The daily dispatch. (Savannah, GA.) 1893-18??, June 20, 1894, Image 2
Iff b L- b T H
FVKLiaHKD BY
Dispatch Publishing Company,
< 6 WHITAKER STREET, SAVANNAH. GA,
TELEPIIONK HO.
»bould N* iu*dr hv check, money
o . letter oi postal note.
4ri commuoicsttons nbouid t»r »«J<lr» <1 Iwt
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A
Fnterec at the I’oMuftice yt Savannah, •
Mail .Mat’et < ; j a . s
nf T itle tisrAic n, when tn
j\. « t o?K City, are to visit our
A-? • Sh " !,! *>•«•!<■» i>K- *ny information hit
v, ~ • »’’<.♦* *»U lx- promptly ’eb gr •ph<-4 •••
at our expense.
. ' '4*. W’AH. GA.., JUNE 20, 1834.
.mJMKMi.I; IM A'H II lii'loitv.
fees,at Savannah will soon
part of past I’jstorv an I The Dvti.V
Thia nil ran jtivlv lav claim to I lie credit
■I ;.:i»ng "'on a big ' ictory for '.lie com
in.rce<-! ourci’y
While the other newspapers were present
ii., their readers with heavy editorials on
he Hawaiian and suiter questions The
Daily Dispatch turned its attention to the
in ■■ inportai't h>cil matters r.f seeming
!. abolishment of quarantine and high
■dllj lees, and we are hat tn illy proud at
Te results of our wuikin behalf of prog-
► r, ‘'-
i The Daily Disi'Aich stalled a ballot on the
quarantine question and the box in our office
is filled with neaily 2,00 b votes against
I. < s These ballots were to have
| nsciited to c limit at the sccon'l meet-
W'■eg tn lulv, Put as favorable a, tian has
H . been taken in response to the demand
H. Ini Daily Dispatch backed by the board
trade, this will be unnecessary.
Savannah can now proudly boast of the
po'session of a daily newspaper alive to her
interests The Daily Dispatch is the people's
paper and its phenomenal success is a deserved
recognition of worth.
We are not yet satisfied. Another matter of
more importance than anything else now de
mands the attention cf Tup Daily Dispatch—
the i losing of Bilbo canal. This death deal
ing sewer has been open too long. It must
be cl sed, and il the people will stand by
this paper as they have done in the other
matters that have been cairied to success, the
canal wi l be closed.
AN A I’OSTltOl'lllC.
Bilbo, (he poisonous -Bilbo, the microbe
breeding -Bilbo, the foul-smelling and loath
some Bilbo, that lloats its sluggish sewage
from 1,000 cess pools of filthy excescenccs
under tlfe beating, germ-kindling sun, at the
♦ oicshold of the doois of a populous city -
Bilbo, that scatters its disease-breeding and
<k.i,.lv vapots on every wind Bilbo, whose
tilthy bed vomits lotili to sti.ik and tester in
t!:c sun its sewage at every lilt of the convict’s
shovel Bilbo, whose pclluted waters, green
and greasy, creep, snail ij|ke, along the city’s
b< snip BilUo, whose* w u'tewashed b.mks illy
Ci.nceal the sepulchreben-ath—Bilbo, the fee
ulent recruiter of graves, flow sluggishly on!
The authorities that should hide you from
the public sight and smell are too busily en
gaged in packing mass meetings—in getting
contracts from the city-in employing spies Io
hound down those who do not bow down to
them and worship in raising funds to cor
rupt tlie ballot in levying excessive taxes to
pay high salaries and to fee partisans and re
taiiuis—tl.iw sluggishly on. They hive no
time to attend to you—they have no time to
waste on you—no money to lender you pow
erless in your daily and hourly industry of
contaminating the air your helpless victims
must breathe.
You have carte blanche, Bilbo, the di
stinctive Paint fever’s hectic flush on the
pale cheek of the infant, and let your mi
crobes sap the hidden fountains of its life
until the night ot death closes the bright
eyes ot some one's darling, and the muffled
foot fall, the funeral pall and the mother's
wail tell the sad story that life and light
have gone out. You need not fear, foul and
shitig though you be, that those whose
duty it is to have robbed you of the power
to make graves will disturb you. It is not
your first victim, it will not be your last.
