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THE SAVANNAH DAILY TIMES
Sum ;? wm
B. 11. iUCiIAKDSON,
EDITOR AND GENERAL MANAGER
SAVANNAH THIES PUBLISHING CO
NO. 94 BRYAN STREET, BETWEEN
DRAYTON AND ABF.RCORN.
We tender our acknowledgements for an
invitation to be present at the formal open
ing of the Piny Woods Hotel, Thomasville
on Thursday next. The occasion promises
to be exceedingly pleasant.
According to our Washington Special
10-day Emory Speer’s case will be consid
ered to-morrow, and Senator Colquitt thinks
that unless party lines are strictly drawn his
nomination will be rejected. Evidently
"Our Emory” will have a tight squeeze of it
even if he gets through at all.
Governor Pattison, of Pennsylvania,
lias issued a general order granting all or
ganized bodies of militia the
right to pass through the
State, armed and equipped, on their way to
the dedication of the Washington monu
ment February 21, and the inauguration of
President Cleveland March 4.
Speaking of the Atlanta artesian well,
the Constitution says: “If we cannot get
water, let us at least make the Celestials on
*he other side of the earth look well to their
back yards.” Our contemporary should
have said, “to their back hair.” Just sup
pose the Atlanta drill should penetrate
China, grab a Celestial by the cue, and yank
him up to Atlanta through that artesian
•well hole. That would furnish our Atlanta
friends food for a sensation sure enough.
The British nation has been stirred up
to renewed activity by their reverses in the
Soudan, and will push the war to the last
extremity. In fact, it cannot do otherwise.
Having entered into the Egyptian trouble,
Great Britain cannot afford the loss of
prestige which would be involved in a back
•down, and besides this the fate of General
Gordon must be ascertained. If he is
alive, he must be released; if dead, his death
must be avenged, or the Gladstone Ministry
will be held responsible.
A Washington special announces that
it is expected that President Arthur will,
after having communicated with President
elect Cleveland, issue a proclamation con
vening the Senate in extra session on the
4th of March, for the purpose of consider
ing Cabinet and other nominations. Four
years ago Mr. Hayes issued, about a
week before going out of office, a proclama
tion convening the Senate in executive
session on the day that President Garfield
was inaugurated. The Senate simply met
after the inaugural proceedings were over
and adjourned until the following day, when
the President sent in his Cabinet nomina
tions. There is no reason to think other
wise than the course pursued four years ago
will be followed this year, and if it is, the
names of the new Cabinet will probably be
made known about the Sth or 6th of March
MR. TOWNER'S LETTERS.
In vesterday’s Times appeared an extract
from a letter of Mr. Ausburn Towner, of the
Elmira (N Y) Sunday Telegram, written to
his paper from this city. Mr. Towner speaks
of Savannah and of the hospitable treatment
he received during his stay here, in glow
ing terms, and in a manner gratifying to
every citizen of our beautiful Forest City.
This letter is one of a series which is
being written by Mr. Towner from the
South. We have read with great pleasure and
interest each cf these letters as they have
appeared. They are written from a North
ern standpoint, but Mr. Towner, unlike a
great many Northern correspondents who
have visited the South, is evidently actua
ted by a conscientious desire to do us simple
justice. He writes impartially and with the
determination to “nothing extenuate or
set down aught in malice.” In consequence,
while he does not overlook whatever he
sees that calls for unfavorable criticism
(and there is no section of the
country in which there cannot
be found something which to
an intelligent mind suggests the necessity
for improvement, he does not dwell upon
our shortcomings with pleasure. To the con
trary he dismisses these things with as brief
notice as possible, preferring rather to di
late at length upon the attractions which he
has encountered in his Southern tour, and
upon the many evidences he finds of South
ern thrift, industry and progress.
All honest correspondents,like Mr. Towner
will receive, at all times, a cordial welcome
from the Southern people. They do a great
deal of good to the South, and largely offset
the bad effect of the malicious perversions
of truth indulged in by our Radical enemies
who have never visited our section, but
who, jealous of our growing prosperity,
draw freely on their imaginations for any
thing which they think will work us injury.
