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THE SAVANNAH DAILY TIMES
oTfiii HTb pS
11. H. RIOHAKOSON,
EDITOR AND GENERAL MANAGER
SAVANNAH TIMES PUBLISHING TO
NO. 94 BRYAN STREET, BETWEEN
DRAYTON AND ABERCORN.
The craze continues. A church at Ham
ilton, Ohio, has been converted into a
skating rink.
The latest freak of O’Donovan Rossa is
to offer SIO,OOO for the body of the Prince
of Wales, dead or alive.
Keely, the celebrated motor man, is
preparing for a public exhibition of his
machine, which it is thought will tend to
boom the motor stock. The ancient stock
holders will no doubt watch the experiment
with intense interest, as it may afford them
a favorable opportunity to unload.
A religious paper is quoted as saying
that the cost of converting heathens per
capita is as follows: To the Baptist, $37 05;
to the Christian (Campbellite), $72 88; to
the Methodist, sll7 91;' to the Presbyte
rian, $234 91; to the Congregationalism
$248 14; and to the Episcopalian, $592 03.
The Alabama Legislature, now in ses
sion, is taking steps for the repeal of the act
passed at the session of 1834, which taxes
foreign capital. The repealing bill has
passed the House, has been reported favora
bly by the Senate committee, and as it is
known that the Governor favors it, its
friends are confident of victory.
The efforts made by the Times to se
cure an appropriation for the fast mail ser
vice between Washington and New Orleans
via Southwest Georgia, have not been
fruitless. Our immediate representative
in Congress has succeeded in getting a pro
vision for $268,000 ingraftfd in the post
office appropriation bill, for that purpose.
As a result of the recent meeting of supe
rior Catholic clergymen, a statement was
read in the various Catholic Churches in
Manchester, England, on Sunday, denounc
ing dynamiters as violaters of the laws of
God and the Church, and as neither true
patriots nor Catholics, but, under a false
pretext, as agents of those secret societies
which are under the church’s ban.
What possible good can result from con
tinuously parading before the country the
squabbles and differences of Lieutenant
Greely and Lieutenant Kislingbury or any
other of the Arctic explorers in the Greely
party ? The hardships and sufferings which
these men had to endure ought certainly to
suffice to expiate any unfortunate jealousies
and bickerings in which they' indulged,
and bringing their unhappy difficulties so
constantly before the public mind can re
sult in nothing in the world except to grat
ify a morbid and prurient taste.
From the new Congre.-sional Directory
for the second session of the Forty-eighth
Congress, it appears that Hon. John E
Kenna, of West Virginia, is the youngest
member of the Senate. He was born in
1848. Justin S. Morrill, of Vermont, the
oldest; born in the year 1810. E G. Lap
ham, of New York, is next oldest; born in
1814. Dawes, of Massachusetts, and Saw
yer, of Wisconsin, each born in 1816. In
the House the oldest member is Aaron Shaw,
of Illinois, bom in 1811; next, N. B.
Eldridge, of Michigan, born in 1813. Wil
liam McAdoo, of Pennsylvania, is the
youngest, born in 1853.
It is enough to excite the risibilities of
a skeleton to read Sherman’s expression of
opinion as to what General Lord Wolseley
should do in the Soudan. Wolseley knows
more about the art of war in
a minute than Sherman has ever
dreamed of in a lifetime, and, as a
military commander, commands the respect
of the world. Sherman’s whole idea of
warfare is burning up defenseless cities, and
destroying the homes of defenseless women
and children, and as there is nothing of that
sort to be done in the Great Desert, Sherman
would soon find himself at sea amid its
barren sands. It is by no means likely that
Lord Wolsely will consult General Sher
man as to his campaign against El Mahdi.
It looks as if the industrial activity so
long predicted and earnestly hoped for is at
last about to become a substantial fact. The
E cecutive Committee of the American Iron
and Steel Association, at its meeting Friday,
issued an address to all the iron and steel
manufacturers in the United States, con
gratulating American manufacturers of iron
and steel and the country generally upod
the prospect that the depression in the busi
ness, which has continued about two years,
is apparently neariug its end, and declaring
there is much in the business situation to
encourage a feeling of hopefulness, and that
absolutely no ground whatever exists upon
which to base an apprehension that the
prolonged continuance of the present de
pression is possible. That is encouraging
in the highest degree.
