Newspaper Page Text
BT JAS. W. STANFORD.
"Independent in AH Thing*—Neutral in Nothing/
—— ^ Y
and Appeal.
TERMS $1.00 IN ADVANCE.
VOL. VIII. S
Ythrert \rrr.\h. Established 1WK. )
.'I THKRT KKTCRPMSK,
1SSI. )
CoVHOLIMATSP I8S4.
CUTHBERT, GA„ THURSDAY, MARCH j, 1888.
NO. 7
mum people
HARRIS’S POPBLAR
MANY BONDS!
IS THE LEADING DRY GOODS HOUSE 12} CDTHBERT.
MR. P. H ARRIS is now in the Northern markets purchasing his mammoth stock of DRY GOODS, ami soon will have on exhibition in his store all the latest shades and styles of Dress
Goods and Silks—all the latest novelties out.
mm mi goods nuns
Buys exclusively for cash and sells at the lowest living profit The trade of prompt paying customers solicited on time. Yon can buy as cheap on lima as for cash, at
•msses
h-
Enterprise & Appeal.
KUB.SCKIPTIOS PRICK :
One copy one year .... $1.00
*• * Six months . . . . 50
“ Three months ... 25
flstil Mon*! Nrhcdnlr.
t>AT UASSKSUMA,GOING WEST.
Arrive 3:10 r. m.
Gorsti East.
Arrive 1- **•
FLORt»\ A Urr.BTVr.K rAHSF.NGKK.
».«>**« WENT.
Arrive 3:15 a. m.
coixn EAST.
Arrive ll:lt P. w.
Stop* at Union Springs* r-ufauln,
Cnthbcrt. Dawson, between Montgom-
•rv and Smithville.
Fort Game** train makes close con
nection with the Montgomery Macon
Passseneorat c-uthhert.
1> IMIKI.PS. Agent.
DR WESTMORELAND,
BRUTIMT,
Offers liia service* to the public in
ail the branches of Dentistry-—
Work warranted. Office over the
I'nslotffce. Room* formerly circu
pied by Dr. Worsham, in a id l ct
V. R. THORNTON,
dentist.
CUTIIBERT, GA.
hFFICB West Public Square,
^ over l«. E. Kev’* Sterc. feblT-l.v
POWDER
Absolutely Pure.
T HIS Powder never varies. A ma r -
vel of purity, strength ami whole
«*o»m*ue-«. More economical than the
ordinary kind*, and cannot be sold in
competition with the multitude of low
test, short weight, alum or pbo*phate
t »owder*. Sold only in mu*. Koval Ra-
linjfPowtler t'o., *IO»i Wall Strret. New
' York. inav&My
^
White and jmle shades of paint
may In* beautifully cleaned i»\
ti8it:s whiting in the water.
163 BROAD ST.
*pr-10-ly.
s. s. s.
On'.v $1.75. at J. W. STAxrono’s.
—You CAS GET ThBEE POUNDS
ok Good Tobacco at J. W. Stas
foiid's lor one dollar. 4t
A Woman’s Discovery.
“Another wonderful discovery
has been made and that too by a
lady in this county. Disease
fa?tend its clutches upon her and
for seven years she withstood its
severest tests, liut tier vital organs
were undermined and death seem
ed imminent. For three months
site coughed incessantly anil could
j not sleep. She bought of us a
bottle of Dr. King’s New Discov
ery for Consumption and was so
much relieved on taking first dose
that she slept all night and with
one bottle lias been miraculously
cured. Her name is Mrs. I.uilier
Lutz.” Thus writes W. C. Ham
rick it Co., of .Shelby. N. C.—Gel
a free trial bottle at J. W. Stas
foiid's Drug Store.
— —
Carpets will look much brighter
after sweeping if wiped oil wi.l.
a damp doth.
I S 1= ; '.-1 ¥ i
£ tHWiiilic
feWMy
Headquarters ior
PIANOS AND ORGANS!
X Can Bell Yon an
ORGAN OR PIANO
Cheapen
THAN
ANY HOUSE WITHIN 500
Miles of this point.
When you want any Instrument, confer with me in
regard to price before buying, and I will savo you mon
ey. I also sell Piano and Organ Stools separate.
J J. W. STANFORD.
Marie Autiduetfe’s Emeralds.
