solf! pure and soluble .
Iffl j |v|j It ha.s more than three times
6fS jflr- fcff the strength of Cocon mixed
ijjgLL with Starch, Arrowroot or
Sugar, and is far xnoro eco
nomical, costing less than ons cent a cup.
It is delicious, nourishing, and easily
DIGESTED.
Sold by Grocers everywhere.
W BAKER & CO.. Dorchester. Mne*
GROCERIES.
J. A. THOMAS 8 BRO.,
Successors to A. H. Champion’s Son,
152 CONGRESS STREET.
Groceries - - Produce.
Beacnnut Hams. Peocnes.
PfjQCfldS
coiiees foasied floiiy. PeoGties.
CLARET
JAMES MCGRATH.
JUST RECEIVED,
500 CASES CLARET,
From $3 50 to $8 Per Case.
I also have a full line of Cordials, together
with everything usually kept in a first-class
grocery.
19 AND I9VS WHITAKER STREET
MACHINERY.
BiiTlliil
IRON FOUNDERS,
Macfiinisis. biocmms ond Boner loiera
A LSO manufacture of Stationary and Porta
-f 1 - Wf, Engines, Vertical and Top-running
Com Mills, Sugar Mills and Pans. Have also
on hand and for sale cheap one 10-Horse
Power Portable Engine; also, one 30 one 40
and one IftO-Hcrse Power Stationary Engines.
AUordero proßptji attemded to. - - *
DRY GOODS.
I IMS
fi Pin
Are now offering their sur
plus stock of Summer Goods
at the most tempting prices.
No reasonable offer refused.
Many goods sold at cost and
hundreds of items below
cost.
Extraordinary Values.
Linen Finish Figured Lawns, fas
colors; a bargain elsewhere for sc.
5c Pineapple Tissues, light and darlc
grounds, beautiful figures; worth double.
BKc Extra Wide Irish Lawns, V*hoi<u
styles, fast colors; worth 12V£c.
reduced from 10c.
7}£c Yard Wide Lonsdale Shirting|
everybody knows the real value.
China Silks, Wash Silks,.
Light-weight Wool Dress
Goods, Black Nun’s Veiling,:
Figured Challies, and all
Spring Dress Goods at less
than actual cost.
Just opened, an entire new
line of Fancy Laces.
15c each, Boys* Percale Shirt Waists,
size 4 to 12 years; worth 25c.
500 dozen Gents* ITnlaundered Shirts at
35c, or 3 for 91; a great bargain.
To close at half price, one lot Gents*
Night Shirts, slightly soiled.
Great sale Ladies’ Muslin
Underwear at reduced
prices.
Agents for Standard Patterns,
FOYE 8- MORRISON.
SHOES.
SEND YOUR CHILDREN TO US:
If you do, it'll make a great difference with the
youngsters and aßtiil greater difference with
you. They'll be better shod than they possi
bly could be elsewhere, and at a considerably
less cost. When you can save money by buy
ing better goods you’ve struck a good imita
tion of a bonanza. That's what you'll always
find in our stock—the best juvenile footwear
in Savannah, and sold at lower prices than
elsewhere. You can’t beat either our goods
or prices: you might as well try to beat a
drum with a feather. Economical parents
buy their footwear
AT THE LITTLE STORE AROUND THE
CORNER
120 Broughton St.,
BUTLER & MORRISSEY.
__ GENTS’ FURNISHING GOODS.
REDUCTION
—— iiibm -bo———
REDUCTION
=Negligee Shirts
reduction
= Straw Hats
reduction
Neckwear
REDUCTION
= Underwear
REDUCTION I IN ALL
=Summer Goods
GARDNER#EINSTEIN
Progressive Hatters and
Men’s Furnishers,
BULL AND BROUGHTON STS.
, peas^
TRY OUR
Steam Cooked
m Cowond Horse Feed
COW PEAS,
LEMONS,
nAY, GRAIN, „
Feed and Produce.
W. D. SIMKINS
JiIDES AND FURSh_; .
Send Your Hides and Furs
—TO—
RANDOLPH KIRKLAND,
SAVANNAH, GA.
He pays for dry flints 514 cents, dry salt 314
cents, dry damaged 214 cents, green salt 3
cents, bseswax 22 cents, deer skins 25 cent*,
wool, free of sand and burs, 17 ceuts; blind*,
2 cents; burry, from 5 to 14 cents.
211 St. Julian Street.