Newspaper Page Text
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THE SAVANNAH DAILY TIMES
tWOzWiruwm
B. H. KiUHAKDSO N,
EDITOR AND GENERAL MANAGER
NO. 34 BRYAN STREET, BETWEEN
DRAYTON »N 0 \BERCORN.
BAV AN NA ’ I TIMESPUBLJSHING CO
It is stated that all the days at Nice are
clear, bright aid b’autiful. Could we not
exchange a little of our rain for some of this
Nice weather.
General Sherman says that St. L uis is
the finest city of America. But then Gen
eral Sherman also said that he had seen a
letter from Ex-President Davis which
convicted (hat gentleman of aspiring to seize
upon dictatorial power in the South.
Our Emory feels confident that he will be
confirmed as United States Judge for the
Southern District of Georgia. The Senate
could not be so kind as to defer the matter
until after the fourth of March, could it?
Perhaps if it could it might decide that Mr.
Cleveland should have a finger in the pie.
It has been suggested, remarks the Macon
Telegraph, that the little fire in the Capitol
building in Washington is but the precurser
of others that will occur in government
buildings between now and March 4th
There are many Republican documents and
accounts upon which “burn this” is written
in invisible ink.
Mrs. Parnell’s words ought to reach
the heart of every true friend of Ireland.
That lady hesitates to believe that the
work of destruction in London is due to
Irishmen. But she denounces it, whoever
may be considered in it, and deplores it as
a terrible if not a fatal injury to the cause
in which her son is so noble andsodevoted a
laborer. The worst feature of these dyna
mite crimes is the damage they do a wor
thy cause.—New York World. Dem.
A short editorial on the subject of the
delay of the mails at Waycross for points in
Southwest Georgia, along the line of the
Savannah, Florida and Western Railway,
appeared in these columns in Friday’s issue
In that article the blame of the delay was
p'acedonthe Postcffice Department, and it
seems the comp’aint is just. The Savan
nah, Florida and Western Railway
Company have given instructions
to their conductors to receive any
mail pouches made up at Waycross
for points beyond, and see to their propet
delivery. The Postoffice Department, how
ever, must arrange for the making upo/ these
pouches, as the railway authorities have
nothing to do with that part of the work
There is no reason why the people of South
Georgia, west of Waycross—to say nothing ci
the thousands of visitors from the North t<
that section each winter—should he put o
this serious inconvenience. The Pastoffict
officials shou'd at once remedy the evil.
A SENSA TION IN RAILROAD CIRCLES
The Augusta Chronicle of yesterday states
that considerable sensation has been occa
sioned in railroad and commercial circles bj
a bill in equity which has been filed in th<
clerk’s office of the Superior Court of Rich
mond county, praying that a receiver be ap
pointed to take charge of the affairs of the
Port Royal and Augusta Railway Company
The bill, it is stated, sets forth some very
interesting facts and is brought in the
interest of the holders of the second mort
gage bonds of the Port Royal and Augusta
Railway Company. The complainant in the
bill is Major Thomas P. Branch, the holder
of $5,000 worth of the second mortgage
bonds for himself and such others as may
unite with him.
The bill is a lengthy one and gives a review
of’the history of the road from its inception
and makes, among several others, the allega
tion “that since the Central road has had
control of the Port Royal road the business
of that road has been diverted at Yemassee
over the Central road and the wharves,
docks,elevators and warehouses of the former
real, erected at great expenseat Port Royal,
are rendered useless and made to prove a to
tai loss; that it is the object of the Central
road to destroy the Port Royal road by
heavy burdens and bad management, and
the holders of the second mortgage bond.-
will never realize anything; that the Cen.-
tral Railroad and Banking Company, en
dorser on the bonds under the third mort
gage, has, with the notice of the illegality of
said payments, received the interest and
sinking fund under said ihird mortgage and
is responsible to the bondholders under the
second mortgage.
The complainant, for these and other
reasons, asks that a receiver be appointed to
take charge of the affairs of the Port Royal
road, and, after paying the expenses of the
road, pay over the net earnings to the
holders of the second mortgage bonds before
anything is paid on said third mortgage
bonds, and before any rent is paid for the
Augusta and Knoxville road or any divi
dend on the stock thereof; also, that said
second mortgage be foreclosed for the benefit
of the holders of the bonds.
