Newspaper Page Text
The Savannah Daily Herald.
8. W. Mason * Cos., Pxowuztors.
Samctt. W. Mason. Ediw*.
SAVANNAH, FRIDAY, JCXYSI, 1805. .
—— ■■
FOR LOCAL MATTERS SEE THIRD PAGE.
TO ADVERTISERS.
Oar advertising patrons are reminded that adver
tisements inserted in the Morning' iulition of the
Herald will appear in the Evening without extra
charge. Advertisements should be handed in as early
as possible, but will be received as late »s 12 o'clock
at night. We adhere to onr advertised rates except
for bug advertisements, or those inserted n long
time, on whfch a reasonable discount will be made.
HOW TO OBTAIN THE HERALD REG
VLARLY,
We often have, complaints from residents of Savan
nah and Hilton Head th and they are not able always to
obtain the Firald. The demand is sometimes so
great as to ej jaust an Edition very soon afrer it* issue,
and those who wi-h tt have the llkrald regularly,
sh aid sub*cribe for it We have faithful carriers in
Savannah nd at Hilton Head, and through them we
always serve regular subscribers first.
Health of the City.— 'We are informed
by those who are well posted in the matter
that Savaunab was scarcely ever so healthy
at this season of the year as now. This is
remarkable, considering that in soldiers,
merchants and other classes there is a much
greater proportion of unacclimated people
here than ever before. One piincipal cause
for this degree of health is the great cleanli
ness of tbs city, and the excellent precaution
ary measures of the street and health depart
ments. Last week the percentage of sick
ness among the tioops was only four, while
ten per cent, is considered a small propor
tion for troops on garrison duty. Tnis was
cousiderably raised on account of the un
usual aniouut of sickness in the 103d U. S.
C. TANARUS., iu which regiment the proportion oi
sickness was ten per cent. The previous
week ’ the whole per centage among the
troops at the post was four and one hall.
Among the civilians, the amount of sickness
is much less than usually in July.
THE SAFAmfI WESTER* A.YD CENTRAL
WHARF COMPANY.
We mentioned last week the introduction
of ft memorial at the meeting of the City
Council, petitioning that body to allow a
railroad track to be laid from the Central
Railroad to the river, by the übove named
company. The charter of tho Savan
nah Western and Central Wharf Company,
granted by the Legislature, expressly pro
vides that the consent of the city authorities
be obtained before the branch-track be laid.
Why this consent skouid be accorded, and how
the extension of the proposed Central Railroad
to the river is to promote the interests of the
city, of the upper country, and of the whole
State, are fully aud ably set forth in the ap
pended memorial. We commend the docu
ment to the attentive perusal of our readers:
Memorial to the City Couucil ot Savan
nah.
Savannah, July 12, 1865.
To the Honorable Mayor and
Council of the City of Savannah, Ga.
Whereas, the Honorable Legislature of
the State of Georgia did, during the session
of 1330, grant unto the Hou. W. H. Stiles,
Rev. Joseph C. Stiles, J. Avery Skilton, H.
L. Palmer, and their associates, a charter,
giving them “the power of constructing,
equipping, maintaining cud operating a rail
road from some poiut on the track of the
Central Railroad and Ranking Company of
Georgia, within three miles of the Ogeechee
Caual, crossing to the Savannah river,”
which charter was assented to Dec. 18th,
1860; Aud whereas it was therein provided
that the said Railroad track shall not be con
structed without consent of the city Council
of Savannah being first obtained ;*•
How, therefore, the undersigned, onfe of
the corporators named iu said charter, would
respectfully ask that said required consent
be now granted by said city Council of Sa
vannah.
Ami your petitioner would respectfully
urge ibat the necessity of placing the car
along side of the ship, especially for the easy
transfer of heavj' freights, is not less now
than it was in 1860, in # view of the impover
ished condition of thepeople sending to and
bringing trout market via Savannah, and also
in view of the fact that the struggle is about
to begin anew for the control ot me business
of which this city had then possessed itself;
with the following,' among tue many modi
fying circumstances, destined in this renewed
contest to work against the interests of Sa
vannah, viz;
Ist, That Charleston, having become
aroused by her loss to this city of he place
as the third cotton port of the United States,
had in 1860 just curried her railroads to the
water, where they now are, furnishing her
with increased facilities in the coming
struggle.
