Newspaper Page Text
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Cfrc|sflnrinc|flehis
Morning-News Building,Savannah.Oa
SUNDAY. SEPTEMBER 2. 1894.
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EASTERN OFFICE, 23 Park Row, New
York City, C. S. Fam-whsr, Manager.
THIS ISSUE
CONTAINS
SIXTEEN PACES
INDEX TO SEW ADVERIISEMLNtS.
Meetings—Workingmen's Union Associa
tion; Division No. 3 Ancient Order Hiber
nians: Workingmen s Benevolent Assocla
tlon; Labor Naval Stores Association.
Special Notices—Myerson's Tan Shoes;
Golden Apple Tobacco at S, Elsinger’s; Dun
lap s Hats, H. H. Levy & Bro; Agency for
Dunlap s Hats. B. H. levy A Bro.; Superin
tendent Wanted for the Commercial Club;
Notice, F. E Itetarer, Clerk of Council; Get
Y'our Shoes at Savannah-Shoe Factory; Sole
Dealers for Remington Typewriters. Etc.,
B. F. Ulmer & Cos ; Rice Broker and Miller,
John Screven. Jr.; Success Self-Rising Flour,
Morehouse Manufacturing Company; Closing
Out Sale, J. Gardner; Try Our Hand-Sewed
Shoes. E. I. Okarma; Shoes Repaired While
You Wait. E. I. Okarma; Special Notice,
Telfair Hospital; Grand Opening Ball by the
Longshoreman s Magnolia Fishing Club
Sept. 3; Hall to the Chief and Tivoli Beer,
Georgia Brewing Association; Wine at Cost,
Mutual. Co-operative Association; Notice to
the Public, Electric Railway Company of Sa
vannah.
School Next Month—B. H. Levy & Bro.
Amusements—Robert Gaylor in Sport Mc-
Allister at the Theater Sept. 5.
Harris Lithia Water—Branch's Estate
Agent.
More Than Pleased With Last Week s
Salzs— Bon Marche.
Fruit or the Loom Shirting, Etc.—At
Gutman's.
A surprise Partt-B. H. Levy & Bro.
Bargains— At Eckstein’s.
Ready for Fall and Winter—At Col
lat s.
Can You See The Good Bargains—Ap
pel & Schaul.
Aki—.Meyer &. Walsh.
Farm and Turpentine Wagons—H. H
Cohen
Educational The Savannah Acdemy,
John Taliaferro, Principal.
Cheap Column advertisements—Help
Wanted; Employment Wanted; For Rent;
For Sale; Lost; Personal; Miscellaneous.
Maj. Black did not miss a roil call in
the House during the session just ended.
Carter Tate missed only two. Probably
one-fourth of the remaining number of
representatives in the House missed three
out of every four roll calls. Yet the re
bates on per diems turned in by the ser
geant-at-arms under the rule for docking
absent members aggregated only about
s'lo,ooo.
If there are democratic candidates on
the stump in Georgia preaching the im
mediate free and unlimited coinage of
silver at the ratio of 16 to 1, the state ex
ecutive committee should have them to
stop it at once. There is no warrant in
any democratic platform that is of force
in Georgia for any such demand, and the
state democracy cannot afford to be
pledged by individuals to any such politi
cal and financial heresy.
State Senator Felix Corput has re
signed from the chairmanship of the
state aliance executive committee. He
found the affairs of the order in such a
condition that they would require, if the
order was to be rehabilitated, more time
than he could give to the work. That is
■what his letter says. To persons on the
outside it looks as if Mr. Corput had
reached the conclusion that the pop ulists
bavfe left nothing of the original alliance
to be saved.
It is gratifying to note that Congress
man Turner's Decatur speech—the first
of his campaign—has aroused more inter
est than the aggregated speeches of all
the other candidates for the Senate. Mr.
Turner has set the people and the papers
to talking. The other candidates have
done all of the talking themselves. Mr.
Turner has aroused the cheap money and
the fiat money advocates to oppose him,
which will have the effect of rallying
sound currency advocates to his support.
Mr. Turner has attracted the attention of
the state with one speech that established
him as the advocate of a dollar for the
poor man which shall be worth as much
as the dollar of the rich man.
A public benefactor has arisen in New
York with a cure for snoring. Olive oil
and mustard, in the proportions of six
drops to a oinch, constitute the remedy,
which is to be taken at ted time. The
function of the oil is that of a lubricant
to the larynx, while the mustard is a
counter-irritant. It iR said one dose of the
mixture will take the edge off of the most
rasping snore. The story goes that knowl
edge of this invaluable preparation came
to the public first through the medium of
a divorce court. A woman sued for a di.
vorce on the ground that her husband
snored so horribly that life with him was
unlit-arable. The Judge, or some of the
lawyers, suggested the oil and mustard
remedy; the husi and tried it; it was a
success; the suit was quashed and the
reunited couple lived together happily
ever afterwards.
Tuesday's Grand Hally.
Chairman Clay, of the democratic cam
paign committee of the state, has fixed
1 upon Tuesday next as the day for a grand
rally of the democracy at many points.
