The Savannah daily times. (Savannah, Ga.) 188?-1???, September 01, 1886, Page 4, Image 4

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

4 THK SAVANNAH t'AILY TIMF* ~ B. H. BICHAKDSON, MPITOU AND GENERAL MANAGER » i VANN AH TIMES PUBLISHING CO HO.M BRYAN STREET, BETWEEN DRAY TON ANO ABERCORN. SAVANNAH DAILY TIMES •HLY BtOHT-PAGK IVKIINO PAPKR IN THE SOUTH CHINO UNIfKC PRESS ASSOCIATION MSPATCHBS. Th»BAVANNAH Daily Times 1b published •very afternoon, Sundays excepted. The Times IB delivered by carriers In the vtty -»r inaUed postage free to subscrl bers for Ml,cents per month, 11.50 for three months, S 3 Jor six months, or $6 a year. Transient advertisements w ill be taken for W per square of 10 Hues or less for the first In sertion, and 50 cents for each subsequeutin ertlon. Noticeso( deaths, fun irals, marriages, sl. Rejected communications will not be re turned. Correspondence con tain I ng important news sad discussions of living topics Is solicited, 'aut must be brief and written upon but oue aide of the paper to have attention. Remittances must be made by express, postal note, or money order or registered letter. All communications should be addressed to ThbSavaNhah Daily Times. Savannah, Ga. Money orders, checks, etc., should be made payable to B. H. Richardson, General Manager. THE TIMES’ CHEAP COLUMN HAS ■PROVEN IMMENSELY POPULAR AVKRrBODY WIH IT, AND Y.>U WILL FIND IT ADVANTAGEOUS To MAKE YOUR WANTS KNOWNTHROUGH THAT CHANNEL Dr. Frisch, of the Vienna Polyclinic, ifter experimenting for three months, re ports against the Pasteur method in hy drophobia cases. Jacob Duncan, of Bedford, Pa., will stand no fooling with time. His brother in-law, Jeremiah Plecker, turned the hands »f the clock forward two hours, whereupon Jacob resented the foolish joke by shooting Jeremiah dead. The murderer probably will be wishing for some one to turn the Hands of a prison clock backward on the day fixed for his execution. The Cincinnati Eriquircr is apprehensive shat broom corn is likely at no distant day X> revolutionize'the breadstuff’ supply of the trorl 1. It says a process has been discovered ky whicn the finest and most delicious flour ean be made from the seed to the extent of one-half its own weight, and leaves the other half a valuable food for meat and aiilk. The average yield per acre is 300 bushels, and in a number of instances 500 bushels, or 30,000 pounds, have been se «ured. 4 » 1 At a recent meeting of the Industrial So tiety of Muhlhausen, Alsace, the President ■reported on the recently invented perforated window panes, whioh are said to be admira bly adapted to hospital purposes, inasmuch as they admit fresh air while preventing a fraught. Each square metre of glass con tains S,OtX) holes,which are of a conicshape, widening towards the inside. Many hospit als have already adopted these window aanes, which are the invention of an engi neer of the name of Henkel. — » Prince Napoleon (Plon-Plon) was re oently visiting the Vatican galleries in Rome And be used every effort tojnduce one of the Papal officers to allow him to remain hid den in some nook while the Pope passed through the galleries in going to his apart nents. The Prince, however, was treated as any other tourist would be, and was obliged to get out. It is said “he went off in a huff," but it is probable the Pope was act particular as to the manner of his going*. The use of frogs as a table delicacy i.- i rreasing. They are shipped from Michigan, Ohio and Indiana in wire cages with zinc bottoms, and go to the large Eastern cities Frogs must be taken alive to market, as the fine while flesh does not keep long after being dressed. The frogs are canght in aeines and dip nets in the shallow lakes and ponds. The only preparation for the cook jug of frogs is to skin them. The manager •f Fulton Market, New York, says a three ■ere poud will furnish each year 100,000 frogs, and be lucre profitable than a herd of Alderney cows A' curious incident is related by the Boston Courier, as having occurred on the French steamer Bourgogne not long since. Among the passengers coming from Paris was the