Newspaper Page Text
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E A. I L Y EVEisriisr gt
Savannah a > prj ER
YOL I.—No. 91.
THE SAVANNAH RECORDER,
R. M. ORME, Editor.
PUBLISHED EVERY EVENING,
(Saturday Excepted,)
At IG1 RAT STREET.
By J. ST Elly.
The Recorder is served to subscribers, in
every part ol the city by careful carriers.
Communications must be accompanied by
the name of the writer, not necessarily for
publication, but as a guarantee of good faith.
Remittance by Check or Post Office orders
must be made payable to the order of the pub¬
lisher.
We will not undertake to preserve or return
rejected communications.
Correspondence on Local and general mat¬
ters of interest solicited.
On Advertisements running three, six, and
’twfelve months a liberal reduction from our
regular rates will be made.
All correspondence should be addressed, Re¬
corder, Savannah, Georgia.
The Sunday Morning Recorder will take
the inace oi the Saturday evening edition,
which will make six full issues for the week.
49-Wedo not hold ourselves responsible for
the opinions expressed by Correspondents.
The Mysterious “Hez.”
Philadelphia possesses a mystery in
the shape of an invisible beneficent
fairy, who writes a cramped band,
worjjts by means of the post office instead
of wands, magic lamps, etc., and sends
its gifts in cheap yellow asylums envelopes and to
the needy poor, orphan sign its identity
hospitals, with no of
inside beyond the single word “Hex.”
These gifts of “Hez” are magnificent
in proportion, and bestowed with great
wisdom and the keenest insight into the
necessities of each case. “Hez” is sup¬
posed to be some eccentric and chari¬
table millionaire, who means to put his
money to good uses while he is alive,
and not to leave it for trustees and ex¬
ecutors to quarrel over when he is
dead.
If there is an eccentricity in giving
money while the giver is a/ive, and not
by legacy, rich men will do well to imi¬
tate it. Many posthumous bequests reach in
this country have failed utterly to
the class for whom they were intended.
Edwin Forrest bequeathed home his im¬
mense property to support a for¬
aged actors, and but one old man has
ever enjoyed the stately mansion and
its luxuries. There is scarely a town or
city in the country which has not its
testimony to give of a charitable legacy
which has failed to answer the purpose
of its testator.
Trustees and executors are open to
temptation, and the care of a large, un¬
protected trust is the strongest one
which can be thrown in their way.
“Hez” is wise to distribute bis tens of
thousands himself, and to do it without
the delay of a day, of
About ten years ago a man vast
wealth was showing to a lriend his col¬
lection of historical pamphlets, which
was the finest in the country.
“I am going to give them to the
Pennsylvania Historical Society,’’ he
said, “and this balance of my library to
the Franklin library. I have no family,
as you know, and I intend to give away
all that I have before I die, leaving
myself only a comfortable annuity. I
have no faith in posthumous charity.”
“When do you intend to do it?’’
asked his friend.
He hesitated. Next month; I shall
not put it off. As soon as I return
from St. Louis.”
He started that evening for St. Louis.
The next day his friend took up a
newspaper and read that the boat was
burned, with most of the passengers.
He was dead, and his money went
to the State. He had put it off’ a day
too long.
Who to Marry.
Many a young man is very agreeable
in social parties, but can’t do much
more than support himself. For a girl
to marry such a fellow is taking great
risks. To marry a man who has uoth
iug but a salaried situation is impru
dent. •Better wait uuti. by economy be
has something to begin married lifei on.
If be really loves he can wait a while,
and >f he has a manly nature he can le
etrict himself ot some enjoyments so as
to save money to begin matrimonial
lit® with. It ne won t do that he 1 ^ eei
fish and not likely to make a good Bus
band. It he can t, then certainly ex
pecting his salary to support absuid. com ten Love La
tdy himselt and a wile is
is iudispensable home comforts tor married absolutely hte, but
some are
needful to make married litexeiy agtee
able. Even if a mar. has some meai^ it
may be very unwise to r sk a marriage
partnership with him. it he is a little
dissipated, or mean and selfish, oi un
principled, ail the worst traits ol ms
character are likely to be manifested as
soon as the honeym oon is o ver.
", * *7, 7 U
A young lady , said to h i i_____ L
“Charley, how tar is it around the
world?” “About twenty-four his
my darling,” replied he, She as all the
encircled her waist. was
world to him.
What Shall Men Eat ?