Avery large number of the best stump
! speakers of the party will on that day ex
plain demoeratic principles and expose
populist fallacies. It will be the purpose
of these speakers to show what the Demo
cratic party has accomplished in national
affairs since it has been clothed with
power, and to give reasons why it should
be continued in power, not only in this
slate, but also at Washington. There
has been a good deal of criticism of the
democrats for failing to do all that was
expected of them, but great reforms are
not accomplished in a day. It requires
time to effect reforms. The Democratic
party has done remarkably well in the
short time it has been in control
of the government. It has made
changes in the tariff which are
of inestimable benefit to farmers and
manufacturers, and it has introduced
such economy in the administration of
the government that millions of dollars
will be saved to the people annually.
It is an easy matter to find fault with
the party in power, even when it has
done ail that it promised to do. The
speeches of Judge Hines, Mr. Watson and
other populists are almost wholly made
up of fault finding. Unable to defend
successfully the nonsensical demands of
their own party they seek to make popu
list converts by attacking the Democratic
party.
We are certain that on Tuesday, and
on each succeeding aay of the campaign,
tne democratic speakers will have no
trouble in satisfying democrats that the
Democratic party is deserving of praise
for what it has done, and that before
this congress is ended it will do all that
it promised the people it would.
There is one thing that the democratic
speakers should keep in mind on Tuesday,
and for the remainder of the campaign,
and that is that the doctrines of the
Democratic party are stated clearly in
the national democratic platform. The
statements of the platform need no inter
pretation. They are so clear that no one
can fail to understand them. The state
ment in respect t(©silver is particularly
lucid. It is that the Democratic party
does not favor any financial legislation
that would not, with absolute certainty,
keep the silver dollar on a parity with the
gold dollar. In other words, the Demo
cratic party is a sound money party.
There are some democrats who have
got on the populist platform so far as
silver is concerned. They should get otf
of it at once. If they think
they will win populists to democracy
by accepting the populist doctrine in re
spect to silver they are making a great
mistake. It is a mistake of which the pop
ulists will make effective use. The dis
tinction between the democratic position
in respect to silver and that of the popu
list is very marked. The democrats are
for sound money and the populists are for
debased money.
If the democratic speakers and news
papers stand squarely on the democratic
platform the victory of the democracy in
October will be greater than that of two
years ago.
Aldermen For Profit.
Judging from the New Orleans papers
the people of that city are profoundly
grieved by the discovery that so many of
their aldermen are candidates for the
penitentiary. Eleven aldermen, together
with the city engineer, have been in
dicted for bribe taking. One of them has
been tried and convicted, no defense
having been made, and all of them stand
a good chance of being condc-med to wear
Stripes. Only a day or two ago one of
them was arrested while in the act
of receiving a $lOO bribe. It is
suspected that there are others who ought
to be indicted, and would be, probably, if
satisfactory evidence could be obtained
against them.
The New Orleans aldermen appear to
have taken office not for the purpose of
caring for the city's interests, but to rob
the city and the people. They have
passed ordinances granting concessions
to individuals and corporations only when
paid to do so, and they have demanded
and received big bribes.
It has long been suspected that there
was a vast deal of corruption among the
New Orleans officials. It is a wonder
that with such men in charge of her
affairs the city has prospered so greatly.
The question might be asked, why
it is that trustworthy men are
not elected to office. The answer
is plain enough. A thoroughly
bad element has control of the city. And
that element will continue in control un
less those who are interested in promot
ing the city’s welfare take an active part
in politics. The only thing that can save
the people of New Orleans from being
pillaged by their municipal servants is a
vigorous campaign against the thieves
and the political organizations of which
they are the leaders.
Municipal corruption is not confined to
New Orleans. It exists in many of the
cities to a greater or less degree. It is
time that a determined stand against it
should be taken. Otherwise the thieves
and bribe takers will defy public opinion,
and municipal governments will become
so corrupt that heavier burdens will be
placed upon the people of cities than they
can bear.
They Were Mistaken.
The protectionists said, if you put wool
on the free list the price of wool will fall
so low that the sheep raisers will have to
kill their sheep.
Wool has been placed on the free list,
and the price of wool has not fallen. The
American sheep has not been destroyed,
and is not likely to be. The price of wool
has slightly advanced since the new tariff
bill went into effect, and the Wool and
Cotton Reporter is asserting that the
manufacturers of woolen goods are
going to make goods so cheap that they
will be able to compete iu the markets of
the world with the manufacturers of
woolen goods of other countries.
The Ohio Wool Growers’ Association
is astonished that atio bottom has not
dropped out of the price of wool. It
can’t understand why it hasn't, and it
doesn’t understand why there is such
sudden activity in the manufacture of
woolen goods.
It is evident that there are some things
connected with wool of which the Ohio
Wool Growers' Association is ignorant.
It has bothered itself so much with poli
tics that it has uot had time to thor-
THE MORNING NEWS: SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 1894.
oughly inform itself in respect to the
wool industry.
The new tariff isn't going to hurt any
interest. Indeed, the indications are that
it will benefit all interests, and that
within six months the country will be
enjoying greater prosperity than it has
lor a long time.
Stop It.
We are confident we voice the sentiment
of the best element of the southern people
when we say that lynchings must be
stopped. There is one crime for which a
considerable portion of the people excuse
lynch law. and that is rape, but. as we
have pointed out many times, if it is ex
cused for one crime it will be resorted to
for other crimes.
The thing to do is to stop lynchings.
and the way to stop them is to enforce
the law vigorously against those who par
ticipate in them. The law makes the
lynching of a man murder, and if lynch
ers were dealt with as murderers there
would be very few lynchings.
