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LpTS & HERALD
PUBUHHBD'BT
MASON fi. ESTILL,
srHKRT. SAVAISNAB, QA.
1,1 ' TERMS:
■ v n'"W3 AND HERALD ;.. $10 00
VwtVKL't NEWS AND HERALD $6 0C
■‘^oapic 5c ‘ ttU '
UiTKS OV ADVKIiTISING.
- A SQOARE iB ten UJ ® Mur ® d14068 of Nonpareil
‘"'Lm .so HEIUOD.
; .uVCiiTlSESlENTS.-Flrst insertion, *100
“’.■m-iMcli subsequent Insertion, 76 cents per
■ pf*! 0 * 1 ’
I ^"ijvertisementa for one month or longer will
I Verted at special rates which can be ascertained
I n me office.
tp continued disfranchisement aa
of retaining the controL 7,’
“Negro suffrage, enforcedHary the^orth,
means, practically, not negro equality, but ite-.
gro superiority; that the negroes, as a class,
mm.
KEtiRO SUFFRAGE
. a Viewed by a Northern Man.
[From the New York Round Table.]
■ Xe^ro suffrage in the Southern States is
mmonly looked upou as involving nothing
re t j ian a n admission of an additional num-
jf the people to a share in the government,
j. ^ taken to be like the recent extension of
. dra^e in England. Practically it is no such
ju'-tion. Negro suffrage in the South is not a
,re extension of the governing power to a
larger number of the people ; it is a proposition
', 0 o ,; V e power in our public affairs to anew
] strange people. It is not to bring a larger
•^portion of the community to the polls ; it is
m^rnmg&nmm
Of ;« >* h.lPEaiwwfcab,?---y
following is a copy of the bill passed Hay.15, iSfiB- j
Houseof Representatives on Thure- Oocnser Tr
7%! i
THE ABYSS.
introduce a new community. It is like, but
y 0r '; £ . than, a proposition to admit the Republic.
Hayti into the Union.
• Practically there are two separate commu-
ijieS in the bouth—a black community and a
white one. They are separate now and will
tilwavs remain separated. No human power
cin blend them into one. The white race in
this country will not mix with the black any
nijre than it will with the native Indian. The
whites and the blacks will not intermarry ; they
*i.l not visit each other’s houses; they will
„ 0[ fr 0 to church together. Au effort will be
made to force them together in the public
.-•bools; hut, like all laws which seek to twist
human nature violently back from its instincts,
this effort will simply intensify the repugnance
it seeks to overcome, and the law will be vio*
iited anJ evaded so extensively that little or
r.o education will be afforded to any one.
“ The blacks at the South constitute a black
people; the whites a white people. They can
not be blended into one people ; for whenever
the black and white blood do iutermix, the
mulatto progeny is rejected from among the
white people and remains a part of the black
commnnity. What is really proposed in negro
suffrage, then, is to constitute one state of
these two repelling elements, they being in
nearly equal proportion : to blend together 1
these two distinct and repulsive elements in
the work of a common government; to blend
together races which, even when they are mixed
for a moment, start back from each other in
stinctively, and remain separate; tc mix these
elements harmoniously in the great and diffi
cult work of public government, while in none
of the every day duties of life they can be
made to mix. It tlie blacks instead of bein;
•here were in their native Africa or in Hayti,
and had all the intelligence of our negroes, and
it were proposed to import into any Northern
State as many negroes as were equal to its
white population, with the condition that the
negroes should share, man for man, in the
common government — such a proposition
would excite universal horror. It would be
looked upon as the wildest absurdity to attempt
to compose an orderly and harmonious state
out of two discordant elements.
"No successful, orderly and prosperous State
wer wa9 so made up. Celt aud Saxon, who
aie very much nearer in blood relationship than
are the white man and the black, could not, in
England, make up a State, a common govern
ment, in which each were to take a part: one
race ruled. Norman and Saxon, who, by going
bat a few years back, could trace up a com
mon ancestry, could not make up a mixed gov
ernment of the two until intermarriage had
effaced the distinction between them. The
distinction cannot, in this instance, be effaced,
even in time, for tJie mulatto continues to be a
black. If all the Southern population became
mulattoes, that would not solve the difficulty ;
for the mulatto, as a race, will not live. It is
practically not a race, but, as its name imports
—a mule. In the mixed governments now
proposed for the South, the effort is to be
made, in spite of all the warnings of history,
to blend together the two races which are the
furthest apart in nature, and the most unlike of
any two races iu the world. The white man of
this country stands at the head of civilization ;
the black almost at the foot of the list of sava-
ges.