Norman Taylor’s Diet—The Injunction Given
Through Moses—Mr.Wm.William’s Case.
Tot he Editor of the Sun —Sir : The
case of Mr. Norman. Taylor, who, on
the first day of the New Year, ran
twenty miles in two hours and twenty
three minutes without apparent fatigue,
on a diet of fruit, cereals and tea,
breaking down a robust, beef-eating
man, scarce half his age, in the middle
of the race, brings up the question of
the .proper food for man—a vital one in
these days, in more senses than one.
The earliest instruction we have on
this point is in the first book of Moses,
called Genesis, Chapter I., 29th verse :
“And God said, Behold, I have given
you every hero, bearing seed, which is
upon the face of all the earth, and
every tree, in the which zs the fruit of
a tree yielding seed ; to you it shall be
for meat.”
These words are explicit. Many men
of thought believe that if a man bad
followed this Divine injunction, instead
of indulging in the flesh pots of Egypt,
the human race would have been
healthier, hardier and longer lived.
If the testimony of travellers in
India and othei parts of the world re¬
mote from us is to be relied upon, men
who live entirely on cereals, fruit and
vegetables think nothing of trotting off
scoies of miles, often over <aountains,
with hundreds of pounds of freight that on
their backs. One writer says 800
pounds are frequently carried with
ease.
A little personal experience tome
fifteen years ago, when skating was all
the rage in Central Park and elsewhere,
nearly converted me into a vegetarian.
On descending a bank to the lake one
evening I slipped and fell, striking my
head violently and cutting my face
severely. A physician who dressed ray
wounds advised me to abstain from
meat, ale or distilled liquors for at
least ten days, as there might be danger
of erysipelas. Although in the habit of
partaking temporarily of the good
things of this life, as they ajre called,
I resolved to follow the doctor’s in¬
structions. At the end of the ten days
I found myself a stronger and more ac
tive man than I had ever been in all
my life before. Where it previously
tired me to skate or walk, half an hour(
I found that I could exercise for hours
without unpleasant feelings of fatigue.
I kept up the vegetarian died all win¬
ter and although my labor was exhaust¬
ing, three working on the a newspaper until
o’clock in morning. I fre¬
quently skated during the afternoon,
worked all night, and walked home
with pleasure in the morning."
What to Eat.
In Dr. Hall’s Journal of Health , a
few years ago, this statement of the
amount of nutriment in various arti¬
cles of food was given ;
Apples, raw, 10 per cent.; beans,
boiled, 87 per cent.; beef, roasted, 26
>er cent.; bread, baked, 80 per cent.;
iutter, 96 per cent.; cabbage, boiled,
7 per cent.; cucumbers, raw, 2 per cent.;
fish, boiled, 20 per cent.; milk, fresh, 7
percent.; mutton, roasted, 30 per cent.;
pork roasted, 24 per cent.; poultry,
roasted, 27 per cent., potatoes, boiied,
13 per cent.; rice, boiled, 88 per cent.;
sugar, 96 per cent.; turnips, boiled, 4
per cent.; veal, roasted, 25 per cent.;
and venison, boiled, 22 per cent.
The cheapest articles of food, except
butter, are the most nourishing. A
pint of white beans, costing a few cents,
contains the same amount of nutriment
as 3J pounds of prime roasting beef,
which is twelve times as expensive.
Furthermore, a pound of Indian meal
will go as far as a pound of fine flour.
Some vegetable and fruits should enter
into the family use for sanitary reasons.
Among fruits, apples are wholesome,
while sweet potatoes, parsnips, beets,
and carrots contain the most saccharine
matter, are are the most nourishing.
Sensible.-— -When a place on the
gi a j n committee was ottered Mr. Bruce,
0 f Mississippi, colored, he replied that
rea py nc t see k ow anv good
cou i t j result from the proposed investi
gation. g Perhaps, he said, there have
een 8ome frauds. It would be strange
if there had not been, but his people
l iac j just made the second largest crop
C otton ever grown in the South,
an( j t } ia t circumstance furnished ample
evidence, to his mind, that they were
au Ysses p e as prosperous as the laboring
c North. This being the case, the
co j ore d people ought not to be stirred
U p Jjy political excitement, which could
t j 0 no good, and might do harm, by
ar0Ud j n g ane w the feelings of suspicious
Hislike of the whites, which were
dyi n g ou t with the prosperity of the
South. These sentiments were felt
to be full of the good sense which Mr.