There is no excuse for lynch la w in any
part of the south. There are courts for
the trial of criminals. Let the courts
deal with criminals, and if they don’t deal
witn them promptly and vigorously let
public opinion deal with the courts.
We have in mind the lynching of six
black men pear Memphis Friday night,
an account of which appears in our dis
patches this morning. The men were
accused of arson. They may have been
guilty. There is a possibility that some
or all of them were innocent. EveD if
they were guilty, they were entitled to a
fair trial. They didn't have a trial.
They were murdered.
It is said the men who lynched them are
unknown. They can be discovered if a
proper effort is made, and the authorities
will be guilty of a neglect of duty if they
don’t discover them, and make them
answer for their crime.
Lynchings in this state have practically
ceased since Gov. Northen has taken a
firm stand against them. Let ail the
governors take the same firm stand in
favor of compelling respect for the law,
and public opinion will become so strong
against lynchings that the punishment of
criminals, whatever their crime may be,
will be left to the courts, and the courts
will be required to have the offenders
promptly tried, and if guilty, punished.
Tha Constitutional Amendments.
What about the constitutional amend
ments that are to be voted upon at the
approaching state election? Are any of
the candidates discussing them, and ex
plaining the meaning of them, and what
their effect would be if they should be
adopted? If not. why nt? It is of the
utmost importance that the people should
Note upon these amend
ments.
One of them provides that the legisla
ture shall meet in the summer instead
of the fall; another provides for increas
ing the number of the judges of the su
preme court from three to five, and still
another provides for pensioning all ex
confederate soldiers who are in an indi
gent condition, whether they are suffer
ing from the effects of wounds or not.
There ought not to be any opposition to
the amendment changing the time of the
meeting of the legislature. The change
will accommodate those members who are
farmers, who have more spare time in the
summer than in the fall. The sessions
are prolonged now because members are
frequently absent at home when they
should be at Atlanta attending to the
duties for which they are very prompt in
drawing their per-diem compensation. If
the members were required to be pres
ent in the legislature every legislative
day, except when ill, or lose their pay,
the work of the session could be done in
just about one half the time that it is now.
The members neglect their duties and
dawdle away their time, and that is the
main reason why the cost of the legisla
ture is so gi eat.
The amendment increasing the number
of the supreme court Judges should be
adopted. There is no doubt about that.
The peopie are more interested than the
lawyers iD having more ludges. The su
preme court, as now constituted, cannot
do properly the work required of it. The
! judges haven't time to write opinions.
They can do little more than render de
cisions, making a few notes to show their
reasons for deciding as they do. They
would get far behind with their work if
they should undertake to look up authori
ties and make a thorough study of each
case.
The people ought not to he left to vote
blindly on the pension amendment. There
ought to be a statement as to what
amount would be required to provide the
pensions contemplated. The amendment
would be adopted in all probability if it
were shown that it would not greatly in
crease the tax burden. The fear that it
would increase that burden beyond their
ability to pay might induce many voters
to cast their ballots against it. Thero is
an impression that it would require a
much heavier tax than is at present col
lected to pension all the indigeut ex-con
federates in the state. That impression
should be corrected if it is wrong. An
estimate should be made of the amount
that would be required for pensions and
published, so that the people could vote
intelligently. It is a mistaken policy not
to inform the people in respect to these
matters.
Falb, the Austrian scientist, seems to
have guessed pretty straight, after all,
about the earthquake iu August. It is
true that the quake occurred in Texas,
and not in New York and Florida, but a
difference of a few thousand miles is reck
oned a matter of no importance among
certain scientists. It is true, also, that
the effects of t.ie quake were local and
comparatively unimportant, whereas Prof.
Falb said New York was to be destroyed
and Florida inundated. But these de
tails, like the difference in locality,
amount to nothing. Falb said the earth
would tremble, and it trembled. Falb
stock will now take a boom with the
credulous. It is worthy of note as a coin
cidence that the Texas quake occurred on
the eighth anniversary of the earthquake
that came so near destroying Charleston.
That great disturbance took place on the
night of Aug. SI. 1886, and the Texas dis
turbance occured on Aug. 31, 1894.
Mgr. Satolli, the papal delegate, is
the person marked out as a victim for
himself by Edward Stolz, a murderous
crunk in the hands of tho Now York
police. Fortunately the police learned of
Stolz's intentions before he had an oppor
tunity to fulfill his "mission.’’
PERSONAL.
Ths Czar of Russia plays on the cornet, it
is said, with such utter disregard to time and
place that someone once ninted that it en
tirely accounted for the existence of Nihil
ists.
Gen. Pousargues. who has just been placed
on the retired list of the I rench army, enjoys
the distinction of having been the first to in
troduce M. Clemeoceau to the delights of
duel ng. of which the Trench statesman has
since lasted so freely.
Mrs Ch.ka Sxkural the Ir lliant Japanese
woman, who visited Chicago last at turnn as a
delegate from Japan to the W. C. T. U, is
visiting Mrs. L. M. t-tevens if Portlsnl Me
Mr c. Sakurui Is the fou ider ot the nrsi school
la Tokio for the Christian education of na
tive women.
