Newspaper Page Text
Society
Women
a nd,n fa.ct, nearly all
women who undergo
& nervous strain, are i V\|S' U-\
compelled to regret- A X/ >
fully watch the grow- / / / ifi
ind palloT of their f ;
cheeks, the coming m
wrinkles and thinness
that become more
distressing every day. \ >7
Every woman iktf/ X \^|
knows that ill-health
is & fatal enemy to
beauty and that good ilk ** A\' /w' 7 ‘
health gives to. the j!sJk /|\
plainest face an en- p\\ /H\/pS
during attractiveness. i|||k /
Pure blood and strong
pe tvcs these are the \V\ f
secret of health and J
beauty. A
Dt.Williams’ PinK H
Pills for Pale People build up and purify the blood, and
strengthen the nerves. To the young girl they arc invalu
&fc|£,°to the mother they are a necessity, to the woman
iDpToaching fifty they are the best Temedy that science
his devised for this crisis of her life.
Mrs. Jacob Weaver, of Bushnell, ■ 111., is fifty-six years old. She says;
••I suffered for five or si* years with the trouble that comes to women at
this time of life. I was mucil weakened, was unable, much of the time, to do my
own work, and suffered beyond my power to describe. I was downhearted
and melancholy. Nothing seemed to do me any good. Then I made up my
mind to try Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale People. 1 bought the first box in
March, 1897, and was benefited Jrom the start. A box and a half cured me com
pletely, and lam now rugged and strong. —Bushnell (///A Record.
The wonderful success of this remedy h&s led to
m&ny attempts &t imitation And substitution. Be
* UTe the full n&me is on
T the p&ckewge. For s*le At dll
MU?I fe JSM druggists, or sent postpdid
PfPP I rrr^)9lfiffo^^SpfUl by* the Dr.Willi&ms Medicine
ftCompany, Schenectddy,H.X.
Price fifty cents per box.
0d and Warvelomc •
THE TIPPING SYSTEM.
IT HIS OVKRGKOUN REASONABLE
801 NDS IX LONDON.
Tin* Deirrpt* ami Extent of the Povcr
ly From Wliich It Siirinsn.
Julian Ra*i>h in the Providence Journal.
T!i* American who is only a short time
l n England as a tourist, Invariably la-
Ir ' ?ms the breadth and depth of the “tip
,ir na '' [ ‘ specially if he comes from any
01 ,hc sma;i(, r of our cities. In the larger
American cities menial service, both pri
' Me and public, has fallen into the hands
of Europeans of many sorts, and all Eu
topeans of the* servant and waiter class
urc alike in their willingness to receive
1 in< J * n their habit of depending
•• " WM.vi.-s to augment the small
■tiih which they are thus made
' 11,1 ' once heard an American say,
' f '"' of a month’s visit to London,
"" * :;ni ipped everybody he had met
I’’ 'he Prince of Wales.”
' 1 !! " - ’ • into business there or tak-
housekeeping he would have had
'■ warrant for his statement. He would
ranks 7'" " lat nt ' ,r ‘ y everybody in the
l-rform. 1 ' ."'" k ' n S fll ' kor ,ile poor who
on a , ”' vice whatever, looks up
n; , : ‘ , r :,s money earned or as a
' h< has dealt with a
t , ' *Hslanguished member <jf
nl ' 11 Many in London, lately <Je
lar® the English view
if ■'• rv talked and acted*as
!| .,i palm deserved to he
nil,,' a 1 T'Per or silver, and as if a
tras.s,. M'.* J a position above the
• hts self-respect to be
a ftp can Pvery Thus giving
tr -flattery, and the giv
w,:ri. " * hack more than he parts
Mot air tnv,
>" Un- Mis can bring themselves
•• Jo 'he end of their
i.. th, SlJl| ; lh ,a < English it cuts them
Ki-r aft, ■ i ’ :iKV< a ekiiled mechanic
I- ui ol , ‘ uor k is done, in the ex
of trnny ~ . , 1 ' :l pP* And to the close
■'i.-i. ■, ; ~j ■■•'"•ans days he will never
' 'he man i . M ‘ Bhou W give a present
"srr u , ‘'silvers goods, the mess
*• *:■ ;l ‘‘-tier, the furniture
Mienum "; no brings in a chair, the
‘cus , , ’ ' r, v’ts tys way about the
i iuv ~, " v other person who is i,l
--■ rs for What he does.