*‘Et tu Brute,” as the young lady, who
had just carried off the honors from a fash
ionable boarding school said, when her mis
chievous beau swallowed the last spoonful
of Dr. Bull’s Cough Syrup.
“ROUGH ON.TOOTHACHE.”
Instant r elief for Neuralgia, Toothache
Faceache. Ask for “Rough on
15 end 25c.
THE SAVANNAH D/ILY TIMES, SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1885.
THE SINKING FUND FOR THE NEW
RONDS.
Alluding to the point made by Captain
D. G. Purse, of this city, that the Legisla
ture was guilty of a great oversight in
that it failed to provide for a sinking fund
with wliich to retire the new bonds to be
issued and negotiated- for the purpose of
meeting the bonds of the State falling due
in 1885 and 1886, State Treasurer Harde
man remarked, a day or two since, to an
Atlanta Constitution reporler, that Captain
Purse was wrong. Mr. Hardeman says
that the Constitution of the State provides
for the needed sinking fund; that in 1873
the Nutting bonds were created, and the
law authorizing them provided that SIOO,-
000 should be raised annually by taxation
f.r the purpose of retiring them, and that
in 1886 the last one of them falls due. In
1877 the State Constitution was adopted,
and in that instrument it is provided that,
after ’B6, a sinking fund of SIOO,OOO annu
ally shall be raised to meet the State debt,
aud that this is why the act of December,
1884, providing for the new bonds in which
ihe debt maturing this and next year is to
be funded, did not authorize a sinking fund
specially for meeting them on maturity.
It requires an exceedingly broad and
liberal construction of the Constitution to
arrive at this conclusion. Mr. Hardeman
evidently based his opinion on paragraph I,
section XIV of article VII of that instru
ment, which Bays : “The General Assem
bly shall raise by taxation each year, in
addition to the sum required to pay the
public expenses and interest on the public
debt, the sum of one hundred thousand
dollars, which shall be held as a sinking
fund to pay off and retire the bonds of the
State, which have not yet matured, and
shall be applied to no other purpose what
ever.” This identical language is used in
the act of ’B4 providing for the new 5 per
cent bonds proposed to be issued, and there
is where, in our judgment, both Mr. Harde
man and the Legislature have made a mis
take. This clause of the Constitution evi
dently refers to bonds of the State now in
existence and yet to mature, and not to any
bonds which do not exist, but which may be
issued at any time in the indefinite future.
In fact so far as we can see, the Constitution
nowhere gives any special authority for any
special sinking fund for bonds yet to
be issued. The only authority at all which
exists for such sinking fund is to be found
in section I, paragraph I, of Article VII,
where general authority is vested in the
Legislature to raise money to pay the prin
cipal and interest on the public debt, and
this authority the Legislature neglected to
exercise in the case under consideration.
It is unreasonable, of course, to doubt that
the Legislature will eventually maxe all
the needed provisions for retiring these
new bonds, but the point made by the
Times, in the article which appeared Wed
nesday last, after Captain Purse bad called
attention to the defect in the funding act
of 1884, was that the failure of the Legisla
ture to make proper provision for a special
sinking fund for retiring the proposed
bonds might lead to serious embarrassment.
The Governor is authorized to issue
and negotiate the new funding bonds
wher-ever in his discretion such ac
tion might be deemed by him
proper to meet the wants of the State.
The Legislature will not meet until next
July, and Bhould the Governor deem it
necessary to issue the new bonds before that
time, he might find some difficulty in
readily negotiating them at par. Capital
is always timid, and wary capitalists would
most probably hesitate btfore investing in
securities for the redemption of which no
provision has been made. It is not proba
ble that any emergency of this nature will
arise before the Legislature reconvenes, but
it was certainly an oversight in that body
not to complete the law authorizing the
new bonds, and this defect should be remedied
a t the earliest practical moment.
THE SUBSIDISTS CRUSHED.