“The present population of the South is di
vided by a law higher than our laws into two
classes—distinctly marked classes. This di
vision is sure to be permanent. It is a natural
instinct in men so situated to cling to their own
class, to counsel only with it, to act only with
it. There will be. then, no political parties
there but the white party and the black party.
A few renegades from th * whites will, for the
sake of power, go over to be leaders of the
blacks, but in the main the division will always
be as now—whites on one side, blacks on the
other. Whichever of these parties may get the
ascendancy in local polities, the government
will be a class government, seeking the interest
not of a people, but of the ruling class. The
blacks have the ascendancy now not by their
own force, but by the aid of machinery sup
plied by the General Government. In some of
die States provision has been made for such
test-oaths as will deter most of tlie whites from
voting. In others, military arrangements have
been made for controlling dissatisfied whites.
In some, large bodies .of white men are directly
disfranchised and shut out from a share in the
government. So long as these mixed govern
ments exist, there will be a constant struggle
for one class or the other to get the upper
band. If the whites were in the ascendancy
now, no doubt nearly all the blacks would have
been shut out from a share in the government.
“There cap be no such thing as a blended
representation of the community as one people,
when the community itself Is not blended. The
State governments are sure to be class govern
ments, representing not the whole people, but
either the black as a ruling class, or the whites.
We are, in fact, narrowed down to this choice:
shall the white men rule in the South, or shall
tbe blacks there rule the whites ? Strive as we
tt ay, we shall be able to bring the problem only
to one or the other of these solutions.
“ The great evil of -negro government will
not be that a few negroes may get into
Congress or into the State Legislatures; that
w °uld be a small evil. A lew well-chosen ne
groes might teach good manners to some of
Jbe white members of the present .Congress.
Tbe great evil of negro suffrage is that it
meaQ 8, in many districts, negro justices of the
peace and negro constables. The home gov
ernments of neighborhoods are the govern
ments most important to the mass of men.
if these are not such as to conduce to order,
content and comfort, the country at large can
not have its just measure of peace, industry and
prosperity. There is no Northern neighbor
hood which could endure negro magistrates
and negro local officers; either the negro offi
cers would be expelled by violence or the
whites would abandon the. neighborhood.
“ There is no such thing possible as putting
the negroes and the white men at the South on
a footing of equality. Nature forbids It. Un
less they can be put on such an exact footing
of equality that in every relation of Kfe the
distinction of color is lost sight of, there can be
no such thing iu the representation of the peo
ple in the proposed governments at the South.
The public officers of all kinds will represent
one people or thw other; they wfllvepresent
me majority, and the majority will always be _
either the hit^t ••gnliuuvflly orAhe white tekfloV-it, wn if
people. Class -governments under universal $>QWBMneahsia- w fli
negro suffrage at the South a** 4he*ittfcie. The fit, however, by a
*totes, being disfranchised, cannot now a#»rt
their natural superiority; and the negro gov
ernments which may get into power
The
by the ftoosrW Representatives on Thanh-
day, and t>y virtue of whioh df is
that the Carolina* and the Golf State* will i
be carried comfortably back Into the
A BUI to admit the States of North QfimHha*
Sooth Carolina, Louisiana, Georgia and Katonton.
Alabama to representation iu Congress. j ~
Whereas, the people of North Carolina;
Sooth Carolina, Louisiana, Georgia and Ala
bama have, iu pursuance of the provisions
of an act, entitled, “An act for the paonr effi
cient government of the Rebel Sites, ” pass
ed March 2, 1867, and tbe acts supplementa
ry thereto, framed Constitutions of State
government which are republican iu form,
and have adopted said Constitutions by large
majorities of the votes cast at the elections
held for the ratification or rejection of the
s ime: Therefore /
Be it enacted by the Senate and 'House of Rep-
resentatives of the United Stales of America in
Congress assembled, That the States ol North
Carolina, South Carolina, Louisiana, Geor
gia, and Alabama shall be entitled aud ad
mitted to representation in Congress as Slates
of the Union when the Legislatures of said
States respectively shall have duly ratified
the amendment to the Constitution of tbe
United States proposed by the Thirty-ninth
Congress, and known os article fourteen,
upon the following fundamental conditions :
That the constitutions of said States shall
never be amended or changed so as to dis
criminate in favor of or against any citizens
or cla>s of citizens of the United States in
their right to vote who are now entitled to
vote by said cou6litutions respectively, ex
cept as a punishment tor snch crimes as are
now felonies at common jaw, whereof they
shall have been duly convicted; and no persen
t>liall ever be held to service or labor as a
punishment for crime in said States, except
by public officers charged with the custody
of convicts by the laws thereof; and that so
much of the seventeenth section of the fifth
article of the Constilnlion of the State of
Georgia as gives authority to Legislatures or
courts to repudiate debts contracted prior to
the first day of June r l86o, aod similar pro
visions iu all other of the Constitutions men
tioned in this Inti, shall be Hull and void as
against ail men who were loyal during the
whole time of the rebellion, and who, during
that time, supported the Union; and they
shall have the same rights in the courts and
elsewhere as if no rebellion had ever existed.