Roswell P. Bishop, who has been note inated
for congress in Gen. Cutcheon's old district in
Michigan, was a policeman on the capitoi
force at Washington a few years ago. Moving
to Mi hgan Bishop studied lav. was ad
mitted to the bar, and soon took high rank as
a jury lawyer.
Norman L Freeman who died last week at
Springfield, ill., had teen official reporter of
t e Illinois supreme court for ' l years, and
was considi rad one ot the ai e tofsichoi
ncials m the country uuiirg his term o!
service Mr Freeman had cotnpi.ed and iss ei
1-M volumes of reports, covering over 7 oju
cases.
Percy Sanderson, who will succeed Sir
William Lane Booker as British consul gen
eral at New York, has been consul general
for the past few j ears at Galatz. Roumanta,
and also commissioner of the Lower Danube.
He was formerly a lieutenant in the British
army in india. but left the army for the con
sular service in 1870.
H. Weld-Blundell has just returned from a
complete round of the oases of the Libyan
desert, including that of Siwah. where are the
rutns of the temple of Jupiter Ammon which
Alexander the Great visited. The complete
tour had previously only been made by the
German traveler, Rohls Mr. Weld-Blundell
traveled over 12.0UU miles on camels.
Jeremiah Marston of Hampton, N. H . left
tod to the local Methodist church to buy ropes
for its bell, 'ihe executors were instructed to
place upon his grave a boulder and inscribe
on it ■ Marstons died in 1650.1790 and lo 90.”
the reference being to the first Marston. who
dttd at Hampton, the deceased's grandfather,
to e,en. Gilman Marston of Exeter, and to
himself.
BRIGHT BITS.
Mrs Crandall—The servant of to-day
doesn't know her place.
Mrs. Talmage—How can she? She changes
too often —Truth.
She—Why does the ocean make that moan
ing sound :-
He—Proi ably one of the bathers stepped on
its undertow.—Brooklyn Lite.
She—Speaking of brave deeds. I once pre
vented a man from committing suicide.
He—How?
She—l married - him —Harlem Life.
“Ef I give you your dinner.” asked Mr.
Haiseed, ''will you turn the grindstone
awhile:”
"Naw," said Dismal Dawson. "I ain't no
crank agitator.”- C.udanati Tribune.
‘ Old man Rox seems put out atout giving
up his pretty daughter.
it isn't giving up his daughter that wor
ries him. it's taking in a son-in-law that
troubles him."—Cincinnati Tribune.
Mrs. Nucook—lsn tit funny, dear, we are
never troubled with many tramps? Why is it.
1 wonder?
Mr. Nucook—Pro!ably because you always
give them something to eat. darilng.—Chi
cago inter Ocean.
Laura—Mamma, when I asked Mr. Good
catch to button my glove last > i :ht his hand
trembled so that it took him a minute or two
1 wonder if he is in love:-
Mrs. Figg—l don t know. Perhaps he might
have been out late the night before.—lndian
apolis Journal.
Tea her—Harry, if a basket of peaches
costs and there are fifty peaches in tne
basket, how much does one peacn cost v
Juvenile Pupil—l—l don't know, ma'am.
We don't never have to buy peaches at our
house. My papa's a baggageman on a 'spress
train.- Giiiaago irioune.
'the man who had a little piece of lawn in
front of his house about as big as a green
back, and who took oare of it as if it were a
baby, was pottering around it the othermorn
lng with a pair cl scissors and a ra/.ui, when
a neighbor came by and hung his chin over
the fence.
Why don't you have a lawn mower?” he
asked, after contemplating the scene a min
ute or two.
"1 dentwant a lawn mower,” replied the
landscape gardener: -what 1 want is more
lawn.” and the neighbor hurried away before
the house should fall upon him and crush him
still more —Detroit Free Press.
CURRENT COMMENT.
Cleveland and Others.
From the Galveston News (Dem).
President Cleveland, unlike many members
of congress and other politicians, was not for
tariff reform merely for campaign purposes.
The Fruit of- arihe&d finest.
From the New Yptk Post arid.).
The Wool and Cotton Reporter rolbs salt
into the still bleeding wounds of Delano and
Lawrence by reminding them of what they
were told in 1888, when they made their great
move for higher duties on wool. It sa.is that,
in the convention or wool-growers and woollen
manufacturers. held in Washington in .Jan
uary. 1888, just alter Cleveland s free-wool
message, the iios on delegates flatly told the
Ohio sages that their plan would be- the be
ginning of the end of all protection upon
wool, as it was "contrary to the general sen
timent of the country and the spirit of the
times." But the Ohio experts would nut hear
to this, and lowered their heads and buited
blindly away, with ,he result that they now
find themselves lying on thsir lacks, with
broken horns and wildly pawing legs, in that
very free-wool ditch which the Boston men
told them was there all the while.
Unintelligible Sugar Rates.
From the Baltimore Sun (Dem.).
The "State of Havemeyer' can hardly feel
satisfied with the candy section of the new
tariff act. if, as seems clear, this seo.ion au
thorises the importation of refined sugars,
"when tinctured.” at 3i per cent, ad valorem
or some 27 cents less per 100 pounds than or
dinary refined sugar is rated at. Says this
Rection 188 "Sugar candy and all eontec
tionery, made wholly or in part of sugar, and
on sugars after i eing reined when tinctured,
colored, or n anv way adulterated, per
cent, ad valorem ” It might be inferred from
this language that the trust has been fooled.