The result of the discussion in the House
on Friday in regard to the proposed subsidy
to the Pacific Mail Steamship Company is
of much more than passing significance, for
it foreshadows very decidedly the future
policy of the Democracy, and shows that
the party which is just on the point of
being restored to power, will prove true to
its old time-honored principles. For years
and years, ever since Radicalism first began
to make its baneful influence felt in this
country, robbing the public for the benefit
of a select few, by means of subsidies, has
been the favorite custom of the party in
power. Determined to make a desperate
effort for one more rape of the Treasury
before the Republican party passes finally
out of existence, the subsidists endeavored,
on Fri ‘ay, to have engrafted upon the Post
Office appropriation bill an item allowing
additional compensation to American steam
ships for carrying the ocean mails, and it
was specially provided that the Pacific Mail
Steamship Company should receive $425,000
for the transportation of foreign mails, in
cluding railway transit across the Isthmus
of Panama. As Mr. Blount, of this State,
well said, this brought Congress face to face
with subsidies, and this fact was made more
apparent, since the applicant for govern
mental favor was that old, well known,
chronic mendicant, the Pacific Mail Co.,
which never gels tired of asking pecuniary
aid from Congress, and which has, on past oc
casions, given so much cause for scandal.
The result of the discussion over this pro
position was an emphatic refusal on the part
of the Democratic House to vote any more
of the people’s money to that corporation.
This action will prove a death blow to the
hopes of John Roach and other well known
subsidists, of obtaining, during the next four
years at any rate, any further assislance
from the public crib for private enterprises,
and the country is to be heartily congratu
lated thereat. Since the Republican party
has been in power the policy of the govern
ment has steadily been to enrich its chosen
favorites at the public expense, and this is
why, at every session, these gentlemen, who
are so terribly poor on the average, have in
variably been able to raise enormous purses
for the purpose of corruptly lobbying their
schemes through Congress. It is this which
has caused corruption to so notoriously per
meate every department of the government,
and to render the name “American citizen”
odious. The present Democratic House has
proven that its steadfast opposition to the
practice of legislating for the few at the ex
pense of the many, has been based on prin
ciple and is substantial. It has been shown
that large corruption funds have lost their
power, and that henceforth the lobbyists
will have to make up their minds to rely
upon their labor and business enterprise for
success, and no longer upon raids on the
United States Treasury.
It is fortunate for the Democratic party
that they have taught the corruptionists
this lesson so promptly. The country knows
now that the party just coming into power
regards the people’s money as a sacred trust,
and that economy and the public weal are
to be considered in the management of
affairs, in lieu of the reckless waste and en
riching of favorites which have heretofore
predominated. This is a most encouraging
sign, and the people will appreciate the
course of the Democracy in this respect.
John Roach, Jay Gould, the Pacific Mail
Steamship Company and others who have
heretofore made the Treasury the means of
advancing their private fortunes will doubt
less be on hand in ’BB again, as usual to try
and control the next Presidency in their
interests. But the people are mightier
than the monopolists, and if the Democracy
continues unflinchingly, to jWrsue the policy
it has already inaugurated, money and cor
ruption funds will be powerless to prevail.
GEN. LA WTON FOR THE OS. I! INE T
The Bainbridge Democrat in an able edi
torial in reference to the movement to se
cure an appointment in President Cleve
land’s Cabinet for our well-known fellow
citizen, Gen. A. R. Lawton, says :
“We are assured by many prominent men
outside of our own State, whose fame be
longs to the nation that Gen. Lawtou’s ap
pointment would be acceptable to the whole
country. And as it seems to be settled that
the South will be properly recognized by
the incoming administration, with Garland
and Lawton in the Cabinet, our section
would in truth be part aud parcel of the
government. From every point of view it
looks to our mind that these two gentlemen
must be the ones honored by the President
elect.
There is not a public man in this entire
country who would bring to the high posi
tion, and the arduous duties cl a Cab net
Minister, a more thorough knowledge ol
affairs combined with more executive abili
ty than General Lawton. While he pos
sesses a great intellect, wide and compre
hensive, he has an aptitude for details
unsurpassed. In the Cabinet he would be
familiar with everything in his depart
ment, and iu no case blindly entrust bis
duties to subordinates.
General Lawton is in the prime of iile,
and his capacity for hard work is wonder
ful—a k qualification that wili comaiand a
premium in Cleveland’s Cabinet. As Post
master General he would make the pos al
service more efficient and satisfactory than
it has ever been As Attorney General the
country would feel that the Department of
Justice had passed into the hands of a great
lawyer and a thoroughly honest man.
An Appl of Discord as Long as He Lives.
Chicago Times.
A little Blandinsville schoolboy wrote a
composition in praise of Jefferson Davis a
few days >-go, and the commotion caused in
the town bv it has divided the citizens into
two bitter factions
Mrs. A. W. Howland, of Providence, R. 1.,
says: “I most cheerfully recommend Hunt's
[Kidney and Liver] Remedy as a safe and re
liable cure for kidney disease, and it is the
only medicine I have ever found that does
exactly what it is advertised to do.”