Lppii- r ” * Possibilities in the
r ’> r ,1, l| ? M hich the English have
British i r, linear conduc.
it ' ‘■•""c’t a tip with each fare,
1 mu. ■ , ' mi places in Germany, it
.■ i o' 111 England, as it did to a
‘ ' traveled in Spain, that
,i "ho arrests you for iyeing
;'”rt asks you for a douceur
1 S;, ,|( " I'ou into'custody. And,
*rot* ( 1 know of r.o such
, . ~ ration of wrong cotidi
" aoale as is shown by al
eotnii.,, , American transportalioj
'' Pays its porters very
T-iring i, ’ U ocsts them to live, rc
c ' depend upon the public to
W rii;n ’ ‘fterencee in tips.
- isaliiMt Tippling.
er r. . ! that tipping has over
**• fv enu 'v bounds—in London, at
°* ni m:;ij, ' ' ° (i by noting the re-
Pot lo
1,1 Places the larger
ar <l ch* v, , * to — as * n the theaters
he,,,-, . taur antf . But it will be
f r ' evil. The root of it is
• ror n vv • ’ ! p xteiH of the poverty
*' The American
alk ° . ho? * ar ® In the streets,
s, the endless proces-
sion of street minstrels. He is shocked by
the hideous litter of tramps asleep in the
West End parks, and, once in a while, he
gets a glimpse of a slum quarter, with its
greater wretchedness and filth than can
be met with in any other capital of Eu
rope. He shudders as he fancies that he
realizes the extent of the poverty around
him, and he wonders, as all men must,
wonder, how it happens that a nation'
which has led in the heaping up of wealth
for a century and a half can have so
misapplied ite vast gains.
But he must live in England and be
come at home there in order to understand
that genuine poverty is to be found far
above the slums, in the many ranks that
would me proud and independent in
America. When he learns that the po
licemen are regarded as well paid with Jo
a week, he pauses to investigate what is
earned by those hard-working folk who
consider $5 good wages. Then he find that
the girl who waits upon him in a restau
rant receives only $2; that the girl cash
iers in many busy places are paid but $1.75
a week; that the average pay of the do
mestic servants—the neatest, rosiest, most
wi.ling helpers that any nation produces—
is only $2 a week, or half the money paid
for the same service here—and that cor
responding prices prevail in every avenue
of labor. Alter that he lets his haud go
oftener and deeper in his pocket. It Is
the hopelessness of the life of millions
which accounts for .the many who cease
to hope, and abandon themselves to
drunkenness and rags. It is the keenest,
truest knowledge of the value of a penny
that leads otherwise proud and decent
ment to stoop to accept a I p.
Worse Tli■■ 11 Tippling.
There are common every-day objects ten
times more dep.orable than tipping to em
phasize the unequal division of England’s
wealth. Among them are the hundreds
of flower girls who roam the streets at
night, pursuing the dangerous and degrad
ing business of cajoling dissipated men to
buy their wares. There are those other
hungrier children who tidy the stoops of
the dwelling houses daily for a few pence
a week. There are the able-bodied men
who run for miles beside a cab that car
ries a trunk, in order to get a sixpence
for taking the trunk into the traveler's
house. Again, (here are the boys who turn
handsprings beside the coaches that run
!to and from the suburbs. On one day,
when I was boating on the Thames, it
was a beautiful girl on the verge of wo
manhood who tflrned cartwheels for a mile
or two on the tow path beside my iioat—an
incident to make a humane man wretched
for a month.
The harmful practice of giving to the
poor, and thus pauperizing them, instead
of assisting or educating them to help
themselves, has pot only taken deep root
In England, but has long been drawing
compound interest there. To illustrate one
of tlie ninny ways in which this operates
to the detriment of the pride and inde
pendence of the poor (and therefore, in
directly. of the race), let me pick out a
village with which I became acquainted
during a month’s stay-in it last summer.
It is an historic place, and as well appear
ing as almost any of the quaint and pic
turesque little farming villages which dot
England with innumerable beauty spots,
it is in the Midlands. Its stone cottages
look as solidly comfortable, its dooryards
bloom as gayly, its parish church, rising
out of a bowery God s acre, is os appe
tizing to the American love of Old World
— A perfect method to develop,
fpAo l strengthen, eulSrge all tveak,
rU It I stunted, feeble prMMMjns of thu
K/l nr fvl I body. Effects of ctrots and
1J IVI INI I excesses cured. A simple plan.
IJ OW IV 1 indorsed by physicians. Ap-
1 ! pijance and treatment sent on
,t r r*-!"g-> ! fy approval. No money in ad
vance. ’.Vrite for explanation and proofs; maili-d
Ul^plain, scaled letter. Correspondence con-
Udeutial. _ _
ERIE MEDICAL CO.. BUFFALO. N. Y.