Sec. 2. And. be it further enacted, That if
i he day fixed for the meetiog of the L2gis!a-
ture of cither of said Slates by the Constitu
tion thereof* shall have passed before tbe
passage of this act, such Legislature may be
convened within thirty days after tbe pas
sage of this ac', by the president of the con
vention which framed the constitution of
such Stale.
Sec. 3. And t be it further enacted, That
the first section of ibis act shall take effect
when tbe President of the United Slates
shall officially proclaim the due ratification
by the Legislatures of said States respective
ly of article fourteen of the .amendments to
the Constitution of the United States, pro
posed by tbe Thirty-ninth Congress. And
it is hereby made the duty of the President,
within U n days alter receiving official infor
mation of the ratification of said amend
ment by the Legislature' of either of said
St ites, to issue a proclamation announcing
that fact.
r mx: iip
« at *e1f— ^ e ggg*osjv& ite.
vs&v ■
Mai *£ *£>-4? d -rt---
ftiKM isuas TUehtiffi '
.fcfrmdrtate; '
AEKIYK. . UiVK
^...^...,.. f .... t ..8id0A.ir
.........:.TAnpfa V
’ 6*AS-1». 5 R- I
......4:33 f. If... .4*5 P, 1L
«iumuw«.j.,,-3*0 P. II.
Connecting with train that loaves Augusta3:45. A. R*
DOWS DAt TBUK- ~ f
Sanaath: .... o:ft
JtKon ..T:..7:0*A. M.
Augosta 6:88 P.M
Connecting with train that leaves Augusta 8:45 A. M.
UP WIGHT TRAIN.
Savannah 7-50PII
Macon .:8:65 A M
Augusta...........,i 3:00 AM ^ ‘ -,t
OABOccioff with tr sin th at ;e&vt* Augpefca 10 :ip P. M.
DOWN RIGHT TRAIN.
Savannah .5:10 A M
Macon . I.... .6rW P H
Augusta. r.i...... .8:00 PM •
MflfedgevQle.....v............ .8:58P M... .9.-10P M
Ratonton.. 11:08 PM :
Connecting with train that leaves AQgasta i 0:1 OP. X.
majlS—ly
A. I> DEES S
Assistant Pnpertpt nrteat
Change of Schedule.
GENERAL SUPERINTENDENT’S OFFICE,)
’ An,Iktio & Gulf Rxjt,ko\i> Company,
Savannah, May 14tn, 1808.
O N AND AFTER MONDAY, the ISth Ins*ant, the
Schednle of Passenger Trains on this Road wi)
be as follows:
Leave Savannah daily (Sundays except-
at...
Arri e at Bidnbiidge....
Arrive at Ltve Oat
Arrive at Ballwin
Arrive at Jackdonville....
Arrive at Tallahissee
Arrive at Quincy
Leave Qalucy
Leave Tal ahassee
Leave Jackson rilie
Leave Baldwin
Leave Live Oat
Leave Bain bridge
. 00 AII
10 20 PM
B 80 P M
10 20 PM
..1145 PM
..10 60 PM
101AM
104> AM
12 60 P M
11 31 A M
1 03 PM
6 30 PM
8 60 PM
Arrive at savannah (Mondays excepted) au.GOO AM
Connect at Ballwin with trelus on Fiurida Rail
road, for 0&ine<iville, Femandina and Cedar Kej s.
Connect at Jacksonville with Brcci'sllncofstoam-
ors for Picolata, Palatka and Enterprise. I'on. eot ai
Bainbrldge with Bamett’a line cf sieamers for Oo-
(ninbus, KntauU acd Foit Gaines.
