Savannah daily evening recorder. (Savannah, GA.) 1878-18??, January 13, 1879, Image 4

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    ^^^W^deputy pl||^Piring which marshal, the latter aurP^ gen
i^rtally stabbed the former. Hale,
mter Republican : “Abram
negro man ai ed 69 years, on
plantation of Mr. lorgan, in Dooly
county, had twenty-six children grown,
twenty-two of whom are now living.
Miss Kate Mackey, the maiden aont
of the late Capt. \V- H. Stiles, died at
the residence of Mrs. Margaret W.
Stiles, on Tuesday last, in Bartow coun
ty. She was advanced in years and
had been feeble for several months.
Messrs. Samuel W. Wynn, Gill Cade,
M. M. Sims, W. M. Sims and J. W.
Sanders, says the Washington Gazette ,
have formed themselves into a company
' for the purpose of working a gold mine.
The mine is located on Mr. Blakey the s
land, two and a haW miles below
Crossroads in this county. The com
pany has only bought the minerial
interest in the land, and will open the
^ mipe immediately.
Mr. Cutler McAllister, well known
in Savannah, and born in the city we
believe, died in Jacksonville on the 8th,
says the Union : He died suddenly at
the St. James Hotel, of pneumonia. Monday
Deceased arrived in the city
last from San Francisco, Cal., and was
walking about the house the day before
death. He was a son of Judge M.
formerly of Savannah,
a.
Of the recent death of that big
hearted, liberal gentleman, Dr. W. W.
Barlow, recently deceased at bis borne
in Americus, the Republican thus
speaks: The Doctor was born Septem- 7,
ber 24, 1811, and died January
1879, at half past 4 a. m., and was in
his 68th year. He has resided in
Americus or near it upwards of forty
years, was for a number of years a suc
seesful and courteous practicing well and ii
cian, and consequently was extensive
favorably known over an
section of Southwest Georgia. He was
frequently nominated an elected to
the Legislature and conventions of the
State, and always discharged the duties
faithfully and satisfactorily to the
people.
The Polygamy Cannon Question—Delegate Uneasy.
The recent decision of constitutional the Supreme
Court, pronouncing the laws of as Congress to
and valid sup¬
press polygamy, will soon receive the
attentive consideration of the cabinet.
Heretofore only spasmodic efforts have
been made to enforce these laws, and
the consequence was that the authority
of the government over the subject was
more a subject oi ridicule than of ap¬
prehension to those concerned. Now
the situation has changed, and Mormon- and
dom is in a condition of disquiet
uneasiness. Mr. Cannon, the Delegate
in the House of Representatives from
Utah Territory, is the possessor of more
wives than one, and has therefore a
personal interest in the matter. He
has already had conversations with re-*
ference to the {Supreme Court decision
with several prominent members of
Congress and other officials. A sug¬
gestion has been made, with the con¬
currence of Delegate Cannon, that the
decision be considered as having a pros¬
pective effect, and that no prosecutions
shall be undertaken except on account
of polygamous marriages hereafter cons
tracted. In behalf of this suggestion
it is urged that to do otherwise and to
institute prosecutions by the wholesale
against all Mormons living in polygamy
would be ruin to all the material in¬
terests of the Territory, result in the
and breaking up the of almost Territory every household
convert into a social
and commercial desolation. By adopt¬
ing the suggestion it is urged that in a
generation, a comparatively brief period,
the peculiar institution of Utah will
have disappeared without any violent
measures. There may be something in
this, but still the question which the
President and his cabinet will have to
deal with is whether they can condone
polygamy in Utah anymore than biga¬
my in the District of Columbus ? The
question is a delicate and a difficult one,
and it calls for all the wisdom and the
good judgment which the President and
hia advisers can bring to bear upon it.
—Baltimore Sun.
Of the 7,629 men in New York
married last year, 5,988 for the first
time led a bride to the altar, and of
the women a still larger number, 6,127,
took a husband for the first time, Ac
cording widower* to universal experience, more
than widows,again embark
on the sea ot matrimony, 1,104 men
and only 387 women marrying for the
second time, while 71 meu and 33 wo
men entered into wedlock for the third
time. Only two There meu married for the
fourth time. were 777 Irish
bride* and 083 Irish grooms; 1,606
German brides and 2,227 German
grooms. The which following table shows
the ages at some of the couples
joined their fort unes: Males. Females
Under 20 years of age... 189 1,959
Between 50 and 55 119 35
Between 55 and 60 66 14
Between 60 and 65 24 1
Between 05 and 70 17 o
Between 70 aud 80 10 i
Between 80 and 90....... 1
d res
The ;young man acted
PRoT pppjny, and although taken not to the seriously Attorney in
was
Street Police Station. He there gave
his name as Francis St. Clair, age 25,
of The No. 45 Johnson street, Brooklyn.
insane. precinct He surgeon complained pronounced being cold, him
of
and was furnished with a shawl which
he wrapped about him. Presently he
was found hanging by the neck, with
the shawl made fast to a hook in the
wall. He was cut down and found se¬
riously injured.