Judge Roney of the Superior Court has
ordered subpoenas issued upon the defend
ants to appear at the April term of the
Court and answer to such charges as may
then and there be made. The issue of the
case will be awaited with considerable in
terest.
e » »
‘RO UGH ON ITCH.’
“Rough on Itch” cures humors, eruptions
ringworms, tetter, salt rheum, frosted feet
hilbl ains.
THE SAVANNAH D'ILY TIMES, SLNDAY , FEBRUARY 1, ISSS.
THE INDUSTRIAL GROWTH QF THE
SOUTH.
It has been a cause of considerable com
ment that the Southern exhibits at the
New Orleans Exposition are numerous ar.d
diversified indicating the decided and grat
ifying industrial growth of this section. This
lias excited great surprise among Northern
visitors to the Exposition, a majority of
whom imagined, in their ignorance of the
South, that our people were devoted almost
wholly to the production of cotton, and that
we had at best, b.t a careless, thriftless
population.
If those who are laboring under this im
pression would only take time to indulge in a
little thought about the present condition of
the South, they would not need an exposi
tion of any kind to have their minds disa
bused of their errors. L' ss than a quarter
of a century has elapsed since the South
came out of the civil war, stripped cf
wealth, her labor and social systems
completely revolutionized, and stricken
to the earth by defeat, poverty and destitu
tion, having lost in slave property alone
to say nothing of the drain upon her re
s urces incident upon a pro
longed and exhaustive conflict —more than
the national debt of the entire country at
the close of the struggle. Yet to-day, in
spite of this and the wholesale spoliations by
political harpies to which she was afterwards
subjected, she is on the highway of pres
perity, and the New Orleans Exposition
affords practical evidence of the fact that
her recuperation has been simply wonder
ful. It is very doubtful if any other section
of the entire country, not even excepting
the great West with all its vast possibili
ties, could, in the same time, have advanced
so rapidly as has the much maligned and
vilified South.
If in spite of all the apparently insur-I
mountable obstacles in the way of the South '
in the past, she has made such headway as
is shown to-day, nothing can occur to retard ,
her continued progress. Her manufactur
ing interests are yet in their infancy, and
they promise wonderful results. Ihe,
development of the manufacture of Southern I
iron alone —a source of wealth which in
past years was scarcely ever seriously thought
of—bids fair to enrich our section beyond
computation. Already the fact that iron I
can be made at Birmingham about eight dol
lars cheaper than at Pittsburg has proven
sufficient to startle the Pennsylvania
iron men who fondly dreamed that they
enjoyed a monopoly of that valuable
industry. Nor is this all, by any means
for it is stated that 123 large industrial en
terprises, including ir. n, cotton, porcelain,
phosphates and salt works, are getting
ready to be opened up in the South during
(he coming spring. We read that “in
Northern Alabama a Northern syndicate
is erecting a million dollar iron plant, while
.ue of the great iron masters of Birming
ham is improving a great water-power for
manufacturing purposes Georgia, with its
•otton milling interests, is not behind hand
Great activity is noted in Atlanta and other
central points, and increased attention is be
ing devoted to the Empire State of the
South. In Mississippi, Louisiana and other
Valley and Gulf Slates, manufacturing in
terests are looking up, and both home and
foreign capital was never so willing to join
in the promotion of the industrial growth
of the South.”
These enterprises, alr.eady under way,
have been started by their own innate
merits. The New Orleans Exposition
must necessarily prove a tremendous im
petus to others of similar character, and cap
ital, always on the lookout for profitable
investment, must be attracted s uthward-
Unless all signs fail, the South, within the
next decade, is destined to become the
wealthiest section of the Union, and with
wealth will come proportionate influence
and power.