Should Mr. Towner visit Savannah again,
he will receive as hearty a reception as he
experienced on his recent visit,
‘ROUGH ON ITCH.’
“Rough on Itch” cures humors, eruptions
ringworms, tetter, salt rheum, frosted feet
bilblains.
It is amusing to see people with their face
drawn as if they had swallowed a feather and
it was tickling their lungs and they would be
happy if t v ey could only sneeze. Now, there
is no need of “making faces.” A bottle of Dr
Bull’s Cough Syrup will draw your face back
into a smile.
THE SAVANNAH DJILY TIMES, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 1885.
AN EXTRA SESSION.
But three weeks now remain before the
Forty-eighth Congress of the United States
expires by limitation. The calendars of
both Houses are full to overflowing with
unfinished business; a day will probably be
devoted to counting the electoral vote, which
must be disposed of on Wednesday next,
and as the principal appropriation bills have
not yet been passed, and as it is indispen
sably necessary for meeting the expenses
incident to running the government that
they should be passed, it is not possible that
the work before the present Congress can be
finished before the 4th of March next.
Most of the bills which will go by default
are measures of but little material conse
quences, and the country will not suffer
by their failure. Knowing, though, that
the appropriation must be voted, the Re
publicans in both Houses have done what
they could to delay business as much as pos
sible, so as to necessitate an extra session
for this purpose. They have done this,
hoping to make political capital therefrom
by raising the cry, at the very outset of
Cleveland’s administration, that though the
Democrats have all along been loudly prom
ising reform and economy in the conduct of
public affairs, the first thing they do is to
inflict upon the country the expense of an
extra session, which could have been avoid
ed. This is a shrewd game, but it will
hardly work.
In the first place if there be an extra
session it will be mainly due to the obstruc
tions thrown in the path of Congress by the
Republican Senate. This the Democrats
can show to the entire satisfaction of the
country, and whatever responsibility will be
attached thereto will recoil upon the Re
publican party itself. In the next place
such a session will not by any means be un
desirable to the Democracy. The members
of the Forty- ninth Congress will have their
pay anyhow if an extra session is or is not
held. Whether working or not, members
get their monthly’ proportion of their $5,-
000 a year with the regularity of clock
work, and the only additional
expense involved will be incidental, such
as burning extra gas in the Capitol, etc t
This comparatively light additional expense,
however, can be more than offset by the
good which the Democracy can accomplish.
Every department of the Government needs
thorough and immediate overhauling, and
many measures of vast importance, which
the Republicans have neglected for years
and years, can be introduced and
promptly pushed. In this way the
needed reforms which the country is anti
cipating at the hands of the Democracy can
be at once inaugurated, instead of being
obliged to wait until after next December.
This will enable the Democrats to fulfill
their promises to the people several months
earlier than would otherwise be the case,
and so, instead of the Democratic party
being injured, it could at once establish itself
in the confidence of the country. The Re
publicans are beginning to realize these facts,
and are growing daily less and less anxious
to force an extra session.
It would be in every way better for an
extra session not to be called, since Mr.
Cleveland would then have an opportunity to
carefully survey the field, and map out in his
mind such a course as he may think it ad
visable for Congress to pursue. His views
could, in the meantime, be carefully consid
ered and digestcu, and when Congress meets
regularly it would have its work blocked
out and ready for being carried on thorough
ly and understandingly. Still, if the Radi
cal Senate sees fit to precipitate the assem
bling of the Forty-ninth Congress, the ses
sion of that body can lie utilized to great ad
vantage, both to the people and the new
administration.
CHEAP THEATRE PRICES.