A Methodist Patriarch Dead. —
Rev. Bartholomew Weed, better known
as “Father Weed,” died at Newark
Tuesday, Father at the advanced age of 96 living yrs.
Weed was the oldest
preacher of the Methodist Church in this
country, being 19 years the senior of any
other member of the New Jersey Con¬
ference. His death resulted from old
age and a life time of hard work. Until
within a few days he has been able to
be about. His last ministerial act was
to baptize two of his grandchildren, who
were brought to him for that purpose a
week or so ago. Mr. Weed was born
at Danbury, Conn,, March 6, 1783. In
1815 he was licensed to officiate as a
local preacher by the Philadelphia
Conference.
Seeking Homes in the South.—
There is—and we are not sorry to see
it—an increasing travel to the South¬
ern States in search of permanent
homes. Some go for the winter only,
looking attracted for by health, cheap but many others are
lands or a more sa¬
lubrious climate, and the hope of some
day dependence achieving an orange grove and in¬
at the same time. The
Tribune states that two hundred fami¬
lies have left New York and Brooklyn
this winter, most of them for Florida,
while the immigration from all parts of
the North to Texas continues large.
The following account of the new
Grand Vizier is given by a countryman
of his, Osman Bey. In 1835 three
small children, born in the Caucasus,
were crouching in a corner of the slave
market the seraglio of Tap-Kahn. The purveyors
to and some Tunisian pur¬
chasers began bargaining with the slave
dealer, the result being that the former
bought two of the boys and the Tunis¬
ian took one. This was Kheredine,
now Grand Vizier. The Bey of Tunis
sent him to France to complete his edu¬
cation. Instead of losing his time, he
worked with such zeal that on his re
turn to Tunis he became one of the
principal be Minister, persons be at Court. Promoted
to a became the succes¬
sor of his father-in-law, Kasnedar Mus
tapha The name of Kheredine (the
delight of religion) is for the Turks a
talisman of good omen. It recalls the
memory of Kheredine Barbhrossa, the
famous corsair, who was the terror of
the Mediterranean, and whose tomb at
Bechictach is much frequented by pil¬
grims.
A lady of rank in Paris died three
weeks ago, in the fashionable quarter of
the Arc de Tiiomphe, of whom an in¬
teresting story is told. She was a
famous card-player, and was credited
with knowing every game there was to
know. When travelling in a foreign
land she met, one day, in a hotel, a
Russian lady with that passion for
gambling said to be inherent in the
Russian nation. Anxious to play with
the lady from Paris, she wrote request¬
ing granted, a few games. Her request was
and the ladies played all
night, until her the Russian losing at every hand,
opponent had won from her
more money than the mines in the Ural
had produced for her revenues in
lady twenty-five made years. At last the Russian
her fortune, a but despairing without effort to regain
avail. Rising
from the table, she told the French
lady bow she but had lost more than she
possessed, that in her desire to pay
a debt of honor she would instruct her
steward to convey to her the title deeds
of all the mines and estates she owned.
At this the victorious antagonist smiled
and requested that she might have her
own way in the matter, since she had’
won. for. When Apiiest and a lawyer were sent
lady asW they arrived, the Russian
m t„ bind Wlf by a
solemn oath never again ° to touch a
card n risk . , at , of ,
or money any game
chaneft uianee. She one did aid no so, nml and then tnen oicma.l signed
an engagement to „/* pay her antagonist
n tue .______ annual i sum _____ of ®a $2,000. Am rn Ihe vow
never to / play cards for money Gnn aeaiu I
i -.1 —
She faithfully i ,, , keut, , and . the ,, <J>2 * 000 , 1
was
punctually Dunctuallv naid paiu ovarv eveiv jeai, vmr the the French riencil I i
lady a" giving ° it the Lame of the “Queen
Oi ,./• bp«U168 j -bounty, r> ____a. >• dJld. j inv'&riubly -Li
giving it to the poor of Paris.
Great ^ Every Britain one knows that we Supply- j
with large amounts of
cheese which, when sold, is called
oheddar, aud that a certain quantity of
ibis article finds its way back across i
of the I
consequence presumably acquired foreign during flavor it has
abroad. So bacof its soionrn J
too, the from Cm
cinnati and Chicago comes back to us
after a voyage to the Old Wond labeled I
England, weeks often needing only a stav of
a few to become thoroughly
naturalized. These are such patent i
deceits that no one thinks of objecting
to them.