ALIEN LANDLORDISM:
This is a subject which is exciting a good
deal of interest in the United States, and a
bill is now before Congress concerning it
It | : s said that many English Jnoblemen
have acquired and now own 21,000,0C0 acres
f land in the United States, while other
itled Europeans and untitl'd aliens are
masters of smaller areas, which aggregated
would make a large territory. The r port
<tates that hundreds of miles of the public
lomain have been fenced up for the grazing
f vast herds of cattle, and the rights of the
-ettler are set at defiance by these titled and
untitled land owners.
The investment of foreign capital in the
United States is very desirable, but there
are gnat evils attendant upon this vast
ownership of public lands passing into alien
hands. These lands enable the Govern
ment to offer homes to thrifty, industrious
-ettlers from foreign countries at reasonable
figures, and prove no small inducement to
desirable immigration. If they are per
mitted to be taken up in large tracts by
foreign capitalists, the Government is to
that extent deprived of its ability to osier
a refuge in the United States to immigrants
seeking to escape from the evils of land
lordism in the Old World. Besides this, if
anything is to be dreaded, it is this same
landlordism, fur it is the fruitful mother of
all the dynamite and anarchist outrages
which are now agitating Europe.
This is a subject to which Congress may
well devote a portion of its attention. The
freedom and cheapness of the public domain I
has been one of the chief sources of the
wealth, strength and prosperity of the Re
public, and the undue encroachment there
on of foreign noblemen and others of wealth
should be watched with a jealous eye.
\the MAIL AI‘RRORRIATION.\
Some apprehension, we learn, is tell lest
the appropriation for the fast mail service I
be'ween the North and southwest Georgia !
and Florida will fail. Congress is progress
> ing very slowly in the matter, February is
a verv short month; the attention of both
House and Senate is largely occupied with
the incoming administration, and business
will be so hurried at the close of the session
that there is danger that this, as well as
other very necessary legislation, may be
overlooked.
The importance of this matter to this
entire section cannot be over estimated.
Should the appropriations fail, the railroads
would be unable to keep up the fast mail
service. At present two daily trains are
run from Washington to New Orleans,
making connections with the principal
points of Fl”rida. If Congress should ne
gleet to vote this special appropriation, the
result would be that one train would have
to do the work now required of two. In
other words, while one train now
is assigned chiefly to local business,
and so relieves the other, enabling
it to be devoted to the rapid transportation
of the mails—if the railroads do not receive
the compensation from the government
necessary to defraying the expense of run
ning the fast mail, the local business and
mails will have to depend on one train
alone. This would bring our Northern
mails into this city about half-past one or
two o’clock in the afternoon instead of about
seven in the morning, and the injuiious
effect of this upon the busmess not oniy of
.Savannah, but of all cities from
Washington to New Orleans, is too mani
fest to require more than simple mention.
The business interests of this section are,
' of course, the first to be considered in this,
i connection, but there are large private in
terests also to be thought of. At this seas"n of
■ the year travel from the North to the South
jis very large. A great proportion of these
j tourists are invalids who seek the balmy
I clime of the South in winter for
i the benefit of their health. Such as
I these are numbered by the thousands,
and they are, both personally and as busi
| ness men, interested in receiving their mails
I from home with promptitude and dispatch
I It is therefore apparent that the South is not
I alone interested in this matter, but the con
! venience and interests of thousands of
Northern citizens are likewise concerned.
' This, then, is a matter which Con
! I gressmen both North and South should look
' into, and see that this appropriation is voted.
: The attention of our immediate representa-
1 i live is especially called thereto, and it is to
' be hoped it will receive the prompt atten
; I tion of the Federal Legislature.
i I _
Five-Cent Music
Actually Given Away!
i
l
I
1
- Music buyers will please bear in
mind that our Ten-Cent Music is
? clearly printed on heavy music pa
-I’Er with elegant lithographic title
’ pages, and comprises hundreds of new
i and popular copyrights by well known
: composers.
Do not confound* this standard and
desirable music with the cheap 5-cent
stuff which has become as big a nui
sance as patent medicine almanacs.
* No first-class music dealers will sell
i this trash, and its sales has therefore
been given over to Grocers, Cigar Deal
j ers, Dry Goods Stores, Book Stores, Ped
lers a.id Toy Dealers. Musicians will
’ not use it, and it is about played out
r every where. Jfe wouldn't offer to sell
> such uff to our patrons, but in order
I to show them how inferior it is,and to
satisfy all that our reasons for not
selling it are sound, we have bought
-a wagon load of it, which we shall
r GIVE AWAY FREE OF CHARGE.