The case Is complicated, however, by what
appears to be a contradictory provision in the
mam clause dealing with sugar. Section
IS.".—the "sugar” section-says: -There
shall be paid on all sugars &' ore number lfi,
Dutch standard in co.or, and upon all sug
ars which have been discolored, a duty of ‘j
cent per pound in addition to the duty of 40
per cent ad valorem' provided for raw sug
ars. Is "discolored'' sugar the same thing as
"tinctured" sugar- If so. which clan e shall
control, or shall both be declared unworka
ble and void? If section 183 is to be taken at
its word, the people may yet get a variegated
sugar enhanced in price by a purely revenue
rate of 35 per cent.
BAK NG POWDER.
Awarded
Highest Honors—World’s Fair.
•Plrl;
CREAM I
IAMN®
mmm
MOST PERFECT MADE.
\ pure Crape Cream of Tartar Powder. F c
Ammonia, Alum or any other adulterant*
40 YEARS THE STANDARD. ,
/OR SALE.
POK SALE or rent ho- seMH ’ a.t Frost
J- s r;et; .tlv jape -ea ra jalat-ed
ttr.im.nout; ba . e.c. ... E. I ujloa C Son,
80-riot Trade Building.
$•) fO - 4 ko ss on Henry net.
near Barnard. J. E. ril'.on A
Son.
FOR SALE. 7. TVJ and 9 Floyd sueet. near
Hull, will sell very cheap J. E. r ulti n .g
Son.
Q(V| !0.-a nice house on W2I burg
street. J. E. Fulton A Sou.
Cl SCAA fer house 77 Jtffjrson street.
is'J'J near Liberty on Jo. 81 feet
front. J. E. fulton A ton.
tViR SALE, cheap for cash: Caligraph
1 typewriter in thorough repair P. L. tv.
P. O. box Y."
SALE or lease, store and dwelling on
J Louisville road: terms reasonable
Apply to Harms & Juehter. 151 Bryan street
SALE, eight-room house and out! uild-
J- mgs. with about fifteen acres fine trucking
land, live stock and farm implements in
cluded or not. Also 3-year-old colt broken to
saddle ana harness. Only five minutes' walk
to station. A C. McAlpm. Guyton. Ga.
UOR SALE, two second-hand pianos;
J- in first class condition che it for cash.
Call and see them as onte: W. C Gray, Har
ris and r.ast Broad streets
■ ■
FOR SALE, folding ted. £rjt cass order.
cbtap. 100 President street.
"PX)R SALE, one horse. *35; one cowand
calf, 115. 99 West Broad, or 5 Eorch
street.
f'j.EEEN’Rro e-.v for sale cheap; good pay
v2 iug business. Address Morning News
office, J. C.
one rosewood piano
faO and $l5 a New Home sewing ma
chine. Apply at Habersnam, three doors
south of Anderson street.
W OOO for sMei-pine 75c. oak 95c delivered,
rr ikreechee u ood Yard, Ogeechee road
and Second street.
TJANDSOME grade Jersey heifer calves
a , that have teen taught to brink from
bucket. V ale Royal Dairy, Bay street ex
tended.
■piOß SALE, level farm of fifty acres, half
f: cleared, half in woods, four miles from
Macon: only twelve hundred and fifty dol
lars; easy payments. John F. Toole, Macon,
Ga.
WANTED, buyers for small truck, fruit
> ’ and dairy farms, from twelve to two
hundred acre tracts, from two to six miles
from city limits of Macon. Low prices and
easy terms. 1 have also several farms to ex
change for stocks, or well secured purchase
money notes. John F. Toole, Macon. Ga.
ft'' OR SALE, store property and store lots.
-A- half block Union 1 a-tsenger Depot. Ma
con, Ga. I have investment offerings that will
interest the capitalist or homG seeker, and
those contemplating an investment ought to
ini estigate my offerings. John F. Toole Ma
con, Ga.
IjlOR SALE.at a bargain; the side wheel
steamer Beilevue. 1 is (eet long. 23 feet
beam. 3, feet over all. 7 feet hole, draw 5 feet,
team, engine, cylinder 32 inches, with 6 foot
stroke; marine boiler; Jet condenser: nne
joiner work saloon, and ten rooms; speed. 12
miles: hull In good order, rei uitt in l&Bl: all
In good order except wheels and toiler, which
need some repairs: sold on a.count of no bus
iness. Apply to W. T. Gibson, Manager. Al
lowed 50u passengers.
FOR SALE, second-hand 14x20 eng<ne.
Good order, cheap; also 10,12 and 15-
horse power. Lombard Iron Works, Augusta
Ga.
OATS. —Finest, heaviest rust proof oats in
Savannah; will get ripe to harvest ie
fore the June rains. We harvested them
in May. J. F. Guilmartin & Go.
"CIOR SALE, lot OOxllOfeet; Taylor. Jeffer
±2 son ana Berrien streets. A. S. Delannoy.
fIOR SALE or rent, house lf4 Gaston street.
Apply to Edward F. Lovell.
FOR SALE, three new show cases, in good
_ order. Address W. H. 8., News office.
CYPRESS SHINGLES for Tybee and
other coast points last longer and are
cheaper; boats can load at the mill; prices
are reduced to *2.25 and #l.su per thousand
Vale Royal Manufacturing Company.