There is a tendency to cheap theatre ex
hibitions, .just as there has been to cheap
eating houses and cheap novels. But there
must be large patronage to justify large re
ductions in prices. One cf the signs of the
times is the fact that Messrs. Shook & Col
lier, managers of the Union Square Theatre,
New York, one of the leading theatres of
the city, have decided to reduce the price
of the best seats in their house from JI 50 to
§l, while the general admission will be re
duced to 75 cents. Mr. Shook says the mat
ter was given the closest consideration, and
he was convinced that many of his former
patrons were kept away simply by reason of
the present prices. For many years mana
gers have recognized the fact that prices
were altogether out of proportion to the
cost of other things. But it has been dis
ficult to reduce them, owing to the pheno
menal salaries paid to actors under the
star system and because of the impossibili
ty of securing anything like co-operation
among managers. Commenting on this
mozement the New York World observes
that the salaries of actors have of late taken
enough of a downward turn to indicate that
this source of expense will finally be re
duced to rational limits. “It now only re
mains for some manager, bolder than his
rivals, to take the next and logical step of
making a scale of prices which shall corres
pond in some degree with the almost uni
versal reduction in the cost of other things,
whether luxuries or necessities. The ex
ample of the Union Square people will no
doubt be followed at an early day by other
managers, until theatre-going will no longer
be the luxury it has almost become.”
“ROUGH ON CORNS.”
Ask for Wells’ “Rough on Corns.” 15c
Quick complete cure. Hard or soft corn
warts, bunions.
A RETALIATION PARTY.
A dispatch from Pittsburg to the New-
York Times, announces the formation, in
this country, of an English“ Society of Retal
iation” for the purpose of opposing the dyna
mite societies in the United States, and it
was announced that the aforesaid society
was connected with “The Society of St.
George,” in Baltimore. This, however, the
Baltimore American denies. It says that a
dispatch from the authorities of that society
pronounces the report false in toto, and that
the Society of St. George in Baltimore, and
elsewhere, “consists chiefly of native born
Americans, who desire to keep up an ances
tral affection for old England. An English
father or grandfather may entitle a man to
membership of the St. George. Os course,
it is absurd to connect this social, or rather
this festal, society with any serious political
purpose.”
This, however, does not disprove the
possibility cf the existence of a retaliation
society in the United States, and the recent
announcement of a plot to blow up O’Dono
van Rossa’s office in New York on the
night of the very day when he was shot by
Mrs. Dudley—and which plot was frustrated
by that memorable shot—gives co’or to the
Pittsburgh report. If such a society does
exist our authorities should ferret it out and
break it up. Neither O’Donovan Rossa,
with his dynamiters, nor Englishmen, with
their retaliation movements, have any right
to organize societies to murder each other
and destroy property in this country. If
allowed to go on the United States would
soon become the scene of foreign disorders
and outlawries, and if either side proposes to
carry on such a warfare, the State authori
ties and Congress should co-operate together
to force them to go home and fight out their
differences on their own soil.
But the O’Donovan Rossa and English
retaliation societies may both, if they will,
work against each other in a strictly lawful
manner, to the advantage of the country.
Let each put spies and informers upon the
other, and when any plot, having murder,
assassination and the destruction of property
for its object, is discovered, let it be prom; tly
reported to the police and grand juries, and
let the perpetrators be brought to justice.
This is the only legitimate manner in which
either dynamiters or retaliationists can law
fully work in this country, and it is the only
way they should be allowed to-work. The
United States cannot afford to permit them
selves to be transformed into an Indian ter
ritory, to which men who have grievances
among themselves can emigrate, and plot
against each other and society at large with
impunity.
“BUCHU-PAIBA.”
Quick, complete cure, all Kidney, Bladde
ind Urinary Diseases, Scalding, Irritatio.
stone, Gravel, Catarrh of the bladder, J1
Druggists.