You have long been privileged to breed
pestilence, and year after year you have been
ted with all the constituents of which you
can nurture and foster your direful work.
You now have 1,000 Sluice ways that feed
you with juicy m. isels wnh which you can
pr ison earth and an. Bilbo the fateful, the
foul, the poisonous, garner all your reeking
sewage and contaminate, nauseate and kill—
you are licensed in this work of murder by
the municipal authorities of a city that you
may c.ecimate, in a single season . when you
have concentrated and scattered among its
people your most venomous poisons.
1. the kid-glove aristocracy of the lot) Club
would _spend half as much in sending repre
sentatives cf the city to such meetings as that
to be held in New York mxt Thursday as
they spend for a corruption fund to employ
heelers and bruisers to purchase the votes of
the illiterate and vicious, the attention of
northern capitalists would be more favorably
duelled this way. What is needed is to take
‘the city out of the hands of those who have
piled up taxes beyond the ability of the man
of modern means to pay; to wrench the con
trol of elections from the hand ot the spoiler
and the briber, and then we can point witii
pride to our city and invite capital to locate
here and establish industries at one of the
must favorable localities on the South Atlantic.
■ ■—l ■ T»—v. in i',m i —i.wi n—y Hill " vnr’. II—II -ini. . . Lw- n m
HI 7 I
No Baking Powder )
IJ Exhibited at the
J World s Columbian Fair
111 '
I Tested So High 1
* At the U. 5. Gov’t Examination ) JI
For Strength, Purity and Uniformity I
As the Royal, t 1
I. The official report shows ROYAL BALING 0
I , POWDER chemically pure and yielding 160
cubic inches of leavening gas per ounce of pow
der, which was greatly in excess of all'others , i HI
and more than 40 per cent, above the average.
Royal is the favorite in every
111 and has a larger sale than all |
|| others combined. |j
Hl hOYAt. BAKING POWDER CO. 106 WALL ST., NEW-YORK.
I ■ y > MTW—... . y A
I tk< AcaenxA* Ahw. -maAWA tvamw » iwa. wm. waMw. « IMW w |
* T.OM iwimi , -Mown. I V~~ T ~ Tr—fflw'. -I -II I, TT—" * mm,. T-
Licensed to kill —the open sewer on the
eastern border of the city.
Wanted—A committee (hat will invest igate
Bilbo canal and report (haCits waters are pel
lucid and lovely, and to whitewash it like its
festering banks.
Tin Augustd Chronicl.; says : "Col. 11. 11.
Richardson is congratulated upon the success
he has made of the lltiquirei Sun. He is now
the owner as well as the editor of the
kleglar I) C e y,lsa I’.isdt’ cudrcd
making it one of the popular ami influential
dailies of Georgia. Now if he will drop one
half of its double-barrelled name all will be
well.” What ails our contemporary? The
‘‘double-barrelled ’ name is certainly not so
perplexing as the dead language in which it is
supposed a compliment is conveyed.
Tin morning paper says: “The legistrars,
Messrs. Mclntire and Manucy, made some cor
rections in the printed list of registered Verters
yesterday and the list will be fully conccteil
before before they are posted .it the differ
ent points where they aie required t’y law to
be placed. Several names were kit out ami
same others were wrongly spellol.'' This is
gotn! news. Heretofore such a small thine, as
a mtspelled name was not thought sufficient
to worry over, and as lor omissions,they were
corrected without announcing it in a news
paper.
Oi a city council that was not elected by,
nor was not the choice of, the people, too
much ought not to be expected lor the people’s
welfare. '1 hat is why it has been lax in pay
ing attention to the wants of the people. If
it sloes anything now to ameliorate their con
dition, and to harmonize differences between
organized labor that it despises, and parti
san employers, it will be that il iecognizes
that the people will soon call it to account.