2d. That a government depot has been es
tablished, and, no doubt, will he maintained at
Hikou Head, or thereabouts, which, bringing
new energy and capital, as well as govern
mental patronage to the ai<K>f railroad com
munication witn Augusta, already projected,
and even partially completed, will, with
well known advantages of depth of water
and convenient anchorage, develop anew
and formidable rival. *
3d. That Brunswick, Ga., already con
nected with the railroad system of the coun
try, confidently expects t’o complete direct
Communication between the City of Macon
and the ocean at that point, and thus be
come prepared to compete with Savannah.
4tu. That Fernaudiua, Fla., with good
harbor, site aud health, ha* already
compared communication between the
Atlantic and the Uulf by the shortest pos
sible routes, and stands ready to claim a
considerable share of the traffic which Sa-
hoped to secure.
sth. That upon the north and east forces
gather w ith renewed energy at Chattanooga
and Augusta to limit the tributary commer-
cial basin ot Savannah, so on the west and
south, new routes via Vicksburg. New Or
leans, Mobile And Pensacola will soon be
ready wjtta shorter distances and larger cap
itals to force new and powerful elements
Into the problem, and perhaps limit the mtst
ness of thi9 city to portions only of this
State, even in the handling of compact
freights, as well as control the movements
of heavy and bulky freight throughout the
State of Alabama, unless all the possibilities
of tmr situation are brought into use.
In consideration of these facts, which are
simply the expressions of a universal policy
in relation to public thoroughfares, (especial
ly railroads, canals, oceans and rivers) and
which it is the object of this 9aid charier to
meet with a legitimate and even necessary
oompetitHm, your petitioner would respect
-1 fully represent that the city of Savannah
should not stand in opposition to a universal
system and consequently to her own inter
ests, by withholding her consent, thereby
obstructing the energy of men and capital
devoted to her prosperity, by preventing the
flow of other capital toward lier as a great
business centre, but ought to encourage by
her approval all attempts to increase her
prosperity and development.
And therefore your petitioner would again
respectfully ask that the said consent requir
ed by the State charter be given bv the City
Council of Savannah may be speedily granted
—and wiil ever pray. James A Skilton.
restoration/
THE PROCLAMATION OFPkOUsiOYAL «OF
EK.YOII JOHNSON
A CHEEKING DOCEIttENT.
Tho Restoration of Georgia at Hand,
Election of Delegates to take Place on the
First Wednesday of October.
[From the Milledgeville Recorder [Extta,jl4.]
Proclamation by Jas Johnson,
Provisional Governor.
lo tho Poople of Georyia ;
Whereas, by the Proclamation of Andrew
Johnson, President of the United States,
dated 17th June, A. D., 1865,1 have been ap
pointed Provisional Governor of the State
of Georgia, with instructions to prescribe at
the earliest practicable period, such rules
and regulations as may be necessary and
proper, for convening a Convention of the
people composed of delegates to.be chosen
by that portion of the people who are loyal
to the United States, aud no others, and also
with all the powers necessary and proper to
enable such loyal people of suid State to re
store it to the constitutional relations to the
Federal Government, and to present such a
republican fprm of State Government as will
entitle the State to the guarantee of the U.
States therefor, aud its people to the pro
tection of the United States against invasion,
insurrection and domestic violence.
Now, therefore, I, James Johnson, Provi
sional Governor of the State of Georgia, a9
aforesaid, do by virtue of the power iu me
vested as aforesaid, proclaim and declare—
-Ist. That an election for delegates to a
Convention will lie held on the first Wednes
day in October, A. D. 1865, at the different
precincts, at which elections are directed and
authorized by law to be held lor members of
the Legislature.
2d. That the thirty-seven counties in the
State, which, by law in force prior to the first
of January, 1861, were entitled to two mem
bers of the House of Representatives, shall
he authorized and entitled to elect each three
and that the remaining counties
shall each be authorized and entitled to elect
two delegates to said Convention.
3d. That no person at guch election shall
be qualified as an elector, or shall be eligible
as a member ot sucb Convention, unless he
shall have previously thereto taken and sub
scribed to the oath of Amnesty, as set forth
in the President’s Proclamation of May 29th,
A. D!, 1865, and is a voter qualified as pre
scribed by the Constitution and laws of the
State of Georgia, in force immediately be
fore the 19th of January, A. D., 1861, the
date of the so-called Ordiuauee of Secession.