March Blizzard
The United States Government Census Vol
ume, just published, speaks of the “RE
MARKABLE SUCCESS” attending our
“UNIQUE AND UNTIRING EFFORTS,” in
pushing the American Agriculturist. It be
gan the current year with a larger subscrip
tion list than at any corresponding period in
twelve years. The able corps of Editors, who
have made the American Agriculturist a wel
come visitor to thousands of Southern homes
for a quarter of a century, are now bending
all their energies to make the Journal, if
possible, more interesting and valuable than
ever to Southern readers. And you may
rightly conclude that it
Is Coming'
to Georgia, where it already has so many sub
scribers and friends, *o quadruple its circula
tion. For who will fail to embrace THIS UN
PARA LLED OFFER?
A FAMILY CYCLOPAEDIA FREE.—Any
person subscribing t > the American Agri
culturist (English < r German) for 1885 whose
subscription is p om >tly forwarded to us,
together with the ub >cription price, 61 50 per
year, and 15 cents extra for packing and post
age on the Cyclopedia, making 61 65 in all—
will receive the Aftien’can Agriculturist for
1885, and be presented with the “American
Agriculturist Family Cyclopedia, just out,
700 pages, 1,000 engravings.
TWO MONTHS FREE Every NEW sub
scriber (and only new. ones), who promptly
forwards his subscription in accordance with
these conditions, can have his year's sub
scription date from March next, receiving
free the numbers of the American Agri
culturist for January and Februajy.
TWO MAGNIFICENT EEGRAVINGS
FREE.—Every sueb subscriber will also be
present* 1, postpaid, with the magnificent
plate Engravings “In the Meadow’’ and
“Foes or Friends,” of which over eighty
thousand have been sent for by our sub
scribers.
CYCLOPAEDIA, ENGRAVINGS, AND A
DICTK)NARY FREE.—To any one promptly
forwarding us the name of a new subscriber
to the American Agriculturist with 62 00, we
will send Webster’s Practical Dictionary,
just out, 600,000 words, 1,400 illustrations,
while to the new subscriber we will send the
American Agriculturist for 1885, and also the
Family Cyclopedia, post free. Furthermore,
on receipt of fifteen cents extra, making 62 15
in all, in this case for packing and postage
we will forward the two engravings, “In the
Meadows” and “Foes or Friends,” to the
sender of the subscription, or to the sub
scriber himself, as we may be directed. Men
tion these offers in writing.
Send six cents (stamps), for mailing you
specimen American Agriculturist’, forty-page
Premium List, with two hundred illustra
tions, specimen pages of Cyclopedia and Dic
tionary, and full descriptions of the Engrav
ings presented.
CANVASSERS WANTED EVERYWHERE.
Address,
Publishers American Agriculturist.
DAVID W. JUDD, SAM’L BURNHAM,
President. Secretary.
751 Broadway, New Y ork,
GEO. M. HELMKEN,
Variety Bakery,
Cor. South Broad and East Broad streets.
BREAD, CAKES and PIES of all descrip
tion.
Wedding Parties supplied on reasonable
terms with the finest cakes. New England
Bread a specialty. None genuine without my
label.
The in and the Monkey.
Once upon a time a man and a monkey
chanced to meet on the highway.
“Hello, my long-tailed friend,” asked the
man, “whither art thou going?”
“Bound for de city,” replied the monkey.
“Glad to hear it,” replied the man.
“I am going there, too, and we will travel
together and be of mutual benefit in case oi
danger.”
The monkey grinned assent, and both
wended their way.
“What alls you?” asked the man; “I see you
are a sufferer, and can scarcely get along.”
“Oh, you see,” replied the monkey, “my
mudder, she had what you call scrofula, very
much scrofula, my farder, he had heap sores,
some big some little sores, long time. They
both took much medicine, and when they
died the sores was all they left me.
“Yes, yes,” replied the man. “I see how it
is. Your mother inherited her disease, scrof
ula, and your father caught his on the wing,
and you inherited or was born with both
complaints. But why pine away and die
when you can be cured.”
‘I been done used over sixtv bottles on
drug store medicine,and it no good. Money
all gone and sore here yet. Some doctors
charge heap money, but no good.”
