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VOL. 4—NO. 17
NEWS & HERYLD.
[SHED BX
ESTILL,
W—g——WM—
a snojtastn lo seglf f ; )0 e bwjbIs« | A _ «• , 2XZ2Z
08 STJ, IgtiJ rfSlSw .BBSlSnoO lo fiWL • J I )*>'i oj.t ' la'JJ
iaA W * _5 J
GrEWRfflEir SATURDAY, .JULY 25,1868
published BX
J. H. ESTILL, 1"
OS
IU BAY BfOBST. SAVANNAH, »A.
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strike ino Attack, attack, . - H .
the war into Africa!—assault id the r ;lroiit:
“ the flanks, in the rear, everywhere; bn'.
r cease to attack, never, even in defend- - Omissions and
mit offensive blows! Tbelate war
issue; it was long ago consigned
If there were blunders in its mai
• V-ffiem; if
it is too late to re
The Key-Note of the campaign.
[From the New York Worid.l
We extricate from the mass of matter in
which it appeared yesterday, and republish
with more prominence, the letter of Mr.
Samuel J. Tilden to the Seymour and Blair
ratification meeting at Washington. It
seems to us to deserve the meditation of the
Democratic press throughout the country, as
suggesting the theatre, the tactics, and the
issues of the great approaching battle for
good government
The theatre—the great belt of populous
free Slates which stretches from the Hudson
;o the Mississippi and beyond. Ip this mag
nificent belt resides tbe mass of our people—
here is the chief seat of American industry,
commerce, and political influence. Outly
ing fanatical New England, and the outlying
desolated South, are of little account in the
campaign.
Tnetactics—attack! attack! attack!—the
defensive, when occasionally it may be ex
pedient to assume the defensive, must be
conducted in an offensive spirit, with aggres
sive energy. Attack! attack! attack!—carry
tbe war into Africa; never cease to deliver
thundering blows on the helmet of the Rad
icals.
The issues—two (no others are worth re
garding), opposition to negro supremacy,
and opposition to the monstrous fiscal ex
travagance of the Republican party. The
Democratic party demands that the political
influence of our great, fertile seats of popu
lation shall not be dwarfed and overshad
owed by tbe twelve Sonators from the di
minutive States of New England plus the
twenty Senators who will represent tbe
emancipated Africans. The Democratic
party demands that the gigantic war taxes
and war expenditures, which have been so
long kept up in lime of peace, shall be dis
continued. Money enough haB been raised
in taxes since the close of the war to pay
more than half ot tbe national debt. And
where has it gone? It has been engulphed
in tbe Africanized South; it has been used
to enthrone negro ignorance and barbarism
upon the ruins of while intelligence and
civilization. Bnt we are attempting to say,
in olher words, what is better said in Mr.
Tilden’s letter, which we here reproduce:
LETTER OF S. J. TILDEN.
New Yoke, July 17. '
J. D. Hoover, Esq., Chairman, etc.:
Sly Dear Sir— Yonr letter of the 15th inf
slant, inviting me to address a Democratic
ratification meeting to be held in 'Washing
ton to-morrow, is received. I regret that eni-
gagements which I am not able to defer
render it impossible for me to be present op
so interesting an occasion.
The political contest now begun is, in my
judgment, the most important ever waged
upon this continent.
The great theatre of that contest will be
the populous and powerful commonwealths
which stretch from the Hudson to the Mis.
sissippi. The people of these common
wealths, by their votes next November, will
practically determine the fate of constitn
tional freedom in the New World. 1 believe
that they will determine it ia conformity
with the traditions of our race and tbe prin
ciples of onr institutions. I believe that the
public opinion ot these great States is ripe
to demand a complete change in tbe policy
of the Federal Government as carried on for
four years past by an intolerant Congres
sional majority, against tbe unavailing bat
patriotic resistance of President Johnson.
I believe this because I recognize two
grand and predominant ideas moving the
popular mind to demand such a change.
These are Justice to the People and
Economy in the Government.
Justice to the People ! This i3 threatened
by a Senatorial oligarchy, which, having al
ready absorbed into itself the powers ex
pressly delegated by the Constitution to the
judicial and to the executive branches of the
Government, seeks now to perpetuate itself
by a system under which Senators of straw,
nominated to order by three millions of
newly-enfranchised negroes, shall exert
twice as much political power as tbe repre
sentatives of thirteen millions and a half j of
our own race, ruling the great belt of She.
Union between tbe Atlantic, the Mississippi;
and the Lakes !
Economy is the Government!—This is
impossible under a system which, with its
cognate systems, annually consumes a sum
nearly equivalent to all tbe net earning of
labor, and all the net capital in our country;
and which in a time of peace, maintaining
mailial law over one half the Republic, de
votes eleven millions of dollars a month to
the support of a standing army, in addition
to the pensions, to the cost of the navy, to
the ontlay on tbe public debt, and to the
general expenses of a civil administration
requiting an official force such as in former
and happiefr times Americans were wont to
regard as the exclusive curse and calamity
of the military and despotic monarchies of
Europe.
The people of this country are too intelli
gent to expect either justice to themselves,
or economy in their government, from the
chosen and willing military agents of Con-
ition. The American army,
_• and whose achievements are
pride and boast, has
lie nation’s heart, not as the
/ bnt as the shield of the _
jof that army to-day has done in-
fits gallant past, by accepting from
an usurping Congress functions expressly
conferred; by the Constitution upon the high
est civil magistracy of the nation.