THE MOUMNG NEWS: SATURDAY, JANUARY 21,1509.
calm and rest as any in the kingdom. To
look at it you would not believe it the seat
of a dread disease.
Harmful Cliarlty.
But, alas! a good man in centuries gone
by planted th© germ of a cancerous
growth which is eating into the ro<?t and
stock of the neighborhood vitality. This
well-meaning citizen of on© of the earlier
Georgian reigns left to the village a small
tract of ground for the pa; ' ' of ten
cows, whose milk was to N pint
at a time, to "the deserving , oi the
place. In time the cows died, and the vi
car of that day, who had the charity in
his control, rented the land as a pasture
for the cow's of his neighbors, who paid
him 10 shillings, or $2.50, each year for
each cow that grazed there.
Thus it cam© about that money instead
of milk began to be dispensed to the so
called poor. Why there should have been
poverty to any considerable extent in a
village of twenty or twenty-four houses
in England’s days of profitable agricul
ture, or w'hether there would have been
any but for this premium that was put
upon it there—who shall say? But time
went on, and not very long ago the rich
men of some busy manufacturing towns
near by turned covetous eyes upon the
beautiful village and began to buy land
on which to put up villas, there. They
bought the pasture land, piece by piece,
until at last, it was all bought up, and
in its place the poor of the village looked
to a sum of something like $200,000 well
and safely invested.
The reader may be sure that the poor
multiplied proportionately to the growth
of this charity. Sadder tales than those
of the wrecks of manhood who flung them
selves upon or were sucked in by this
charity could scarcely he conceived. Farm
ing ceased to pay* it is true, but from be
low’ the former farms the earth began to
yield a rich mineral store, and work was
made for people threefold as numerous as
the population of the original farming vil
lage. Cottages sprung up in rows, even
to the forming of anew street or two, and
earnest, honest men came there to labor.
To-day many of these families have suc
cumbed to the temptation of the local
charity.
To-day there is in that little village
squalor to match the worst in London.
Honest households have been transformed
into families of parasites, loafers and
drunkards, who will not work because
alms money comes more easily than
wages. The charity must be distributed.
If it as withheld to-day it will be bigger
and more harmful later on. The kindly
man who is in charge of it at present
has no alternative except to dole it out to
whosoever asks for it. Unfortunately, he
is too credulous, too kindly, too much ab
sorbed in other work, too honest to com
prehend the wickedness of the i*eo,de who
cringe to him for alms and laugh in ihelr
sleeves as they take them. To-day these
parasites go to him with any story th-y
can invent when they merely want the
means for a debauch. A tale of a sick
wife, a lie about a foreclosed mortgage or
about a police court fipe, or a fiction about
an accident to a limb—lies out of whole
cloth seven times in ten—suffice to get
them an order for any sum between 10
shillings and £5.
And what, then, thinks the reader? They
sell fhe orders to the shopkeepers—iho
largest/ beneficiary of the charity, because
he operates as a broker, cashing the orders
for as little as he thinks the holders will
accept. Two shiMngs on a 5-shilling or
der, or £1 for £5. I am told, is how he dis
counts these tenders. With what he gives
they get drunk. This awful tnfe of the
poisoning of a commur.ity may partly ex-
P.ain how it was possible that a modern
“king of finance” found several communi
ties willing to let him dole out weekly
sums in alms, rlrht and left, iji the coun
try which he aspired to represent in Par
liament. Hundred* took his gifts as reg
ularly as if they were wages, and to many
who read of this the story seorned worse
titan the subsequent revelation of the same
operator’s alleged relations with the titled
min whose more valuable influence he also
sousht.
The tale of the poisoning of ihe village
by the gift of pasture land is well vouched
for. it was told to me by a man of the
highest standing in the village, who de
clares it to be one form of an evil which
assumes so many shapes all over England
as endowed charity foundations can
branch out into. Sooner or later England
wiil put pn end to these pestilential en
dowments. It will not prove too difficult a
task to a people who reformed their pen
sion system as they did. and who put the
crown lands into the public charge when
the time for doing so was ripe.
TO-DAY’S WEATHER FORECAST.
Forecast for Savannah and vicinity un
til midnight: Threatening weather.
Washington Forecast for Saturday:
For Georgia and Western Florida:
Threatening weather, followed by rain on
the Gulf; light easterly winds.