I ; or months il burdened shipping with
exorbitant quarantine fees when rival ports
had abolished them Selfishness, greed and
disregard of the rights ami the necessities of
the people have characterized this unfortunate
body and its chief spirit.
h Richmond sowed the wind when her
packed and snap mass meeting sought to
stifle of Itfr democratic masses, the
Chronicle, that is now perturbed at the
ominous whirlwind that seems to be impend
ing. should blame itselt and its associate party
dictators. The press syndicate composed of
the Atlanta Constitution, the Augusta Chron
icle, ami the Morning Snarler of this
city, are learning that they do not
dominate the Georgia democracy, who
cannot be deceived by their boastings, turned
aside by their abuse of a trusted party leader
nor influenced by the sneers of this triple
alliance of self-constituted oracles The
Atlanta ami Augusta soreheads and-the Savan
nah Morning Swellhead have weakened what
ever influence they may have had in the
democratic household. All three are presided
over by patriots in whose bonnets are buzzing
gubernatorial and senatorial bees, but neither
of these dark horses will ever get into the
light.
Our Xew Shoe Store.
We are better prepared than ever to save
you money in the purchase of shoes.
We have many single pairs of a kind, odds
and ends—remnants, as our dry goods friends
might say—that we are offering below cost.
Our grand tall opening will take place the
latter part of August, when we will have one
of the Digest and most complete stocks el
shoes in Savannah.
It isour aim to be rid of as much of oui
present stock as possible, to be ready for our
opening with as many new shoes as we can
See our large windows and low prices.
Look at shoes in racks in back pan of store.
Ask for shoes that we are closing out and
see the bargains we will give you.
M. L. l ambert,
No 158 Broughton street.
I’.ccoriltT s toiirt.
In the recorder’s court the following cases
were disposed of:
Robert l-letclier, for cursing and threaten
ing Iris wife, was fined >5 or ten days.
Willie Willi.uns, for stealing a pair of
shoes from a colored woman. wa> turned
over to the city court.
Anna Belle G. Carr, for raising a disturb-,
ance in the market, §3 or live days.
Phillip Henry, for fighting on the streets,
$5 or ten days.
William Grange, lor beating a woman, $5
or 11t days.
John Smith ami Edward Domd.i'S, two
small negioes about 11 years ot age, w'ere up
tor throwing rocks in the windows ot a
Charleston and Savannah railroad train at the
I lorida Central and Peninsulai i.rilioad junc
tion. They were turned over to the city
COU't.
Dkink Suwannee Springs water.
g jg====— i
I ROAD
-
I LEADING I
-
■fc- -
ITo Satisfaction
O-- 2
AND
| CONTENTMENT, I
< I
i vA '
i
H Congress and Jefferson Streets. :
uuiuiuiuiuj auiuiuauuu ud
Gas st ive t o ip<iii.
Ihe housekeeper guessing nearest tie'.
number of gas stoves in use in Savannah on .
June I. will be entitled to a gas. range put up
ready lor use by the Mutual Gas Light Com-1
pany.
Name ‘
; Number im use I
: I
Tins Daily Disr.vacu
• • ... *
All coupons must be left at the gas coir
panv’s otiice, 12!) Congress street, in a sealed !
envelope. No guess received unless on a,
IT All 1 I )isva tch coupon.
Bei’okh making arrangements tor yout sum j
met trip call on the Florida Central and Pen-1
usular for intormation about the Virginia and I
North Carolina resents.
WHAT WE HAVE DONE '
& ,A I*oll o'l HE i<S WE
fe-. CAN -DO FOR
> Vlv YOL>-
jKj!'h t . T’> a 'ir.ijle Statementaa-l Xdmitsof no Argument.
WE CAN SURELY SATISFY
YOU IN
Tjp'‘* l shoes.
CORNER WHITAKER STREET-
OUR BASE BALL CLUB
IS SOMEWHAT
KNOCKED * OUT,
But we are still in Hie ring with a full supply of Refrigera
ators, Mailing-', llainm-cks and all oilier Summer Goods,
wliidi we are ofTerim-'at Hard Time Prices. Come and see
us al. the corner
BROUGHTON AND BARNARD.
.<.. <u-i--.7 x - 3 .'S-rari-TO .TB^:i*u?anaK'..r? , s :v?
PGAN'I’ S YSTEM.
Charleston and Savannah Railway. Savannah, Florida and Western Railway.