Tbe Amlerican people, and the soldiers of
America, wrho are also the citizens of Ameri
ca, will baye no snch leader in the work of
‘ ng civil liberty throughout this
['expensive.
if it
essly protracted
a incurred .__
expenditures in lime 'pf jpettmA
taxes, not to pay tbe debt but to erect
race into opr rulers, is a bnr-
iob **inpy,gwaq,.a Kgfflen,
to be perpetual, and wr
white race m
' .aye been colled
Ahe clQse'pf.the"
, "bestowed $2.500 each on
voter that hps been marfe. Tiff
Federal Government has no .mpre
raise enormous sums to
brutish black barbarians ml
rulers, than it would h^ye to take eqi
of money out:of;onr pockets to bi
farms.
> LET US HAVE PEACE.”
. , ol Importance Hiving oc*
cnfredln the platform adopted by the National Con
a corrected term; and aalt hr deair able that all
and impressed with the prill-
t riples it enunciates, we wUl keep it standing in
Omni as krngaa convenience will allow:
, .. __ PLATFORM. . * . '
upon the MSglS
‘■tee e toSme?n^8hS«"i
assembled, and never to
;
civil government to the American people.
Second. Amnesty for su paatpoUtieri of
lyjhMrmtiaena.
Significant, Article from the President’s
Organ at Washington.’., '
[From the National Intelligencer of Friday.)
More than three years have passed away
sinee the rebel arniiea were dispersed and
the rebellion wa9 crushed.' Not 1 a single
effort has been made since Lee’s ‘surrender
to resist the national authority, or to prevent
friendship and harmony. The, South bad
and bas the greatest interest in a condition of
perfect peace, because through that agency
alone can its prosperity be'recovered br Us
losses repaired. And yet the state of the
country Is really worse to-day than it’was at
the close of the war, and hag been made-so
entirely by the determinatfoh of the Radical
rulers to foment discord and prolong strife
in the interests cf their political ascendancy.
Restore the South to.Its normal relations in
the Union, let comm'erco and intercourse re-
tnme their accustomed ways, revive credit
and confidence between the two sections,
and the Radical party would at once cease to
exist, and be dissolved'by a natural law. It
lives by agitation alone, 'and hence all its
policy is directed to keep up agitation.
It is for this 'reason that;all the various;
schemes of reconstruction have been ih-
vented toopprsas and degrade the Southern
people; lt[&t a 'military despotism morel
odious and outrageous than any -‘devised by
Austrian tyranny has been 1 'Continued; that
the Free'dmen’s Bureau'has! been extended,
and that bloody riots have, been endotfraged
to influence public opinion. AH’these dia-
bolical inventions were 'contrived for the sin
gle purpose of keeping np irritation; and of
excluding the Sbiilti from the Union. Had
there been the least sincere wish for peace,
or any capacity in Congress to bring it abont,
all these differences would have been settled,
and all the wounds closed at the-very first
session after the war had ceased. 1-1
Bnt there was no such intention, and- ho
snch desire. The best proof ot that fact is
to be found in tbe bitterness with which thfi
conciliatory course of Mr. Lincoln, wfis pnrj-
sued,'and the manner in which, he wasper.
sonally persecuted by the Sumners, Stevenses
and others, who, since his death, have been
seeking popularity out of the memory of the
man whom they had unscrupulously assailed
while liviog. They sought ~ to stimnlate bad
passions' in the Sobtj), and to provoke resent
ment by the , most cruel and dastardly
wrongs, hoping to convert that resentment
into political capital, and to speculate upon
it as an article of trade. This is tbe spirit
in which they have treated a prond and pros
trate people of their own blood, and after
imposing terms most disgraceful to our age
and civilization they expect them- to kiss the
rod, and to accept their degradation as a
Now that they have established negro su
premacy by the power of the bayonet; that
they have subjected the white men, women
and children of tbe South to the brntal bar
barism of their former slaves; that they have
elevated ignorance, 1 vice, loatbeome' sensu
ality, and crime into the high places of trnbt
and honor, above virtue, integrity, intelli
gence and education; that they hdve overrun
the South with plundering adventurers, cant
ing hypocrites, and carpet-bag knaves; thjat'
they have, 'bjr force and fraud and villain^
secured possession of the State government
and placed the whole political -power in -theJ
hinds of hirednegro emissaries and thieving
agents of the Fieedmen’s Bureau; and that
they have robbed a rained people of almost
their last dbflaj.'by pn infamous system Jot
taxation, imposed ‘-negrpes destitute of
property and debased in ignorance, after
committing these crimes, and others equally
atrocious, their leader,' General Grant, uncler
the instructions of his keepers, has the hs-
surance to say, “Lit ns have peace!” The
men who bave kept-up the war daring the
last three years, and who design to keep it
up in the fatale as they have done in i be
past; on the - eve of the election cry i >ut
“peace !” that is to say, a peace which is to
bow down in' submission before- negro- su
premacy, audjto accept it as a condition of
toleration. ....
We tell these vindictive and 1 deeper ite
destructives that there can be no real a pe ice
so long as tbe white race of tbe South is
snbjeciedjtq the role of^ the black, and that
the return of all material prosperityHr
do '
gressional
•whose
the nation’i
dcared to
of power,
The head
justice to
ments are
been en-
the sword
i people.
reconstruc]
country.
They dedband a leader who shall represent
their deliberate attachment to the principles
of free government, and their deliberate re
solve to see tbtpse
maintained,
feet a thoroughNand sweeping change in the
existing condition of public affairs. Snch a
leader we now sett before them!
The nominations^ which yon are about to
ratify reprei
ment of the
held in this 1 ?ountrj% for eight years past.