SWEET GUM AND MULLEIN.
The sweet gum, as gathered from a tree ol
Sue same name, growing along the small
itreams in the Southern States, contains a
Itimulatiug expectorant principle that loos
ing the phlegm producing the early morning
lough, an d stimulates the child to throw on
.he false membrane in croup and whooping
:ough. When combined with the healing
nucilaginous principle in the mullein plant
if the old fields, presents in Taylor’s Chero
cee Remedy of Sw'eet uum and Mullein, the
lnest known remedy for coughs, croup,
vhooping cough and consumption; and so
lalatable any child can take If. Ask your
lruggisifor it. Send two-cent stamp for
Caylor’s Riddle Book, which is not only for
he amusement of the little ones, who wiil
;ather around your knee to hear the puzzling
luestions, but contains information for the
iealth and welfare of every home.
Manufactured by Walter A. Taylor, propri
mr Taylor’s Premium Cologne, Atlanta, Ga.
>rankenr.eds, or Ihe Liquor Habit Can
be Cured by Administering Dr.
Haines’ Golden Specific.
It can be given in a cup of coffee or tea
vithout the knowledge of the person taking
t, effecting a speedy and permanent cure,
vhether the patient is a moderate drinker or
iu alcoholic wreck. Thousands of drunkards
lave been made temperate men who have
•aken the Golden Specific in their coffee
vithout their knowledge, and to-day believe
,hey quit drinking of their own free will.
Yo harmful effects result from its adminis
tration. Cures guaranteed. Circulars and
estlmonlals sent free. Address
Golden Specific Co.,
185 Race St., Cincinnati, O.
THE HARNETT HOUSE, SAVANNAH.
Visitors to Savannah, Ga., will find the
Harnett House a comfortable and desirable
stopping place, where the charges are mod
irate, while the uniform excellence of the
table is a subject of general remark-.-Chi
lago National Hotel Reporter.
Just Received.
Messrs. Logan & Calder, the well known
wholesale and retail butchers in the Market,
have just received a supply of Ireßh Smelts,
fresh Codfish, fresh Baltimore Sausages,
fresh and corned Beef. Call early and leave
your orders.
OKA N Cl'S. ETC.
JUST RECEIVED !
200 BARRELS CHOICE
POTATOES!
EARLY ROSE, PEERLESS,
HEBRON, BURBANKS,
For Eating, Planting or Selling.
APPLES!
BALDWINS, PERMAINB, SPYS.
150 barrels FINE STOCK Just in and FOR
SALE LOW.
OKTIOIXTS,
RED AND YELLOW.
Butter*, Cheese,
Fresh, direct, from the Factory, on which I
can give INSIDE PRICES.
Cocoanuts, Peanuts
ORANGES!
The celebrated Indian River Orange BEND
and CRESCENT CITY, noted for their line
flavor.
E. E. Clieatliam,
lot lJay Street.
Telephone No 273.
Yellow Bananas
-AND
COCOANUTS!
\ E TO-MORROW MORNING :
600 Bunches large Yellow Bananas.
10,000 Cocoanuts.
50 Crates White Cabbage.
IN STORE:
Cliili Red Potatoes, Seed.
E art v Rose “
Peerless
Goodrich “
240,000 Oranges.
J. B. Reedy
BAY AND WHITAKER STREETS.
O RANGES!
Orange* !
Oranges l
500 Boxes Selected Florida
Oranges !
For the Holiday Trade.
300 BARRELS CHOICE APPLES,
100 BOXES SELECTED PEARS,
100 BASKETS GRAPES in 5 and 101 b Baskets,
100 Sacks Virginia Hand-picked PEANUTS,
LOWEST BOTTOM PRICES.
O-Now Landing and for sale at
W. D. SIMKINS,
169 Bay.
liESTU Alt ANTS AM) BAKE.
You Will Find
At All Honrs, Day and Night,
THAT YOU CAN
Get the Best Meal
IN THE CITY
FGK THE PRICE
AT
MS Sicks’Murut,
SUCCESSORS TO
W. J 3. Fe r r e 11,
Nos. 11 and 12 Market Basement.