H. 9. HAINE 3 ,
may 15 —6t General aapcTintcprteuf.
Black Hawk Trotting Stallion,
SUMTEB,
O WNED IN THI1 CITY, will STAND to a limited
number of MARK?. Kor particulars apply at
the corner of Brou'hton and Abercorn «1s.. lo
may 11—2w LDKS CAR-ON.
DR. E. W. L'ENGLF,
of Florida.
DR. N. M. FNSRD,
of Georgia.
DRS. SNEED & L’EStiLE,
DENTAL SURGEONS*,
117 Congreo 81.1 Johnson fqnme,
(Between Bull and rt’hitafecr
SAVAKNAH, Si.
gif All Operations in Dental Surgery can b« per
formed without pain. Patrons will yleaee bo pnnr-
tnal to rngsgemei.ts. lBAyll"-Sm
A Lrokicfo the Horrors of Impeachment.
From the New York Times.
Tbe Kepublicaa party [11 -1 y ha ye reason to
thank these men lor having saved it from
sell-destruction, befure tbs contest is oyer.
The violent ejection of the President, for po
litical reason under the forms of impeacb-
meut, was never a Republican measure. It
never commanded the approval and settled
assent of the Republican pirty. It was tbe
reckless device of the radical section of lhat
parly, intended lo pnt the patronage of the
nation into its hands and to give it the abso
lute and complete control ot the Republican
sentimenc aud policy of the country.
It was forced upon the party by the un-
scrnpnlous audacity o( the Radical leaders,
aided by the obstinate and short-sighted pre
sumption of the President. If it had been
carried out, it would have added greatly to
the weight the party would bavo been forced
to carry, in tbe coming Presidential contest.
Republicanism would have been only another
name for Radicalism. Not only would tbe
parly have been onder the absolute control
of the Radical leaders, but it would have
been pervaded by tbe intense and intolerant
malignity of tbe Radical temper. The spirit
of Butler, of Steveus, of Chandler, and of
Wendell Phillips, wonld have ruled the
counsels, dictated the policy, monopolized
ihe patronage, aud seated the fate of the xto-
publican party. .
Everything like moderation, everything
which savored of regard for constitutional
principles, lor the rights of Stales and the
limitations .of power would have been
trampled under foot. The Jacobinical clubs
and Radical leagues which sit in secret and
proscribe all moderate men ot liberal and
conservative tendencies, us remorselessly as
the Jacobins proscribed the Moderates of the
French Reign of Terror, would have held
nndisputed and absolute sway, ouch a
state of things would not strengthen the lie-
publican party or contribute to its success m
the Presidential canvass. Nor would any
use which that party could make of the Ex
ecutive patronage between now aod .Novem
ber make up for the damages which the pre
dominance of such a temper would inflict
on the party at large.
A CnABurNO Bit of Objticism.—Mr. Ten
nyson, iu an admired passage of (Eione
says :
“ For now the noonday qoiet holds t|ia hill i
The grasshopper is edantla thegms ;
The lizard, with his shadow °“ thefltone, ^
Rests like a shadow, Ah* the cicada sleeps.
Upon this the Saturday Review appropri
ately remarks: An especial faatnw of the
cicada’s song is that it inoreascirfo intensity
when tbe aun is hottest, and, indeed, one of
the later Lati« poets mentions the line
when its monte at its highest as an alterna
tive expression -for neon. Mr. Tennvaon,
Dissolution of Co-Partnership
T ib firm of rob habebsham & son*
was dissolved on the lt>.b ultimo, by the deruL
uFA. TELFAIR HABERaHAM.
Thetuifii r^ipned Lave associated with them ROd-
BRT BEVERLEY HABERSHAM, andcrlhe style and
drm of ROB HABEE3HAM A CO.
ROBERT HABERSHAM,
apll—lm WM. NEYLKHABKBBHAM.
NOTICE.
J^£R. T. A. CANUET is my utrthorived «ttomc>
daring my temporary s’esena from the ciry.
may6—lawtf . A. S. CANUfiT.
BACON 1 BACON!
50 Hhds. Shoulders,
75 Hhds. Ribbed S des,
50 Hhds. Clear Ribbed Sides,
BALTIMORE CITY CURED, WAR
RANTED STRICTLY PRIME.
mayl—if
For sale by
HARNEY Sc CO.,
1« Stoddard’s Upper Ranee.