GOING SJI TH READ DOWN ‘I EM E<’A RD. (*OING NORTiI-K EAI) I’P
15 •_*; ■ T» In i ri’it f May 20, 1894. 32 78 V
' 12 0311*1 II 10am Lv I'liiLub lplii.t Ar Jo Hium, 3 Lmiu 1
I 2 -rOniH* 2 13pm Lvßail i (MoreAr, 8 2<Mm 12 18;un
i . | 3');i]h 3 ■•"pai Lv . . . Wa-diington Ar 7 oOiimJl lOpiir
i 9 05am 711 pm LvßichmondAr 3 4<«am, 0 43pm;
• .? |opm! LvWilmington Ari 11 10an»
j I 35pm112 51am Lv 1 .lyt-lic ville. Ar 9 30pm 10 2->;um .
i 3 iVjimiil 38pnd 5 07am Lv Cbarie*lon \i 1 ;10pin! 3 15amjl2 50p!iii
i . I LvAugustaAr 1 8 55pm ■• - • ••• j
Lv I; auf-.-rt Ar 6 41pm • - llOhuui
1 Hpini .... ..] 609 am I.v .... VtimasHec Ar 1 ,‘Jopm. | 9 lOnm
6 30pn>! 2 ..T hl I 7-. mi Ar SA VA NN All . Lv. 12 02pm 110 00|>m 72* tun!
2 I »pn? 6 45] m' 2 I-tn i 55am Lv S.\\ ANNAII \r II 42nm| 9pm| 7 00am|
1 4i»pm 8 53pm !35a:i | 9 2-Jam Ar leenp Lv |o I Jam 733 pm 135 am:
6 02pm! 1020 pm 3 50ait 10 22um Ar V,aye.<-s L\ 9 o*am 6 10pm I 3 00ami
! 7 I.»pm' ... ;'-Wui | A” Br.mswiik Lv 725 pm ’
I Jl.imllO i 3 tmi Ar Albany..’. L\ 109 am I 3 .Tipnr
b 10pm' 8 10am ’2 'upm Ar... la* I; <>:.ville i.v 7 OOhiii 3‘2o,>in! 700 pm!
J (xp.im! ... 12 27pm Ar • Valdo-biLv 3 52pmi 11 59pm!
2 i'j.md I '9pm Ar Ti (Uini-v ilk- I v 2 .'Xipm 1032 pm’
I 2.’».tin| i i JOpmAr.. . ii !<•*.• !l<».. Lv II 3-am 5 3* pur
[ 1 I.Ortmi 3 17pm Ar. . I ’.uiibritlge I.v I 02pm! 9 12pm
7 Mum I- pm \r ... .Gamoville Lv ,035ami ‘'.3opm' ....
[ 9 5..;;, 2-Hpi Ar Oi-ala Lv . .. 9 47am. 1 I3pm ;
;’>suam . ... - 2 <-'pm! •> l''pn. Ar SaiHmd I.v lb. ,o 2 .'am' 1
I Uipmi '■ •* -pm; !■ pm Ai Tampa Lv * wpm 3O.»'iii|! _’ l.'.pm .... ..
I K‘>piii| 7 apin' I" 25pm Ar Port Tampa Lv' 7 2"pi>. . 0";;ni II loam
7 00.1 . t , |0 lAainj e'i tpin'Ai Montg nivry Lv 7 ->o])m( 7 H im; 2 43pm
J 2 2-lpii 5 2<'pml. 1 3 (loam Ar Mti’ulc D. ... .12 20am! j
sUopii. lO2spm| ". ; 7 '-Yam'Ar Nt vv OrleansLv , 7 50pmI:
’J'r.tins •», 6. 15. 21. • ..nd 78 run daily- Train 12 leaves Ravenel d nty. except Sunday, at 425
pm 6>i Chai h I'i.iC. 111-.', -s Chai leston daily vxc«,-t at ■'<>• nt for Raven’d. Train
9 leaves C*h *’’’ Aon 7 in am Sun-lav . oniy and anives Savmmah la 42am. Train 10leaves Savannah
340 pm. Sund y. only and arrives < barle tan 9 pm. Trains •«. ti. 9 and 10st<»D at all stations.
SLEEPING CAR SERVICE AND CONNECTIONS.