Regular Boarders have a superb Bill of
Fare. The choicest Meats, Game, Fish, etc.,
in the Market always provided and prepared
to order in the best style
4®-Call and be convinced.
m pii
OYSTER & CHOP HOUSE.
r l\ H. Enriglit,Propr,
Cor. Broughton and Drayton Sts.
Open for the Season. Fenovated and Im
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.“fc*
WSuperb Cuisine, Attentive Waiters and
the Best in the
At D. Fried's, the reason you are not forced
or talked half to death to buy goods you do
not like,is because he carries a large and well
selected stock. Also sells so cheap that you
will And it no trouble to buy or get suited,as
he intends to carry out as headvertises.
(Sxflirgimtj.
TOTIIE
New Orleans
EXPOSITION
Tie Samh, Florida l
Western Railway
Will sell Round Trip Tickets between Savan
nah and New Orleans, commencing Decem
ber 15, for 821 55, good lor 15 days.
Fast mail train leaves Savannah 7:01a. m
daily, arriving at New Orleans at 7:45 the so
lowing morning.
Pullman Buffet 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.
Central Railroad
OF
Georgia System.
PARE REDUCED
TO
k Orleans Exposition
-A N D
RETURN,
FROM sl3l 55
TO
:so.
TICKETS
GOOD FOR 15 DAYS.
Leaving Savannah ANY DAY and on
ANY TRAIN.
Winter Excursion
A N D
Tourist Tickets
Are also on sale to THE EXPOSITION.
For rates, sleeping car accommonation and
other information, apply at tic et office 01
Central Railroad, 20 Bull street, Savannah,Ga
GEO. A. WHITEHEAD,
General Passenger Agent,
Savannah, Ga.
J. C. SHAW, Ticket Agent,
20 Bull street, Savannah, Ga.
Me Northern Beef!
LOGAN & CALDER,
WHOLESALE AND RETAIL
Shippingßutchers
STALLS
GT & 68 Savannah Market
Received by every steamer: CHOICE
BALTIMORE, NEW YORK and BOSTON
BEEF, Fresh and Salted, TENNESSEE
BEEF and MUTTON, BALTIMORE BEEF
and SAUSAGE, BOSTON BEEF, Fresh and
Corned, FRESH SMELT and CODFISH, and
are prepared to supply ships and families
at the LOWEST MARKET PRICES.
Goods Delivered Free to Any Part of
the City.
*S- LEAVE YOUR ORDERS, "a*
Tali*, TVotice.
If you wish Irish Potatoes of any variety,
to eat, to plant, or to sell, send your orders to
F. M WEVER&CO,
Brokers in Fruits. Vegetables and General
Merchandise, No. 8 Bull street,
Savannah, Ga.
And they will have them filled promptly
from best stock and at the very lowest mar
ket prices.
Quotations furnished at any time with
pleasure.
Correspond with them or ylve them a call
40-60 Quia CtrtridgM.
™ Very Strong. Perfectly Safe.
mm? DUCT* Dim V in the world for Large
mil DtlOl fill LD Game. Much more ef
fective than 44-cab, which usee small amount of
powder and lead. Superior in accuracy! rapidity»
model and finish, to any other.
BUTT A DTI Gallery, Sporting and Target
DMlJjiiuU Rifles. Send for Catalogue.
Marlin Fite iris Co. Hew Haven Ct.
tflassifipfl Cheap gUwrtininfl.
WANTED.
WANTED— Everybody to know that Cabl-
VV net Photographs made by the new in
stantaneous process are $1 50 per dozen. All
work guaranteed first-class in every particu
lar. J. N. WILSON, 21 Bull street, opposite
Screven House.
WANTED—Ladies and Gentleman to keep
VY our goods on exhibition. Agents make 83
to 87 daily. Send 10 cents for Illustrated
Catalogueand begin at once.
PARK MFG. CO.,
Box 1521. 230 Broadway, 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. U.RKPPAKD.
EOK RENI\
F’OR RENT—Dwelling southeast corner
Drayton and Broughton streets. lApply to
PETER REILLY.
POR RENT—A desirable three-story brick
T dwelling; centrally located; In thorough
repair; with all modern improvements, iu
clud ng hot w-ter; possession given at once.
Apply to JULIAN SCHLEY, 116 Bryan St.
tiOR RENT—That desirable residence on
South Broad street, second door east ol
Abercorn. Apply at this office.
L'OR 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.
Apply to JOHN A. WILSON,
FOR SALE.