‘ But my friend,” said the man, “you got
hold of the wrong medicine. Go to the dru
store and get one hot tie of B. B. 8., and before
using all of it yon will feelbetter. It is a quick
cure. It will cure all sorts of sores, Scrofula,
Blood Poison caught on the wing, Itching
Humors, Catarrh. Blood and Skin diseases
and Kidney Troubles.”
“I be so thankful for your kindness, and
will go getß. B. B. to-day,” replied the mon
key.
The vemoned shaft hurled at the scrofu
lous girl—the pitiless cries of that pale and
tender infant writhing and moaning with
hereditary blood taint-the groans of that
stout man confined with running, foul ulcers
—the wailings of that wife prostrated with
the pangs of rheumatism—the excruciating
agonies of those sulfering from chronic kid
ney troubles, the sleepless nights of those
children terrified with that itching humor of
the skin—the wild and weird appearance of
those unfortunate victims to all forms of
syphilis -t nose and all other similar diseases
indicate an impure condition of the blood,
all of which can he cured in an incredibly
short time by the useof B. B. 8., the concer
trated blood purifier of the day.
For sale by
OSCEOLA BUTLER,
Savannah, Ga.
Without Money
AND
Without Price!
We have just issued a most wonderful and valuable
new book, which treats of diseases “peculiar to the
female sex ” and have spared neither pains nor money
to make it worthy the perusal and confidence of the
women all over the land.
Every mother, wife, sister and daughter in this
country is deeply, aye, vitally interested in this grea
work, and should send for it without delay.
It will be sent to any address in the United States
■pee of Cost I
Read it carefully, study it well and you will glean
from its pages information that may prove more valu
able than all the wealth of all the Rothschilds, more
precious than all the gems of Europe's royalty!
it mh sm w mi
Give Post Office and write name plainly, and ad
dress
The Bradfield Regulator Co.,
P. O. Box 28, ATLANTA GA.
Bradfield’s Regulator and Mother’s
Friend
For Sale by OSCEOLA BUTLER, Corner Bull
and Congress streets.
Durham is historic. It was neutral ground
during the armistice between Sherman and
Johnson. Soldiers of both armies filled
their po aches with the t ibacco stored there,
and, after the surrender, marched home
ward. Soon orders came from East, West,
North and South, for “more of that elegant
tobacco.” Then, ten men ran an unknown
factory. Now it employs 800 men, uses the
pink and pick of the Golden Belt, and the
Durham Bull is the trade-mark of this, the
best tobacco in the world. Blackwell’s Bull
Durham Smoking Tobacco has the largest
sale of any smoking tobacco in the world.
Why? Simply because it is the lest. All
dealers have it Trade-mark of the Bull
LOOK OUTIEMH
DURHAM Hk far
BULL
'-AiSb R he’d gone for a pack
age of Blackwell’s Bull
Durham Smoking To
*v flOUfilN bacco, as he was told, he
WU*® wouldn’t have been
cornered by the bulk
lißwl
CELEBRATED., haggard appear-
* # ance of the < oun-
tenance and sal
lowness of dys
peptics are sup
planted by a
vfe healthier "look,
and as the food is
assl mi 1 a ted, the
# body acquires
' substance. Ap-
petite is restored,
an< * * lie nervous
system refreshed
with much need*
~ ed slumber,
through the useof
SmP R SfS this medicine,
which isaNohrii-
I | I • eficial to persons
of a rheumatic tendency, and an inestimable
preventive of fever and ague. For sale by ail
Druggists and dealers generally.
ORANGES, ETC.
JUST RECEIVED”!
200 BARRELS CHOICE
POTATOES!
EARLY ROSE, PEERLESS,
HEBRON, BURBANKS,
For Eating, Planting or Selling.
A. I * JP L E S !
BALDWINS, PERMAINS, SPYS.
150 barrels FINE STOCK just in and FOR
SALE LOW.
ojxrioixrs,
RED AND YELLOW.
Rutter, Cheese,
Fresh, direct from the Factory, on which I
can give INSIDE PRICES.
