The daily dispatch. (Savannah, GA.) 1893-18??, June 21, 1894, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

Highest o.' all in leavening Power,-'- Latest U. S. Gov’t Report Royal KS ABSOLUTELY PURE The Daily Dispatch —rvxu«xi> »» 1 ru DiSFaTOh Publishing Company, HLt WHITAKER STREET. SAVANNAH, GA, Aoi.ephoN in -110. TT urn. ‘ • ’’ lii > '‘ hy money sj;. I AHI Mm l -* 1 ' “tc aFsk’’’ a«|<irr%M <! \ * * r, < > I -..<■><» Reader* of TH New York city, ar« cordially invited to vifl^our New York office, Mr. George A. Coonee, manager No. 21£, Slewart building- Any information left at the above office will be promptly telegraphed to paper at our expense. VANNAH. GA., JUNE 21, 1894. |U FOR GOVERNOR : W. Y. ATKINSON OF COWETA COUNTY. The influence of federal office-holders should not be felt in the manipulation of politi cal primary meetings and nominating conven tions. Gkovek Cleveland. I>K. FAXTOKK VAGARIES. Dr. Paxton, the Presbyterian minister who performed the secret marriage ceremony be tween Congressman Breckinridge and wife is back again in New York after a voluntary exile of several months. The clergyman re signed from his|church some time ago and on account of ill health has been in a private sanitarium. Aside from the unpleasant notoriety he has gained by keeping illegally secret the marriage celebration, and by his failure Io report the same to the lieallli board, Dr. Paxton is again brought prominently forward to public view on account ol his pronounced views on the immigration question. In a recent interview he claimed that there were too many people in the world and to offset it there is only one remedy, war or pestilence. The weak-minded but positive churchman would sweep 2,000,000 off the face of the earth .nut believes that as a nation we are I wrong in ideas of mercy and Unlike most clergymen, he is not in fa vor 11 nursing incurables and keeping crim inals in penitentiaries, but would extermi nate them like the Lacedemonians of old. Instead of believing in the theory that the worid is improving and advancing the ven erable eccentric says it is no better than in the days ol the flood, and that the rich are getting richer and the poor are hating them harder every day. The spirit of turmoil is, according to his ideas, the same as that which caused the I -Tench revolution, and that it has not yet been demonstrated whether a republic is an enduring tact or only a theory. In ex tenuation of what the doctor says,and prob ably explanatory thereto, it can be added, parenthetically that lie has frankly admitted hat lie should have never gone into the minority and that he has done things that a ministry ought not to have done. He wanted a stimulant to spur his lading and weaken ing energies, and took to cocaine. Die notoriety he has gained in the Breckin itdg.i case, coupled with his mental decten sior. and erratic remarks, w ill make him a _vcnlr.il AgUre hereafter in metropolitan affairs 4^/ public attention with Ward Mc- MMI, George Francis Train and Steve Brodie, “ the bridge jumper. Rats deseit a sinking ship. The first to desert the Evans cause in the hour of need were those who, as members of Evans clubs and editors of Evans organs,should have been more loyal to their candidate. The Augusta Chronicle seems displeased with ittt Daily Dispatch for saying that Col. Atkinson can be elected without the vote of Richmond county and intimates that it is a strange sort of democracy that would inspire such a prediction. The Chronicle should pull the beam out of its own eye be fore it attempts to go mote gathering in the eyes of its neighbors. It has been but a short time since when it was telling its readers that the populis's would probably not nominate a candidate tor governor if Gen. Evans was nominated. It is a strange sort of democracy that would artlessly con fess that its chosen candidate for governor would be satisfactory to the only party in Georgia that its confronting the detnocracy a party foe that hobnobbed with negro dele gates 'it the convention that nominated the populist candidate for governor. The Chronicle had better look to its own local household, where, as a result of ring mani pulation and snap mass meetings, the demo cratic masses are about to go into open re bellion with a view of teaching the self constituted leaders of