4th. That any two freeholders qualified to
vote at such election us aforesaid, may act as
managers of the election at each of the pre->
cincts as aforesaid; and that in managing
and superintending such election, they shall
be governed by and proceed'under the laws
of the State regulating and prescribing the
election,of members of the Legislature, prior
to the first of January, 1861: Provided, That
each of said managers, before .entering on the
duties prescribed, shall swear the other truly
and faithfully to superintend and make re
turn of said election according to law as
aforesaid aud the requirements of this Pro
clamation.
oth. That the delegates who shall be elect
ed as aforesaid, shall assemble in convention
at the city _of Milledgeville, at 12 o’clock
meridau, on the 4th Wednesday of October
A. D. 1865,
And whereas, the rebellion which has been
waged by a portion ol the people against the
government of the United States has, in its
revolutionary progress, deprived the people
ot the State t of all civil government; and
whereas they must remain without civil offi
cers and the administration of civil law
until a State government shall have been or
ganised by the convention called as aforesaid;
and whereas it is necessary in the meantime,
.that domestic tranquility be ensured, and
that the loyal people be protected in all their
rights ot pei-sou and property, I do further
proclaim and declare:
Ist. That no individual by virtue of his
own authority, shall inflict corporeal punish
ment on any person for any real or supposed
injury, whether such injury relates to person
or property, and that in all such cases, re
dress must be sought from aud given by such
military authority, as may be invested with
jurisdiction over the cases.
2. That slavery is extinct, and involuntary
servitude uo longer exists. Hence no per
son shall have control of the labor of anoth
er, other than suchcontiol as may lawfully
result from indenture, the relation of parent
aud child, guardian aud ward, and the con
tract of beiug freely and fairly made; and
that lor a breach ot duty, on the part of any
one standing these relations, the military au
thority will administer, in a summary man
ner, adequate and proper relief under the
laws of the land.
3d. That all riotous or tumultuous assem
blages of the people, and also all assem
blages for unlawful purposes and unlawful
objects, will be dispersed; aud to this end if
necessary, the military power of the United I
States will be inyoked.
4th. That the idea if any such is enter-
I tainod, that private property will be distrib
i uted or parcelled out is not ooly delusive but
dangerous and mischievous; and if any at
tempt should be made by any person or per
■ sous to effect *ucb an object by violence or
l unlawful means, it will oniy secure to him
or them speedy and merited punishment.
sth. To the end that the people may qual
ify themselves as voters, it will doubtless be
tile pleasure of the com missioned officers in
the service of the United States, to have the
oath of amnesty administered under the rules
and regulations prescribed by Secretary of
State of the United States; and in this
work, I most earnestly desire and solicit the
cheerful co-operationi ot the people, so that
Georgia may speedily be delivered of milita
ry rule; that she may once again regulate
her own domestic affairs, again enjoy the
blessings of civil government, and be Heard
and felt by her Senators ant Representatives
in the councils of the nation.
Done at Milledgeville, the Capitol of the
Slate, on this, the 13th day of July, in the
year of our Lord, 1865, anc the eighty-ninth
year of American Independence.
Jas Johnson,
Pi ovisional Governor of Georgia.
By the Governor:
L. H. Briscoe, Secretary.
[communicated.)
To the Young Men of tlie South.
The people of the Southern States, as a
whole, have accepted the true results o£the
appeal to arms ; whether their cause was
just or not, it is not worth while now to en
quire,—the result is before them. After four
years of bloodshed, unparalleled in tho an
nals of history, we find that the supremacy
of the national authority,, in opposition to
States Rights, is sustained. Now what course
must we pursue in older to regain that which
has been sacrificed by tae total change in
our social and political relations ? What is
for our best interests ? Must we in order to
maintain our houor as soldiers of a defunct
government, still presetve a hostile attitude
towards the Udited States government agd
thereby force ourselves into tne position that
PolandTholds towards Russia ? or shall we as
free Americans set to work heart aud hand
with the general government, renew our al
legiance, assist in repairing the devastations
of war, encourage business, welcome to our
lauds thosq who would settle amongst us,
and thereby develope the resources of our
fruitful country ? Which course shall we
choose ? If the choice is the latter, (and
with niue-tenths of people I believe it will
be) then let us at once take the amnesty oath,
regain our rights as citizens, qualify ourselves
as voters to uecide upon the future destiny
of our respective States, assist iu putting the
To many of us the sudden change has been
as a lightning stroke, coming so quickly that
we are paralyzed; but this is but momentary.