Viscountess de Coetlogon; formerly Miss Georgy Blake, who came to visit her ibtnily in Boston. She had hardly gone on board, when she discovered an old friend in ihe person of one of the cabin stewards. In explanatian of his present occupation he told her that all the money of himself and family had been Swallowed up, that he was .obliged to work for his living, and, failing to find more profitable or congenial employ ment, he had been compelled to accept ser »ice with the Compagnie Transatlantique. Better* than Vacation. This is pre-eminently the vacation month, rlien thousands seek rest and recreation. But to those who stiller the depressing affects of summer debility, the disagreeable jymptoms of scrofula, the torturesof bilious ness, dyspepsia or sick headache, there is more pain than pleasure in leaving home. To such we say, give Hood’s Sarsaparilla a trial. Il will purify your blood, tone up and strciighten your l«»dy, expel every trace at’ scrofula, correct biliousness, and positive ly cure dyspepsia or sick headache. Take t before you go, and you will enjoy your vacation a thousand fold. F Salvation Oil is the greatest curejon earth *r pain. It afford instant relief and speedy xire to all sufferers from rheumatism, Ae iralgisj headache, sore throat, pain in t’se back, side, and limbs, cuts bru,.,cs, &c. iri< ■ • twenty-iive centra bottle. THE SAVANNAH DAILY TIMES: WEDNESDAY. SEPTEMBER 1. 18S6. WONDERS OF THE HEAVENS. How They May be Unfolded by the Greater Telescopes. All the discoveries of ancient astron omers were, of course, effected without the aid of glasses, and Pliny, in his ninth book of the Almagest, quotes fourteen observations of Mercury, dating 200 or 800 years before our era, and still to be relied on. They had, no doubt, good eyes in those days, when everybody ex cept the astrologers went to bed with the sun, and rose as soon as he appeared. In the tail of Ursa Major the middle star has near it a small companion styled on the celestial chart Alcor. The Arab ob servers knew this by the name of Saidak, which means touchstone or trial; for if a man coul d perceive that tiny point with the unassisted eye he could easily see the small stars of the Pleiades and the statellites of Jupiter. We must, however, also remember the purity and transparency of the eastern sky, especially in dry, desert regions, where all the heavenly orbs shine with a brilliancy quite unknown to western as tronomers. Copernicus, it is related, lamented in the hour of his death that he had never so much as seen the planet Mercury, which the happier Greek ob servers called Stilbon, the spendid shin ing; and one of the most promising points in connection with this great new telescope in America is that it will be perched upon a mountain peak, far above the dusts and mists of the lower world —lifted into the stainlessly dark blue atmosphere which Pro fessor Tyndall has celebrated upon his high Alps. Accordingly, when we call to mind the considerable additions made to the heavenly science by such com paratively inferior instruments as those of Lord Rosse, Mr. Lasell and the elder Herschel, we may be full of hope that the California astronomers will astonish and delight the Old World with new dis coveries, “when some new planet swims into their ken.’ They can hardly be in time for the two comets of the season — the Fabrey and the Bernard, which are to be in their highest brilliancy about May 15 next, and not much farther from the earth than the trifle of 15,900,000 and 35,000,000 of miles respectively. There are, however, unresolved nebu lae at which the great glass will no sooner be pointed than we may expect to have those distant mysteries instantly come down—like Col. Slick’s coon —into galaxies of stars and systems; and out side Uranus and Neptune, the latter being distant from us 2,746,000,000 miles the new telescope may cast a glance in the border world between our farthest planet and our nearest etar, and perhaps find a sister for the single moon of Nep tune, and tell us why the four moons of Uranus—Ariel, Umpriel, Titania and Überon —dance backward in the eternal