the party that the rank and file have some rights that are en titled to respectful consideration. A CONSERVATIVE SPIRIT. When one considers that the Citizens'Club has just emerged from i zealous struggle, in which it was confronted by an opposition , that disrega-ded party usages and failed to comply with the spirit, if not the letter, of the call fi r mass meetings at which were to be elcit, d county democratic executive commit teemm, it is remarkable with what unanimity ! tin; dub consented to again go before tile people to secure what it was already entitled to- recognition of flic election of its candi dates. It fully realized the desperate opposition it would have to ancounter, but it also had faitli in the justice of its cause, and recognized the fact that a large clement of citizens be- > longing to no partisan organization would be Bound supporting thecause represented by the MUzens' Club jLthe mass meetings, and it is samYT.-'iixyftiat if ilit opposition had sub mitted to the test ol a fair count on the night ot the mass meetings, the majority in favor cf the Citizens' Club ticket would have approxi mated from 800 to 1,000 in the four districts of Savannah. In the face of a majority so overwhelm ing, it was asking much of the Citizens’ Club to submit to a resubmission of the question* but the democracy ot its members has stood the test, conservative counsels have prevailed and witli a firm and abiding faith that popu lar sentiment sustains the Citizens’ Club in the reforms which its seeks to carry out, it again appeals to that tribunal in which it has all along had the fullest confidence that the reforms inaugurated will be carried to a suc cessful conclusion. The Citizens’ Club has stood alone among the party organizations of this city favoring primary elections where the fullest and fairest expression of the people may be , arrived at, and the mass meetings, out of • which grew complications from which the > parly seems to be emerging, wete neither i solicited nor desired by the Citizens’ Club. - "We do not favor primaries," was the i language of one of the spokesmen of the > 150 Club, while Tammany's opposition to I the primary system is well known. , The citizens’ Club is the only party or ; ganization in Savannah which has indorsed > the Doolan registration law that has given ; Chatham county the fairest registration of | many years, and has put thousands of dollars I into the county treasury that never would i have found their way there had it not been , for the law in question. The Citizens’ Club Is the only party organ ization in the county that has indorsed and stands pledged to see th.d the provisions oi ■ the Osborne Australian ballot law are faith ; fully observed. These are facts which thoughtful persons must iccognize, nor can that class of citizens . be deceived by the bi-yearly bugaboo that the only issue before the people is whether or . not Waring Russell shall or shall not be re elected to a county office. > The paramount issues arc, shall the people , control ? Shall our registration lists be fair j and free from the suspicion of manipulation? ; Shall our elections be conducted fairly, ] honestly and honorably, and the odium and scandal which have been so long connected i with them be removed ? Shall the taint of s bribery, which has so long attached be es ; faced, or shall our registration list be bur . dened with that class of illiterate voters who . can be corrupted by the use of money to sway elections for this faction or that faction, j or for this or that candidate who can bid the e highest sot purchasable ballots? ( Democratic harmony and democratic unity I are desirable, but if any considerable portion . of the party seek to perpetuate the evils which are being antagonized by a majority . of the democracy of the county, then har mony to the winds and th.