A German newspaper contains
he interesting announcement that
the Czar presented the Czarina on
ner fortieth birthday, Nov. 2ti.
last year, a necklace of forty mag
nilircnl onuraids. The purchase id
these forty gem* had been kept a
profound secret w hile I lie Czar's
igcnls for the nine niontfl^ pre
ceding the presentation were en
gaged in collecting them. For
lie sake of the brilliant woman
who received so imperial a present
l is to be Imped that she wilt uot
recall the sail auguries that have
been historically furnished in Iht
connection of emrralds and ill
fated women wlm were sovereigns
also. One of Dumas' great stories
is founded on the emerald neck
lace presented to Marie Antoi
uette, about the disnp|iearanee o'
which so much of romance am.
suffering was woven in the terri
ble days that saw her die upon
the scaffold. The mention of etn
cralds and Marie Antoinette re
calls a sltange story told the.
Graphic soltte lime since, which, j
as it relstes to emeralds, and some
too reputed to lie of marvelous;
size and purity, will bear telling I
in tv|<e.
In the northwest quarter ofj
Washington, and upon the edge j
of the most fashionable Section, i
there stands an old fashioned
three story house built nbutil fifty j
years ago. Except that It is old
fagliiime-i and seedy there is only
one thing to call attention to it,
besides its being the home of a re
Uuced yet well known Virginia
family. That one tiling is the
fact I hat a back window on tiic
second floor is closed tight with a
pair of heavy iron shutters, in the
top of which there are two amall
light holes.
A Southern gentleman living
on his wits somewhat, though not
in a disreputable sense, told the
incidents herein narrated. He
knows the Virginians, who are
still possessors of a small properly
and among the family a couple nl
government appointments. He
was aware that there was a room
in the dwelling which was nevei
opened, so far as visitors knew.
The door thereto was heavily
molded and evidently had a strong
lock unit. In tiic course of a;
friendly conversation he mention j
ed a visit made to the Chinese '
Embassy (not the |>rcsent one) !
in the course thereof his host, one {
of the accomplished attaches, who
spoke English perfectly, led him
to his private sitting room. The
conversation accidentally turned
on gems, on which subject the
Chinese diplomat proved himself
an adept. He showed his visitor
a large number of rare jewels, dia
monds and other stones, some of
them of a most costly character.
He was a gem collector, and.<being
very rich, could readily gratify his
most extravagant wishes. His
visitor remembered afterward that
as he told the incident quick
glances passed lietweec members
of the family. A few days passed
by and he was waited upon at his
office by one of the male members,
wbn asked, alter exacting a pledge
of secrecy, if he could bring the
Chinese attache to the house with
the iron shuttered window in or
der to examine some very rare
and valuable jewels.
Of course this was done. Bulb
gentlemen, the American and Clil
ncsc. went on their call is quite n
flutter of excitement. The hour
set was late in the evening. Tliui
were met at the door by the two
gentlemen of the family. None of
die ladies were visible, nor tlieir I fortune they were unable or afraid
foully had held them in posses
sion ever since. They had be
• nine both a fa*i itialion and a
•.crrnr to the family which had ap
parently gone down the hill of
well doing in guarding a great
Where and How They Lire. t tub, than live in one of those hor
It is said that there are 22,000 riblc , '" UH ‘' 9 ’ * el ll * ree of U,0,, ‘
New York who earn ‘ thal 1 9n * wcre filIeH lo the
women in
their daily bread and have no
home other than such as they
make for themselves. These wo
Custom House Clerks.
There is one department in the
custom honsc for which there ar e
and mostly by girls of the better, not many aspirants, though the
; das*. One occupant was an ex pay is good. It is the liquidating
; actress, who has taken to journal- j department. The work is
The work is hard
men-ihe greater number of them !' 8 n> for a living, and lives one j and puzzling, and it requires a
at least—cannot afford to pay over
: #3 a week for tl.eir lodging*, ami! mcn ’ ll,, '- v al1 l,tin S wrI1 p,, '“' ale<l \ ™»kc bis way in it. The liqtiida
‘‘and well bred girls. Within the
one servant either. After removal ' i» utilize.
«»f lints anti coats the callers wort j Tl»e Chinese gentleman was ea-!
iskcl to go up stairs. They were- j * vr Lo Buy. Difficulties arose at , .