Bruce has always shown in speaking
a ff au , * s affecting the South and his
t 4
______ _ ^ ____
Two white girls in Vermont ran away
[with a brace of married negro men the
day,
SAVANNAH, THURSDAY, JANUARY 10 1879.
BY TELEGRAPH.
RUSSIAN AND TURKISH
TREATY.
The Dinas Mine Explosion in
England.
Northern Settlers Satisfied
With the South.
ARRESTS AT JACKSONVILLE
RUSSIA AND TURKEY.
Constantinople, Jan. 15.—Prince
LobanofF, the Russian Ambassador at
Constantinaple, has accepted all the
articles of the definite treaty of peace
as agreed relative to by the Porte; but clause
two, to Russia’s supervision
over the execution of the Treaty of
Berlin, is only accepted ad referendum.
The scheme for the organization of a
gendarmerie, adopted by the Eastern
Roumelian Commission, provides that
the commanders and instructors be
Frenchmen. A Constantinople dis¬
patch says eleven battalions of Turkish
troops have been ordered to hold
themselves in , readiness to occupy
Adrianople as soon as the definite treaty
with Russia had been signed.
THE DINAS MINE EXPLOSION.
London, January 15. — There has
been no communication yet with the
entombed colliers in the Dinas mine.
Eighty yards of roof at the bottom of
the shaft have fallen since the explo*
sion, rendering ventilation impossible,
and explorers cannot enter the mine.
bility Experts say only by the barest possi¬
can any of the sixty men be aliye,
and give no hope of their rescue,
THE RUSSO-TURKISH TREATY.
Constantinople, January 15.—The
signature of the Russo-Turkish treaty
is expected to take place Thursday.
Russia, it is understood, accepts a re¬
duction of the indemnity by one hund¬
red million roubles, and also in pay¬
ment in paper roubles.
TIIE DUCHY OF BRUNSWICK.
Berlin, Jan. 15.—The journals pub¬
lish a semi-official note, which says the
reported statement that the Crown
Prince Frederick William, of Prussia,
does not intend to incorporate the
sumed Duchy of Brunswick, must not be as¬
to be authentic because it is not
officially denied.
TREATY BETWEEN FRANCE AND ITALY.
London, Jan. 15.—A Reuter tele¬
gram from Rome states that a provision¬
al treaty of commerce between Italy
and France on the “most favored
nation’’ basis has been signed.
THE TROUBLESOME CHEYENNES.
Fort Robinson, January
Tuesday morning a reconnoisanee
ed that the Indians had escaped
the night. The tioops being without
provisions, pack returned to camp to equip
a and train, and start on a pre
longed scout after the savages.
THE COBB TRIAL.
Norwich, January 15.—In the Cobb
trial this morning, Mr. Thresher, of the
counsel for defense, concluded his argu¬
ment, and State’s Attorney Waller be¬
gan the closing plea for the prosecution.
political arrests.
Tallaiiasse, Fla., January 15.—
Arresis for violation of the election is
continued at Jacksonville.
postmaster arrested.
Cincinnati, January 15. _ John
Back, Postmaster at Frenchburg, Ky.
was arrested yesterday, letters’ charged with
rifling valuable It is alleged
that he has broken upen upwards of
thirty letters in the last three
report of yei low fever expepts ‘
Washington, Jan. 15,-The b a ,. d
of experts under instructions of the
,i , ... (
uminina ha’viug”retm77lo’thi3 mfn tu n.nun citvt „aii t
ed to-day summing up their labors It
will be several days before their report
can be made. '
b&itish labor troubles.
London, Jau. lo ihe umpire m the
arbitration concerning the wages die
pute m the Cleveland and North of
England iron trade, has decided that
the men must accept a reduction of
five per cent.
NORTHERN SETTLERS SATIS FI with
THE SOUTH.
Charlotte, N. C., January 15.—
Northern men who hate settled in the
South since the war, assembled in the
Opera House to-day, and passed re^ o
lutions expressive of their satisfact
with the social treatment, and deelar
that in no section do al cla ' • -
greater liberty. Five State; were re¬
j presented.
| The fair in aid of the Ron; Lath
I olio Cathedral in New York uty re -
| alized $275,000. The expenses vver
'only $5,000.
The Wife that Victoria does Not
Recognize.
London, December 17.—You will be
surprised to hear that the marriage to
take place between the ex-King of
Hanover and the Princess Thyra of
Denmark could not be solemnized with¬
out the consent of Queen Victoria, and
that such consent has lately been
declared under the great seal of Great
Britain.