minuet of the skies and have planes per pendicular to the elliptic of the mother body. There are, indeed, endless points upon which astronomers seek such informa tion as improved command of the heav ens might supply, especially if the en hanced power of the telescope can be wedded to the faithful eyesight of the photographic camera. Wonderful things have been achieved of late in such a way; spaces of the midnight sky blank to the ordinary lens or mirror, have re vealed to the sensitive tilm of the plate myriads of starry bodies. The crimson cressets on the sun’s ridge have depicted themselves; his spots have registered their periodic passage, and the time ap proaches, apparently, when an automatic astronomer will be invented which will chronicle event of the spheres with sleep less accuracy. We want to know much more of comets, of nebulae, and of those curious little members of our system, the planetoids, which perpetually in crease in numbers with closer observa tion, until they have grown up during tiie present century to more than 250 known and named bodies. They wander as obedient to law as the very largest planet, between Mars and Jupiter, tiny islets of the sapphire ocean, small chil dren of the cosmos, the biggest not much more than 300 miles in diameter, few of them so bulky as to be visible without a telescope. Are these little silver bees of the sys tem mere broken fragments of some in termediate planet, or have they been seriously created, and have they been taken up with revolution and gravita tion, and all the rest of it, on their own account and for special purposes. To answer that and many another question of the kind may doubtless, in an Ameri can phrase, "lick the Lick glass;” but more and more, as astronomical concep tions expand, are they silently affecting morals, thoughts and religion. We see infinity and grasp eternity when we look forth into the starry space. The visible universe is palpably boundless, and im plies an invisible universe of which it is the shadow, the symbol and the imper fect provisional expression. All faiths heretofore delived to mankind have been prescientiflc, built on the theory—or ac cepting it —that the stars were set in heaven the light this little O, the earth,” round which the sun goes daily. Faith has not yet ventured to look through Galileo’s “optik glass,” let alone the gigantic lenses of James Lick. By and by mankind will understand, as well as hear of, larger ideas. It will be better understood why the Divine Teacher of Galilee said: “In my Father's house are many mansions, ” and why the wise east has always insisted upon evolution and ■ progressive life for all which lives, be- : fore Darwifi and Wallace were heard of. Astronomy and religion have yet to com pare notes and to labor through the same telescope.—London Telegraph. Strawberry and Cream. Some one writes from West Point of s ; young lady in a white dress, who was “play- j ing tennis with all her might and a small boy,” ! that her red face above her white dress re- j sembled a strawberry on top of a plate of vanilla ice cream.—Chicago Herald. AT A CHINESE FUNERAL The Remains Interred Along with Roast Pig and Pullets. The friends of Lai Poy did the proper thing by him, the other day, and gave him a nice, quiet “send-off” on his road to that exclusive realm of bliss eternal reserved for the virtuous children of the Flowery kingdom. Poy was somewhat in a hurry to undertake the trip, and ac celerated things with a knife and a header into a pit. When the young men at the laundry where Lai Poy was visit ing, found their friend dead with his throat cut and three gashes in his head, Wah Lee, the dead Chinaman’s boss, was informed and he in turn informed the Chinese consul of the facts, and then a meeting of Lai Poy’s friends was held and it was determined that poor Lai Poy should have as fine a coffin, as much roast pork, and as many fat pullets as any other Celestial who had had a fash ionable burial. The Sth of July was se lected as the time for taking Lai Poy to the cemetery of the Evergreens, but the programme was changed. All day long on Monday Lai