For Eastern Florida: Threatening
weather; light northeasterly winds.
For South Carolina: Threatening weath
er; light, variable winds.
General Conditions—Rain is falling at
Galveston, while generally cloudy weather
prevails on the Gulf. Generally clear
weather prevails along the Atlantic coast,
except at Hattcrns and Philadelphia,
where it is cloudy. On the lake the weath
er is partly cloudy, with light precipita
tion in that section. In the central val
leys clear or partly cloudy weather pre
vails, while in the West ii is clear. The
temperature is lower on the South Atlantic
and slightly higher on the North Atlantic
coast. It is higher in the Ohio and Mis
sissippi valleys and In the lake region. A
high southwest wind prevails at Chicago.
Yesterday’s Weather at Savannah-
Maximum temperature. 4 p. m.. 51 degrees
Minimum temperature, 8 a. m... .34 degrees
Mean temperature 12 degrees
Normal temperature 51 degrees
Deficiency of temperature 9 degrees
Accumu.ated deficiency since
Jan. 1 3 degrees
Accumulated deficiency since
Jan. 1 3 degrees
Rainfall 00 inch
Normal 11 inch
Excess since Jan. 1 42 inch
Excess since Jan. 1 42 inch
River Report—The hight of the Savan
nah river at Augusta at 8 a. m., 75th me.
ridian time, yesterday, was 11.8 feet, a
fall of 2.1 feet during the preceding twen
ty-four hours.
Observations taken Jan. 20, 1899 . 8 p. m.
(75th meridian time) at the same moment
of time at all stations, for the Morning
News:
Stations— | -|-T.j *V. |Ra!n
■ lot torn clear ! 38 | 12 | .00
New York city, clear 1 38 | 10 | .00
Philadelphia, cloudy | 34 | 8 | .00
Washington city, p’t cl’dy| 36 j L | .00
Norfolk, clear | 36 j L | .00
Hatteras, cloudy | 42 | 18 j .00
Wilmington, clear | 40 | 8 | .03
Charlotte, cloudy | 40 | L | .00
Raleigh, clear | is j L j .00
Charleston, clear | 44 | L j .00
Allanta, clear j 42 | L | .00
Augusta, partly cloudy ~| 44 j L | .00
Savannah, partly cloudy | 46 | L j .00
Jacksonville, cloudy | 48 | 6 j .00
Jupiter, clear | 58 | L | ..
Key West, clear | 58 | L | .00
Tampa, cloudy | 58 | L | .00
Pensacola, partly cloudy.j 52 j L | .00
Montgomery, partly ClMyj 44 | L j .00
Vicksburg, cloudy j 44 j L | .00
Now Orleans, partly cl’dyj 46 ’ 8 ). .00
Galveston, raining | 48 | 16 I .32
Corpus Christi, cloudy ...| 56 | 12 j .14
Palestine, cloudy i 46 | L | T
Memphis, clear | 40 | 8 ! .00
Cincinnati, clear .‘.j 36 j 6 | .00
Pittsburg, cloudy j 36 | L j .00
Buffalo, clear I 36 | 20 j .00
Detroit, cloudy | 32 | 16 j .01
Chicago, partly cloudy ~| 32 { 30 | T
Marquette, cloudy j 30 j 20 | .00
St. Paul, clear j 38 | 8 | .00
Davenport, clear | 40 | 6 | .00
St. Louis, clear j 43 | 12 | .00
Kansas City, cloudy —| 46 | 12 j .00
Oklahoma, partly c!oudy| 46 j L j .00
Dodge City, clear | 42 | 6 | .00
North Platte, clear j 40 j 6 j .00
-]-T, temperature; *V, velocity of wind.
H. B. Boyer,
Observer, Weather Bureau.
A Little Mixed, lint Means Well.
From the Charleston News and Courier.
A correspondent writes from Savannah
that “Mr. McDonough is the standard
bearer of the Liberals, and Col. J. H.
Estil! is on his aldermanlc ticket, and not
on the Myers ticket, as stated in the News
and Courier." It is very hard to keep up
with the political procession in Savannah,
and we confess that we got a little mixed
up about Myers. Our main purpose,
however, was to stfy something that would
help Estill. It would be a good tiling for
Savannah if he should tie placed on both
aldermanio tickets his election being far
more important to the business and com
mercial welfare than that of either or
both of the candidates for Mayor.
—Russia has probably the most curious
tax in the world. It is called the "amuse
ment tax," and was instituted a year or
two ago to found an institution for the
poor, under the title of the "Empress
Marie Foundation.” The tax is laid upon
every nmusement ticket sold, nad the man
agers raise the price accordingly. Already
more than 1,600.000 rubles have been raised
in this way.