*
s & A.
DLACKSMith worKWT^I
j <r 1 i
1» ioJ -SE
PHOENIX IRON WORKS
JAMES MONAHAN,
IRON AND BRASS FOUNDER,
Cor. Broughton and Randolph street. streets,
East End Broughton GEORGIA.
SAVANNAH,
MANUFACTURE OF
Sugar Mills and guaranteed Pans a for Specialty. One
My Mills and Pans y ear
MILLS: PANS:
12 inch. Mill...... ...$25 00 30 gall. Pans 8 7 00
10 s 00
14 ... 35 00 50 10 00
60 11 00
16 46 00 15 50
100 20 00
18 63 00
Mills and Pans being made of best material
are strong, durable and convenient. superior Experi¬
ence enables me to offer my patrons address
inducements. Call and see me, or me
by mail.
MANUFACTURER OF
IRON AND BRASS CASTINGS.
I manufacture at reasonable prices Archi¬
tectural Iron Work of all kinds and styles, for
Churches, Stores, and Dwellings. Send circulars. Cemetery f33
rden Railings. for
Wines and Liquors.
CORN and ROCK!
RECOMMENDED BY THE MEDICAL
FACULTY FOR
Coughs, Colds and Affections oi
the Throat and Lungs.
$4 PER GALLON i $1 PER BOTTLE,
PREPARED AND SOLD BY
WM. HONE & CO.,
oelltf Corner Bay and Bull streets.
F. J, RUCKERT,
Cor. St. Julian and Barnard Sts.
Calls special attention to his
TAUNUS NATURAL MINERAL WATER,
—Of the celebrated—
TAUNUS BRUNNEN, GROSSKARBEN,
Near Frankfort o. M., Germany.
Also dealer in ail kinds of
Imported and Domestic Wines
oct!4-tf
_
LEON RAMBAUD & CO •I
Importers of and dealers in
F oreign & L( n cstic Wines, Liqn
Segars, Canned Goods, Relishes
And Delicacies.
In our sample room we sell all popular
brands of French Wines and and Liquors, also the
America Champagne Catawba Grape
Champagne at ten cents per glass; fine quality
Claret at $1 00 constantly per gallon. hand the following
We keep on
celebrated French Liquors, which we will sell
in any quantity: Cassis splendid morning drink).
French (a
Liqueur de la Chartreuse, Marschino. Curacao,
Absinthe Anisette, Creme de Rose, ue Noyau,
de Vanilie, etc.
11614 BROUGHTON STREET. 33r:zyb
Leather and Findings,
COMMISSION MERCHANTS
And Dealers in
HIDES, LEATHER AND FINDINGS,
106 BAY STREET,
SAVANNAH, GEORGIA.
—o
H IGHEST Market Price paid for Hides,
Wool. Sheep Skins, Furs, Deer Skins,
Beeswax and Tallow.
A full supply of the best French and Ameri¬
can Tannages constantly kept on hand.
Liberal advances made on consignments.
No business transacted on Saturday.
Medicines,
DR. ULMER’S
Liver Corrector,
TRADE
OR r— sSfflS?- o % < r? FOR
_
Vegetable m i\\, 1 -3 DISEASES
Mar*
From a Disordered State of the
Liver,
Such as Dyspepsia, Obstructions of the Vis
the Bowels, Sick Headache, Diarrhoea, and
Dysentery,
Enlarged Spleen. Fever and Ague, Eruptive
and Cutaneous Diseases, such as St. Anthony's
Fir0i Erysipelas, Pimples, Pustules and Boils,
Female weaknesses Affections oi the Kid
neys and Bladder, Piles and many other dis- j
orders caused from derangement of the Liver,
This preparation,.composed os it is of some
of the most valuable alteratives known, is >>
valuable for restoration of the tore and
strength to the system debilitated by disease,
Some of our best physicians who are familiar
With the composition of this medicine attest
Its virtues and prescribe it. It is a pleasant
cordial. Prepared by
p_ ULMER,
SAVANNAH, GA.
Price One Dollar. For sale by Druggists
generally. “ ocloeod-tf
NOTICE.
Orders will be promptly filled
fw Hebrew Prayer and School Books,
Bible, - - - - Z. ’
rn? T nach k (Scriptures) . x ,P"j"n .
’
Forms of Prayers )
for the if Hoi wl-i vs ’ } 1 '
“
Haily ta , Prayers,
- -
* ~
&Q., &C.
With English or Gem in Translation. r
Apply to, or address J, STERN, i
Savannah, Ga.