T'raius 32 and earr; Pullman buflot sleeping cars Kt ween New York and Port Tampa. Trains
23 am N c .rry Pullman bullet sle< ping car W'.i\cr to tv, .Nashville, Louisville and < in
ciuuati 'I i.-ins ;• and carry rullman buffet sleeping cars between Savannah and Ocala. Trains
ti and 23 carry Pullman s.l* eomg cars betw< en Savannah and Jacksonville. Passengers fur Jackson
ville Gy train 23can enter sleeping car at 9 pm. Trains 5, p; and 33 mike close connection for
Mobile, New Orleans and the southw. -t.
Tickets sold to all points and slecpingcar Iwrtlis secured at passenger station, an I ticket office, 22
bU, C. t S?GADSI)EN. R. G. FLEMING. W. M. DAVJ DSON,
Supt. C. & S. R’y. Supt. >.. F S: W. Ry, Gen. I’ass. Agent.
Charleston, S. C. Savannah. Ga. Jacksonville. Fla.
.THE
DEADLY
PARALLEL
COLUMN.
A LESSON IN ARITHMETIC,
Average daily consumption of beer in this citv
May Ist to October Ist, annually.
200 KEGS PER DAY.
Average daily,’consumption of ice in same time,
80 TONS PER DAY.
Ti: ■ f. it is.
Price of above ice > Price of ice when
when competition is brewers protect their
wiped out CO cents per customers. 30 cents per
hundred; sl2 per ton. hundred; $6 per ton.
Total cost of SO tons Total cost of SO tons
per day to the people, per day under thissys
tern, s4Bo.
Net saving per day
to the people, 5 ISO
Net saving per the
season of 184 daysMSS,-
320.
JUST THINK!
$88,320 00.
This is what you pay over and above good value
for an article of necessity when am one has a cinch ■
on the business. See how profitable it would N to
give away five or ten thousand dollars’ worth of
beer in order to obtain control of this market on
ice! But the people are too well read and in
telligent to lie caught with this spider and fly trap.
Withe ut doubt, the beer is the thing that has
come to the rescue.
Consumers, McKinley's tariff is a gentleman
compared to this monster. Your interests are at
stake, and in our hands will be as jealously
guarded for the future as they have been in the
past.
All wo ask is a fair field and a share df your
favors for ihe world renowned
FAUST
AND
PREMIUM PALE BEER
—AND OUR OWN
MEYER BEER.
RESPECTFULLY,
Mira® ffliiffl
George Meyer,
GENERAL MANAGER.
STOMAC.I IS
W I LL
It IL ITDIATE
MEAN
BEER,
And no monopolies or combina
tions can make people believe
CHEAP BEER IS GOOD BEER.
The people of Savannah appreciate
the product of
Home Industry
because they know the
smma wino com
Is brewing the
FINEST BEER IN THE WORLD
In its
EXTRA PALE CABINET.
An analysis by the highest au
tliurity shows it to be the superior
of anv of its competitors on this
side of the .Atlantic.
ITS
CHA MP jA G- IST E
BEER
CANNOT BE SURPASSED.
♦
Every first-class saloon in Savannah
sells cur beer.
SAVANNAH
Brewing Co„
PIONEERS OF LOW PRICES
FOR FIRST-CLASS GOODS.
AMONG THE PYTHiANS.
LODGE OFFICERS TO BE INSTALLED
BYGRAND CHANCELLOR DOUGLAS.
There Will be a Reception in the Even
ing in Honor of the Occasion—Sa
vannah to Have a Pythian Band by
the Next Meeting of the Grand
Led??..
Last night Excelsior Lodge N > 8, K. of P.,
held itV —rr,’" monthly meeting, at which ,
the iug ullicers we'-- r'e.'e.f:
C. C.—R P. L.kw • !
V. (.. u i’. K
—Wii’Hu, Deiii,—<y
M -;d-A-M A .M.KrlWe
M ~f W— J G K-rt l.
Trmte<'s—F. W. t.ramer, 1* M Bern
h.,rdi, W H. B-rcl.y
T hs b>dge is -ne < f the ni si prosperous
in the city, i's membership having increased
at a lire].- ra=e for sonic time ,-dSt, while its
tinancijl c-ndi ; ci i, the most encouraging
in the history of Excelsior, which has seen
many an apparent unsurmoumable object
staring it in the face; but there wfere too
many good men in the badge to allow it to
go to pieces, although it bad a narrow es
cape.
TO BE JOINTLY INSTALLED.