BOARDERS.— Large rooms, southern ex
posure. nicely furnished, with table
board, at 172 Liberty.
tiOUTH room, with board, or entire suite
O of rooms, bath, hot and cold water on
same floor, to desirable party. 156 Liberty
stieet.
\\* ANTED at 93 Jones street, two ta’de or
*v permanent Load ;rs; references ex
changed '
IJOARD and rooms at IC4 Harris street,
• corner uarnard. terms reasonable.
■ \\T ANTED, boarders, with or without
v* room; gentlemen only. 14 McDonough
| stieet,
FIR-T CLASS table card at $3.50; board
and rooms at $4. 8 1 Broughton street.
TJLEASaNT rooms and good table board at
f 152 uastoit street.
BOARDING— Pleasant rooms with or with
out board, at 140 Taylor street.
ONE or two furnished southeast rooms with
board, or for light housekeeping. 64
Bolton street.
■pdOß RENT, a nice front room, suitable for
-*- man and wife, or couple men or some
ladies, with board, at 7b‘/4 Montgomery street,
corner of Stone.
npwo nr three gentlemen can get elegant
A soi them, rooms. nne:y furnished; hot
and coiu water bath on same , ov; brst-cluss
table board: private family L2Taylor.
REASONABLE BOARD may be obtained
at Grovetown, Ga., in private family.
Address Box 14.
BOARD, with large, well furnished rooms;
good table; reasonable terms. 163 south
Broad.
ROOMS, with or without board, delightfully
situated; retired neighborhood; 358 West
Fifty-flfth street. New \ork. Terms reasona
ble. For particulars address as above K. F.
Lonohoe. Savannah reference, Misses Spell
man and O'Brien and postolflce box 104.
and board. 56 Barnard street.
AIRS. H. F„ SAWYER and Mrs. L. A.
uvl Wakeman have rented No 99 4-resident
street, third door east of Drayton, and are
fitting it t.p for boarders. Handsomely fur
nished rooms for single or married people
Table boarders tail oe accommodated by the
day, week or month.
A MIDSUMMER bargain— 20 meal tickets
for $4. Harnett House.
for boys; formerly Crowther s
school. Ninth annual session of this
school begins Monday, Oct. 1. Thorough pre
paration lor University of Georgia. Lnfted
Slates military and naval academies, or for
business. Full corps of teachers. For cata
logue call at Katin's or Conner's book stores,
or at 53 Liberty street. W. S. Lawrence, J.
K. Morton, Principals.
(JJEORGIA Business College has removed to
" postofflee ouildlng. Examine the legi
ble, simple non phonotic system of shorthaLd
taught uy us. Tuition, day or night session,
$5 a month.
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES.
OUCCESSFUL speculation open to all; try
id our syndicate system of spy. ration; in
crease your income; lnformai.on free; send
foroireular. Thompson zt Derr Cos., 38 Mall
street. New York, ln.orporated under tho
laws of state of New York. Capital *IOO,OOO.
kk QIND for our little book. ‘How to Specu
la late noc essrully in the i.rain and
Stock Markets;' mailed free Comstock,
Hughes A Cos., Kialto Building. Chicago."
I[tREE; tend for our book "How to Specu
late successfully on the Grain and
Stock Markets." T rading on limited margins
fully explained. Coates & Cos., Rialto Build
ing, Chicago. 111.
HOTELS.
WHEN v°'< vlßlt Savannah, stop at the
* Harnett House, hates reduced to $1.50
ner day.,
OLD NEWSPAPERS, 300 for 26 cent*, m
Business Office Mu ruing News
AUCTION SALES.
TRUSTEE’S SALE,
B| J. McLAUSHLIN & SOL Auctioneers.
Under and by virtue of the authority and
power vested in The Oglethorpe Savings and
Trust Company, acting as the agent and trus
tee of a syndicate of individuals, firms and
corpora ions, tyaeertain agreement made on
August second i2di. eighteen hundred and
ninety-two <1892). between The seaboard
Company and said The Oglethorpe Savings
and Trust Company, amended bv an agree
ment made between the same parlies, upon
November fifteenth (15thi. eight3er. hundred
and ninety-two (1-412) whereby certain bonds
and stocks issued by the Middle Georgia and
Atlantic Railway Company, and certain con
veyances of all the right, title, interest and
estate of said The seaboard Company,
in and to certain contratts and
lands and other property. real and
personal, as required by said agreements,
are held by said. The Oglethorpe savings and
Trust Company, as trustee, as security for
the full amo-nt uf money of the syndicate
loan covered Dy said agrtemems. as well as
security for all attorneys' tees, disburse
ments, costs and expenses of said trustee, in
cluding expenses of sale, default having ueen
made by said i fie Seacoard Company in tne
payment of said syndicate loan, wnich default
has continued lor more than the period named
in said agreement: Notice is bereDy given,
that The Oglethorpe havings and Trust Com
pany. as agent and trustee of said syndicate,
will sell, at public auction, to the highest
bidder, for cash, in the city of sa
vannah, Ga., at the court house door,
at eleven <11) o'clock in the forenoon,
or as soon thereafter as practicable,
and before the hour of four <4> p. m., on the
eleventh (llth) day of September, eighteen
hundred and ninety-four (189i). ail of the
property, rights, estate, equities and collater
als pledged under said agreements or con
veyed in pursuance thereof, for the purpose
of paving the principal and interest then due.
of said syndicate loan, together with all at
torneys fees, disbursements, costs and ex
penses ot said trustee, including expenses of
such sale: the said property, to be sold at
said time and place, being to wit:
beveD hundred and ninety-tso (792) first
mortgage gold bonas. of the sum of one
thousand 1*1,900.) dolla.s each, dated April 1,
1592. issued by the Middle Georgia and At
lantic Railway Company, with all coupons at
tached.