Sweet Chalybeate Springs,
(Formerly known as Bed sweat Springs,)
A LL HIGH AN Y OtUNTY, VIRGINIA—These favo-
rite ripriDga, bo tong known to th? pnblic, Will
bfeopenedontielstot JUNE. F>r lnformaiion far
terms of Bo trd, send for pamphlet free of charge,
jziyingfali desoripU- n of Waier, Route, eto. Can U-
Bad of-Kelly * Met, pablishers, Baltimore, or or lit
^JCoiSt THQ3. KtSKIRET.
SOUTHERN
LIFE I
PURELY A SOUTHERN INSTITUTION
PRINCIPAL OFFICES:
ATLANTA, 8A., MEMPHIS, TENN,
LOUISVILLE, Kf,
CAPITAL STOCK, $200,000
BOABD OF DIR30TOS9, ATLANTA, OA:
JonwaGoanmi,
IMP
J. M. JOHNBON,
of the grasshopper being *
and of the cicada sleeping
rtnv auiet holds the bi)L
mm
when the noon-
dav auiet-holds the hilE Without
back to the foontoin head; he^ might
remembered Keats’s Unea :
new-mown
T^t is the grosohop pot’s. v ;
But the s«Mdte«Mehte»onto the Qte^ppcin
KMiassgXiSUU
is called by Aristo-
of the cicada is
houxs of the.
SUBBS LIVES. AND PROMPTLY ADJUSTSUnd
?ays LoflflBKr-Xu printIpal bastaess ia with Booth-
-Sutes, and to them it apper a ror paironage. It
H»g Ample Beaof to fatly Protect f
ey Holders and Pay *11 Lortes.
Vtax>s Haxrxozr,
J F. Alkxandkk.
OFFICERS:
10RW B. GoBDOM. President; Ben. H. Hill, A. H*
ABO OF JHBBCT0B3. 1BWBIS, TOtfl:
*. a tunw Mempkta A urn* BOCA
wm&g* Shaiitat
HOOK Toux.cl, Cotton Factor, Mw«,lilOi
a ff- UBM'bl**' rmnita, ta-wynnto
JL Mown. Cotton gaawy* Momphli. ^ „
C. w: Pkazho. Attorney at Law, MnapbP.
Lnd Ur Theocritna Acrttema-acorohed Up
»ih» 2a. when all things arc parcbed with
ssa?
the no. When all things ate
mZHEX*u&s* aa»
noontide, and °* *
•un fire Mm
the
stocking lait. This, aa may be *
CL Wl Faxiaa. Attonwy at Law, M-aght*. a.
C. C. fivasnxa. Auctioneer and Commiasioa M*,
chant,LonlaVhlo, Kp. — '*
off there
ling off tbil >■ takii
laat.”
NET ASSETS OF
, -c. .■**?M68, WSf,*fT.V6-
- . . ■ - t£3U..5amg|
- ; gut,
GENERAL AQESSmiBE COMfEtt A®
spraALwrncE.
HAYWOOD, GAGE & CO.,
- BavoapooflUhateaswaodadesslv*
[ c e Sffywg’frj!
T\EaiQNATB» “ BAT itffc YnitraSr.^ Sn tlie
XJ BAT, te bonding torand, kaown as -Aaier-
T»a
NERVOUS AND OEBILIMO,
VTOOSE SUFFERINGS HAVE BEEN
PROTRACTED FROM HIDDEN
CAUSES, AND WHOSE CASES RE
QUIRE PROMPT TREATMENT TO
RENDER EXISTENCE DESIRABLE.
If you are suffering or have suffered from
uvoiuntary discharges, what effect does it
produce upon your general health ? Do you
feel weak, debilitated, easily tired ? Does a
little extra exertion produce palpitation of
the heart? Does your liver, or urinary or
gana, or your kidneys, frequently get out of
yrder? Is your urine sometimes thick,
milky, or flocky, or is it ropy on settling ?