Poy’s body lay upon ice in a box in the stable of a Mott street undertaker. The hostlers washed car riages and groomed horses within, and young America and mature China banged packs upon packs of Are-crack ers without. The master of ceremonies was Ye King, a little dried-up Chinaman, the head partner in a tea firm of Park row. At the last moment he decided that it wouldn’t make any great differ ence to Lai Poy if he waited until the morrow. Anyway, Lai Poy had no voice in the matter. “Him belly good Chinaman,” ex plained old Ye King, laying down his pipe and gazing meditatively out of the grimy window. “Him come Melica six years ago, and catchee plenty money. Him plenty friends. Fire fire-crackers to-day, bury um to mollow, plenty nice.” Accordingly Lai Poy’s friends dropped around to the undertaker’s shop early in the morning for a last view. The dead Chinaman had been dressed in a white tunic —the mourning color —and a natty black skull-cap with the reddest of red buttons on the top. Lai Poy during life prided himself on the length, thickness and texture of his cue. The thoughtful undertaker had disposed this essen tial to unquestioned entry into the Chi nese heaven so that its proportions and beauty might be appreciated as it lay over his bosom. The plate said that Poy was in his 32d year when he elected to die. Old Ye King was justly proud of the arrangements, for the coffin waa a showy, veneered affair, and the com position handles and buttons were im posing, Sixteen mourners entered four carriages, the hearse door was snapped shut, and the procession started for the Evergreens. Some of Lai Poy’s friends wore blue, others soft brown silk, one from the consul's office a pale lilac tunic, and one carriage with the nearest friends had occupants all in white. The other mourners carried a huge hamper, wherein were deposited a little roast pig all covered with icing and things, two fat pullets browned to a turn, biscuits, candies, nuts, a pot of excellent Sou Chong tea, punk, and praying papers of gilt. The friends smoked 5-cent cigars and looked grave. When the cemetery was reached the procession went to Ce lestial hill, the plot owned by the Chinese government, and the body of Lai Poy was deposited beside eighty-nine of his coun trymen who learned all about the mys teries of the Chinese eternity at earlier periods. The little pig and fat pullets and the biscuits and things had a fair start with Lai Poy, and were buried to gether, while old Ye King burned punk and incinerated little three-cornered bal loons of gold paper. Then they drove back to Mott street and had tea. —New York Tribune. Formation of Fog In the Air. It has recently been demonstrated that in a perfectly moist air no formation or a fog is possible, however much the temperature is lowered, so long as the air is absolutely free from dust, and that the more air, sufficiently moist, is charged with such foreign particles, the more intense is the formation of fog. If filtered and completely moist air in a glass ball have its pressure diminished only a few particles of fog will reveal themselves to the most careful inspec tion. But if a few cubic millimeters of ordinary house air be now admitted into this filtered air a very fine, silvery, trans parent fog at once forms itself, of such slight density that even in the case of a considerable area of it the transparency of the atmosphere would be but very slightly affected. At the first moment of its formation if a reflected image of the sun, or the reflected light of an elec tric lamp, be viewed through it the im age will be seen surrounded by an in tensely luminous blue or greenish light. —Chicago Herald. Emigrants Sent to South Africa. Eighty emigrants, all abstainers, are being sent out to Kaffraria. Each of the number is to have 120 acres of land and other help, and the little band has been selected with the greatest care. If one of the most beautiful and richly gifted portions of south Africa be any aid to the success of this enterprise, the pros pects of the expedition are virtually as sured. Kaffraria is beyond question the most favored spot in South Africa. It abounds in wood, grass and water, and is eminently adapted to the raising of stock, as well as for agriculture.