They attest dike Abe voice of the greal
North demandbg justice, economy, and the
Constitution, a\d the Aoice of the bouth ao-
cepting fully an\ in go J
lnble Union, wit\ a fl * 1
and dmies.
The Democrats party]
that Convention t&sembl
“think with ns the
our common conntr:
standard as equal ’,
In this great coi.tea
of defence. We c,
And, speaking from
ban thirty years of potfcai J
Political action, I do n
faith
obligations, hopes
. hartal
in whose name
invite all who
dogs concerning
■’ly> around onr
id brothers,
wage no war
s into Africa!,
fence of more
serve -ion and
to EAy that
iommation contioi
possible while'that
They devised, it with perverse ingenuity, to
shut out a possibility of reconciliation, ind
as a means of prolopgiog sectional strifej -
Let us hot be 'deceived by the hypocrisy 1
of those’who prate of “peace,” and Whose
policy is war. They seek t& embroil [the
mm '-"* war, in tbe hop
thousand million
country m ane:
distributing another
® J t they see;
forget that’if such a calamity should i
bafle tbe‘country tty their wicked and
ful design’s; it will ’• involve no local
sion or interest, bnt every man who
the Constitution, who respects itsiobbga-
tions, who is determined to preserve.thJlifc-
erties and rights which it guarantees, land 1
who is opposed Uf the subjection of tbe white
race to the negnr. The soldiers who
into the war of the . rebellion volunteers
fight for the Unjon, under a solemn pledge
made,by,both-brpncm^jOrCqngress' that it
was not to,bq prpseppt^d for any^purpose of *,
subjugation. They were^betrayed then, but
they will not be deceived again. Tbe war
was converted Into a political crusade for
power, and mow« with three thousand mil
lions of debt; and half a million of lives sacri
ficed they propose to renew it with the sole ob-
ncy thus frandn-
ficedthey propose to rene
ject of preserving an ascei - uu ..
lently obtained. Arid In order to promote that
scheme, they have cast aside all their own
leaders, repudiatednhe men by whose ability
and skill the party was created and adopted
the General Of our _ armies -as a candidate,
looking ttttSla mtended contmgenoy. Kueh
is the explanation of his nomination, 1 and
the true reading of the canting words which
they have put into, his month, - ‘ ’Let ns. have
peace.” -They intend another civil war, and
have so shaped: their measures ; as to render
it almost inexit&W®* Geo. Qrant is notigno-
rant of these designs, and he is.thr-
our indisso- venient instrument.
The conntiyriA, SfiL be
tatty evidence, ^idicsiisin has
upon Conriitsljsb’iy^lpl 1 W?
war on the.Judiciary *
erties, war .op „
against every principle
fathers. Its aim is.to dest. oy. Xt
subvert [bij form Of,
n no Presidential confl.r since*-the days °f
Andrew Jackson have ,mens < of victory to
any party or any cause aen go , clear, •'I 'm-
merons, and so inspirinns tbr.-'W- Which now I
Leer U»e party or the ..tionaj , Democn.cy 1
“0 battle in the cause oy.m e rr oan 'liberty.
With much respect, t ly ~ -
£. ,T V, .LDEW.
This letter pifehes t, pt ns all
erect a m:
and it will j
less, to XUai
three jf
has
dan^
th:
The Democratic Platform.
or t:
Con
ioWrl'S^
and bf civil rot
the States
I Third. Tbe payment of the publto debt of tbe Uni
ted Stated as rapidly ae practicable; all moneys
drawn Worn the,people by taxation, except so much
as is requisite Mr the necessities- of tbe government
eminent do not exj&eMftr state upon their face, or
thoUw — **' *
— _.. under which they were issued does not pro
vide that they shall ba paid ia cola, they ought, in
. Bqa»l taxation or every species or property
; to its real value, including bonds and other
o?theSSltodatatek^ PlUd ** 1110laWfalmonej
j Fourth,
according
puolic securities.
Fifth. One currency for tbe Government end tbe
people, tbe lsborer end tbe office-bolder, the pen
sioner end the soldier, the prodneer snd the bond
holder.
Sixth. Economy in the administration of the eov-
■nmanl; the reduction of the standing army and
navy; the abolition of tbs Freedman's fiureau, end'
.11 political iustrumouta-ities desiguod to seenre negro
_ elmpUflcstioa of the system and diBcon-
tiuuance of inqaisitorlsl modes of assessing end col-
lecrtng lntern»J^ e»euue, eo that tbe burden ot taxs-
Uoa msy be tqasuso^ end lessened, tbe credit of the
Government and tbe currency made goodt'tho repeal
ot Ml enactments for enrolling tbe State militia into
national foroes iu time of peace, and a tariff for
revenue npon foreign imports, snd sneb equal taxa
tion under the internal revenue laws as will afford
incidental protection to dom'estio manufactures, and
as will, wltboutimpairing the revenue, impose Ufa
least burden npon aud best promote and encourage
tbs great industrial interests of the country.n
Seventh. Reform of abuses in the administration;
expulsion of corrupt men from office; abrogation of
useless offloes; the restontUon of rlghttni authority
:e of, the executive and Judi-
government; the subordina
tion of the military to the civU power, to the end
that the usurpations of Congress and the despotism
of tho sword may cease.