—Those who have lately seen him re
port that the Prince of Wales has aged
perceptibly since a year ago, though he
never looked more jovial and in better
spirits. When a man of Albert Edward's
years meets with a mishap like breaking
his hones a change occurs in the physique
that cannot be repaired.
—A correspondent writes from London
that Herbert Spencer is putting the fin
ishing touches to a revised edition of his
earlier tvorks. He looks frail and tired,
and a tinge of pessimism overspreads his
heavily lined face.
•.*♦**♦*♦*♦ •* *#*##***#**
HIE HEALTH!
Never Pails lo Renew Youthful Color
and llfo to DRAT IIAItt. Use lilt. J
HAY'S* HAIR HEALTH. Covers 9
B*Ll> Bpot*. StopH dandruff, hair fallum, W
Bnalp diHcaKCH. Don’t taekin or linen. W
▲bNolutoly hannlcßS. m
Gives Perfect Satisfaction, a |
Best HAIR liItOWKK ORKIiSINO, A
If your hair is FALLING, FADING of %
TrLh'INC Git \V, try at onco DR, 4
HAA'tj HAIR. llj.al.Tll, —\ J
LII’PMAN Bhob., savannah Wholesale
Agents.
DC ft and Noises in Heau
lir Hr ENTIRELY CUBED
IfH by Peck's Pat. Im
proved Tubular Lat; ('ishions. yzAtf'*-.
Übtspera heard distinctly. Un- J*V ?
seen, comfortable, self adjusting, [ja dWt
Stiecesbful when all remedies fat, fv Jnffkl
Sold only by I . Illst (>\. H.vi llrowriway
err. lull St.. SI. Y. Write or coil for Mlu's
(rated kook ol proofs tttKU 1
& BULL STS, **
Clotl)if?g : Depaftn^ei^t.
♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦
Our buyer, who is now in New York, bought last week from
one of the leading Bovs’ Clothing Manufacturers about
300 BOYS' VESTEE SUITS
At a very low figure. Ihe manufacturer preferred to close them out rather
than carry them over for another year. They are all this season’s rich,
elegant styles, in All- Wool Cheviots, Solid Colors, Plaids and Checks; some
with Mohair Puffed \ estee, collars trimmed with red or green braid, brass
buttons, Imperial patent waistbands, sizes 3 to 8, about twenty {A A
styles to choose from, worth $5.00, $6.00 and $8.00; \ * Ux
WILL BK SOLD AT iPwiwU
Men’s Velour Finish Cassi meres
and Scotch Cheviot Suits in all imaginable colorings, every-size, A A Aft
worth up to $15.00; the choice of thirty patterns to make your \ A MH
selection from, at
MARINE INTELLIGENCE.
Local anil General Wwb of Ships
an<l Shipping.
The coastwise schooners Hilda. John G.
Schmidt, M. B. Millen and Margaret A.
May have been detained several days from
sailing on account of the strong northeast
wind which has prevailed. These- vessels
are anxiously awaiting for a change in the
weather.
The schooner William H. Shubert ar
rived yesterday from Nortolk with a cargo
of coal consigned to G. I. Taggart.
The schooner Julia A. Trubee, from New
York, arrived yesterday with a cargo of
fertilizer consigned to the Commercial
Guano Company.
Tile schooner Frank Vanderherchen,
from Philadelphia, arrived yesterday with
a cargo of coal consigned to Bond, Harri
son & Cos.
Passengers by steamship Nacoochee
from New York Jan. 18—G. E. Savage, J.
W. McCormick, W. L. Gray and wife, 1,.
Gabel and wife. W. G. Benjamin, Miss M.
Dilmar, Miss M. Ritchie, and in steerage
l’hoelte Lee, H. Bluester.
Passengers by steamship Gate City
from Boston Jan. 18.—A. W. Merriam, F.
H. Jeffrey. Mrs. C. F. Williams, Mrs. G.
S. Shields and wife, Corpl. J. G. Flagg,
G. W. Hawkins, G. Edgetl, Mary Bowlder,
G. W. Keys and wife.
Sn van nit It Almanac.
Sun rises at 6:55 and sets at 5:05.
High water at Ty!>ee to-day at .1:30 a.
m. and 3:58 p. m. High water al Savannah
one hour fater.
Phases of the Moon for January.