„ • i the* are driven to many shifts to
. , Tl 7’ aS , I'T 1 ™'° rs " ereUD ! find a decent home at that price. la8t lh " u new f ” r
' “ ^ 7’ e "‘T I ' ll " ng l ” lrUSl a " e * I,erl " ,lh i The larger number of the... I find j ™ rk ‘ D S llaT <* '*«*“ "I™' 1
a i,! 1,1 77 ", i ll,e,r / t 7 ,t °, r . l 1 ° the 8*"" meet the difficulty bye. operation, j 0nc al 35 « Wcsl TW«j third
‘.v , ' P :'" ,l0f lb « r « , "*“g 11 ’-; or ,ive wilfelub together and was organized by the head
Its lock was a comh.nat.ou one. j .faehe desire,! lo have expe.t ^ , (|| . ^ can „ et a i of a large dry goods shop, who was
ST ,rL ' n f " U . ' * ! , ' S ‘ iU,, : n ' V “ l ° , V “' Ue am, 1 ,Ur ; tJ big room somewhere in which arc * w » k « ne ‘ l tj ll * e uf l’ ro
.on shutters were closed, as usual, j before he ex,winded a pnaeely for- j <|ouJ)le ,^ (U am , . lou c j riding a decent home for his many
. «r C nTr S „ , 1* r/T : lUnC ' 1 N ’ me " ,qni r? W “ re n,: ! de lUree or four dressing tables.: fcm » le tni l'b». v es. It is looked af
but an iron stand, bolted to Hie a* to the History of the remarks li ler '»y the S,witty to Befriend
?hT;‘“} , w, rli 7 “ u :, r r ‘.T re ' i lt.t Cn e| r a:f were'bKTeTi ^pt'tbcr assets for meals T^se ! Gills, ami not only doc.,
I lieiloor was closed I>ehind them 1 ""*’ *■ were i,H.ueii except, it i,,,,,,- ... .„,.i, ,.r ,1,,
: those of l.ic unfortunate tjuecn of J meals fluctuate as to quantity. If| ,tb, U ^ homes U such of the
i France, whose necklace had
parcnlly disappeared
from the lace of
(.'hiuesc gentlem
home or aenl somewhere else luxurious character; but when the
On the stand lay two cocked rc
volvcrs. The visitms were asked
o stand near the door. Both
were men of nerve, and one had
been • dashing cavalry officer and
wa* scarred with a score of wounds
Uul they confessed afterward that
thrills of upprehension ran through
them. One of the brothers o,reli
ed the safe and the other slum
where his hands would rcadilv
grasp the revolvers. A few see
: as to quanuiv. 11 1 ...
a P‘ | the club is inTunds the uearcst! 8l, °l’ C irls as are " ,iU,out
**r«» absolutely j re , tanrt|ljl aniI , „ a8 8love furcish ! but no young woman applying Tor
aan w« recall.s| ll, * om wiU * *pre*d» of a mildly « night's lodging is turned away.
slioilly afterward. He did not
bay.
That much and no more the
Graphic knows. S>„ far as it "* I ^ingredients ol their breakfasts j lau attend, if they wish, classes
! ol sewing and instruction in
The prettiest
necessity for clothing becomes im
minent with the recurring season,
lea and crackers form the pnnei-
acd many girls out of work are
received there and ara aided, as
far as |mssible, in finding employ
menl. While they are idle they
aware the marvelous gems are still
I in Washington.—A". T. Graphic
Kobliiiur the Farawn.
and dicucrs. It is |>erfeclly sur ,
prising to find how long a healthy j household work,
girl can live on this diet and stand “nd pleasantest home for
grasp me re oners, a .ew see , Thp tarlff monoplists certainly , d , on bcllilia a L . oonlcr or j was o,K.ned this year at 59 M.
bVfrrm will r'Ts.Tl *7*1 1 n ° l ‘ Mk an,1 “ cit - V ' sit stead.lyat a desk or type wri ! lon slrecl - Tl,e l’“ rlor * rcl
" , ‘ 1. *• “ ' , l lbe K' l-ubiican party and Mr. S. ; tef You aon - t 8ee aBV fal w ,.men | cJ ** «<»»an's club, which hcl
carefully wrapped in soft leatuer , j. Randall, of I’ennsy lvana. they , * -r, I to nav the coat of the whole hou
and cotton, was as carefully rc
moved.