Cocoanuts, Peanuts
ORACLES!
The celebrated Indian River Orange BEND
and CRESCENT CITY, noted for their fine
flavor.
E. IH.
101 Bay Street.
Telephone No. 273.
Yellow Bananas
-AND-
COCOANUTS!
' . V E TO-MORROW MORNING :
GOO Bunches large Yellow Bananas.
10,000 Cocoanuts.
50 Crates White Cabbage.
IN STORE:
Chili Red Potatoes, Seed.
Early Rose “ “
Peerless “ “
Goodrich “ “
240,000 Oranges.
J. B. Reedy
BAY AND WHITAKER STREETS.
ORANGES!
Oranges !
Oranges !
500 Boxes Selected Florida
Oranges !
For the Holiday Trade.
300 BARRELS CHOICE APPLES,
100 BOXES SELECTED PEARS,
100 BASKETS GRAPES in 5 and 101 b Baskets,
100 Sacks Virginia Hand-picked PEANUTS,
LOWEST BOTTOM PRICES.
■IJ-Now Landing and for sale at
W. I). SIMKINS,
1(59 Bay.
Beans ! Beans! Beans!
Impwood White Spine Cucumber
SEED,
TOMATO, EGG PLANT, CORN,
Alfalfa, Mixed Lawn and Bermuda
Grass Seeds.
JERUSALEM ARTICHOKES,
Onion Sets, Onion Sets,
A few of those Peas still on had. A full
line of Garden Seeds, offering bj’
J. Gardnev, Agent,
30J4 BULL STREET.
GEO. V. HECKER & CO
176 BAY STREET,
SAVANNAH, t A,
kpaliilij Flcor.
his: Pditi bln
lute 1 ’
ESTABLISHED 1877.
“The Savannah local,”
Next Oldest Paper in the cjiy.
An Eight Page Paper, 61 a/ Year.
The Savannah Local has run succesfully
through the past 8 years, and is to-day one of
the freshest and spiciest weeklies in the
State. It abounds in originality. No stale
Items. You will be pleased with it. Adver
tising rates low. Sample copy free
Address ELY OTTO,
Editor and Proprietor.
Pure Ground Land Plaster.
to arrive soon for sale, in large o
small quantities, by
THE WILCOX & GIBBS; GUANO CO.
tosified (Gieap
WANTED.
WANTED— Everybody to know that Cabf
net Photographs made by the new In
stantaneous process are J 8 50 per dozen. All
work guaranteed flrst elass In every particu
lar. J. N. WILSON, 21 Bull street, opposite
Screven House.
VVANTED—LadIes and Gentleman to keep
'' our goods on exhibition. Agents make #3
to's7 daily. Send 10 cents for Illustrated
Catalogue and begin at once.
PARK MFG. CO.,
Box 1521. 239 Broadway, New York.
WANTED— Every body to know that I
have Rough Lumber, Boards, Planks,
Scantling, Lathes, Shingles, Flooring, Cell
ing, and Weather-boarding for sale at my re
tail lumber yard, Taylor and East Broad
streets, next to Cassel’s wood yard.
R. B. REPPARD.
FOR RENT.
FOR RENT—Store and dwelling northeast
1 corner Gaston and Tattnall streets. Apply
to PETER REILLY, 26 Drayton street.
EiOR RENT—The dwellingabove the store on
1 the southeast corner of Broughton and
Drayton streets. Apply at store or to PETER
REILLY, 26 Drayton street.
FOR SALE—A good, sound Buggy and Sad
-1 die Horse, cheap. Apply to A. MACHER,
116 Broughton street.
L’OK RENT—That desirable residence on
1 South Broad street, second door east of
Abercorn. Apply at this office.
L’OR RENT—From the Ist of January, 1885,
I part of store No. 138 Congress street.
TO RENT—One four story Brick Building,
No. 155 Gordon street, 11 rooms and 2
bath rooms, two story outbuildings; posses
sion given at once.