Eigbtu. Equairighta and protection for naturalized
and native bom citizen, at borne and abroad; the
assertion of American nationality which shall com
mand the respect of foreign, powers, snd lnrnish an
example sad encouragement to people struggling lor
national integrity, ounstitntional liberty snd Inch-.
vidual rights, and the maintenance ol the rights of
naturalized clOzena.againit tbe absolute doctrine of
immutable' allegiance, and the claims of foreign
powers to pOnisu them for alleged crime committed
^^nTSKe^nres and reforms we ar
raign the Radical party for its disregard of right and
the unparalened oppreasioa snd tyranny which have'
marked its career. After a most solemn and unani
mous pledge of both Houses of Congress to prosecute
the war exclusively for tbe maintenance of the gov
ernment and tbe preservation of the Union under the
Constitution, it. has rsnestediy violated that most sa
cred pledge.under which alone rallied that noble vol
unteer army which earned our ffag to victory.
Instead ot restoring-the Union, it has so far aa in its
power dissolved it snd subjected ten States, in time
of profound peace, to military uespotism and negro
supremacy. It has nullified there the right of -trial
by, jury; it baa abolished the hattecu corpus, that most
Bacred writ ol liberty; It has overthrown the freedom
or speech and the press; It has suostituted aroltrary
eelzures and arrest*, and military pials snd secret
star chamber inquisitions lor the constltutloual tri
bunals; It has disregarded in tithe ol peace the right
of the pebple to bo free from searches snd seizures;
post and telegraph
S P ^vs«e^iSr«^ ..
ebarge or notice of affidavit, aa required by the or
ganic law; it has'converted tbe American cepitol Into
a bsatlie;it has established a symstem of spies and
official espionage to which no constitutional mon
archy of Europe would how dare to resort; It has
abolished the right uf appeal on important constltu-
al questions to the, supreme judicial tribunals,
toreatei - ----- .
diction, wh
tton; while
joetedtothe moat atrociuui Calumnies, merely be
came he would not prostitute his h’gh office to the
support of the false slid partisan charges preferred
against the Fresident.: lie corruption aud extrava
gance have' exceeded' anything known In history,
and by its frauds find-monopolies it has nearly dou
bled the bnrden of the dent created by the war. It
has. .Lijpped'ths President ol his coustitul
ul power or appointmeut even of his own cabi
net. Under its repeated assaults the pillars of the
government are rocking on their bass, aud should it
do declare sud resolve that ever _
ho United states threw off sU anbj
tish crown the' privilege and tru.t of sur-
to tho several states, and have
exclusively
people of the f Tj —-- ■ .'.-'ri^W .
to the British
have be]
6y the political power of eacu State respectively, and
that any attempt by Uongress, on Soy pretext What-'
ever, to deprive any State of this right, or interfere
with us exercise,'Is a fUg'rant usurpation of power
Which can find no warrant in tbe constitution ;
and if sanctioned by the people will subvert our
form of guVBrnment, snd can only end In a a single
centralized snd consolidated government, in which
the separateieziseencs iff; the States will do entirely
ira . ov. ■
autoroed and an anqoahfied despotism be established
in piaci of»Ffiilecal Union of.co-cqual States; -aud
that we regerdithe reoonscrnctlon acts (ao-caUedj of
Uongress, as pi
(so-called; of
nsorpstions and nnconstnu-
— —-(; that our soldiers sad
our Country to victory
prminart foe must ever
be gratefully .remembered, sod all the guarantees
given in tbcicf.vor most be faithfully carried iiito
execution.
That the public 'lands should be distributed, as
widely as posstnid among tne people, and should be
disposed of either nuder the pre-emptlou of hoffib.
stead lauds, aud soid-in-reasonable quantities, find
to none bat actual occupants, at. the miuimum price
estsbllahed’&y tlie Government. When grants of the
public-lands may be allowed necessaiy lor the en
couragement of important public improvements, the
proceeds or the Biile of «uch lands, and not the lands
tb TaMaleam^eatS‘Ute*SuilBd SUte3, Andrew
uS of the States aud the people, is en-
tltled to the kraUtado ot tne wbolp Amsrioau people,
U^u^ 8 U^um^heD U ^ilVrf^l1o
overy patriot, IncludUlgall-the-conservativeelement
and all who .desire to .upport tn'5 /Jomiitutlon ana
resiore the Union, forgetting alL?!?*. aifroVonceBoT
on, to units withuAlb me present great strnggle
... .ue liberties of - thi people, sod ttat io sU .uch to
whatever pattythvX
.‘. J-todJ. anil htwHirnn
we extendthorgtu.,
Sucl} co-operstlug r~
—
1 as friends and brethrep.
TTT&Trru-
‘O
bIM%I^
COLUMBIA, S. C.
on the first MON-
erBlty'oEbrtddttyl
„„ ^,. 0 _,„ tratnin«’ intheERersiy and
SclenUflc branches, nndlu .the Bchools of Lsvjr aqd
MoUttne. for ^he Session of nlne
In three Litersiy or Scl-
-'sheet R300 t. foc a Student tniLsw,
ttot Sfumo'scStifiiC^uTiaoo y foe a'swdent
about 928O rad-for a
. Include
room ’—
■ of further. lnformaU'
Hev. C. BUUUffJ7AI#Kft. ‘ '
jy80—lawlOv^
l .n
competent to teach the
’In - mV Academic CJoarte,
1 testtmoniila of charmeter
A.
wno o«n'glv»’ v i
sndcspsctry. Atauj» LADT Wft°]
and the other, ornamental branches. A
MUTUAL, LIFE INSURANCE
‘Hi O.A-nttEAB.jPrpsiaemt.
SPECIAL NOTICE.
■iii i
addbks s
TC THE
DEBILITATED.