- Citizens’Club ; will neither give nor ask quarter in s the warfare it has begun and which . it proposes to wage until a free bal lot, an unpurchasable ballot and a fair count of that ballot so cast shall reflect the will of the people. Confident of the suceecc of an issue so vita! to the good name of this community, the Citizens' Chib, with a full knowledge that it largely preponderated in the mass meetings of last week, again throws down the gage of battle to all who stand in antagonism to these much needed reforms, and with full faith and abid ing confidence again appeals to the people, assured that the verdict will be such as is worthy ot an intelligent ?nd a law-abiding community that desires to see a fiefifef ;ra in the history of elections in Chatham county, and by that token we welcome the 10th day of July as tile harbinger of a better era. Atkinson 148, Evans 70. nearly two to one. Scriven's rote to-day makes it an even ISO for the plowboy, ‘•Public oefice is a public trust," says Pres ident Cleveland, and he has practiced what he preached when he reads the names of ap plicants for office, especially for consulates. Men must be trusted before they can get office. The suicide of Hon. Thomas M. Bayne, republican ex-congressman from Pennsylvania, a man of wealth, it appears was the result of fright at a slight hemorrhage, that led him to believe that he had consumption, and then he fired the pistol at his heart that severed the gordian knot. Should Gen. Evans withdraw front the gtibilMlotUl iac.- it w uU ieavc mom for t’le "South Georgia man.” Rats! Gubirnatorial dark horses seeking uniu structed delegates should take warning by *he booiniet <1 Gen Evans. It was a bawlcss fabric of a vision. •’Bunching” and "instructing" continue, notwithstanding the sage advice ot prospec tive dark horses that there are ‘‘a half dozen better men than either Atkinson or Evans." Mr. Atkinson lacks less than two votes of having two-thirds of all the delegates so far selected, and with the vote of Scriven to day he will have the two-thirds. He will then lack but 20 votes Io nominate. Turn are lint 50 counties yet to select del egates ; as Gen Evans has but 28 counties and 72 to get the "100 counties," it will take some extraordinary figuring to solve the puz zle. No wonder Maj. Howell left the state to relieve his tireci brain at Conev Island. Tin democratic state convention of Floiida has been called to convene at Jacksonville on July 31 to nominate a candidate for justice of the supseme court. The populists will nomi , nate a candidate, but with little hope ot suc cess, for Florida, handicapped, as it is by Senator Cali, still remains true Io the faith of the fathers. The Florida papers that aie advocating the abolition of the office of county treasurer, 1 and the deposit ol public funds in banks, on the score of economy, should investigate this subject a little mote fully, and they will find that when the number of bank failures are I considered, it is best to bear the ills they now , have than to fly to those they know not 01. A bill is pending in the Louisiana legisla ture to make the governor, secretary of state, state treasurer, sheriff, parish treasurers and municipal treasurers throughout the state in eligible for re-election. This is to be heartily commended and will tend, by alternating officers, to rid the state of office-holding rings. Other slates might emulate the example of the Pelican state to their advantage. With the thermometer at 100 degrees in the ' shade last Sunday at Manchester, N. H , it will not be a great while until our northern ' friends will be attracted to the South Atlantic summer resorts and where cool breezes arc, ' the rule, just as warm breezes are the rule in ‘ winter, which are ho popular with the north r ern tourist. Here in Savannah when the ther mometer marks 90 degrees in the shade we - think it is torrid. I GET A FREE TRIP f ; [ GO TO SUWANNEE SPRINGS OR ASHEVILLE. N- C. ' rhe Grandest Offer Ever Made to Sa vannahians- Free Trips With Board • at Suwannee Springs and Asheville. ’ Now is the Time to Subscribe to The i Daily Dispatch. Till! Daily Dispatch, with its usual enter prise, having presented on June 1 a free : ticket to New York and return and one r week’s board at the St. Dems hotel to Mr. • G. T. Dunham, the holder of coupon No. ■ 1182, now oilers its readers two splendid | opportunities for a summer's outing To Nuwaiiyep Springs Free. To the person gathering the greatest num ber of coupons cut from The Daily Dis ’ patch by July 1 and presenting the same to i Mr. Andrew Hanley, No. 37 Whitaker street, will be given a free ticket to Suwanee Springs, ’ Fla., and return and one week’s board at that ■ famous resort. The coupon appears daily in this paper. r To Asheville, N. Free. . To every cash subscriber of The Daily Dis patch a numbered coupon is given entitling the holder to participate in t|)e award of our free ticket to Asheville and return via the ’ Florida Central and Peninsular railroad and 1 two weeks' board at the Kenilworth Inn, the , finest resort in (he south, to be presented July 1 at noon. Every monthly subscriber of 50 cents can I secure a coupon. f , Quirk Time to .tacksonvlllt*, 1 Leave via Florida Central and Peninsular . 