To a large majority of the people.of the late
Confederate States ’the result must be bene
ficial The mechanic, the farmer and the
merchant, and all who have to earn their
bread by labor of both head and hands, will
be helped by the change. Instead of the la
bor and money of one-half of the population
being, as if was formerl/, in the hands of a
few men, who spent it at the North and in
Rurope in frivolous pleasures or pretended
business, it will be necessarily spent at home,
and will be so much more towards rebuilding
the wealth of the South.
This increase of the monied population
must build up towns aud cities, Where all
manner of business will be done, mercantile
and mechauical. And all experience has
proved that these necessarily foster the vari
ous professions, so that ail. classes will be
benefited by the change.
To those who thiuk that a system of
negro peonage will be allowed, I have noth
ing to say, but would respectfully refer them
to work already effected by tho Abolition
Societies of the north, and ask them if it is
possible.
Then let us strive to forget the past with
all, its painful recollections, aud accept the
destiny so clearly indicated by the horoscope
of the times.
OOLETHOKPB.
The Scene of the Execution. —Since the
execution of the conspirators the affairs of
the Arsenal Prison have gone on with little
change. The bodies of the criminal dead
still rest beueath the shadow of the western
wall, and the scaffold upon which they met
their doom is without change or disturbance.
Even the “drops" of the latter still remain
as they fell.
No order relative to the removal of the
bodies to the place prepared for them had
yet been promulgated. Tbq New York Her
ald’s correspondent says :
“It i3 surmised, however, that in a day or
two they will be placed upon a steamer un
der guard aud sent upon their way.—
Since the execution the prisoners are greatly
improved in health and general tempera
ment. Though without official notification
of the sentences that have been passed upon
them, they undoubtedly have learned their
fate from their counsel affid friends.” \
The top of the great wall overlooking the
prison yard is still faced night and day by
sentries posted at short intervals, and yet be
yond an extended circuit pf pickets keep
watch and ward over the outgoing and in
coming of every person leaving or approach
ing the arsenal grounds.
On Monday last the inmates of the prison
| had an acquisition to their number in the
, persons of the rebel General Harris and Pro
j lessor McCullough. The fbrmer, upon, his
j arrival, requested that the officers in charge
would tell him where he was. Upon learn
ing that he was abiding in the Penitentiary
| of the District of Columbia, he remarked
that it was a “damned pretty place to bring
a'man after four years of glorious revolution.”
McCullough thought it wag possible that
good might result iroin the rebellion, in that
it would teach the people of both sections of
the Union more regarding thd habits and pe
culiarities of each, besides furnishing Europe
with a grand exposition of our strength.
lt is said that the most disappointed
Uian about the Derby is Baron Rothschild,
who for twenty years has been ambitious to
win the world-famed prize; and trying to
find somebody who can tell him how to~ do
•it. His investments in this line, however,
have never testified the family reputation for
sagacity.
Doo-Dats.— We are now in the .midst of
the dog-days. They commenced on the 3d
instant, and end on the 11th of August. Be
fore the alteration of the style in 1752, they
began, according to some almanacs, on the
19th of July and ended on the 28th of Au
gust. Others differed from all these in the
times ot the commencing and ending ot the
dog-days.
When the ancients observed Sirius, (the
dogstar,) emerging from its conjunction with
the sun, they sacrificed a brown dog to ap
pease its rage, considering the star as the
cause of the sultry weather, incident to that
period. Such was the power of the heat as
cribed to Sirius, that, on the morning of its
first rising, according to their superstitious
belief, “the sea boiled, the wine turned sour,
dogs went mad, and all other creatures be
came languid ; causing to man, among the
diseases, burning fevers, hysterics, and
phrensies!” The supposed influence and ef
fects of the dogstar are however now explod
ed, and justly so, for, In point of fact, that
star not only varies in its rising every year,
as the latitude varies, but rises iater aud
later every year in all latitudes; so that when.
it rises in winter, which cannot take place
often iu five or six thousand years, it might,
with equal propriety be charged with increas
ing the frost. Sirius, the nearest to the earth
of all the fixed stars, is computed tc be 2, -
200,000,000,000 miles from our globe—a space
which cannot be passed by a cannon ball fly
ing with its calculated velocity of 480 miles
in oue hour, in less than 523;211 years.