PROTRACTED FROM.
QUIRE PROMPT. TREATMENT TC
RENDER EXISTENCE DESIRABLE.
involuntary discharges, what effect does
produce upon your general health ?
feel weak, debilitated, easily tired ?
little extra exertion produce palpit
the heart? Does your liver, or urinary or
milky, or flpckyj, or is it ropy on set
Or does a thick scum rise to the top ?
A sediment at the bottom alter ltnas
ing or dyspepsia ? Are your bowel
pated? Do you have, spells of fa
rushes of blood to the head ? Is yo
ory impaired ? 1 Ia your mind &
dwelling upon this subjeot? Do
dull, listless, moping, tired of oon
life? Doyou wiah to^be left aloi
away from everybody,? Does
thing make you start, or jump5
sleep broken or restless 1 is the lustre
cheek )rr .
society as well ? Do you pursue your bus
ness with the same energy ? Do von feel 1
much confidence fix yourself? Are yoi
spirits dull afid flagging, given to fits 1
melancholy? If so,<do not Jay it to yoi
Your back wi
but little
kweak,j
appetite, pud.y
dyspepsia or Uverroomj
• ba : ■: „ toiiMpi 1 ;.-i
Now,, reader,
>ypp i att
pm»
eratfve organs. The organs of generation,
when iu perfect health, make tbe man. Die
you ever think that those bold, denant, en-
are in perfect health ?
vonsness, of palpitation of the heart.
ness; they don’t become sad
thie company of ladies, and look yon t
them right in tije lace—none of your do’
cast looks or any other meanness ap
thmn, 1 do not mean those - who keep
organs inflamed by running to t
also: those they do business with or lor.
How many men horn badly-cored diseases,
from the effects of self-dbui.< and excc
havebronght about that Ftsteof weal
in those organs that has reduced the general
system so mnoh .as to indnoe almost every
other disease—idiocy, lunacy, paralysis,
spinal affections, suiciJ . and almost every
other ^orm. of disease Lieu nnmamty is
heir, to, and the real -ite of the trouble
scarcely ever ^nspucte 1 md nave aoctored
for all bnt the rign; oos.
Diseases of’ these organa require the use
of a diuretic.
ni ;j ii
vu-
LMBOLDS
2QSUIES3 DlfiEGTOEI
! ofsavaShaYl :
ASTKOLOGIST, &C.
XT ADAME T. DE GARRO NEVE, AstrologUt
IVI phrenologist end Physiologist, soutnwest cor
net Houston anACongreis streets. Savannah, Ga.
msy2Z—tf
BILUA&D SALOONS. •
—u : .
ja/1 ETKOPOLITAN BILLIARD ROUMS, (five ol
LV1 Phelan's first class Tables,) Bryan street, op
posite Screven House. 4S~FRKK LUNCH every
evening. D. MCCONNELL, Proprietor. [mh21-6m
BROKERAGE, EXCHAhrfE AMD COM
MISSION,'' 1 '
ITAHTRIDGS A NEFF,' Commission Merchants
XI and Brokers, 163 Buy street. mh21—ly
SHIPPING AND COMMISSION JHEft-
CHANTS.
J'tARL EPPING A CO. General Commission Mer-
\J chants. No. 149 Bay street, Sevsnnau, Georgia;
Vice Consulates of Spain and oi the Netherlands.
49* CARL EPPING, Timber Merchant, Darien snd
Brunswick, Georgia. novxs—tf
ETAHNKY A CO., Commission Merchants, No.
n IS stoddaid’s Upper Range. Liberal advances
made on consignments of cotton. Wool, Hides,
Ac. to our friends in Baltimore, Philadelphia and
NOW York. auso—ly
IA7AR11 A MclNliltdi, Auction, commission snd
TV shipping Merchants, Bay street, Savannah,
Georgia. Consignments of all kinds solicited. Auc
tion days Tuesdays anil Fridays. Agent for first
quality Kerosene OIL. angSl—tf
T C. ROWLAND ft CO., Storage and General
(1 a Commission Merchants. Cotton taken on Stor-
age In Battersby’s First Class Fireproof Warehouses.
Particular attention given to weighing and sampling.
J. C. ROWLAND. H. H. HOWLAND.
)y3i-iy
*ar u. griffin A CO., Cotton Factors, Com-
VV * mission snd Forwarding Merchants, No. 9?
Bay street, savannah, Georgia. jyZS—ly
vttilKINSON ft WILSON, Cotton Factors ami Ge-
W' nersl Commission Merchants, No. 90 Bay street,
Savannah, Georgia. Liberal advances made on con
signments to oorselvea or our friends in New York;
and Liverpool. ‘iT-i '■
m B. MARSHALL A BBC., General commis-
X, slon,Shipping and Lumber Merchants, No. 3
Harris’ Block, Bay street, foot of Lincoln. Consign
ments respectfully solicited, and will receive strict
attention. iy23
HIM. D. H. MILLAR A 00., 157 Bay street, Com-!