The ex-King, or more correctly he
would have been King of Hanover if
Hanover had not b„een wiped off the
European slate by Germany, is a mem¬
ber of the royal family of Great
Britain the British and is Duke of To Cumberland tl.marriage in
peerage.
of the humblest member of the royal
family the consent of the reigning
monarch must be abtained,or else such
marriage is not legal and the issue of it
illegitimate. Hence, the children of
the present Duke of Cambridge, though
their mother is as good a wo nan as
ever lived, are simply bastard-.
The cruelty of this arranges nt has
been brought before the public mind
lately by the announcement that “Capt.
Fitzgeorge, son of the Duke of Cam¬
bridge,” bad been appointed assistant
private secretary to the Secretary of
V ar. The existence of such a person¬
age was unknown to the majority of the
present generation. He is a fine fellow,
beloved by his father and mother, who
were married years ago according to
the rites of the Church, but which
marriage the Queen refused to recog¬
nize, because her cousin George’s wife,
the woman he loved well enough to
select above all royal princesses at
his disposal, was an of actress. day, And the idol so
the Capt. Fitzgeorge to
of society, and deemed worthy of
copying so important a post in the
government of the country, although
the Church says he is the honest son of
an honest marriage, is, according to
law, only a bastard. “How long, 0
Lord! how long?”— Chicago Journal.
Till mage and His Critics.
Rev. Mr. Talmage devoted his ser¬
mon Sunday morning to his critics.
He declared “a war of twenty-five years
against the iniquity for Christ’s sake,”
and said between the tabernacle and a
low bed in Greenwood Cemetery there
should not be an inch of retreat, indif¬
ference or compromise. He had been
criticised by some of his clerical brethen
as a sensational mountebank, but he
“would not retort on the dear souls,
but wished them all good luck, with
large audiences, $15,000 salaries', a
bouse full of children and Heaven to
boot'.” He was so busy in assaulting
the powers of darkness that he had no
time to stop and stab any of his own
regiment in the back. When a fellow
j minister threw an ecclesiastical br:ck
| at him, he would pour holy oil on that
| minister’s head until it runs down on
collar. He thanked the secular
press for the dissemination of his ser
mons Mr. Talmage emphatically de
; nied a falsehood which had invaded
j the sanctity of his house. He said it
had been stated in private circles and
newspapers that many years ago be
went sailing on the Schuylkill river
with wife and her sister, when sudden¬
ly the boat capsized, and that, hiving
au opportunity of saving eith u his
wife or her sister, he saved her sister,
marrying her sixty days after. He said
he proposed “to nail that infamous lie
on the forehead of the villian, man or
woman, and to invoke the law to help
him.’’ He then explained sister, the but calamity his
it was not his wife’s own
.sister. His present wife was not within
j one hundred miles of the place, and so
p ar from being sisters, they were
j strangers, and had never heard of each
i j other.
--— ** -
“The Chinese must go!” is a cry that
1 heard not in California only, but the
[ "'hole world over «-herov« they have
se ‘ led m considerable numbers. Such
; is tne case in Bntisn Columbia, New
iZealand, New South Wales,
an< ^ f 16 Sandwich Islands. They come
Q° these countries without wives
i fami ^ le \ Ilve ’ cl ° 3el J packed together,
, on the cheapest food that will sustain
life, save all the monev ti they can with
a view to returning China with
earniDgs as soon as they can, and, being
thus enabled to work at lower prices
than the native workmen possibly can,
j soon obtain a monpoly of ou» depar t
ment of labor after the other. In
Zealand they have been set to work
upon the* railroads, but have been
driven away by the white laborers. In
New South Wales the cabinet-making
trade hi passea entirely into their
hands, and they are taking the p lace
°* white cooks and servants in the
hole
Mi t she
wi as be fe»™
that ue c d no id the eiectn al
nc
Mrs. L -Marv Anderson's moth
er ana who travels* with her cads the
'or great of her actress ia "Sis” circles- when speaking
private
ITEMS OF INTEREST.
The d bt of the Roman Catholic
Cathedral in Fifth Avenue, New Y-rk
is $400,000.
M. Gabriel Ibrahim, the last surviv¬
or of the Mameluke Corps, formed in
Egypt by Napoleon, has just died at
Marseilles.
On the night of the 4th in Mobile,
Ala., as Mrs. Stein was saying her
prayers preparatory to going to bed,
her clothing caught fire and sdie was
burned to death.