Fort Pulaski. —This fort is regarded as
one of the healthiest places in the State. No
regiment has garrisoned it without a rapid
improvement in its health, and a manifest
decrease in. the per centage of sickness and
mortality. This was exhibited in the cases
of the 6th Regulars and the 30th Maine, and
already' in that of the 103d U. S. C. T. The
troops which were relieved, some weeks
since, by the 6th U. S., had at one lime only
one man in hospital, and he from a lame fin
ger. The location of the Fort, the lack of
means of dissipation, and the great cleanli
ness maintained account for this healthiness.
Captured Treasure Restored. —The Ma
con Telegraph says all the jewelry belonging
to the citizens, which was sent off on the
approach of the Union army, and was after
wards captured near Athens, has been turn
ed over, and will be in Macon in a few days;
and the gold captured from the Central Rail
road Company la9t April, has been returned
by the military authorities.
AUGUSTA .NEWS.
By the arrival of the steamer Jeff. Davis,
ftom August last evening, we are placed in
possession of Augusta papers to the 19th in
clusive, from which we take the following
items of interest:
The Augusta Savino’s Bank, at a meeting
held on the 17th inst., resolved to bill holders
fifteen per cent, on the face value of the bills
that being the extent of its ability to pay
after appropriating its capital and all its as
sets.
City Tax on Cotton.— The city of Augusta
has imposed a tax of one dollar per bale upon
all cotton entering the city.
Important. —The Constitutionalist learns
from reliable authority that shippers of do
mestics North, via the West, will be expect
ed to prove property at Atlanta.
Gov. Johnson. —Gov. Johnson arrived here
in the cars, rather unexpectedly, on Wednes
day last. A number of our citizens waited
upon him in a body in the afternoon, and
welcomed him among us.
The Governor has assumed his duties, hav
ing been qualified at Washington City. L.
H. Briscoe, Esq., of Milledgeville, has been
appointed his Private Secretary.
Gov. Johnson does not contemplate re
moving his family from Columbus, not ex
pecting to .continue in his office more than
about six monflis. He leaves us to-morrow
(Saturday; to visit his family in Columbus,
whom he has not seen since his return from
the North. He has promised to address the
people here on his return from Columbus, of
which we shall give timely notice, that the
people may attend from the country and sur
rounding counties. He speaks in Macon to
morrow afternoon at 5 o’clock, on bis way
hence. —Milledyvil/e Recorder , lith
The Expous fkom Texas.— Additional- ac
counts of the exodus of the rebels from Tex
as to Mexico are also given in the New York
Herald’s Galveston despatches. General Jo.
Shelby, with three thousand of his followers,
and accompanied by ex-Governors Moore
and Allen, of Louisiana, aud other extinguish
ed political luminaries of the late confeder
acy, were on the way. They had transpor
tation and supplies for six months, and all
were armed with the weapons which they
faithlessly failed to surrender to the national
government, in accordance with the terms of
Kirby Smith’s capitulation. They professed,
though, that they were merely-going to Mexi
co as emigrants, and not to nght for either
republicans or imperialists. Many of the
Texas people who choose or are compelled
to remain in their own State are much em
bittered against these fugitives, and especi
ally the leaders, who flee from the troubles
into which they have succeeded in getting
their helpless dupes. Those who stay be
hind are deeply engrossed and agitated just
now over the reconstruction, amnesty and
free labor questions, and are casting about
for the ways and means of surmounting the
general prostration in which the war has left
ail manner of industry in the State.
The Army and Navy Official Gazette, the publi
cation of which has just been suspended by the War
Department, should not be confounded with the
Army and Navy Journal, which is now left alone in
its special sphere of journalism. The Official Gazette
was intended only as a temporary means of communi
cating official orders and Information to the staff cores
aud and epartments. The Abmy and Navy Journal, in
addition to its official publications, embraces the
whole range of military journalism, and is designed to
be the permanent representative of onr Army and
N«ty s S jy9o j
The Rebel Prisoner* at Port Warren, j
[From the Boston Traveller, July 18.]
There are but few prisoners now at the
Fort, and they keep themselves quite close
when visitors go there. Among those seen
by the excursion*** yesterday was General
Barton aud Harry Gilmore, though it might
be supposed that the strains of “ Dixie” and
“My Maryland”from the band would Lave
brought them all out, if “The Star Spangled
Banner” and “ America” did not. Gilmore
is more retiring than he was a week or two
since, and did not make u dress parade ; and
it is said he does not feel particularly com
fortable in view of his approaching trial fop
treason. The general opinion is that he will
swing Vice President Stephens, whose
chances for life tre supposed to be good, is
not to be seen except between four and five 1
in the afternoon, when he takes his daily
walk. The rest of <the time he is kept under
close guard. He is in fair spirits, and mani
fests neither gloom regarding the present nor
forebodings concerning the future.