W mission Merchants, Dealoru in Railroad Sup
plies! Agents for Ingeraoll’s Cotton Press and John
Wataon ft.Oo.’s Axle Grease, Ac. jy23
WHOLESALE LIRCOR CEALEBS.
m J. DUNBAR ft CO., importers and Dealers
In Brandies, Whiskeys, Gins, Wines, Cigars,
Ac., and Agent for Smith’s Celebrated PhOadelphis
Ales, 147 Bay street. Jy33
WHOLESALE GROCERS,
tit M. DAVIDSON, Wholesale Dealer In Gro-
W • oerles, Wines, Liquors, Teas and Cigars, ISO
Bay street. Savannah, Sole Agent in the State of
Georgia fot Massey, Houston & Co.*a Philadelphia
■ * ~ —
LICtUORS, &C..AT RETAIL. . |
iriusTOM HOUSE SHADES, by F. Dows, Bsyiane,
tf rear of Post Office. Best of Ales, Wines,
Liquors, Cigars, Ac., and a Lunch every day trom 11
Bill. Jy23-ly
rRVlNG HOUSE, corner or St. Julian and Jeffereoa
X streets. ALBOklnvntu, Proprietor. Beet of Ales,
Wines, liquors, Cigars, Ac., always on band, jyffl
DRUGGISTS AND APOTHECARIES.
1, rkuUEBX H. TATEM, Druggist and Apothecary
K. and Wholesale Dealer to Window Glass and
Kerosene OU, corner Jefferson and McDonough
streets, and corner East Broad and Broughton
streets. jy25—ly
PHOTOGRAPHS.
DUOTOGUAPHS. and all other styles ot Pictures,
X With Frames, Fittings, Oases, Ac., of every kind.
Uopies ol all kinds from Oid Pictures neatly finished.
Stereoscopic Views of Bona venture am) Savannah.
Corner of Whitaker anu Broughton streets. J N,
WILSON. . Jy23
WATCHES AND JEWELRY•
111 GRUB CLAUDE, Dealer in Watches, Jewelry
f % and Silverware, Bull street, opposite Masonic
Hall, Savannah, Ga. Watches snd J eweiry carefully
repaired. unv7—tf
CJAMUKL f. HAMILTON (aucoosaor to Wllmot A
O Richmond), Dealer In Watches, Silverware, Jew
elry, Ac., corner Whitaker, St. Jalien and Congress
streets. Watches and Jewelry repaired. Chronome
ters rated by transit. lyss—ly
SAIDS. AWNINGS, BAGS, &c.
i ’ : : -.: |— . ,... ’ , ■ ■ ■ — . .
Hjf P. BEAUFORT, Exchange Wharf, Mannfac-
iXL* tursr of sails, Awnings, Tents, Flags, Bogs,
kc. Sold at New York prices. jyrf
ARCHITECTS AND ENGINEERS.
•XiULLER A BBUYN, Architects and OivU and. Me-
ixl. chsnicol Eoginoors, southwest corner Bay and
Bull streets, np stairs. M. P. Mulleb, OivU and
UechanicalEsiglneur; DnWrxr Bmus, Architect:
• sepd'
HABUWattE. CUTLERY, dtc.
Lead, US 1 Oon Jress sad’eT St* Jal't-u stree'-s^Savan-
oah.Gcorgiu. t i * —ly
PAINTING AND GLAZING,
DR. EDWIN W. L’ENGLE,
n BbTA’isru,
Wo, 106 Bryan Street,
BETWEEN WHITAKER AND BARNARD STS.,
Ssvsnnsli, Ga.
Jeia-iy .. -'
D.'R. ADAMS,
Raton ton, Ga.
aBBURZ 'a. ADAMS,
of
Americas, Gs.
"I
H. X. WASHBURN;
. Of
Savannah, Ga.
ADAMS, WASHBURN & Co,,
COTTON FACTORS
COMMISSION MERCHANTS.
Office, So. 3 Stoddard’s Lower Range.
MAURICE HACKETT,
Cooper, and agent of the sub
marine DIVING AND WRECK
ING COMPANY.
S FFICB UNDER THE BLUFF, foot, of Drayton
street. All orders tor tbe Submarine Diving
Wrecking Company con be left with him. and
be promptly attended to. ooSS-U
UPHOLSTERY.
160 BUOUGHTOJS STBEET.
[HE undersigned bsgsthe attentlonofhlafrienda
and tbe putillc generally to his new and well «e-
nteel- * . • , .
House-
Materials,
CURTAINS; .
GILD WINDOW SHADES, Cord and
Green snd White Shade Hollands, 00:
OfVfc
lions styles—together with many other articles ot
iiousebuld goods usually kept in Ms line. 111
MATTRESSES, CUSHIONS, MOSQUITO NETS,
etc., made to order. Matting. Oil Cloths and Carpet
ing cut and laid. IWA11 Repairing in bis line done
in rworkman-jike style. Prompt attention given and
moderate prices charged.
No.
a P S—ly opposite Messrs. Weed A Cornwell.
ALEXANDER & RUSSELL,
Wholesale
OOB. ABERCORN AND BRYAN STS. 1
Savannah, Ga.
WH. S. ALEXANDER. ... ; W1L A.
... ifcfeH
NTcMAtlON d
JOHN
l CO.,
LOlU BO-'/lli j
Groceries, Corn, Oats, Hay
Feed, &c.. 1
CORNER BR00GHT0I AID JEFFEISU STREETS-
0- All orders promptly attended to.
WM. ESTELL, Jr.,
AND
1LCU L.ltU ,
■i (..nacCiwJ
BOOK8ELL E,
Bull St., Next to the Post Office,
(DOWN STAIRS,)
SAVANNAH, GEORGIA.
. j JXr i }2 X 1
j&fopkftpfe v)
Lamps, Oil,
iisim Kid
load.
4_;Hai
jLsra
Tio*
CLOTHES-WRINGERS
AND
W!
AT
68 ST. JUUDEN
AND
101 Bryan streets,
SATAilVNAH, GA,
Advertisements forwarded to all Newspapers.
No advance charged on Publishers* prices.