Last quarter, 4th, 9 hours and 43 min
utes, evening; new moon, 11th, 5 hours and
11 minutes, evening; first quarter, 18th, 10
hours and 68 minutes, morning; fuli moon,
20th, 1 hour and 56 minutes, evening.
ARRIVALS AMI DEPARTURES.
Vessels Arrived Yesterday.
United States transport Manitoba, Ha
vana. *
Bark Eugenie (Nor.), Aaroe, London—
Dahi & Andersen.
Schooner William H. Shubert, Peterson,
Norfolk—C. W. Howard & Cos,
Schooner Juiia A. Truhee, Albertson, New
York—C. W. Howard Cos.
Schooner Frank Vanderherchen, De
neau, Philadelphia—C. W. Howard & Cos.
Steamer Doretta, Chadwick, Bluffton
and returned—J. H. Judkins.
Vessels Cleared Yesterday.
Steamship Kansas City. Fisher. New
York—Ocean Steamship Company.
Sleamship Dora Foster (Hr.). Woolley,
Liverpool—Georgia Export and Import
Company.
A’essels Went to Sea.
’ Steamship Chattahoochee. Boston.
United Slates supply ship Comul. Cuba
River Steamers lie pit rted.
Steamer Clifton. Strobhar, Beaufort—
George lb Beach, manager.
Shipping Memoranda.
Port Royal, S. C., Jan. 29 Cleared,
‘schooner Fanny 1,. Charles for Boston.
Fernandlna, Fla., Jan. 20.—Arrived,
schooner Greenk-af, Johnson. Woodruff,
New London.
Pensocola. Fla., Jan. 20.—Arrived,
schooner Classic F. Bron-on, Bennett,
Tempico.
Sailed, steamer Drumfell (Br.), Chubb,
Bremen; bark Satina (Br.), Hansen, St.
Pierre.
Cleared, steamship Nora (Br.). Grog,
Antwerp; barks Virginia. Pettigrew, Rio
Janeiro; Teresa O’ivari Cl tab). Merani,
Castlemare; Drot (Nor.), Sorenson, Swan
sea; Hannah B-lanchard (Hus.), Bjorkvlst,
Antwerp; schooner Eva B. Douglas, Hen
net, Tampico.
Carrabelle, Fla.. Jan. 20.—Cleared,
schooner H. B. Holman (Br.), McNeil, St.
John.
Pori Tampa. Fla.. Jan. 20.—Arrived,
steamer Florida. Allen, Havana via Ivey
West; tug Dauntless and barge Nora,
Jacksonville; Spanish tug Humberto Rod
riguez and barge Fernando, Havana.
Sailed, schooner Laura C. Anderson,
Potter, Clartaret.
Jacksonville. Fla., Jan. 20.--Entered,
schooner Methehesee, Snow, Damarara.
Cleared, schooner Maude Snare, Lowell,
Kingston, St. Vincent. B. W. I.
Key West. Fla.. Jan. 20.—Arrived, steam
ers Florida, Al.en. Havann and sailed for
Port Tampa; Thorndlse (Br.), Thomas.
Genoa; Cocoa. Dillon. Miami; Mat lle
Awan, Connor, Gulveaton and sailed for
New York; schooners Golden Hind, Curry,
Mujures; Nimrod, Woodlands, New York.
Charleston, S. C., Jan. 20.—Arrived,
steamer Algonquin. Platt, Jacksonville,
and proceeded to New York; schooner An
nie C. Grace, Smith, Philadelphia.
Salfid, steamers Dalmatia (Oer.), Ostcn
tlorff, Hamburg; Ciurih, McKee, New York
In tow of steamer Algonquin; schooner
James itaird. Booye, Pensacola.
Norfolk, Va , Jan. 20.—Arrived, schoofter
Warner Moore, Crockett, Charleston.
Sailed, schooner Jennie E. Itighton,
Crosaby, Charleston.
New York, Jan. 19.—Arrived, Cotnmtttt
die, Jacksonville.
Sailed, La Lotla, Charleston,
Notice to Mariners.
Pilot charts and all hydrographic infor
mation will he furnished masters of ves
sels free of clmrge in United States hy
drographic office in custom house. Cap
talns are requested to call at the office.
Reports of wrecks and derelicts received
for transmission to the navy department.
Tompkinsville, N. Y., Jan. 18.—Notice Is
given by the lighthouse hoard that a black
spur buoy, without number, has been es
tablished In 12 bet mean low water in
Sandy Hook Bay, N. J., to mark the outer
end of the sewer pipe, leading from Fort
Hantock. Magnetic bearings; Sandy
Hook (rear) Light Station E%B; North
ilook Beacon NNE%E; outer end of Rail
road Dock, S by E.