I tny-two hundred and seventy-nine (5,279 1
shares of the capital sto.k, issued by the
Middle Georgia and Atlantic Railway Com
pany, each share being of the par value of one
hundred (*100) dollars, and all of the right,
title and interest of The .seauoard Comnany
in one oiher share of said stock, not. covered
by certificates in possession of trustee.
Also all tne rights of said ihe seaboard
Company, under the contract of construct
tion. now subsisting between it and The Mid
dle Georgia and Atlantic Railway Company,
including all of its rights to receive Loads and
stock, in pursuance of said contract.
Also all of the right, tit.e. interest and
estate of The seaboard Company, in and to
five hundred and sixty (580) acres of land on
Hutchinson's Tslanu, in Chatham county,
Georgia, to wit: All of the right, title, inter
est and estate of The Seatoard company, as
conveyed by deed made in pursuance of said
agreements, on the 14th day of March. lal)3.
from The Seaboard Company to said trustee,
and recorded in the clerk's office ot the
superior court of Chatham county. Georgia,
in book of mortgages 2 -v s. loiio 197. et seq.
Also all ot the righ , title, interest and
estate of said The seaboard Company in and
to the fo lowing lots or parcels of land, which
have een conveyed by the said ahe Sea
board Company to The Cglethorpe Savings
and Trust Company, trustee, in pursuance ot
the terms ot said agreements, to wit:
All of those lots of land, situated in Jasper
county. Georgia, which were conveyed by W.
G. Kelly, on'the 18th day of September, 1893,
to The Seaboard Company, try deed recorded
on page 324, Book K, in the land records of
Jasper county, in the clerk’s office of the su
perior court, said deed coa’ainlng a plat
showing the lots conveyed, said lots being
known on said plat as blocks numbered six
m(), three (3). and four (4). at or near the sta
tion known as Kelly, on the Middle Georgia
and Atlantic Railway.
Also, all that tract or parcel of land, situ
ated in the town of Aikenton. Jasper countv,
Georgia being the whole of block numuer
two (2), in the plan of said town, being lour
hundred (4UUi ieet on Crest avenue, front, ami
two hundred and forty-five <245) feet on
Leonard and Main streets, and also, all of the
land in block number seven (7), in the plan ot
said town, said lands. In blocks numbers two
i2i and seven (7), together containing five (5)
acres more or less.
Also, all that certain lot or parcel of land,
in the city of Eatonton. Putnam county,
Georgia, containing one-fifth of an acre, more
or less; the said tract beginning at a point on
the southern side of the Jenkins mill and
Eatonton road, leading toward Eatonton
where said road first touches the public
street, recently condemned and opened up by
the city of Eatonton, and running south three
hundred and two (302) feet to a point, on the
comer of land belonging to sad city, thence
northeast, thirty (3Ui feet, thence north, two
hundred and eighty (2stu feet back to said
Jenkins mill and Eatonton road, thence along
said road to the starling point, and adjoining
lands of C. D. Leonard on the east, lands of
the city of Eatonton and said C. D. Leonard
on the south, me public street on the west,
and the Jenkins mill and Eatonton road on
the north.
Also, ail those certain lots or parcels of
land, known as lots numbered one (V), two (2)
and three (3), in block numbered eleven (11),
and lots numbered two (2). three (3), four <4),
- live ioi. six (8) and seven (7), in block num
bered seven (7), and lot numbered two i2),'in
block numoered eight (8), and lot numbered
three (3) in block numbered tyro <2,. in the
town of Hayeston, being on the Middle Geor
gia and Atlantic railway, near Big or East
Bear creek, and on land lots mimleredtwo
hundred and thirty-one (291), and two hun
dred and thirty-two (2c2), in Newton io nty,
Georgia, as shown on a plat of said town,
made by Arthur Few. civil engineer.
And also, all that parcel or plat of land in
New ton county, Georgia, situate and lying oa
the north side of the Middle Georgia and At
lantic railway, beginning at a point seven
hundred and thirty three (733) feet west of
where a street crosses the said road, on the
land line between this tract and Evince Pitts,
where the said line crosses the line of the
right of way of said railroad, and running
three hundred and forty and one naif (34uv s )
feet along said Pins land line, and at an
angle of thirty seven (37) degrees and
six (6) minutes with the track of said
railroad, then at about a right angle to
the left, a distance of one hundred and
seventy four (174) feet, thence at about a right
angle to the right, following the land line
of Robert Ch Ids. a distance of one hundred
and ninety-three and seven-tenths (193.7) feet,
then parallel to said railway, two hundred
and fifty one and six-teath3 (251.8) feet, thence
parallel to the first line three hundred and
forty and one half (340(4) feet to the right of
way of said railway, anu thence along the line
of the right-of-way of said railway, to the
starting point, con aining two (2) acres, as
more fully shown by a plat attached to a deed
made between Robert Childs of Newton
county. Georgia and The Seauoard Company
recorded in the land records In the clerk's
office of the superior court of Newton county
Georgia, in book Y. folio 510. it being
stated in said deed that it is under
stood by the purchaser that if any
spirituous or malt liquors should ever be
col/1 on Iho urn o. inns tl,n * V I , ~ . ,
sold on the premises, the ownership and title
to said property reverts to Palmvra Institute
Together with all and singular the property,
rights, estate, equities and collaterals pledged
by i he seaboard Company, under said agree
ment of August second (2d i, eighteen hundred
and ninety-two ilß2i, as amended on Novem
ber fifteenth (loth), eighteen hundred and
ninety two (1892). or convened to The Ogle
thorpe Savings and Trust c ompany, trustee
in pursuance thereof, reference being hereby
had to said agreements, and to the convey
ances thereunder now in the bands of said
trustee for greater particularity, with the
hereditaments and appurtenances, rever
sions, remainders, rents, issues and
protits. and all the title, in
terest, property, possession, claim and de
mand whatsoever at law or in equity of the
said The Seaboard Company of, in, or to the
same, or any part thereof.