Or does a thick scum rise to the top ? Oris
sediment at the bottom after it has stood
iwhile ? Do you have spells of short breath
ing or dyspepsia ? Are your bowels consti
pated ? Do you have spells of fainting or
rushes of blood lo tbe head ? Is your mem
ory impaired? I* your mind constantly
dwelling upon this subject? Do you feel
lull, listless, moping, tired of company, of
? Do you wish to be left alone, to get
iway from everybody ? Does any little
thing make you start or jump ? Is your
deep broken or restless 1 Is the lustre ot
/our eye as brilliant? Tbe bloom on your
cheek a9 bright ? Do you enjoy yourself in
society as well? Do you pursue your busi
ness with ihe same energy ? Do vou feel as
much confidence in yourself? Are your
;pirit8 dull and flagging, given to fits oi
melancholy ? If so, do not lay it to your
liver or dyspepsia. Have you restless nights?
Your back weak, your knees weak, and have
bat little appetite, and you attribute this to
lyspepsia or liver-complaint ?
Now, reader, self-abuse, venereal diseases
badly cured, and sexual excesses, are all ca
pable of producing a weakness of the gen
erative organs. The organs of generation,
when In perfect health, make the man. Did
you ever think that those bold, defiant, en-
rgetic, persevering, successful business men
we always those whose generative organs
ire in perfect health ? You never hear such
men complain of being melancholy, of ner
vousness, of palpi:ation of the heart. They
are never afraid they cannot succeed in basi-
;; they don’t become sad and discour
aged: they are always polite and pleasant in
the company of ladies, and look you and
ihem right in the face—none of your down
cast looks or any other meanness about
hem. I do not mean those who keep the
organs inflamed by running to excess. These
will not only ruin their constitutions, but
ilso those they do business with or for.
How many men from badly-cured diseases,
from tbe effects of self-abuse and excesses,
nave brought about that state of
in thoBe organa that has reduced the
system so much as %o induce almost every
other disease—idiocy, lunacy, paralysis,
spinal affections, suicide, aud almost every
other form of disease which humanity is
heir to, and the real cause of the trouble
scarcely ever suspected, and have doctored
for all but the right one.
Diseases of these organs require the use
of a diuretic.
Km. 196, 198, 200 and 202,
arhera tfcsy Will keep const nitty bn lriuKla?
plj oMCE. toffsotobrtae <*n
Oar facilities are. such aa to
SH order* with dispatch.
. 49- “ ’
north
Participation Policies
ISSUED BY THE
4WWIi INiKJlB H
OF, SAVANNAH..
7 V n .i ..-U
i f.is teuut Av st.-is
■M———
i! ,u.j uj u m mtm
BRICES CENTS.
■ Orders m«y atao be left at their former office,
aide of Market Square. apSO—103
spr204f
OFFICE, 07 Bay Street.
oonisr i
onnn bushbls primb white corn,
4LUUU 1600 barters OATS,
NORTHERN and EASTERN HAY constantly on
hand aud for sale by E. B. CHI PM AN,
177 Hay street,
mh25—tf Between Barnard and Whitaker.
BOOKKEEPING.
JJUPFY’S BOOK-KEEPING, by
Us Entry—Price $3 76
Harris' Book-keeping, 2 60
For sole at ESTILL’a NEWS DEPOT,
feb«4 Bu 1 ! street, next to 'he Post Offioe.
CHEESE, CHEESE!
25
BOXES STATE CHEESE,
WRAPPING PAPER,
100
For sale bv
apSl—II WILLIAMS. WARD A ifeINTIBE.
SOAP, SOAP.
25 BOXES SOAP.
For sole by
apU-tf WILLIAMS, WARD & HcINTIRE.
Af W 5*'JI t>s£i
» bseufju
Uf? t, Uo tiw i-t
«!*' as>
^JtQVAJtata va< -
^ » PREN€H»RES6
6 Ctl^OA K-M A KI N O X
cfMaa
Tamps Oil;
“"cSSltlra. 1S3 BMtathtn Ota,''
ai-ort kA k
1
Ct^TttES-WWNfiERS
AJtD .
BOlMINISm
68 ST. JULEBN
AND
XOl Bryan streets,
. SAVANNAH,
leLA-am
GA.
Wholesale Grocers,
ABERCORN AND BRYAN S’
L
OOR.
Savannah, 6a.
WM. s. AWntASqM. WM.A.
ocll-ly ■ . -
, I
Buawu.
JOHN McMAHON & CO,
DSALXBff IH
Groceries, Corn, Oats, Hay
Feed, &c..
tOHER H81HHT0II AID JIFHISIIIJIIITS.
WINDOW SHADES, §r All orders promptly attended to. Jy24-ly
WINDOW SHADES!
AT EXTREMELY LOW PRICES, IN
NEW AND ELEGANT PATTERNS.