These oliicers will be installed next month
at a joint installation of al! the recently
elected oflicers of the different lodges of the
city, at which Grand Chancellor Hamilton
Douglas of Atlanta will officiate and will la
aided by District Deputy Ed.vard F. Hoff
man and resident grand lodge officers. On
the evening of the day on which the install
ation occurs there will be a reception to
the members of the order at Knights of
Pythias hail.
The present prosperous condition of
Excelsior lodge is largely due to the labors
of W. H.-Barclay.
Pythianism is certainly on a boom in Sa
vannah. All the lodges in the city are in
splendid condition, and there is a friendly ri
valry between them as to which one can get
the most new members. This spirit is cer
tainly admirable.
TO HAVE A BAND.
The young members of the lodges who aie
of a musical turn of mind, have suggested
the organization ot a comet band. At lirst ,t
did not seem to take so well, but those wl o
wanted it were indefatigable, and their labors
have not been wasted. > >,
The matter has been taken up with a will
and determination that will not fall little short
of materialization. A committee consisting
of members from all the lodges have the mat
ter under advisement; in fact, it is only being
held in abeyance temporarily, as it has been
decided that the order must have a band.
The members of the Uniformed Division are
most desirous that there be a Pythian band in
Savannah. Savannah has the best drilled
Uniformed Division i:i the state, and there is
no good reason why she should not have a
band.
“There is v.ry good reason to believe that
when the next session of the Grand Lodge
meets in Atlanta in May, 1895, Savannah
lodge will go there headed by their own
musical corps,” said an enthusiastic member
of one of the lodges today. The Savannan
lodges will be well represented at the Supreme
Lodge conclave at Washington on August 28.
SIOO Kcniird. $lt)0.
The reader of this paper will be pleased to
learn that there is at least one dreaded disease
that science has been able to cure in all its
stages, mid that is catarrh. Hall’s Catarrh
.Cure is the only positive cure known to the
medical fraternity. Catarrh being a constitu
tional disease requires a constitutional treat
ment. I kill's Catarrh Cure is taken internally,
acting directly on the blood and mucous sur
faces of the system, thsreby destroying the
foundation of the disease and giving the
patient strength by building up the constitu
tion and assisting nature in doing its work
The proprietors have so much faith in its
curative powers that they offer SIOO for any
case that it tails to cure. Send for list of tes
timonials. Address, F. J. Cheney & Co.,
Toledo, O. Sold by druggists, 75c.
ltrs. Reilly Dead.
aVus. Mary Reilly, relict o! the late Capt.
lames K. Reilly, died last night at her home
No. 58 Broughton street, after a lingering ill
ness. Mrs. Reilly was 62 years old. During
her life she was noted for her many charitie
and her death will be generally regretted. She
leaves t wo daughters, Sister Mary Gertrude of
Mount Dechantal, \\ heeling, W. Va., and
Mrs. James F. Lynch of Atlanta, the latter of
whom was present at her death. The funeral
will take place to-morrow.
A Man tn the House.
Last evening Mr. W. F. Crosby celebrated
his 21st birthday and was made tire recipient
of many handsome presents. His friends
were given a reception at Mr. Crosby’s resi
dence, Whitaker and Anderson streets, last
night and everyone had a most enjoyable
time, the boys and girls dancing until the
“wee sma” hours. An elegant lunch was
served at midnight. There is a man in the
Crosby household to-day.
Livery.
if you want a road horse the only place in
town to get one is at the Pulaski House
stables. More of them than ail other stables
combined Landaus and Kensingtons for hire
by the hour or day. No plugs er cripples.
E. C Gleason, proprietor, 138 and 110 Bryan,
next to Pulaski house.
Quick Time to Jacksonville.
Leave via Florida Central and Peninsular
s:l> >a. m. or 4:40 p. m. Best schedu'es
offered.
F. W. CRAMER,
SHEET METAL WORKER,
122 STATE STREET.
Galvanized Iron Cornice. Door and Win
dow Caps a Specialty. Tin Routing, fie
pairiug. Estimates Chee riul ly Furni sited.
A. J. KYNETTeT -
Roof Painter,
55 1-2 EAST BROAD STREET.«
Repairing and Painting of .Metal Roofs ,
»