Apply to JOHN A. WILSON,
No. 193 St. Julian street.
MISCELLANEOUS.
HORSE FOUND—Any person who may have
11 lost a Bay Mare (small), with Saddle and
Bridle, can learn of the same by applying to
VAN R. WINKLER, Esq., Monteith Station,
paying all expenses and proving property.
pHEAPEST VARIETY STORE-Goods
sold at five and ten cents. We offer a
Fine Gilt Frame at 35 to 95c, worth double. Cal I
and get your bargains in Tinware, Crockery
ware. Glassware, Picture Frames, Chromos,
Oil Paintings, Musical Instruments, etc.
Don’t mind the walk; It will benefit vour
pocket. Goods will be delivered to every
i body. Call at once at
NATHAN BROS.,
186 Congress street, near Jefferson.
SAR’S CELEBRATED ENGLISH
COMPLEXION SOAP.
OTTO OF ROSES,
33 PER CENT. GLYCERINE,
WASH BALLS,
UNSCENTED WRAPPED,
SHAVING STICKS
AT
OSCEOLA BUTLER’S,
Corner Bull and Congress streets.
ICE CREAM to be found always at OPPEN
-1 HEIMER'S, 139% Broughton street. -
SOMETHING NEW 1 CRYSTALIZED VIO
° LETS, at OPPENHEIMER'S, 139%Brough
ton street.
* LARGE and fine selection of Mallard’s
Candies at OPPENHEIMER'S, 139%
Broughton street.
IF you want to give a handsome New Year’s
* Present, call at OPPENHEIMER’S and
have one of his handsome Candy Boxes filled
with fresh Candles.
AT OPPENHEIMER'S, 139% Broughton
zx street, made daily, Caramels, Chocolate
Creams and Molasses Candy ; also Fresh
Caudles.
SPRING LAMB, Fine Tennessee and Balti
more Beef, at BAKER’S STALL, 66
Savannah Market.
anything you want go to the ITEN
1 CENT STORE. Each article in this store
sold at 10 cents. You can get your money’s
worth every time, and sometimes more. Call
and convince yourself. No. 154 Bryan street,
between Barnard and Whitaker streets,near
ly opposite the market. The stock comprises
Hardware, Crockery, Glassware, Tin, Wood
and Willow Ware, Cutlery, and all kinds of
.Xotions and Novelties
R. C. CONNELL,
. Proprietor.
IVIONEY TO LOAN—A place where you
I’-*- can obtain a loan on personal property.
Parties wishing to sell Diamonds and Jew
elry, and those wishing to buy such articles,
should call on me. Cash paid for old gold,
silver and mutilated coin. Office private •
business confidential. CLEMENT SAUSSY,
Broker, 142 Bryan street,
Choice Northern Boos!
LOGAN & CALDER,
WHOLESALE AND RETAIL
Shippingßutchers
STALLS
G7 & 68 Savannah Market
Received by every steamer: CHOICE
BALTIMORE, NEW YORK and BOSTON
BEEF, Fresh and Salted, TENNESSEE
BEEF and MUTTON. BALTIMORE BEEF
and SAUSAGE, BOSTON BEEF, Fresh and
Corned, FRESH SMELT and CODFISH, and
are prepared to supply ships and families
at the LOWEST MARKET PRICES.
Goods Delivered Free to Any Part of
the City.
4S- LEAVE YOUR ORDERS. ~ >
PRINTER’S™
ROLLERS!
THOMPSON’S
Sciiihern Edlsi Cmpoiitios!
The only reliable COMPOSITION made for
the SOUTHERN CLIMATE.
by the Pound or made into
Rollers at short notice.
A. D. THOMPSON,
93% Bay Street Savannah, Ga
G.R. HOHENSTEIN WM. H. PITT.
HOHENSTEIN & PITT,
(Successors to G. R. Hohenstein,)
PLUMBERS m ms ms.
No. 30% WHITAKER ST.]
4a*Work done at the shortest notice and
guaranteed at the lowest figures.;