Brunswick. Ga., Jan. 20.—St. Andrew's
bar buoy No. 2 bas drifted from its position
end is lost.
Westerly, R. 1., Jan. 20.—Notice Is given
that red spur buoy, off Watch Hill Light,
went adrift and has landed on yr<( Beach.
Watch Hill. Masters should keep we.fl off
toward bell buoy.
Washington, Jan. 10.—Notice Is given by
the Lighthouse Hoard that on Dee. 18,
1898, tlte characteristic ol the light shown
from second turn gas buoy, stationed just
off the easterly end of Pelican Spit, to
mark the turn for deep draught vessels In
to Galveston channel, Galveston harbor,
was changed from fixed red to fixed red
during periods of 10 seconds, separated by
eclipses of 10 seconds.
Coastwise Exports,
Per steamship Chattahoochee for Boston
—3.414 bales cotton, 100 bales sea island
cotton, 17 bales domestics, 15 barrels cot
ton seed oil, 20 barrels rosin, 74 barrels
turpentine, 80 barrels syrup, 120 bales wool,
13 barrels oysters, 21 Itoxes fruit, 19 pack
agt s vegetables, 100 sacks cotton seed meal,
119 packages merchandise.
Foreign Exports.
Per British steamship Dora, Foster, for
Liverpool—l,3B6 bates cot ton, valued at
131,573 ; 636 bales sea island cotton, valued
at 129,387 ; 23,520 sacks cotton seed meal,
valued at *18,900; 1,075 sacks cotton seed
cake, valued at *1,836 ; 2,112 sacks cotton
seed, valued at *1,738 ; 500 tons pig iron, 725
barrels soap stock, valued at *3,625 ; 20 bar
rels rice, valued at *426; and 2,750 barrels
cotton seed oil, valued at *30,015.
Receipt* til Railroads.
Per Central of Georgia Railway, Jan. 20.
—3.896 bales cotton, 115 packages merchan
dise, 70 packages domestics, 837 barrel*
rosin, 55 barrels spirits turpentine, 19 cars
lumber, 1 car lard, 1 car cattle, 1 car rice,
13 cars wood.
Per Georgia and Alabama Railway, Jan.
20.—305 baltvt cotton, 086 barrels rosin, 73
casks spirits, 9 cars merchandise, 21 ears
lumber, 1 car corn, 1 car hay, 3 cars meal.
VESSELS IN PORT.
Steamships.
Kansas City. 2,164 lons, Fisher, New York
—Ocean Steamship Company.
India (Gcr). 935 tons, Hirsch—C. W. How
ard & Cos.
Wakefield (Br), 1,543 lons, Wale, Idg cot
ton, Rotterdam and Bremen.—J. F.
Minis & Cos.
Barry (Br), 1,411 tons, Holt, Idg cotton,
Genoa.—W. W. Wilson, Agent.
Koordistun (Br), 1,729 tons, Idg cotton, Bre
men.—W. W. Wilson. Agent.
Arrest
disease by the timely use ol
Tutt’s Liver Pills, an old and
favorite remedy of increasing
popularitv. Always cures
SICK HEADACHE,
sour stomach, malaria, indiges
tion, torpid liver, constipation
and all bilious diseases.
TUTT’S Liver PILLS
Clio (Aust), 2,293 tons, Lucella, Idg cotton,
Trieste—Strachan & Cos.
Bertholey (Br), 1,454 tons, Hurry, Idg cot
ton. Bremen—Strachan & Cos.
Burlington (Aust), Dabinovich, idg cotton,
Venice and Trieste—Strachan & Cos.
Huckminsler (Br), 1,297 tons. Brown, dis
charging pyrites; Strachan & Cos. to Id
cotton for Genoa for Georgia Exitort and
Import Company.
Simonslde (Br), 1,956 tons, Kish, Idg cot
ton, Bremen—Georgia Export and Im
port Company.
Matin (Br), 2,433 tons. Archer, Idg cotton,
Bremen—Georgia Export and Import
Company.
Armenia (Br), 1,515 tons, Scearf, Idg cot
ton, Havne—Georgia Export and Import
Company.
Lavernock (Br), 1,495 tons. Pyres, Idg cot
ton, Liverpool—Georgia Export and Im
port Company. „
Aeara (Br), 2,677 tons, Newell. Idg cotton,
Bremen—Georgia Export and Import
Company.