ALSO,
Lace Window Curtains
AT LOW PRICKS AT
3? E J? 3? E R 5 S T
miyfi-tf 119 and 121 CONGKKS8 ATH.fc.BT*
600
In store and for sale at
City Marshal's Sale.
TTNDER RESOLUTION of tte City Council of 8a-
U vannah, and axu.lt-r direction of the Commit:te
onPaullcSiiea ahd C!ty Lot*. I will toil at pabliq
outcry, on the premie**, rtn WjtDNS3DAY, the i3th
iostant, at 11 o'clock o. m , ('.omir.ftieing in Btepflcns
Word,) all those LOTS OF LAN U, burner h par*, of the
City doma>u. known a? LOTS NOS 13,14, 15, MTt£-
PH6NS WARD con!a;tiiitK 62 Jeet irnht (each) on
HunUngdoo B'reet, and 141 teet 6 Inches (eaefi) In
depth. LOTS 30 and 3V LLOYD WARD, contain
ing (each) 61 feet 6 Delias front on Gwlunstt a jeet,
and HO Let each in depth.
Teems op Salk: Twenty per cent, cash of tho ag
gregate valuation and Increase money, and interest
on tbe balance of the purchase money, to be paid
semi-annually at the city treasury, at thj rate of
seven per cent, per annum, witn the privilege to
puichaeeraof paying into the treasury tt.e balance
remaining unpaid of the pnrchaee money, and ail
Interest dne thereon up to ihe time of said payment,
and receiving thereafter a fe<» slmplo title.
THOMAS &■ WAYNE,
City
TO PURCHASERS OF CITY LOTS.
CITY OF SAVANNAH, 1
Office Clerk of Council, May 1,1868.)
(.Extract from Minutes of Council Meeting April
2&th, 1S6S.J
* * • - •
BFSOl.tmONB ADOPTED.
By Finance Committee-
Resolved, That hereafter the purchasers of city
lots be required to pay np the twenty -per on
sold loti within ten days after tho sale of the same,
or the lots to reteit to the city.
FLUID EXIBACT
BUCHU
IS THE GREAT DIURETIC,
4V.FBICB-UM ** *0ata, Or a*
.^^11
LAND PLASTER!
BBL£. RhD EE1H LAUD PLASTER.
Twenty-five Dollars Per Ton.
BRIGHAM, HOL8T A CO.
OF Tfl£
Jas. W. KeogL,
wm. h: peck,
{■ft* wAsatlSTe, strut,
to itwuMt SSHk ■ 5 > *• :
Commission Dealer In.
SOUTHER!* GREEN PEAS,
>** BEAN3.-NEW POTATOES,
TOMATOES, PEACHES,
> ,/ ^ io* V-
«r CUSHftWWSTS IOUCITBD. .f|
AGENTS WAKTJSa*
£ i , -.FOB THM :
Ltife of: Jefferson Davis
B Y FRANK H. AUfBfS*P. or fiiaxnon».^TUs
Is the only fall, authentic and ottci&l history of
tbs Life and -FnMio ^erviewt oi .the great Southern
leader. Mr. Abriend has hud the co-operation and
feistanc? ol thele^dint? Coniei
to all
" cir
colors, with terms. Addret* NATIONAL FUBLI
ING uo., Atlanta, Ga. mayl—Hn*
WM, ESTILL, Jr.,
NEWSDEALER
Boll St., Next to the Post Office,
(DOWS STAIRS,)
SAVANNAH, GEORGIA.
CHARLES GREEN, 80S A TO.
i t , - CHARLES GREEN A. BON.
Savannah, Go., May 1st, 1868. ? Suyi—1m
t, H. STBOUS.
Savaiiuali Steam Bakery,'
67 & 89 BAY STREET.
«3 A.VANTKTAII, GA.
Manufaeturere of rfl klhda of
SHIP BREAD and CRACKERS.
■"Orders for shipping promptly attended to,
8TROUS & RTJWE,
>5—3m PROPRIETORS.
LAIRD, BROWN * SMITH.
Shipping Rian tern and Notarial Pals He,
Corner ef Bay and Lincoln streets, Cover Wxa. B,
btark It Co’a Store,)
SAVANNAH
O SKWS 8HIPPED and pat on board at tfcs short
en notice. Marine F.oteota noted and extended.
sapll- ty
Chbis. BIuufhx. " Cjoas. Cx-*HR..