Ojiening tins there were exliib
itoil to the astonished eyes ot the
callers several large emeralds and
evidently of great parity. The
Chinaman trembled witii excite
meat. He declared, as the larg
est one, as big at least as n good
'ennsylvana. they
.ire fearlessly proceeding to pluck
the goose unmercifully.
We have already mentioned the
plow “combine,'’ by means of
nhicb plows were increased in
price to cover an arbitrary ad
vance of over one hundred percent
in the price of steel as well as the
greed of the plow manufacturers
sized pigeon's egg. was placed in ai en.selves. TUe -combine”
bis band, that he bad never seen
anything like it, while telling also
of wofiderful geins that lie knew
«f in China. The emeralds were
rut in an antique style. There
were a.dozen of them, and all re
markably for their beauty and
size. The Chinaman was allowed
lo examine them all carefully.
He did so with the utmost min
uteness and delight. All the liinc
the closest watch was kept, and
he brothels, as well as the visi
tors, seemed lo feel relieved when
1 hey were all outside the door and
going down the staircase.
in
eludes all the great plow manufac
turers of the country, and it is
safe to say that plows are at least
75 per cent, higher than they
would lie if the duties on them and
the “combine” that goes with
them were abolished.
Will some one of a mathematical
women
Mor
snt
helps
among this class, however. They I lo P»> lUe ‘-'" 8l ° r lhe * llole l,OU8 «
are very happy, though, apparent
charming old-
lt is one of those
fashioned square roomed dwcll-
to the fact of their absolute inde-! * n S s ' I’uilt before the days when
|>endenee They ean slay out as
late as they want to and arc not
called U|Kin to explain their ah
scnces, and they can ask their via
itors into their own room. It is
laud was so valuable on this is
land that they began lo cut the
slices thin, and there is a garden
behind, with Bowers. The cost of
living is so arranged that a girl
not altogether the best life for. can G ot - 8 room there for from $4
them it is feared.* Some painful | to $5 a week, and the rulca are
tragedies happen among these wo-1 k* and flexible. It was meant
men and they lose a good many of; ^ ,r B b ,, P 8' r ^ 8 8n d factory bands,
the best (eminine instincts living ! artists, stenographers, jour-
in this co operative fashion. Do
I mesticily and feminine reserve
j can scarcely ffuuiish in such an
atmosphere. People who arc de
voting their lives to the study of
turn of mind figure out bow much j lbese qlle8tions len me lbat> if
tax Georgia pays a year on plows? j 1JO „ 8ible> cvery woman 8bould
It would be interesting. But plows I havc a ruom of her OWD> no maller
arc not all that are taxed by the |loff Uny u be Xlial lll(i BCD8C
tariff protecteil “trusla.”
The tlircsbing machine manfac-
turers met in Chicago, about ten
days ago, and formed a “trust.
of absolute possession of every
thing about her ia fostering to
that domestic mstinct that is
strong in all the best women. In
the pursuance oi this quest I—on
And this was the story of recalcitrant, if any, will be
„ 1 81 1 1 > 11 L , lUe risk ol losing their entire liusi-1 f . Ba w Lite insideof two
Virginians: Their paternal great-1 Be8S The maBBer in wWcb the 1 for 3 b ' 8lcr - 8JW lllC lnsl ‘ ,cof lWO
grandfather was a military sur-
Just as the French retolu-
nalists and women in the higher
class of work flowed in the first
week and filled it up to the brim,
so that there has never been a sin
gle vacancy for |>oorer applicants
Another honsc established this
year is at 308 Second avenue,
which accommodates some forty
or more widows and elderly un webbing under fbur ounces
ling office is the place where the
final calculation of the duties to
be paid nn imported goods is
made. When the goods arc first
entered a rough estimate of the
duties as per invoice is made and
the duties are deposited. Then,
after the work of the surveyor’s
office is completed and the apprai
ser has examined the goods anil
placed on the invoices their clas
1 sifieation and rate of duty, the
work of the liquidating office be-
gins.
One of the liquidating clerks,
in speaking to a reporter about
the woi k of the office, said:
“To one who is not acquainted by
actual experience with the work,
it is a hard maller to explain 'll.
I have never known auch difficult
work. In the first place the in
voices come to yon in cvery known
language, and the measures of
quantity and value arc expect
ed in the same tongue as Hint in
which 'lie invoice is written All
these, in the first place, have to be'
reduced' lo American measures
and values, and is trying Work.
Then a man in our department lias
to be a walking encyclopedia of
commercial and trade technical!
tics.