? | All music buyers are invited to call
1 and select from this music without
money, without price. The distribution
will commence at noon on Tuesday,
a Jan. 27, and continue until all have
2 i had enough.
11 There is no trick or dodge in this.
I The music is actually given away free
1 j of charge, whether you buy anything
• ' or not. Come and get it.
> i
)
1
Ludden & Bates
MUSIC HOUSE.
I THE HARNETT HOUSE, SAVANNAH,
Visitors to Savannah, Ga., will find the
Harnett House a comfortable and desirable
stopping place, where the charges are mod
erate, while the uniform excellence of the
table is a subject of general remark-.-C'hi
cago National Hotel Reporter.
u
Book
SALE.
A FEW DAYS MORE !
OVER
10,000 VOLUMES
ALL MUST BE SOLD.
Among the collection are some of the rarest
and finest editions printed. The following
list comprise a very few of the books we have
all bound in Cloth, Russia, Alligator,Morocco,
Calf, Ac., under Metropolitan Hall :
ART BOOK’S,
Ills America Dalzlel’s Bible Gallery
Standard Library American Poetry and
Dore’s Don Quixote Art
“ Paradise Lost Shakespeare s Dream
« “ “ Blinker Hill
“ Inferno American Portrait Gal-
“ Dante lery, &c.
“ Tennyson
“ Moore
“ Scott
DICTION ARIES.
American Standard German-English
Webster’s Latin, Ac.
POETRY.
Arnold Language and Poetry
Br. Female Poets of Flowers
Browning, Mrs Meredith
Burns Milton
Byron Moore
Beauties of Shakes- Muloch
peare Odyssey
Campbell Peirarclr
Chaucer Pilgrim's Progress
Cook Boe
Coleridge Poets of Am.
Cowper Proctor
Dante Pope
Eliot, George Religious Poems
Favorite Poems Kogers
Goethe Rossetti, Dante
Goldsmith Shakespeare
Green, Marlowe and Shelley
Co -sin Schiller
Gems 1001 Scott
Heine Songs—Sacred
Hernans Songs—Household
Hood Tasso
Household Poems Tennyson
Hugo Thompson
Iliad Tupper
Ingelow Virgil
Keats White, Kirke
Kingsley, Chas Willis
Luelle Wordsworth
SETS IN NEAT FOXES.
Blue Bells Juvenile Macaulay
Chas Dickens’ Little Hume
Folks Gibbon
English Men of Let- Pollin
ters Plutarch
DeQuincey Rawlinson
Spectator • Irving
Marrj att Beaconsfield
Lytton Bancroft
Banim Chambers
G. P. H. James Dickens
Bulwer Waverly
Goldsmith Thackeray
Bunyan Eliot
Knight Kitto, &c.
Popu ar and Standard Works.
i Anderson's Fairy Oregon, History of
sales One Hundred Years
Arabian Nights Pickwick Papers
Australia, History of Paris with Pen and
.Esops Hables Pencil
A Good Fight Prose Writers of
Hanim's Works America
Bonaparte Family Pilgrim's Progress
Brief Biographies Robinson Crusoe
British Female Poets Romola
Buffon’s Natural His- Russian Fairy Tales
tory Scottish Chiefs
California, History of Sketch Book
Calhoun, J. C., Life of Thaddeus of Warsaw
Children of the Abbey Tom Brown
< ’orinne Uarda
Creasy's Battles Willy Reilly
i Mokena* Child’s Eng Wood’s Natural His
land tory
•avid Copperfield Taine’s Literature
i >on Quixote Sculpture Poetry
xplorations and Practical Letter
Adventures Wri.er
Fairy Bells Bible Dictionary, 32
famous Boys e mo
Famous Men Cook’s Voyages
France, History of Franklin’s Autobio-
Fremont, J. C., Life of graphy
Gulliver’s Travels Clairvoyant
Germany, History of Humphley Clinker
Hours with the Bible Book of Nature
Hypatia Adventures of Fam-
lii the Forecastle ous Travelers
Jane Eyre Chavasse’s Advice
John Halifax' Conjugal Bins
Knickerbocker Female Spys
Last Days of Pompeii Household Book of
List of the Mohicans Wit
Language of Flowers Heroes and Hunters
London by Day and Joe Miller's Jest Book
Night Spectator
Mormoi s, Hi tory of Veritable Black Art
.Munchausen Word Book of Synon-
Nickolas Nickleby n ms
Smith’s Bible Die- Heptanieron, Plain
tiona y “ Hl us
Hitarch’s Lives Dancing Imps of the
Eminent Americans Wine
Santa Ciaus and His Fox's Book of Martyrs
Friend st Nicholas Fi o t’s History of U. S.