AUlsading Newspapers kept
Information as to Cost of Ad
All Orders receive careful attention.
Inquiries by MaU answered promptly.
Complete Printed Lists of Newspapers for sola.
Special Idetz prepared for Customers.
Advertisements Written an^Notices secured.
' Orderefroih Business Men e
vs. Mora.
A SERMON.
By Rev, Raphael D'C. Lewln.
XJ‘f t -jj
FOB SALE AT
...as
J-
LAIRD, BROWN A SMITH. 1
Shipping Master* and Notaries Public.
Comer or Bay snd Lincoln streets, (over Wm. H.
Stark A Co’s Store,)
SAVANNAH.................GEORGIA,
f-tRaws SHIPPED and pnt on board at the short-
VV eat notlca. Marine Protests noted and extendi'
sepll—ly
!a
Ohuis. Mobfby.
Ohas. Clara.
MURPHY & CLARK,
HOUSE, SIGH, SHIP
PAINTERS, “/j ^
GILDING, GRAINING, MAHBUNG, GLA-
ZING, AND PAPEB-HASGnftts!
fVTE ARE PREP,
** SALE AND HI
TO SELL,’ AT WHOLE-
—"{ hrats.
v PAINTS. OIL, I
HES;, —
ition.
VARNISHES; MIXED PAINTS,
Machinery i and
PUTTY,.
BRUSHES of
HARNESS OIL, in v GREASE, etc. ' •
T7 Bryan 6t., between Bull and Drayton,
rnhI4—ly SAVANNAH, GA
W.
(Successor to W. H. MAY,)
Wholesale arid YteYail’tE^airerllM,
SADDLERY. HARNESS. &CL.
rAS JUST received s New Stock of
! -ot
CLARK,. Bull
opposite the
Pulseki House. House, Sign, Ship snd steam
boat Painters. Gilding, Graining, Marbling and
8igns of overy description. Jy23
moit
PLASTERERS.
edt nl tibf d';
FlitriD EXTBACT
JJ DnJ
!)L~h
1 t»lt
IB THB GREAT DIUBETIU,
And Is a certain cure tor
GRAVEL,
Hit:!®)?®?’
. ORGANIO WEAKNESS)
COMPLAINTS, GENERAL DEBILITY,
AMD ALL
• . ■
DISEASES OF THE URINARY ORGANS,
’»• - I It V» III i .. Ml . '
Whether e
in Male or Female, from
originating, ana no
; matter of how long standing. r
H< * “eri .tli: ... n
If no treatment U submitted to. CONSUMPTION
or INSANITY msy ensue. Onr fiesn and blood are
«npported from ,
ms, and ' flmt of posterity, aepenas npon
use of a reliable remedy. :
a flhar mite at otfT .
if*SdcO Afnn[iA“-i'o’i i *sij3BVrj ! *
Helmbold’s Extract Bncbu
L-O.tw’-f .1 f . O'.Zt f/f. , ,1 r i /Ft .. _ I
op IQ’.
nsit
ESTABLISHED UPWARD OF IS TEAKS,
It i* Cheap am Available, to All.
Uis.:.,, .. t For the smalt sota of j
SIX DOLLABJ
*' • .c- ; . . hi. !
#9* BROADWAY. MW YORK.
' ■ i
iqo.utit.'MK
J0Q-;«'nit • ’t
inwnfta;
excesses and _
are to come. 'If tbe
perils which are tbnatened, they mm
np in their strength snd crush out Radical
ism, roof '
1 MlBbnc
PRICE—ji a per bottle, or six
35 so, delivered to any addles*. Sold ny all
YXRADY * TOLLY, Plain and Ornamental Pis*-
VXterers and Dealers in Laths, Lime,Plaster,Hair,
Cement and Building Material, Bryan street, between
Drayton and Abercom streets. augl-tf
OAK and HEMLOCK (tanned)
sole leather;
CALF and UJSHIG SKINS,
and a general asaorttnfmlOf SHOE TOOLS.
RUBBER im^LEASMEEBELTING ST? 1
" filled promptly. 4 j
BOOKS AND NEWSPAPERS,
UMBEL
Hi
Bull street, next to the 1 Post
Office, Dealers In Newspapers, Magazines,
Books and Stationery.' The latest New York and
other Dally and Weakly Newspapers received by
every mall and steamer. jyfit—ly
Bodies. Funerals famished st the
shortestnotice. Country orders promptly attended
jy27—ly
i” a -•'i (
Oi
Cl B. MU LSH, No. 1ST
O* 1 In_ Mahogany juid- Walnut
_ Dealer
Furniture snd
HERMETICALLY SEALED
;■ $
j ||SE8 S 1b PKACHB8.
37
KNEABEtBSfli I
assorted, In Goblets and
42 cksesaHt’^OTE OYSTERS,
S3 esses I ft LOBSTERS,
IS cases CHOW CHOWV
In store and foTsateby
HABNEY Ac CO.,
. - No. Ill Stoddard’s Upper Range,
loS—tf’ Savannah. Gs.
ISTotice.
R
' UNDERSIGNED
GUANO
.the; only Importer of
the lulled states of
Gu. no In
by hlssgentst Balumore,^
Agent for Cons! inees of
and
. . . i. A98oaUA«tMit.
; krioitH RULED '
John OL.iy;jB:
... DEALER HI ‘
Sashes, Bliiuls and Doors,
PAINTS. OILS. GLASS,
I^tNTER^ AKD GLAZIERS’ TQOjk'
MIXED FAINTS OF ALL COLORS AND
SHADES. .