Recorder.
Subscription: $5
per annum.
PA fABLE IN ADVANCE
It is the Paper
for the People.
It is the Paper
for the Merchant
to advertise in.
Advertise in it.
It is the heist ad¬
vertising reaching medium,
1 all classes
and that portion oi
our people, who
procure their sup¬
plies at home.
Cor. Bay & Barnard f
ENTRANCE ON W STREET,
Furniture, liarpets 5
WindolF Shades, &c.v *
I desire to call the attention of my friends, and the public generally, to the fact that I will
on or about the FIRST OF SEPTEMBER REMOVi5 TO MV NEVV STORE.I ‘
NO. 169 BROUGHTON STREET,
Where In addition to a largo and well selected stock of Furniture, I will open a flue stock o t
CARPETS,
OIL CLOTHS,
MATTINGS,
WINDOW SHADES,
!&c. &c.
I have visited all the principal markets in the United States, and have taken great care
in the selection of my Stock at LOW CASH PRICES, which will allow me to sell very Cheap
My Stock is all of tlie NEWEST and LATEST styles, both in
FURNITURE and CARPETS.
I have now a full stock of Furniture which l n»i goffering chea
rather than move it.
50 rolls of assorted Mattings Just receive! to-day.
Don’t buy until you have examined my stock.
D. O. ALLEN,
No. 165 BROUGHTON ST.
National Wire Mattress, the best in the market. Upholstering and Mattress
making. 31
Tobacco and Cigars,
Jaas
HEALTH. k k E I Philadelphia.
TRADE MARK
Oft*
Mil satra#]
— : ■
\V.T.RlHCKMELL Sf CO. lUTtH/IMNC
Dry Goods,
A Pleasant Invitation is Extended
To the Ladies of this City and vicinity to call at our Dry Goods Emporium, where we *ro
daily receiving immense quantities of everything in the shape of t»l 4
Dress Goods, Shawls, Cloaks, <fco.
Our stock of CORSETS is simply immense and are CHEAP.
M R. COHEN is now attending some of the Large Auction Sales in New York City, and
we are determined to give our customers Goods
CHEAPER THAN EVER.
All we ask is an Inspection of our goods before purchasing.
RESPECTFULLY,
JACOB COHEN.
notions and Furnishing Goods,
AN EXTRAORDINARY CHANCE
To purchase Winter Dry Goods cheap, extraordinary
cheap, is herewith offered.
C HRISTMAS being over, we have concluded to close out our entire Winter stouk at a
sacrifice, and rather word than be compelled facts. to carry W offer these goods CLOAKH over the summer. We mean
business, value. every of we WHITE say are BLANKETS, e from 100 Si at a reduction of ouo-thii d
their 500 pairs 25 a pair and upwards, 300 single
and double SHAWLS at unheard all of prices. Dres Goods Woolen Dress Goods, thut Black Alpacas, Black
and L’olored Cashmeres, and other at such prices they must sell.
A speciality we offer in a large line of
BLACK DRESS SILKS!
These goods really deserve the special attention of the public as we have determined to close
them out at less tnan cost. In HOSIERY and UNDERWEAR 1 we offer also inducements
to Duyers. Children’s fancy Stockings, which are cheap at 10c. we have reduced to 6c. per
pair, and others in proportion. CLOTHS for Men’s and Boy’s wear, we oiler also at a
reduced price.
50 pcs. Calicoes, reduced to 3 cents a yard.
350 pcs. Best Calico, warranted fast, at 5 cts. a yard.
As we anticipate an extraordinary rush, we would request an early call to avoid disap
pointmenpfor we cannot duplicate any article at the prices at which we have determined
to sell off our winter stock.
DAVID WEISBEIN,
dec29 153 BROUGHTON STREET.
PREPARE FOR THE FALL?
GREAT REDUCTION in UNDERSHIRTS.
Uent’8 Merino Undershirts, at 40c. former price 75 cents.
Gent’s Merino Undershirts, atB5c. former price fl 00.
Ladies’ Merino Vests, 25c, 50c* and 7;>c. WORTH DOUBLE.
MOHR BROTHERS,
mchl7 165 C0NGRES3 STREET.
C. A. CORTJ.NO,
Bair httia?, Bair Dressitf, Curling and
SHAVING SALOON.
HOT AND COLD BATHS.
J66U Bryan street, opposite the Market, un
&r
HAIR store:
JOS. E. L0ISEAU & CO.,
118 BROUGHTON ST., Bet. Bull A Draytoa
K EEP on hand a large assortment of Hair
Switches, Curls. PufTk, and Fancy Good*
Hair combings worked in the latest style.
CefHfndr, ard* N 12HVt.