Rome, History of Flowers from Fairy
Adv. of an Atom Land
Amateur Amusemt’s Inexorable
Book of the Ocean George IV, Life of
Boys and Girls Story Greece. History of
Book Geikie’s Life of Christ
Biographical Sketc’s Hawthorne’sChamp’n
Biographical Diction- Book of Kecltations
ary Handy Bible Cyclo-
Chamber’s Informa- piedia
tion Great Rebellion, His-
Crabb’s Handy Cyclo- tory of
ptedia Merry Rhymes
Common Sense in Milt n’s Prose Works
the Kitchen Prince of Argolis
Bocaccio, Plain Water Witch
“ iiius
Smith’s Wealth of Milman’s History of
Nations the Jews
Adam Smith’s Essays Hallam’s Eurmie
McCulloch’s Political Locke on the Human
Economy « Understanding
Montaigne’s Essays D'Aubigne’s History
Bolingbroke on the of the Reformation
Study and Use of Eccentric Characters
History Drake's Indians
DeQuincy’s Essays Doctor at Home
Bacon’s Essays Keightley’s England
Burke’s Choice Pieces Family Physician
Froissart’s Chronicles Negroland
Josephus Hood
Rollins Ancient His- Swift
tory Lain!)
Perfect Shakespeare Russia, History of
Hume’s Essays Roget’s Thesaurus
Sidney Smith s Essays insects at Home
Childrens Books, Boy’s Books, Girl’s
Books, Books lor all.
Rooks at Private Sale During Day at
Auction Prices.
Auction sales Each Eve. at 7:30.
' 4®*Ladies are especially invited to our
! Private Sale During the Day.
KENNEDY & BLUN, Auctioneers.
SAM D. LIT,
Manager for Publishers.
TO THE
Hew Orleans
EXPOSITION
Ills Sauk, Florida S
Westa Railway
Will sell Round Trip Tickets between Savan
nah and New Orleans, commencing Decem
ber 15, for s2l 55, good for 15 days.
F'ast mail train leaves Savannah 7:01 a. m
daily, arriving at New Orleans at 7:45 the so
lowing morning.
Pullman Bullet Drawing Room Sleeping
Cars without change from Waycross to New
Orleans in close connection with same ser
vice on above train from Savannah.
Tickets sold, Pullman car accommodations
secured and information given at BREN’S
Ticket Office, 22 Bull street, and at the Pas
senger stations, foot of Liberty street.
TICKETS
TO
.b Orleans
-A N D—
RETURN,
55.
GOOD FOR 15 DAYS.
Will be on SALE at CENTRAL RAILROAI
Ticket Offices, 20 Bull street and at the
Depot, on and after DECEMBER
lath. Also at all Coupon Tick
et. Offices of the
Central Railroad
OF
Georgia
Winter Excursion
A N D
Tourist Tickets
Are also on sale to THE EXPOSITION.
For rates, sleeping car accommonation and
other information, apply at lie“et office ol
Central Railroad, 20 Bull street,Savannah,Ga.
GEO. A. WHITEHEAD,
General Passenger Agent,
Savannah, Ga.
J. C. SHAW, Ticket Agent,
2u Bull street, Savannah, Ga.
RE-TUARANTS and bars.
Th b oi the City t
A N D
Don’t Fail to Remember It!