—Chi cago Herald. A Hungry Kobin’s Daily Food. Professor Treadwell, of Massachusetts, has proved that a half-grown robin will daily devour more than once and a half its own weight in caterpillars and beetles. A young brood can not live on less than seventy or eighty worms a day. A single pair of sparrows will carry every week to the nest 4,300 caterpillars or beetles. —Exchange. 1850. ESTABLISHED SB YEARS -1886 GEO. N. NICHOLS, ACCOUNT AND RECORD BOOKS OF EVERY KIND. PRINTING ano BINDING* 93| BAY ST., SAVANNAH, GA. REMEMBER " w '.' y d 7, BLANK BOOKS, JOB PRINTING or BINDING, that you CANNOT DO BETTER than send your orders to this OLD AND RELIABLE ESTABLISHMENT, where every convenience for the prompt execu tion of orders is to be found, together with large stocks of PAPERS and MATERIALS of all kinds. Skilled Workmen in every depart ment, and no inferior work permitted to be sent out. SPECIMENS OF WORK SHOWN AND ESTIMATES GIVEN. DO NOT MISTAKE THE PLACE. TELEPHONE 39. BAY STREET Excursions. CENTRAL KAILROAD OF GEORGIA. OPENING OF THE NEW SHORT LINE VIA— in 1 MIB TO ASHEVILLE, N. C., FROM SAVANNAH, GA., IN Twenty-Three Hours ROUNDTRIP TICKETS ON SALE GOOD TO RETURN UNTIL OCT. 31st, 1886. For full Information call on or address J C. SHAW, Ticket Agent, Central Railroad Ticket Office, 20 Bull street, and at Depot Ticket Office, Liberty and West Broad sts. .GEO A. WHITEHEAD, General Passenger Agent. Planters’ Supplies! 100 Doz. RICE HOOKS, RUBBER and LEATHER, Belting, Lace Leather and Packing. DUC’S PATENT ELEVATOR COPS. —FOR SALE BY PALMER BK.O’B. NOW 18 THE TIME TO HAVE YOUR PICTURES FRAMED If you want to save money. FRAMES of all sizes made to Older on short notice at A. HELLEWS, Masonic Temple, Whitaker street, Ml, IMP 1 SSEET M TURPENTINE TOOLS, TRUSH HOOPS, ETC., CARRIAGE MATERIAL, WHEELS, SHAFTS, HUBS, SPOKES, RIMS, AXLEES, SPRINGS. NAILS ! SHOT I Just arrived CARGO OF COFFEE per Diana In store and lor sale by WEED & CORNWELL FEATHER DUSTERS, -EXTRA QUALITY, ONLY 10c AT Tiie Dime SStore. "35 Whitaker street. El T A STOPPED FREE I Marvelous success. Da Imans Persons Restored ■ ■ ■WDr.KLINE S GREAT ■ ■ Wr nerveßestorer fr aZZ ßrain &Nbrvb Diseases. Only sure ure for Nerve Affections. Fits, Epilepsy, etc. ALLIBLB if taken as directed. No Fits after day s use. Treatise and J? trial bottle free to latierxts, they oaying express charges on box when v*d. Send names. P. O. and express address of ted to DR.KLJNE.MI Arch St .Philadelphia. Pa. gisU, BHWARH QE IMITATING FRAUDS Auction Sales. EXAMINE - THIS MAP OF SAVANNAH, Particularly that portion south of Anderson street, between Habersham and Montgom ery streets. That is the area over which Savannah must extend. It Is impossible for us to advance In any other direction. An investigation of the ownership of these lands discloses the fact.that less than twen ty-five persons own that large vacant epace, extending to Eliza street, and represen ting scores of acres. These owners have the ability and seem to possess the Inclination to keep their proper ty Intact, and not to put it on the market. There are no streets in that section that are recognized by both the city and the owners until you pass Eliza street South of Ellzi? are Norwood, King and Lawton st-eets, ranging in width fiom 40 to 60 feet Th-.se streets are already dedicated to the public and lots sold upon them. I have recently sold twenty-three lots, fronting south, on Norwood street, to good parties—some of them young men just com mencing to accumulate. I am now offering ten lots, fronting south, on King street, each 40x90, at the uniform price of IE 125 each, for cash. C. H. DORSETT, Real Estate Dealer, Savannah, Ga. I. D Laßoche’s Sons, Auctioneers and Commission Mercn ants, Dealers in Stocks, Bonds and Real estate, have on hand a number of desirable Vacant lots well located. Residences, large and small, In various parts of the city, also sev eral Truck Farms within a short distance oi the city, all of which will be ofiered at