MURPHY & CLARK,
HOUSE, tilSI, SHIP ail STEAMBOAT
PAIN TEES.
OILDINli, GBAnna, MIHBI HG «!>»■
From this Date,
lfk JOSIATI GREEN LOW. Mr. CIIA8- GREEN,
IR JR-, of Savonnsh^and Mr. ALFRND H3BELL,
meJmctners la oar hoaea, Bader
becnaa
and style t S
CAUCELIMd and BUSINESS
STAMPS,
FUHNlflH THH FOLLOWING CANCELING
trr AliPS at makers’ prices :
~ * 8tam;t, wltli dto and date*
completer §9; 8e?omb T s Banking House Stamp, with
out a tte, from $14 to“$15; extr “ ““ ' -
.. T _, .JSSifM/a
BfbtMHu, from $l ito to $3; Dates. $S lo extra.
Address orders to WM. ESTILL Jn.
Ball street, next to the Post office,
BimBr'SRirpoieoY.
SENSE; ob. SATURDAY NIGHT MU&-
1NGS AND THOUGHTFUL PAPERS.
By “Brick" Pbiucroy. Price, $1.50.
NONSENSE; on, HITS AND CRITICISMS
ON THE FOLLIES OF THE DAT. By
••Brick* Ponaetoy. Price, $1.50.
1 ,. -fi « FOR SALK AT
ESTILL’S SEWS DEPOT,
BULL BTRifiT, NEXT TO THE POST OFFICE.
tobll—t
THE AGENT OF
>|llB(«ay) “COMMON SENSE SEWING MA-
X CttlNAd” Is happy in announcing to a long
expectant public their arrival. He aiaerts their sa-
pedority over any and all othera, when the mowing
Leporiont coMuleratlona are well weighed:
let. Their extreme simplicity of construction, sad
conecquunt ocn-liabihty to get gnt of repair.
Mi. Th« dr compactness; may be carried onder say
A true extract Attest:
may4—9t
JAMES STEWART.
Clerk of Connell.
CHEAP EDITION OF DICKENS.
JUST RRCKIVKD a Fmrth.r s.pply o,
SRETCHES BY “BOZ." 2fl cente.
OUR MUTUAL FRIEND 10 cent?.
A TALE OT TWOCITIES.. cents.
PICKWICK PAPERS; 25 tamta.
.2gcentfc :
25 cents.
MARTIN CHUZZtEWrr.._........23 contB.
CHRISTMAS STORIES. .. 2s centa.
NICHOLAS NICKLEBY 25 cents.
DOM.BEY AND SON 25 centa.
HARD TIMES.... v... .25 cents.
* ^ FOB ^
KSTILL’8 NEWS DEPOT,
O>F70»:
zino,
ASK PRSrPiftEB TO SSL6, AT WHQW-
jiLB AND KKTAIL. PAINTS. OIL, «LAB8,
PUTTY, aad VARNISH US; HHEJ PAINTa.
BSttNHKA ot ever, dasirtptton, MlcHlKZBY »d4
HARNESS OIL, AXLE ettEASK, teo. , _a i
77 Bry.n S«.. t.we«* B.1I»nA BtalWli
«M4—ly SAVANNAH, GA. '■
- - - -- a » i • ■ ■ - - te
W. 3T.
jt Tj (BBCoetoOT to W. H. HAT.,
WhotesalH and Retail Dealer In
lj>
^ ^ l
JJA3 JUST received a Hew Stock of ^ ^
with earn, un observed,
3d. Will sew ae i .oh auy deelred length—every
third one of which may he Revered, rtSi not rip or
pall apart.
4th. (Rot least) the price for them IS only $10,
CASH—$ffi lea* than they can be obtained for at re
tail oi the Manufacturer. Indeed they ore
THE 08LY TRUE
LOWEST PRICED Machines in the market that are
war looted 1 (except wear and breakage of needle*) to
remain in repair five years, aud wiffsew any kind
of fabric, from the most delicate huoaltoa lace to a
ar*Piitxonfl will be served by a LADE wholly con -
Tenant rifth tfa- m, and aH n-emsazy 1 attraction*
rives. SOOTH J3HQAD MTkEKI. north rid* be
tween Bernard and Whitaker, diractlj oppoatte the
NE£DttW0MAN*S FRIEND
SOCIETY'S OFFICE, AI THR atON
t
feta
Rustic Floral Basket,
MO^uiwA... ...