WOOD FOft SALE at 84 a cord. Reynolds
street, one door from Broughton. Apply
to D. L. MOSES.
FOR SALE—Western half of Lot No. 11,
Green ward, between Price and Houston
streets, on State, with improvements there
on, consisting of two small wooden houses.
Apply to PETER REILLY.
FOR SALE—One or two houses for sale
cheap; part cash, balance on time. App y
to Mr. Hanson, Toll Gate Thunderbolt Road
F’OR SALE, CHEAP—Four Showcases, in
good order; Glass and Sugar Jars and one
Image. Apply at Barnard and State streets.
MISCELLANEOUS.
FRESH COTTON SEED MEAL on hand
and to a reive. For sale by LAWRENCE
HARTSHORNE, 104 Bay street.
IT OPPENHEIMER’S, 139% Broughton—
A First of the season. Fresh Strawberries
and Cream daily.
/CHEAPEST VARIETY STORE—Goods
v/ sold at five and ten cents. We offer a
Fine Gilt Frame at 35 to 95c, wort h double. Call
and get your bargains in Tinware, Crockery
ware, Glassware, Picture Frames, Chrornos,
Oil Paintings, Musical Instruments, etc.
Don’t mind the walk; It will benefit your
pocket. Goods will be delivered to every
body. Call at once at
NATHAN BROS.,
186 Congress street, near Jefferson.
BAR’S CELEBRATED ENGLISH
COMPLEXION SOAP,
OTTO OF ROSES,
33 PER CENT. GLYCERINE,
WASH BALLS,
UNSCENTED WRAPPED,
SHAVING STICKS
AT
OSCEOLA BUTLER’S,
Corner Bull and Congress streets.
SPRING LAMB, Fine Tennessee and Balti
more Beef, at BAKER’S STALL, 66
Savannah Market.
DOR anything you want go to the .TEN
U CENT STORE. Each article in this store
sold at 10 cents. You can get your money’s
wort h every time, and sometimes more. Call
and convince yoursell. No. 154 Bryan street,
between Barnard and Whitaker streets,near
ly opposite tlie market. The stock comprises
Hardware, Crockery, Glassware, Tin, Wood
and Willow Ware, Cutlery, and all kinds ol
Notions and Novelties
R. C. CONNELL,
Proprietor.
HONEY TO LOAN—A place where you
can obtain a loan on personal property.
Parties wishing to sell Diamonds and Jew
elry, and those wishing to buy such articles,
should call on me. Cash paid for old gold,
silver and mutilated coin. Office private;
business confidential. CLEMENT SAUSSY,
Broker, 142 Bryan street.
N E bOLOMILNS,
HIST ui TEACHER,
Is prepared to insi ruct a limited number
of pupils. Apply at his residence,
No. 65 JEFFERSON STREET.
Pure Ground Land Plaster.
A cargo to arrive soon for sale, in large o
small quantities, by
THE WILCOX & GIBBS GUANO CO
Notice to Ladies.
MISS KATE LUTZ h*»» just returned from
New York with a full line of the
LATEST FASHION PATTERNS
and is prepared to attend to all order for
DRESSMAKING. Perfect fits, in the latest
styles guaranteed. Prompt attention given.
Corner Dully and Montgomery streets.
T. Aspinwall «Sc Son,
75 and 77 W. 23d ST., NEW YORK, N. Y
TILES of all description for Floors, Walls
Hearths, Fire-places and decoration general
ly. Mantels, Grates, and all Fire-place Fit
tings. Andirons, Fenders, etc.
Sole Agents for Minton’s and the Campbell
Tile Co.
Estimates furnished on receipt of particu
lars.
Experience setters sent to all parts of the
United States.
wms SCALES.
JONES I ron Levers and Steel
Bearings, Brass Tare
OF Beam and Beam Box.
BHtUUM !ill<l
Jones he pays the freight
j; ■ —for free Price List men
tion this paper and address JONES
BINGHAMTON, Binghamton, N. Y.
VARIETY BAKERY.
Fresh Baked every day : MINCE, CRAN
BERRY, PEACH, APPLE and DAMSON
PLUM PIES. Also, fresh variety of FANCY
and PLAIN CAKES. VIENNA BREAD A
SPECIALTY.
92 BROUGHTON STREET, Branch Store
Under Masonic Temple.
[JOHN DERST,
Proprietor.