very low prices. A Block of Lots that we are offering on the INSTALLMENT PLAN. These lots aie desirable to parties with small means who desire to obtain a home on easy terms. Any one wishing to rent, buy or sell will consult their Interest by giving us a call LUMBER AND TIMBER. D. C. BACON & CO., Pitch Pine and CYPRESS TIMBER AND LUMBEK By the Cargo. FORSAKE A LARGE STOCK OF WELL-SEASONEI Flooring, Ceiling, Weather boarding, &c., At prices as low as ever offered In this city. Carpenters and Contractors will do well to call and examine our stock and prices before purchasing. We are also handling a good quality oi BRICK at low figures. McDonough & co., Planing Mill and Lumber Yard on Charlton street, between Price and East Broad. F W. DALE. M. W. DIXON. J. £. RAY Lumber! Lumber At Retail and also by the Cargo X’rices Reduced I We have a large stock of seasoned Lum be, that must be sold to make room for stock constantly arriving. We have made a GREAT REDUCTION In Prices and are determined not to be undersold by any one. Orders soli cited. Call and get our Prices before purchas Ing. Dale, Dixon K>o. i (Successors o) Dale, Wells & Co., Planing Mill,'Wheaton and Liberty LUMBER? ■, ID & CO., Liberty and East Broad streets, Have a full stock of Seasoned. Dressea nd Undr sse Lumber which they are selling at reduced rates. WAKT AGEMTS Id SEIC VT'J STEAM Men and Womon of good character nx.d intolligej.ee. Lxelaaive Territory C-naranteed. A weeks' Jriei oi sarople Washer to be returned a*, my » xj 3nse if not Satisfactory. A thorn yid t.. r cent.the oestWasherin the world, and pays curable utents BIG money. I trinsio meric n akos it a phenom nai sucre ,severy, where. For IlluutrEtou ..ircuh.r and terms of aconcj I address. J. WORTH - St, Louis, Mo* 1 CHEAP ADVERTISING. One Cent a Word. ADVERTISEMENTS, 15 Words or more. In this column Inserted for ONE CENT A WORD, Cash In advance, each insertion. Everybody who has any want to supply, anything to buy or to sell, and business or accommodations to secure, indeed, any wish to gratify, should advertise In this column. The Times has a circulation among all classes, and this column Is specially read by buyers, sellers, and those seeking employ ment. As. WANTED. WANTED, Ja position by a young man thoroughly conversant with office work, quick and accurate at figures, acd writes a gaod business hand. Best of city references. Address L, 106 Taylor street. WANTED, the public to know that FLEMING, the Shoemaker, has re moved to No. 8 Bull street, opposite Pulaski House. WANTED— Ladles and gentlemen to work for us at their own houses; no canvass ing; 87 to sls weekly; work sent by mall at>y distance; we have good demand for our work aud furnish steadv employment. Address at once, Reliable Manufacturing Company, Philadelphia, Pa. FOR SALE. PIRSALE- A lot of shop-worn TRUNKS and SATCHELS, perfectly good but soiled, at low prices for cash. Also a nice line of Plain and Cedar-Uned Packing Trunks. Itwillpayto examine these goods W. B. MELL A CO. ■pORSALE—Large quantity of strips Ix 3, Ix 4 and Ix 6; also scantling, ranging In sizes from 2x3 upland 4-4 Boards, Framing Lumber, Planks. Weather Boarding, Floor ing, Laths and Shingles. We have a large stock on hand which must be sold. REPPARD & CO., Yard corner Taylor and East Broad streets. Telephone No. 211. poR SALE— and Lightwood In Savannah, Florida and Western Railway yard, foot of Jones street, by E. A. FULTON. Telephone 61 FOR RENT. fTOR P.ENT—From the Ist or October.Jthat -T desirable brick residence, with outbuild ing. No 89J4 Jones street. Apply to DALE, DIXON & CO., Liberty and Wheaton streets FOR RENT—The brick dwelling 1-7 3 South Broad street, between Barnard and Jef ferson. Possession given Ist October. Apply at 175 South Broad. Fj'Oß RENT—Desirable offices on Bay street, “Harris’ Block, and also on Dray ton and Bry_iu streets Apply to ED. F. NEUFVILLE. 