Beecher’s pews were rented on Tues¬
day for nearly $4,000 more than they
brought last year. Is this an indica¬
tion that his stock is rising, or of an
improved condition of business affairs ?
• It is stated that the intemperate hab¬
its, which caused the death of Beverly
Douglas, the Virginia Congressman,
were the result of his war experiences.
Douglas was a Major in the Confederate
army, and on one occasion, in a fit of
passion, shot one of his own soldiers
Remorse at the thought that he had
killed one of his own men without suf¬
ficient reason preyed upon his mind
and ultimately brought him into a mor¬
bid condition, which drove him to
excessive and almost constant use of
the strongest liquors.
The Washington Tost indulges in this
line of lecturing Bishop Haven :
Bishop Gil Haven recently started
and disgusted Southern an intelligent declaring audience that
in a city by
Christ was “lynched.” The reverenck
gentleman should have a new version
of the Scriptures declaring that Paul
and Silas were “bull-dozed,” Peter
“intimated,” and that all the apostles
suffered from “Roman outrages.’’ He
might mention, too, that Agrippa in¬
sisted on "dividing time” with Paul.
Possibly the raiment for which the Ro¬
man soldiers cast lots could go into the
Haven version as bloody shirt.”
The Pennsylvania couple who were
married a few days ago at the ages of
eighty-six and eighty-seven are con¬
siderably outdone by two representa¬
tives of the Jewish race in Russian
Poland. The bride was a widow pre¬
cisely 100 years old; the groom a
youth of eighty-eight. daughter, Indeed, the
bride has a with whom she
has lately lived, whose age is as great
within four years as her step-father’s,
while a great-great-great-granddaugh
ter is a gill advanced of thirteen. Notwithstand¬
ing her age this bride is said
to be strong in her faculties. She goes
out of the house alone, hears and sees
“perfectly well,” and retains all her
mental powers.
The Rev. Mr. Broy, Congregational
clergyman, of Montreal, employed Dun¬
bar, sculptor, to make a bust of him. It
was finished, and it was the Rev. Mr.
Bray only who from was satisfied. The shall ar¬
tist was far being so. “I
carry it away,” said Mr. Bray, “to de¬
light my family and congregation.’’
“You shall do nothing of the sort,”
responded doubly the artist, and to make as¬
surance suie, be knocked off
the nose of the bust with a broomstick.
But he forgot that he had received his
pay in advance, and that the work
really was no longer his. So Mr. Bray
sued him; he was fined $5, and con¬
demned to pay $20 damages to the sit¬
ter; and all, poor man, because he was
judicially fastidious about his own
work.
One of the earliest pieces of paper
money ever in this country was the
work of Franklin’s press, It was
printed in In 1754, and represented inches three by
j pence. size it was three
j two, and had the subscription : “Three
pence. 73,319. Three pence. This
bill shall pass current lor 3 pence within
j the Province of Pennsylvania, accord¬
j ing to an act of Assembly made on the
14th year of King George III. Dated
the 18th day of June, 1764. Three
pence. J. W. Wbarton. In the lower
left lrand corner were the English
ot arms. Copies of this curious relic
of greenoackism are very rare—if, in
this one be not the only copy
j and known. was found It is owned in Chester in Philadelphia, several
ago by some workmen who were exam
ming the interior of an underground
vault.
Of the Prince of Wales and Dr.
Lvon standing' Playfair it is told that they were
011ce near a caldron contain
; n a lead which was boiling at white
j heat. in “Has science?” your Royal said Highness the any
I faith
“Certainly,” replied the Prince. “Will
y 0U) then, place your hand in the boil
ing metal and ladle out a portion of
it?” “Do you tell me to do this ?”
as ked the Prince. “I do,” replied
T> ctor. The Prince then ladled out
eome of the boiling lead with his hand,
without sustaining any injury. It is
well known scienc tic tact l.. tt the hu
man hand may be placed uninjured in
lead boiling at wlme beat, be.ug
tested from any harm by the moisture
ottheskm. .Should the lead be a a
perceptibly lower temperature, the
effect need not be described. After
this let no one underrate the courage
1 the Prince of Wales.
PRICE THREE CENTS.
To Rent.
i
T O Bluff RENT.—A Hoad, small «>!/£ miles Farm, from on Savannah,) the White
containing good fencing, 15 acres of cleared lanu, under
Blacksmith with good Dwelling, store and
est terms, by Shop. Can be rented at the low¬
at Mr. O. Mehrtens’ applying Grist to C. II. G. WTTTCAMP
and Charlton Mill, corner Jeffer¬
son streets. decJl
Business Cards.