House and Sign Painting,
tss,
Tin-:
Estiirs News Depot,
Bun street, nest to Post Office.
FOR SALE.
i • * -• --
T>RIME
I HHJ
BICE
YABNS. from the Columbus Factory
TOBACCO
t BAGGING
T BAGGING, Tucker, Carter A Co
BALE HOPE.
Je2S-4m . JOHN W. ANDERSON'S SONS A OO.
MANSION HOUSE,
69 Broad Street)
BETWEEN MERTINa AND CHUBOH STREETS,
s, c.
rjiHIS well-known snd long- established
been leased by the
open to the Travelling public,
lan^to’now •
patronage is re-
Board can be arranged for upon moderate terms.
Jall-tf
Latapfth^ymsHonie.-
ARTIFICIAL^ TEETH!
DR. W. flL. SNEED,
DENTIST,
'.‘h
TTAVING EVERY FACILITY FOB THE MANU-
XX FACTUBE OF ARTIFICIAL TEETH iu all the
venous modes known to the profession, and comne-
tedr zssistsota In my Postal Laboratory, I css at a
- msnnfsctnre an entire settof Teeth,
the old roots (which can be done la
•U essee without any pain.)
OLD CASES not comfortably worn, I can make so.
OLD GOLD and SILVaB PLATES taken 1
OFFICE AND L.1BU1
■1 ' .■>• 10 v, ; r. r i
‘£117, ~ '
tin part pay.
STORY,
OPPOSITE PULASKI HOUSE.
Between - Ball and Wbltnkcc EtrceU,
jeS-tf /SAVANNAH, 6A. „
&C-
GLAZING,
* A.V • i. gj if f
No. 6 Whitalrer St., Corner of Bay- Done,
Jy8—ly
FOR
’ Ms
eel
rjIHE UNDERSIGNED OFFER FOR SALE latent
7,000 Acres of Fine Lari 1/
sltoated in Can^enrong^Wlppging to the ec fCeof
Dr. .A. DeLaroche,decessed.’'Thae lands'are aid off
in separate surveys Of one to two thousand
wUI be sold either separately or together, as desired.
Some ot these lands' are heavily timbered wl h pine
and-liveoak,and ore well adapted to raising
island eqtton. They are Allsituated.near Cabin BUB1'
st yvbich point the southern boats ,
ular trips. For further particulars apply- to (he un-
msyl4—eodCm
-Ci—1—- ■■■■ - -
JOHN F. HAMILTON,
.J-E-OAUBRY,^^
i; i ■. .j^rrr
bnc
SENSE: or. RATUBPAY NIGHT MUS-
INGS AND THOUGHTFUL PAPERS.
By “Brick” Pomeroy. Price, $L50.
NONSENSE; ok, HITS AND CRITJOBM8
ON THE FOLUr*’ ““ ""
“Brick” .Pomeroy. .. o .,
FOR SALE AT
ESTILL’S
DEP0I* ; »
BULL STREET, NEXT TO (THE POST OFFICE.
febll—t : -:-i erf xzzu c- Lla-.’iT
BOOK-KEEPING
i isr-.f
ir.-tu -’. ir.n J
t:
TVUFITS BOOK-KEEPING, by angle sad Don-
ble Entry—Price fi3 T<
otice.
FIRM OF BRYAN, HARTRIDGB A CO.t
terminated by mutual consent; fwlllc
Brokerage and Commission
BXTSHVBSS
office la
On my own account, snd wm open
Septembernext st No. lOl' Bay sueet.
fiffiNRY; BRYAN.
Notice, X^adies t
FLUTING, PINEINGy STAMPING
AND DRESS-MAKING,
XT MADAME L. LOUIS’ BAZAAR,
tnsyasjy , 133 BROUGHTON gT- Up 8talrs.
GRAIN BAGS,
Ui - NEW AND SECOND-HAND,
. AND COTTON BAGS, .suitable
for Wheat, Com, Ac., for sale in quantities to
snit. Bags lomiad for the transportation of grain,
b Wi-sS
NICK OF THE
1*>1 liiit 1
Nick Of the
• 3ft ^t'!i It
«
v * yyuo I
"cOIVIPAJflOIV,”
ofpublish-
f T EORGE MUNEO A CO. have, at an
VJ expense, secured the exclusive righto
Ing that wonderful story of Border:
“NICK ON* THE WOODS P*-
the "FIRESIDE COMPANION,” which! wffl
commenced in Ko. 24 of that popular Journal,
on April 3d.
:ek.
OP TH H WOODS’ _
is the most remarkable and exciting story of tbs kind
that ever appeared, and Is the Fountain-haul from
which myriads of Indian Tales have been derived.
Borne of the characters are unequalled In the whole
range of Fiction for s certain kind of weird, myste
rious interest that bancr* ftronnd them. TorlsaYanrFi
rioria interest that hangs aronsd them,
the terrible Jibbenainosay, the
Floody Nathan, the "Man of"
Ralph 8tackpole, the
__—.’’.who was equally st home
Red men’s scalps or a pale face’s hr
to read a story of such interne in
will be universal, and we trnst '
[i: order thi
theHoEing
Pattern st the NMWB.
ui *r
snC ^OONDTO any)
AND BMtULD JOB j
Harris’Book-keeping, . -» *
F0- sales’. ESTiLL's NEV -' r _’OTv
W)M Bull Street, nett fo tfce post ttfioe
PANION Ir tho Best ]
^gpnbUthed- «ffe by all New
“!>« Hvwlccd.
. .
AM