5:35 a. m. or 4:40 p. m. Best schedules I ottered. '/=■ OFF ON ALL STRAW HATS. We are determined to close out our stock of Straw Hats, consequently will allow a discount of 33i % on present prices. Do not miss the chance. • Our Shirt Waist Sale Still Continues. See Our Specials in Undershirts, APPEL & E 'l_ . _ 3 e fe ICZ MW 5 | SIIk3U | Gives you pick of a lot of | £ - | ' STYLISH | I $15.00 AND $16.50 1 I !' | Not make believe $15.001 | and $16.50 Suits, but suits 1 £ I that are worth it were sold 1 | at that price here and for I £ =4 I more elsewhere. I | How can we do it? | i That’s our biz. 1 | You bring the money—we 1 •►J ■-•O | do the rest. | M.DRYFUS, =3 ST Congress and. Jefferson Streets. To Suwanee Springs free. To the person presenting the greatest number of these cupons, cut from The Daily Dispatch by July 1,1891, they will be presented a round trip ticket to Suwanee Springs via the Savannah, Floridr and West ern railway, and one week’s board at that famous resort: Tun Daily Dispatch : Free ticket tn Suwanee Springs, Fla., ; : and re urn via Sav., Fla. ana West. K. R. and one week’s board. Name Address Cut this out and present at Andrew Han ley's, 37 Whitaker street. Gas Stove Coupon. The housekeeper guessing nearest the numbei of gas stoves in use in Savannah on June 1 will be entitled to a gas range put up ready for use by the Mutual Gas Light Com pany. * * Name Number in use••• • Tint Daily Dispatch * All coupons must be left at the gas com pany's office, 129 Congress street, in a sealed envelope. No guess received unless on a Daily Dispatch coupon. FOR BEJSTT Upstaiis of premises No. 23 Drayton stree Large roomy building, suitab for any kind of Apply No. li Whitaker street, Daily Disnatch Office. THE SUN. The first of American Newspapers, CHARLES A. HANA, Editor. The Ameiiran Constitution, the Anicrienn Lira the Ame lean Spirit. These first, laat, and all tlie lime, forever. THE SUNDAY SUN is the greatest Sunday Newspaper in th- world Price sc. a copy. ilv mail, $» a year Daily, by mail £■'. a year Daily ami Sunday, by mail <s » year The Weekly $| a ve.j i'll I'. SUN, York, .jdiy A. J. KYNETTE, Roof Painter, 551-2 EAST BROAD STREET. k>nairintf and Painting of NJetal Roofs* RICHMOND'S ~-y Shorthand, Typewriting, Bookkeeping, Penmanship, • Enghsn Branches. OPPOSITE POSTOFFICE. Whitaker and President Streets <JT T - ►('The Daily Dispatch. » THIS COUPON and TEN CENTS in : Y money or stamps entitles the holder to one |N part of any ot following three bowks : < £ MARIE BURROUGHS F ART PORTFOLIO OF T STAGE CELEBRITIES. ' DORE’ BIBLE GALLERY. I 1 AMERICA'S GREATEST | MEN AND WOMEN. << y Frank Leslie’s Scenes of tbp War, 7 A Or this coupon and thirteen eentsin money A Yor stamps will be accepted for one part of V I PICTURESQUE WORLD’S FAIR. | » Always state tyhjt part is wanted. 4| ¥ THE.DAILY DISPATCH,J 6 Whitaker street, SAVANNAH. GA. ▼ ■*. *--*-*• A WHAT WE HAVE DONE I A FOR OTHERS WE l> 4 CAN DO FOR Vw you I-is a simple Statement and Admitsof no Argument. we can surely satisfy you in SHOES. CORNER WHITAKER STREET. OUR BASE BALL CLUB IS SOMEWHAT KNOCKED * OUT, But we are still in the ring with a full supply of Retrigera ators, Mattings, Hammocks and all other Summer Goods? which we are offering al Hard Time Prices. Come and seg us at Ihe corner BROUGHTON AND BARNARD.» PLA X's SYSTEM. Charleston and Savannah Railway. Savannah, Florida and Western Railway. soi -i ii ui. ad down “ fTSnTcAiip? ~ GciNGljoitfgTFß’Ai'rTF' ~15 7~ 5 23 i 35 I s Effect May 20, 1891. 32 1 78 9 I I 2 ■rdani 2 13pm Lv Baltimore Ari 8 20am'12 48am ~ | 4 3011111; 3 30pm Lv Washington Ari 700 am 1110 pm i 9 05am; 711 pm Lv Richmond Ar 3 40am 6 43pm ~ i ; h’pnij ... i.v Wilmington Ar ill 10am l.v \ugnsta Ar 1 8 55pn ..... I or.pn Lv Beaufort Ari 644pn 11 01am ~ .... lilpu 6 •’•.'