100 Bay etieet. PIR RENT—From November Ist, in whole or In part, to good tenants, the Jasper Spring Farm, consisting of 51 acres, with Its beautiful dwelling, outhouses, stables, yards, gardens and orchards, Ac. Also 31 Acres ad joining tract. All excellent for truck farm ing, and convenient for shipping. Apply to 8. L. LAZARON, 107 Bay street, Savannah, Ga. PIANOS FOR RENT-Always in stock a full supply of Renting Pianos at from 83 to 88 per month. All styles, Squares and Uprights Rented Pianos kept in tune and order free of charge. LUDDEN & BATES MUSIC HOUSE. P)R RENT—The stole next to the north west corner of Bryan and Abercorn sts., with well ventilated cellar, suitable sot most any kind of wholesale business; size 40x90 feel; will be finished by Sept I. Also, hall 60x90 in same building. For terms inquire atoffice of HENRY BLUN. MISCELLANEOUS. PIANOS Moved, Boxed and Shipped on fine Spring Piano Dray, by New York professional Piano Movers of long experi ence, who handle Pianos quickly and safely. Prices low as tbe lowest. LUDDEN A BATES MUSIC HOUSE. FARMS, Orange Groves, and valuable tim ber lands to exchange for Northern property. Oakwood, No. 23 Park Row, New TUNING AND REPAIRING-Planos and Organs Tuned, Repaired, Renovated and Repollshed at New York prices. Best work guaranteed No factory can do better. Six rsfclass Tuners and Repairers employed all the year round Orders promptly at tended to. LUDDEN A BATES MUSIC HOUSE. I ADIES, we are furnishing pleasant and J east I v learned work, which can be done at home; good wages given; no canvasslng;all materials furnished. 2i cent sample of work and full particulars sent free. Home Mfg Co., Boston, Mass. P O. box 1916. PIANOS TUNED BY THE YEAR-Squares and Uprights 88, Concert Grands sl2 Four regular tunings. Care of Plano, re. placing broken strings and regulation of ac tlon included. BEST and CHEAPEST way of keeping Pianos In playing order. LUD DEN ABATES MUSIC HOUSE. GENERAL. jyjATTAIR A HARRIS, Contractors and Builders. All Jobbing Promptly Attended to. Corner President and Jefferson streets, Savannah. Ga. JUbt ARRIVED at the Ten Cent. Store 154 Bryan street, a lother lot of those Polkadot Goblets, Preserve Dishes, China, Shoes, Individual Salts, assorted colors. Also Glass ornamenta'. Also Just re ceived Chair Bottoms, Chair Nails, Clothes Reels and Pulleys, Buggy and Riding Whips, Fly Fans, Wize Dish Covers, Pnotog aph Frames and Cotlee Mills, instock, Woodand Willowware, Hardware, Glassware, Crock ery, Jewelry, Notions and Novelties. R. C CONNELL. NO TELLING where you can get bargains until you compare. It’s well to read about all you can buy cheap, proving it tells the tale. We have ou hand 2,00) Cabinet Wire Frames of tur e inch Moulding, readv to hang up at 2>c; the moulding can’t be bought for tne money; 800 alee Engraving llctures at 10c, worth 50c. Oil Paintings, Student Chromos very cheap, and all sizes of Gilt aud Bronze Frames at remarkably low prices. Frames made of all sizes while waiting In tact we can sell on* goods tor less money than any house this side of New York. So call. It is not in the writing The goods are here for you to see to convince yourself that you <-an save money by calling at NATHaN BROS’.. 186 C ingress and 181 St. Julian street, between Barnard and Jefferson. ri HL CHOICEST AND THE BEST-Having -I permanently located my business in the Savannah Market at Stall No. 50,1 would in form the public that I will always have on hand the FINEST BEEF, MUTTON and VEAL that comes to this market. The stall will be under the management of my son assisted by an experienced butcher. My terms are STRICTLY CAsH, and I can afford tosellat SMALLER PKOFT and guarantee satisfaction I will also continue the busl ncss at my «ld established Green Grocery, No. 46 South Broad street, where I will keep constantly on hand the choicest Beef, Mut ton, Veal, Pork aud Sausages. Dressed Chick ens and Turkeys. Also Northern Beef by every steamer. J. E. SANDIFORD, Stall No. 50 Savannah Market, Green Grocery 46 South Broad eti et, near Habersham. WANTED— La liesand Gentlemen In city or co: ntry to receive light, simple, easy work at home ail th year round; work sent by mall; distance no objection; salary from S 3 os6 a day; no canvassing; no stamp re qiiired for reply. Address UNION MANU- F.i-c* JRING COMPANY, Box 5106, Boston,