J|&b*rtis*nunts.
OFFICE SAVANNAH GAS LIGHT CO. >
July 19,18*35. /
All consumers In arrears for Gas Bills due on the
Ist July are notified that their bills must be
on or before SATURDAY, the 22d Inst. In default, ’
the flaw of Gas will be stopped without further notice.
, W. F. HOLLAND,
ly!9 3 Accountant.
■poß new york'
The Brig
MARY COBB, Captain Duncan,
Will have despatch fer the above port. For Pas
sage. having superior accommodations, apply to
Jy2i-3 HUNTER A GAMMELL.
P. MULLER.
CIVIL ENGINEER AND ARCHITECT.
Agent for the Sale of Lands. Will give strict atten
tion to Surveying, furnishing Plans for and superin
tending Buildings, all kinds Machinery, Ac.
Office, Sorrel’s building, next to Gas Office.
jy2l lm
m 7 J. SOLOMONS.
COMMISSION MERCHANT.
Will attend to the Selling or Receiving and For
warding all kinds of Merchandise. Produce, Ac.
Office for the present at the Drug Store of J. M,
Abrahams & Cos. jy2l-lm
h 7 A, TOPHAM. •
188 CONGRESS STREET, SAVANNAH, GA,
NO. 7 MERCHANTS' KOV7, aiLJON HEAD.
Calls the Attention and Retail pur
chasers to his superior Sfbck of
MILITARY, NAVAL and CITIZENS' CLOTHING,
BOOTS,
SHOES,
REGULATION HATS,
CAPS, and
GENTS’ FURNISHING GOODS.
For sale at the Lowest Market price.
Additions to the Stock received by every Steamer
from New York. ju2l-tf
gCHOOL NOTICE.
The having decided not to re-open the
University of Georgia for the present, I have com
menced a School for young men and boys In my Lec
ture Room. I propose organizing a Freshman Jand a
Sophomore class, which can be turned over to the
College whenever it msy be re-opened. Any study u*
the ordinary College course will be taught. Compe
tent assistance is engaged.
Tuition, five dollars per month; each month in ad
vance.
Board without Lodging can be had at from sl2>£ to
sls. with Lodging, at from sls to szo per month In
the city.
WILLIAM RUTHERFORD,
Prof. Mathematics. Astronomy and Civil Eng.
JySO 3 i University of Qeorgta.
h: 'O. ftl/WB A CO~7 r
Cobnee Bt. Julian Street awn Monument Square,
Near the Pulaski House,
WHOLESALE DEALERS
—in —* < ' ,
GROCERIES, FINE IMPORTED LIQUORS, WINES,
SEOARS, Ae-
Also Agents for two large and excellent Breweries,
at New York, from which we receive the be»t#f
ales and Lager bier.
Also, constantly on hand the best
EAST INDIA' UI,
We came down here very inexperienced in business,
as conducted under necessary mtiltary restrictions;
and coming unprovided with the proper papers for
our trade, we at first labored under many disadvan
tages. But we now consider ourselves well posted,
and having, strict compliance with all military
rules, been put on a good footing for disposing of our
Stock, with the proper license, we propose to offer
unusual Inducements to the trade. We shall give a
superior article at a small advance on New York
prices.
MONEY OR GOODS ADVANCED
FOR
COTTON, RICE, AND GENERAL PRODUCE.
Jyw . iw
'Ranted, 1
by a careful Tenant a FURNISHED ROUSE. In a
Co<>d locality Possession either in September. Octo
ber or November
. Apply HI >md 113 CongTessStreet,
jylS-tf l’reanor’e Old Stand.
jQOTTON RE-PACKEi). *“ ~
We have put up a Press for the.Re-packlng of Cot
ton and Wool at our Store No. US Hay street, oppo
site City Hotel,
,iylß-6 b. J. GUILMARTIN & CO.
£j.UNNY BAGGING.
25 bales GUNNY BAGGING,
l or sale by
WM. H. STARK,
jy2o-S Corner Bay and Lincoln afreets.
IMPORTED AND DOMESTIC
'
WINES AND LIQUORS,
AT wholesale, for family in,
AT 207 BAY STREET.
' »ay»«f o mAEL B *W.