.in. Lv Yamassee Arj ISOpt) .. Dam 6 30pm m SAVANNAH .Lvil2O2pi. iiunpn; 7 2onm • 2 1.-um 6 45pm 2 4 bin 7 .Mam Lv. SAVANNAH Arill42ai 9 35pm 700 am I 40».in m 4 35am 9 23amAr Jesup Lv 10 13am 733 pm 4 35am <i o ipin'lO 20pm o.'Hiam 022 am Ar Waycross. Lv 9 08am 610 pm 300 am i 715 pm! . . 7.50;m Ar Brunswick Ly’i 725 pm...... i ! 21am!10 45 uni Ar Albany l.v, 109 am;, 355 pm....,,. ! 8 lOpm ’ 8 loam 12 30pm Ar Jacksonville l.v! 700 am 330 pm 700 pm I 00am 1227 pm Ar Valdosta Lvi 3 52pm 1159 pm ' . ... . d.'-.un 1 I f>Qpin Ar ....Thomasville Lv 230 pm 1032 pm 9 2.5 am I 3npm Ar Monticello Lv 'll3oam 5 30pni ....... , 7 3t>am 12 pm V Gainesville Lv o 35am 6 30pm ...... ' 9 05am 2 51pm \r Ocala Lv '9 47am 4 15pm ....... i 3. r jomi. , 2 09pm 3 Input Ar ...Sanford Lv 115 an 110 20am j. 1 O’.pn | 6 5.5 pm; 15pm Ar Tampa .Lv SOOpn 1 6 30am 12 15pm I Ispiri 7 35pn 10 25pm, Ar Fort Tampa Lv 7 20pn i 6 00am 11 40am , Im 13.5 pm \r Macon Lv! d 00am 10 45pm i ... 7 s<)i- s 10pm; Ar Atlanta 730 am 7 30prh ", <«‘a i 10 .... ,8 55pm'Ar - Montgomery Lv 7 30pn 718 am 2 45pm 1? 25pii 5 20pn 3Qsam’Ar. Mobile Lvi 12 20am ' 50opn 1025pn 7 sainlAr New Orleans ..Lvi 750 pm Trains 5, 6. 1-5, 23, 32. . > and 78 run daily 'Train 12 leaves Ravenel daily, except Sunday, at 425 !pm fur Charleston.h Train il leaves Charleston daily except Sunday at 800 am for Ravenel. Train ; 9 leaves Charleston 7 Io am Sundays only and arrives Savannah lo 42 am. Train 10 leaves Savannah i 3 40 pm Sundays only and arrives Charle ton 9 pm. Trains -5. 6, 9 and 10 stop at all stations. SLEEPING CAR SERVICE ANT) CONNECTIONS. 'l’rains '-2 and 2,5 carry Pudo an buffet sleeping cars between New York and Port Tampa. Trains 123 and 78 carry Pullmat Mont ierv, Nashvilh, Louisville and Cin- cinnati Turns 5 and <’• carry Pullman buttvt sleeping cars between Savannah and Ocala. Trains ; 6 and 22- carry Pullman si ‘ping cars between Savannah and_Jacksonville. Passengers for Jackson ville by train 22. can enter sleeping car at V pm. Trains -5, J 6an 135 make close connexion for Mobile, New Orleans and the southwest. 1 T ickets sold to all point: and sleeping car berths secured at passenger station, and ticket office, 2‘4 Bull street. * ’ 1 ■• . * C. S. GADSDEN, R. G. FLEMING, W. M. DAVIDSON. Sppt.C. S. R’v Supt. S., F & \V. Ivy, Gen. Pass. Agent, Charleston, S. I’. Savannah, Ga. Jacksonville. Fla. THE DEADLY PARALLEL COLUMN. A LESSON IN ARITHMETIC. Average daily consumption of beer in this city May Ist to October Ist, annually, 200 KEGS PER DAY. Average daily’ consumption of ice in same time, 80 TONS PER DAY. 111 i: i. I r is. Price of Ice when brewers protect their mistomers, 29 cents per hundred; per ten. u Total cost of 80 tons per day under this sys tem, J4£o. Net saving per day to the people, S4BO saving per the season 0, 161 nays 188,- 320. Price of above ice when ccmpetition is f iped out CG oor.ts per ftundtedf s!‘2 per ton. Total cost of 80 tons per day to the people, |960. JUST THINK! $88,320 00. This is what you pay over and above good value ’’for an article of necessity when anyone has a cinch cp tire I ’fsiness. See how profitable it would <be to ‘‘ive hwiry nve or ten IhoutiaihS dollars’ v.nrthbf beer in order to obtain s control of this ’mah ket ch iCel Bat the people are too well read and in telligent to be caught with this spider and fjy trap. Without doubt, the beer is the thing that has come to the rescue. ” CQf t sunion;, ley’s tariff h T B£ntlcman to th , manster. * ouf ißtere&s areYf Stake, and in our hands wfil be as ieal M asfy guarded for the future as they have been in the past. All we ask is a fair held and a share of your favors for the world renowned FAUST AND PREMIUM PALE BEER AN}) OU4 OWNtk? MEYER BEER. RESPECTFULLY, Bi K IffiWl George Meyer, GENERAL MANAGER. STOMACHS WILL REPUDIATE And no mqnup dies or coinbina tions can make people believe CHEAP BEER IS GOOD BEER. The people of Savuinah appreciate the product of Home Industry because they the UW BSEWt CM Is brewing the FINEST BEER IN THE WORLD In its EXTRA PALE CABINET. An analysis by the highest au thority shows it to be the superior qf any of its corppptitqrs on this side of the Atlantic ITS CHAMPAGNE BEER CANNOT BE SURPASSED. Every first-class saloon in Savannah sells oyr beer 5 * SAVANNAH Brewing Co., PIONEERS OF LOW PRICES FOR FIRST-CLASS GOODS.