FKAXCEUUS’ COPYING INK.
In Pint and Half Pint Bottles.
Doez net mould or thicken when exposed
to the air. Saves the Pen. Copies excellently.
TRY IT.
F. BINGEL,
WINES, LIQUORS AND SUGARS.
Milwaukee and Cincinnati Lager Beer on
draught. hand. Free Lunch. Fresh Oystors always
on 21 Jeft'erson st., corner G*ongrest\
street lane. mchlO-Iy
C IGAR rer of FACTORY.—F. Cigars, and dealer KOLB, in manufactu¬ Cigars, To¬
Street. bacco, Snuff', Pipes, Ac. Call at 121 Broughtou 28g
y
VAL. BASLEIt’S
WINES, LIQUORS, SUGARS and TOBACCO
The host Lager Beer in the city, The well
known TEN PIN ALLEY reopened, Lunch
.Square every day House, from II to 1 o’clock. At the Market
174 BRYAN ST. Savannah, Ga.
GEORGE FEY,
WINES, LIQUORS, SEGARS, TOBACCO, Ac.
The celebrated Joseph Schlitz’ MILWAU¬
KEE LAGER BEER, a speciality. No. 22
Whitaker Street, Lyons’ Block, Savannah,
Ga. FREE LUNCH every day from 11 to 1.
r-zSl-Jv
Clothing.
Tlie Popular Clothing: House of
B. H. LEVY,
/'"VFFERS for the next thirty days his entire
stock of all styles Men’s, Youths’ and
Children’s CLOTHING, at the following re¬
duced prices:
201 Men’s uassimere Suits, dark or light, solid
colors or striped, formerly sold at 11(1 00,
now S12 50.
Dress Diagonal Coats and Vests, ranging
from #6 00 and upwards.
500 pairs Cassimere Pants, different colors and
000 Children styles, ranging Boys’ from $2 00 and upwards.
and suits from $0 00 and up¬
wards. Great reduction in Overcoats!
000 Overcoats at the low figure of $3 00 and up
warde, must be closed out, rather than to
carry over the season. Anyone wishing
to this purchase will find it profitable to call at
jan.l popular Clothing House. B. H. LEVY,
Corner Congress and Jefferson sts.
Stoves and Tinware
%
THOMAS J. DALEY,
PRACTICAL TINNER anil dealer in HTOVEB
House Furnishing Goods, Willow
and Wooden Ware,
manufacturer of
Tin Ware, Tin Roofing, Gutters, Leaders, Ac.
177 Congress Street,
SAVANNAH, GEOh, lA
novlO-tim
Plumbing and Gas Fitting*
CHAS. E. WAKEFIELD,
Plumbing, Gas & Steam Fitting,
No. 48 BARNARD STREET, one door nortb
oi South Broad treot.
Bath Tubs. Joboiug Water Closets, Boilers, Ranges,
Promptly attended to.
ebll Also, Agent of “BACKUS WATER MOTOR’
T. J. McELLIN,
PLUMBIN AND tras FITTING.
Whitaker street, Oue door North of State st.
N.B. Houses fitted with gas and water at
short notice, Jobbing promptly attended to,
and all work guaranteed, at low prices.
.'ilRiZgy
Carriages*
A. K. WILSON S
CARRIAGE MANUFACTORY,
1 Corner Bay and West Broad sts.
CARRIAGE REPOSITORY,
Cor. Bay and Montgon*ery streets.
GEORGIA.
T he largest establishment in the city.
I keep a full line ofCarrtjiges, Rockaways,
fine of Carriage ami Wagon Material. ; have
c!iau!«. Yny ^dSr'f for® .^V 0 satfsiactioa k rk‘and“£
executed to give
t “ ,hort ° ollce -
CENTRAL.
ijilJItUi a \t TTATIDTi JLlUljlSlli
tl
' 4 NI) RESTAURANT 1 '' ‘ *
. _ Bryan Street,
opposite the market,
SAVANNAH, - GEORGIA. Proprietor.*
jamks la:;..;.
The interior of the building has been reoo
vated throughout, ami ready to receive
th J? PtffiUc can rely upon the best the market
Torma $1 <*> por
booh a».i [.oding by th. <l»y
Meals at ail hours, open day and night,
r-im 7 **