I
WHEN YOU—
Wish to Get a First-Class Meal,
SERVED UP IN SUPERB STYLE,
AT
fniU Hicks’ Restaurant,
SUCCESSORS TO
W. JB. Ferrell,
Nos. 11 and 12 Market Base-neut,
4tS*Onr best com.neaaat ion comes from oat
Regular Boarders.
Prompt attention, polite wait ere and a Bill
of Fare unsurpassed.
■lt EEffIMT
OYSTER & CHOP HOUSE.
T. 11. Enright,l’ropr,
Cor. Broughton and Drayton sts.
, Open for the Season, renovated and Im
-1 proved, and the MOST ATTRACTIVE RES
TAURANT in the South.
NEW YORK OYSTERS and
THE FINEST NORTHERN MEATS!
DELI OUS CHOPS, Etc.
COOKING UNEXCELLED!
Served in the Best Style
and at Reasonable Prices.
O-Superb Cuisine, Attentive Waiters, and
the Best in the
Ladies’ Newport” Button and Ties, 2 to 7,
solid, forsl 00 at Myerson’s.
(Classified Ocap Advertising.
WANTED.
WANTED— A couple of furnished rooms (up
stairs; in a central location, suitable for
a dentist's office. Address W. A. C., care
Times office.
POR r ER WANTED—Must be sober and in
dustrious. Being an Irishman will not
be deemed an objection. Apply at
THE HARNETT HOUSE’
WANTED.— Everybody to know that Pho
tographs made by tlienew instantaneous
is $3 50 per dozen. All work guaranteed first
class in every particular. J. N. WILSON, 21
Bull street.
WANTED—One agent, lady or gentleman,in
” every county. Steady employment. Our
agents are making from $3 to $7 per day. Full
particulars sent free. Address at once PARK
MFG. CO., 239 Broadway, Box 1521, New York
WANTED— Everybodyto know that I
have Rough Lumber, Boards, Planks,
Scantling, Lathes, Shingles, Flooring, Ceil
ing, and Weather-boarding for sale at my re
tail lumber yard, Taylor and East Broad
streets, next to Cassel’s wood yard.
R. B. REPPARD.
FOR RENT.
A SOUTHERN front room for rent, witli or
-A without Hoard, and a few day boarders
desired, at 156 Liberty street.
LtOR RENT—One floor containing 3 rooms,
1 with bath room. No. 15 Broughton street.
DOR RENT—That desirable residence on
1 South Broad street, second door east of
Abercorn. Apply at this office.
IJ"O R RENT—Store and cellar, front and
■ back office, first floor of 75 Bay street.
FOR RENT—From the Ist of January, 1885,
part of store No. 138 Congress street.
TO RENT—One four story Brick Building,
No. 155 Gordon street, 11 rooms and 2
bath rooms, two story outbuildings; posses
sion given at once.
Appiy to JOHN A. WILSON,
No. 193 St. Julian street.
FOR SALE.
FOR SALE—Two shares Workmen’s and
1 Traders’ Mutual Loan stock, on which
fourteen Instalments have been paid, and one
share Cotton Exchange stock. Address X.
Y. Z„ Times Office.
poll SALE—One of the most eligible lots in
1 tin- city, fronting on a square; also a very
desirable stand for a grocery store. Apply to
CHAS E. WAKEFIELD.
CIOW AND HOG FEED—OId flour and
v bread. Will sell it very low. Cheaperthan
anything in the market. Apply to
JNO. H. RUWE,
75 Bay Street.
pOR SALE—One double wagon platform
I spring, one truck that will carry 20 barrels
of Hour: also one phaeton, almost new. Pole
and shaft with both. Apply to
J. J. MCMAHON,
Cor. Abercorn and Bay Street Lane.
MISCELLANEOUS.
I OST—Between the Screven House and Bay
U street, a Pocketbook, containing sundry
notes to the amount of $1,500, payable to Har
rison A Rant, ofß'.ufton. Ga. The tinder will
be liberally rewarded by leaving same at
Screven House. F. A. RAMBO.
ELDER FLOWER SOAP,
THE BEST
SOAP
IN THE MARKET FOR THE MONEY,
10c. per CAKE, AT
OSCEOLA BUTLER’S,
Corner Bull and Congress streets.