Dora Foster (Br). 1.573 tons, Woolley, old
cotton, Liverpool.—Georgia Export and
Import Company.
Nordkyn (Nor), 2,104 tons, Beer, Idg cot
ton for Bremen—Barnard & Cos.
United States transport Michigan, Cuba.
United States transport Manitoba, Cuba.
Hnrka.
Vanadls (Rus), 1,024 tons. Ahlstorm, Ply
mouth, for Darien, dismasted.—Dahl &
Andersen.
Cyprian (Nor), 883 tons, Hansen, eld Bue
nos Ayres—Dahl & Andersen.
Emil Stang (Nor), 878 tons, Evensen, Idg
naval stores.—Dahl & Andersen.
Hecla (Nor), 838 tons. Hansen, Idg naval
stores.—Dahl & Andersen.
Zanrak (Nor), 565 tons, Mnthlesen, dis bal
last— Dahi & Andersen.
Runfaxe (Nor), 513 tons, Aanonsen, Idg
naval stores, Europe—Dahl * Andersen.
Ludvig Holberg (Nor), 980 tons, Kaldager
Idg naval stores, Europe—Dahl & An
dersen.
Unlone (Hal), 865 tons, Cammaretto. Idg
naval stores, Europe—Dahl & Andersen.
Anieilino (Ital), Albano, discharging—Dahl
& Andersen. ,
Eugenie (Nor), 635 tons, Aaroe, dis ballast
—Dahl * Andersen.
Cato (Br), 738 tons, Tallaksen, Idg naval
stores, Europe—Paterson, Downing &
Cos.
Elvira (Ger), 1,44.0 tons, Bonnhorst, Lon
don for Philadelphia; In distress.—
Strachan & Cos.
Zefiro (Ital), 584 tons. Paturzo, Idg naval
stores—Strachan & Cos.
Glovannlno (Ital), 1,182 tons, Commorola,
Mg naval stores—Strachan & Cos.
Beechdale (Aust), 792 tons, Itattlehleh, dis
charging cement—Strachan & Cos.
Lima (Nor), 778 tons, Olsen, discharging
ballast—Strachan & Cos.
Fred P. Litchfield, 991 tons, Hardy, loos
ing naval stores, Pernambuco.— Wilder
& Cos. • t
Schooner*.
Oscar C. Schmidt, 613 tons, Crawford, Id*
lumber, Philadelphia—C. W. Howard &
Cos.
John G. Schmidt, 430 tons, old Philadelphia
—C. W. Howard & Cos.
M. B. Mi Ben, 319 tons, Caviller, cld New
York—C. W. Howard & Cos.
Emily F. Northarn, 318 tons, Johnson, Idg
lumber—C. W. Howard &. Cos.
Maggie M. Rough. 555 tons. Tilton, Ids
lumber—C- W. Howard & Cos.
Aaron Iteppard, 404 tons. English, Idg lum
ber— C. W. Howard & Cos.
F. C. Pendleton, 388 tons, Burgess, Mg
lumber—C. W. Howard & Cos.
Harriet C. Kerltn, 491 tons, Smith, d.s.
coal—C. W. Howard & Cos.
Mary F. Godfrey, 421 tons, Wicks, dis
charging— C. W. Howard & Cos.
Woodward Abrahams, 707 tons, Wade, dis
charging c. W. Howard & Cos.
Frank Vanderherchen, 511 tons.Deneau,
discharging coal C. W. Howard & Cos. ’
Samuel B. Hubbard. 333 tons, Mehattey,
discharging—C. W. Howard A Cos.
Win. 11. Shubert, 562 tons, Peterson, dis
charging coal—C. W. Howard & Cos.
Julia A. Trubee, 392 tons. Albertson, dis
■ harging fertilizer—C. W. Howard & Cos.
Charles M. Puilerson, 780 tons. Tunnel
Mg lumber, Philadelphia—Master. ’
Margaret A. May, 510 tons, Monsey, Phila
delphia—Dixon, Mitehen & Cos.
J. E. da Big non, 159 tons. Turner, Idg lum
ber, New York—Master.
Annie T. Bailey, 380 tons, Peters, discharg
ing coal—John A. Calhoun.
Luther T. Garretson, 491 tons, Green, dfs
charglng—Master.
fLUIBIN6, STEAM AND 6AS FITHMa
By Competent Workmen at Reasonable
Figures.
l. a. McCarthy.
All work done under my supervision A
full supply Of Globes, Chandeliers, Steam
und Gas Fittings of all the latest styles at
142 and 144 DRAYTON STREET ’
7