“One of the most puzzling things
in our work is the figuring out of
the duly on articles which pay. a
compound lax. Take for instance
dress goods. Tiic tax is five cents
a yard and 35 per cent ad vaio
rein, or 7 ceuls a yard and 40 per
cent., according to whether Hie
value is over or under 20 cents a
yard. Say we have a consignment
of 1.000 yards of dress goods from
England which are billed in the
invoice at 2 shillings and 6 pence,
less 1.37, a favorite discount less
5 per cent., less 2 per cent., and
with charges say of £12. The
charges must- be deducted and
discounts taken off in order to
find out just what the cost per
vard is, and on this the duty is
assessed. This is a simple opera
tion compared to many we have.
On all worsted goods there is a
pecific and ad valorem duly for
gcon
lion was beginning he was in Paris,
greatly interested, loo, in all stir
ring event* of the |>eriod. He
had apartments in the house of a
ho had
plowmakers were forced into lbe
plow “combine” is a warning and
an example to all who would other-
wise Upld back from these unholy
combinations.
Nineteen out of the twenty one
physician who had some court. II1>nurw . lurer8 of ^pers. mowers
practice and yet was secretly 8 an( , bjn(ler8 mel , fem day8 ag „
radical. He was involved heavily ] amj ilulnciliate | y , )rocC eded to
business. They pnqmsed at once
lo curtail production and “reg
as a gambler at onetime, and bor
rowed: money to a considerable
amount of his American friend.
When the revolution became vio
lent the Frenchman came under
suspicion nn both sides. One day-
lie brought to the Virginian, then
about to return to America, a
small jewel box and showed .lbe
emeralds which had been exhibited
to tlie visitors. He insisted upon
his creditor taking them to Amer
ica, where be promised lo come
also. Suffice it to say they were
brought lo the Virginian's borne.
The French physician was never
heard of afterward. The posses-
emorandum of them, and bis
ulale” prices.
The * object of ail such con
spiracies is to kill home compel!
tion as thoroughly as the tariff
prevents foreign cnai|ietiliun
The farmer in all these cases pays
the fiddler. When analyzed they
prove to lie simply conspiracies to
roll the farmers of the country,
and what is most distressing, the
government is a party to the great
wrong and injustice—made so in
sor of the emeralds held a transfer jdall, a Pennsylvanian member of
Congress.—Telegraph.
or three boarding bouses strictly
for girls. Poor girls! They were
every one of Ibcin cheap and un-
s|H-akably nasty. Such odors,
sour and greasy, ss lurked in those
black halls and dingy rooms. The
big rooms bad four beds in each
and the small rooms were so small
that even a new born kitten would
have failed to find comfortable
space for being swung around by
tbe tail. There was a carpelless
dining room on lbe second floor of
one of these, ltuill over a shop and
a stable,' and I saw delectable
dishes of cabbage and pork being
distributed about along the table
prrparlory to the evening meal.—
For the small room with board
the occupant paid $9 a week, foi
a share of one of the big rooms
she paid $7. The appliances for
tbe first instance by the Rcpnbli pathing were startling by their
can party, anil held up lo lbe dark
work by a handful of mcn under
the leaderabip of Mr. S. J. Ran-
absence. Were I a woman I should
far rather rent a corner of a gar
ret over some shop wliere # tberr
: was nothing but a bed and bath nearly all canned vegetables.
married women, and a branch,
meant for girls not more than 18
or 20, gives shelter to thirty-five.
Several years ago a M rs. Lcgget es
tablished a hoarding house for
business women in Clinton place,
and as it was clean and well kept
she soon bud lo lake two more
bouses, sbe bad so many members
clamoring for Admission. She got
tired of tbe wutk after awhile, but
put women, trained according to
her ideas, at tbe bead of her es
tablishments before she retired.
Tbe uldesl of all these establish
menls affording female refuge is
tbe Home of tbe Ladies’ Christian
Union, founded in 1861, in Wash
ington square, before there were
so many wash and cook ladies,
and lllh name was more honored
in tbe observance than in the
breach. It baa spread out into
macy branches all over the city,
and it is and has been tbe vehicle
of much good and comfort to
homeless women.—Brooklyn Ea
gie.