For anv further particulars, and for a more
specific description of the property to be sold
reference is hereby made to said syndicate
contracts of August second (2d), eighteen
hundred and ninety-two ilsi.Ji as amended on
November fifteenth (15th). eighteen hundred
and niiietv-two ilsa2i. and to conveyances in
pursuance thereof, now held by said trustee
and parties desiring to bid. can apply at the
office of said trustee for further information
THE OGLETHORPE SAVINGS AND
TRUST COMPANY, A U
By J. J. Dale, President
Garrard. Meldrim & Newman, solicitors.
PRINTING.
How Are Your Office Supplies?
WAHT ahtthiho for next week,
OR IN A HURRY?
If so, send your orders for
PRINTING, LITHOGRAPHING & BLANK BOOKS
To MORNING NEWS, oava.tnali, Gjk
DANIEL HOGAN.
EflraordiirT
Reductions.
STANDARD^
—ANO
s SEASONABLE
GOODS
w Mi lowei in ft
TABLE LINENS.
The prices are attractive
enough to buy even if not
immediately in want. Ex
clusive, rich and beautiful
designs Bleached and Un
bleached 54-inch Cream 32c,
60-inch White 49c, 68-inch
Irish 64-inch Scotch
65c, 72-inch Satin Damask
87c, 72-inch Extra Fine
$l.lO.
Summer Sale of Underwear,
Hand-made Night Gowns
89c, $l, $1.45, $1.95, $2.25,
and up to $4.
Chemises and Drawers
49c, 60c, 69c, 89c, $l, $1.25,
$1.50, $2.25, and up to $2.50.
Summer Waists in French
Percale Cheviots, Silk and
Sateen. The prices run:
45c, were 60c; 59c, were
75c; 79c, were $1; $1.15,
were $1.35.
White Waists. Colored Hemstitched Collars
and Cuffs r’sc. 75c. 85c. *l. *1.25, #1.50 and #•'
Fine Dimity Wai3ts #l. *1.25 and up to #2.
Wash Goods of every description at half
price.
Daniel Hogan.
TOILET ARTICLES.
DR.T. FELIX GOIRAUD’S ORIENTAL
CREAM, OR MAGICAL BKAUTI
FIER.
Purifies as Well as Beautifies the Skin
No Other Cosmetic Will do It.
Removes Tan,
Freckles. Moth
#u| '’atches. Rash,
Vvr *B> >nd Skin dls
•Jig vfu* ffh/eases. and
every blemish
and
SL \ stood the test
\ of 43 years.and
, jjt f/ j \ Is so harmless
/ JtK j | Iwe taste it to
(' j/VL Ibe sure it is
y I *1 1 properly made
\ Accept no
7, . _ counterfeit of
similar name. Dr. L. A. Sayre said to a lady
of the haut-ton (a patient): "As you ladies
will use them. I recommend ‘Gouraud's
Cream' as the least harmful of all the Skin
preparations. ’ ’ For sale by all druggists and
fancy goods dealers in the United States,
Canadas and Europe.
FRED T. HOPKINS. Prop’r.
37 Grew Jones St., N. Y.
For sale by Llppman Bros.
159 Broughton Street.
50 pieces Fruit of the Loom and Lons
dale Shirting, worth 10c; reduced to
71-2 c.
10 piecss Scrim, worth 10c; reduced
to sc.
25 dozen Towels, worth 25c; reduced
to 19c.
10 dozen White Quilts, 10-4, worth
$1.25; reduced to 79c.
Ail our Figured Lawns and Chailles at
half price for this week.
A line at Embroideries worth 15c and
20c reduced to 12 l-2c.
Our 49c Tray Cloths reduced for this
week only to 25c.
Our 51.25 Silk Vests, In all colors,
reduced to 75c.
50 dozen Gents' Hose, black, fancy
stripes, tan and unbleached, 35c; re
duced to 19c.
A line of Ladies' Shirts, embroidery
trimmed, reduced from $1.48 to 98c.
CRAIN AND PROVISIONS.
APPLES.
Onions, Lemons, Pots toes. Peanuts,
GEORGIA SEED RYE.
Texas Red Rust-Proof Oats.
HAV, GRAIN AND PEED.
Magic Food.
Chicken Feed.
Cow Feed.
W. D. SISKINS.