ICECREAM to be found always at OPPEN
• HEIMER'S, 139% Broughton street.
I HEREBY consent that my wife. ROSE A.
DONNELLY’, may become a public or free
trader after tlie publication of tins notice,
for one month. WM. J. DONNELLY.
Savannah, Dec. 28,1884.
. OME I'HING NEW ! CRYSTALIZED VIO
LETS, at OPPENHEIMER S, 139%Brough
ton street.
{ CHEAPEST VARIETY STORE—We have
now a complete line of Picture Frames
of every description. A Cabinet sze Velvet
Frame for 10c., worth 25c. Tinware, Crock
eryware. Musical Instruments and Albums
very cheap. Plated, French and Jet Jewelry.
Toys at low prices. Velocipedes, worth irom
$5 to 38, we will sell at half price.
NATHANS BROS.,
186 Congress street, near Jefferson.
i LARGE and fine selection of Mallard's
» Candies at OPPENHEIMERS, 139%
Broughton street.
|F you want to give a handsome New Year’s
1 Present, call at OPPENHEIMER’S and
have one of his handsome Candy Boxes filled
with fresh Candies.
»T OPPENHEIMER’S, 139% Broughton
rt street, made daily, Caramels, Chocolate
Creams and Molasses Candy ; also Fresh
Candies.
SPRING LAMB, Fine Tennessee and Baltl
' ’ more Beef, at BAKER’S STALL, 66
Savannah Market.
IpOR anything you want go to the TEN
CENT STORE. Each article-in this store
sold at 10 cents. Y’ou can get your money’s
worth every time, and sometimes more. Call
and convince yourself. No. 154 Bryan street,
between Barnard and Whitaker streets,near
ly opposite the market. The stock comprises
Hardware, Crockery, Glassware. Tin, Wood
and Willow Ware, Cutie y, auid all kinds of
Notions ami Novelties
R. C. CONNELL,
Proprietor.
MONEY TO LOAN—A place where you
can obtain a loan on personal property.
Parties wishing to sell Diamonds ana Jew
elry. and t hose wishing to buv such articles,
, should call on me. Cash paid for old gold,
silver and mutilated coin, office private;
business confidential. CLEMENT SAUSSY,
Broker, 112 Bryan street.
SAVE YOLK CHILLI
On June 4th, 1883, we issued a circular,
which read as follows :
“There has been a great effort made for
►ome time past by many manufa turers t >
increase their sale Os CANDY by placing <>n
tlie market a cheaper article than their com
petitors, and so engrossed have they been on
the subject of cheapness that they have en
tirely lost sight of a much more important
I item, and the result is that Candy which was
originally intended to be a purification of
■ sugar, is fast becoming an asylum for all tie
I adulterations which are daily being discove:’-
| ed. It is a known fact that most of the cancy
manufactured is consumed by cbildrer.;
therefore it requires a very elastic conscience
for any one to attempt to enrich themselves
by sending fort h the germs of disease in su<h
a tempting shape; but as this is being doie,
we must guard against becoming victims iy
buying only such candy as we KNOW to be
i PL KE. It is true that many adulterated
candies are such excellent counter eits that
it is difficult to detect them by theirappear
ance, yet almost any one can tell PUKE
candy by its rich, sweet taste.”
The correctness of this statementis shown
by tlie recent action of the New York Board
of Health. They have condemned end seised
- during THIS month tons of adulterated
. candy, and are still waging a vigorous war
against it. Our Virgin Candy was analyzed
October 3, 1883, by Professor Pratt, and was
pronounced by him PERFECTLY P RE and
FREE from ALL IMPURITIES. We have
• kept it strictly up to this stancard, making
no changes whatever in its qaality. Many
manufacturers are still ort'eriig candy at 1 or
2cents per lb. less than the pace of VIRGIN;
• but with this inducement against it, its pop
ularity is rapidly Increasing
» We shall be pleased to hive your orders,
and beg to remind that vhile adulterated
candy encourages disease pure candy is
1 nutritious and healthy.
ACOSTA & EINSTEIN.