Do not leave any tomatoes in the
bottom of a tin can, but pour them
into an carthern, bowl till you
want them. This applies to
a yard, ami another fur goods over
four ounces, and on some other
woolen goods we have to find out
whether they cost 40, 60 or 80
cents a pound, because differem
rates of duty are charged. 1 have
had sometimes lo make as many
as "twenty five different calcula
Hons lo ascertain what the rate of
duty was on a certain line of
goods. We can’t go by the ap
praiscr'e calculation at all; bis
work is doue hurriedly in many
cases, and wc can’t afford to trust
him.
“About tbe most tedious work
we have is on invoices of glass. It
comes in all sizes and weights, and
there is a different duty for each
size and weight. I have known of
invoices that required the making
of 10,000 figures to ascertain the
duty. Sugar ia another tedious
article to figure on. It ia graded
by polariscope lest, and a differ
ent rale of duty is charged for ev
ery degree above 75.
“W'inea, liquors and tobacco all
have compound duties, which, as
I saiiA give us the hardest work.
Tbe work never gets easy, as puz
zlers arc liable to come up at any
time. There are men in the office
who have been there fifteen years,
and they will frequently come
across something in an invoice
which they have never met before.
It is like silting down to solve a
Chinese puzzle and keeping at it
for eight or len hoora erery day.
“It helps a man very little to be
a mathematician. Young Malhe ,
who committed suicide, was in tbe
office, and was a splendid mathe
matician, but he was of a nervous
temperament, ami 1 don’t doul-t
that puzzling over some of those
infernal ‘over or under four ounce’
invoices drove him crazy.”—Me,a
York I’reix.
■ ■ • m
The Last of tbe lluffnlocs.
“It was but four years ago.”
said W. S. Balrows. of Mandan,
Dak., “that I bought 10.000 buffa
lo horns, and to day it is about
impossible to obtain one for love
or money. According to the
storks of hunters and lrap|ier*
who have been engaged in tlieir
occupations for years, one small
herd of buffaloes exist at this
time ns a representative of tbo
countless thousands thal swarmed
on the Western prairies, and they
have sought protection in Hie Yel
lowstone I’ark. There are about
30 in the herd, and many of the
tourists thro’ the park last sum
mer encountered them during their
travels. Even these arc likely to
become extui minuted, unless the
government takes vigorous meas
ure* for their security, as their
whereabouts are known to n few
daring spirits, who will take des
perate chani es to kill them, if they
ean be discovered near the boun
dary line of the park where de
tection would he exceedingly
difficult. The expricnces of Tax
idermist W. T. Hornaday, of the
National Museum, in quest of
specimens of buffulo for thal in
stitution, have already been given
at length, and he had orders be
sides from European museums for
some of these animals. After
working industriously for two sea
sons, and traversing all the coun
try north and west of Minnesota
to Canada, he succeeded in finding
two or three animals, which havc
been stuffed for lbe museum at
Washington, and unless the Uni
ted Stales government decides lo
pick out a few of iu only herd as
a prcseul to some European mu
seum, the foreign orders never
will be filled.—From the St. Paul
Globe.
The Fate of Ocean Wrecks.
The almost daily reports by ar -
riving vessels of passing derelict
and abandoned vessels at sea,
might lead the landsman lo sup
pose that wrecks are more numer
ous than is actually the case.
But, in fact, a single wreck is re
ported many times and frequent
ly in a wide change of position.
It may be seen to day on one part
ot the coast and to morrow may
be many miles from that position,
as it drifts about with the current
of the Gulf stream or it is driven
a long distance by the winds.
It is only a few weeks ago that
the cruiser Atlanta towed into the
capes of Delaware a dangerous
derelict which had been drifting
about off tbe coasts for weeks,
and though sjiecial attention had
been given by passing vessels to
report this wreck, in order that
the information might lead to
finding and destroying it, it was
along time bofore it could be
placed. Often the wrecks that
are reported at tbe hydrographic
office lead to an extensive and un
availing search only because they
have been carried so far from tbo
reported position by winds and
currents that the searching vessel
could not find them. When it is
possible to tow them into port
this is done; otherwise they are
blown np with gun cotton torpe
does. One wreck, seen on the
lower edge of the banks of New
foumllaml on Aug. 28, in latitude
43 degs. north, longitude 55 deg*,
cast, bsd drifted to latitude 39
degs. north, longitude 64 deg*
west, on Oct. 7. a distance of 6C0
miles, and had been reported font
times.— Hea York Tribune.