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D A. I E Y e viiizsriisr q
Savannah loTTc] Recorder.
VOL I.—No. 98.
THE SAVANNAH RECORDER,
R. M. ORME, Editor.
PUBLISHED EVERY EVENING,
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corder, Savannah, Georgia.
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the piace of the Saturday evening edition,
which will make six full issues for the week.
DS-We do not hold ourselves responsible for
the opinions expressed by Correspondents.
A Romantic Record.
[St. Louis Globe Democrat.]
The career of James Shields, for the
third time a successful candidate for
the position of United State senator,
reads like a chapter of wild romance.
There is nothing like it in the history
of this country. Without exceptional
advantages or abilities of any kind, he
has gained a brilliant record as a soldier,
fair fame as a politician, and and a fine re¬
putation as an.honest His public man beginning patriot¬
ic citizen. life,
in 1840, covers the most momentous
period of our national existence. He
has outlived all his more famous friends
and associates of the Mexican war
period, and now goes back to haunt,
like a ghost, the halls in which, as a
senator, he mingled on terms of fellow¬
ship Cass, with Seward, Webster, Chase, Clay, Calhoun, Ben
^Tom ton, Douglas and
Corwin. When a young man,
with poverty and law, in
he was the intimate friend of
and Lincoln. He has seen all
great men pass away, full of
if not of years, and now returns
the scense of their triumphs, clothed
with a dignity that any of them might
have envied. It may be said of him,
in the words of Dr. Johnson:
s Superfluous lags the veteran on the stage.
But, this is not wholly true. Mr.
Shields is not an old man. Born iu
1810, he is six years younger than
Lord Beaconsfield, twelve years young¬
er than that wiliest of living diplomats,
Gortschakoff, thirteen years younger
than Kaiser Wilhelm, two years
younger than Marshal MacMahon,
and but five years the senior of the
man of blood and iron.
He seems old because of the extent
and variety of his public life. He took
kindly to politics while yet a mere boy.
He was state auditor of Illinois in 1840.
Six years later, though by no means a
distinguished the lawyer, he was elected
Under to President Supreme Bench he of the State.
Polk was appoint¬
ed land commissioner. He left this
position to take command of the Illi¬
nois volunteers in the Mexican war,
with commission of brigad’er-general.
As a soldier he was even luckier than
as a civil officeholder. Without any
marked capacity for command, he won
great bravery renown as a fighter. His personal
was only equalled by his
tenacity of life. At Cerro Gordo he
was shot through the body while
charging through a battery. A grape-shot tore
his right lung and passed out
near his spine. The surgeon gave him
up, and his death was reported. Yet
in ten weeks he was again at the head
oi his brigade, as ready for a fight or a
frolic as any man in the army. At
Chapultepec But he he was wounded again.
held a charmed life, and came
out of the war covered with scars and
glory. He was not a great general in
any sense ot the word, but he was a
fearless and intrepid warrior. He never
asked his men to go where he feared to
venture. With him the post of duty
was the front ot battle always.
. In a fit of enthusiasm, the people ot
Illinois made him the colleague of
Stephen A. Douglas in It the United
States Senate iu 1849. is no injus¬
tice to him to sav that he nevei did
anything Always to distinguish Democrat, himself he in stood that
body. a all
with his party on questions; have his
speeches, it he made any, been
long since forgotten. When his term
expired he was not returned. But he
was a born office-holder, and we next
find him a resident of the young State
of Minnessota, and a candidate lor
United States Senator. He was elected
in 1857, one of the first two Senators
elected, and drew the short term. He
served tor two years, and after his
retirement, he took up his residence in
California His record in the late war
is familiar to all. In the honor valley of the de
Shenandoah he had the ol
feating Stonewall Jackson, though the
victory was of brief duration. Too
war-broken for active duty, he retired
from the command of the army of
West Virginia, and was sent by Presi¬
dent Lincoln to California, where he
remained till the close of the war,
when he came East Missouri. and bought a farm
in Carroll county,
Through all he remained honest and
poor. Indeed, these qualities physical bravery seem as
natural to him as his
and tenacity of life. Few men could
have survived such wounds as he re¬
ceived at Mexico, and as few would
have let his opportunities for amassing
wealth slip by unimproved. In 1874
he enjoyed the dubious honor of
bership in the State Legislature.
political resurrection at this time
due in a large measure to the audacious
attempt of Mr. B. F- Butler to
his last election as door-keeper of the house
Winter, when Mr. Polk was
moved from that positin.
Dawn on the Moon.
The Lunar Wonders Revealed by the
vancing Sunlight.
[From the Rochester Express.;
A Rochester journalist who visited
Prof. Swift the other evening, and had
a view of the moon, says: The telescope
with a power of thirty-six diameters,
was turned upon the moon. At first
the flood of light was blinding, and the
view was very cursory. The moon
looked like a shield of embossed silver,
the shield of Achilles, hung by his
goddess mother in the azure of the
heavens. Prof, Swift looked over the
field, and noted as he looked many of
the interesting points, and suggested
that we follow the sunrise on the moon.
On the moon the dawn advanced
ten miles an hour, lightning up new
fields and furnishing to him an
changing panorama. Still, there is
naught but desolation, yawning|c raters,
peaks waUswith of volcanic perpendicular mountains and
sides
that surround deep pits. The moon
is dead, to all appearances—burned out
with volcanic fires. No water laves
the desolate aud rugged shores of its
great sea bottoms. But in the gray
plains, where some spread, astronomers think
an ocean once craters are seen
with The perpendicular plains walla. beiseen with
gray can
he naked eye forming what is ca led
•the man m the moon, on a map like
the eastern continent. Under the tel
escope we could trace what seemed at
first to be shore lines on the borders of
this plain. On closer inspection,
instead of wave-washed1 sand, these
lines appear to be bu rounded
steps formed by the successive plain lava bursts
spreading oyer and making,
by the lessening flow, the gradual ex
haustion of the volcanic force. From
one of the largest craters rise three
volcanic cones, the summits of which
are tipped with sunlight before the
floor of the crater is lighted. In an
other large crater two cones arise.—
From the larger craters rays spread
out, as though firm the volcanic force
cracked the crust in its upheaval,
injecting through the broken surface
ridges of like dazzling white lava that
spread out the arms of cuttle-fish
covering a vast surface.
served he grandest following phenomena are ob
by the sun on the
moon. The advancing dawn forms a
ragged darkness. crescent hue upon the surface
still in The suns rays pass
over dark chasms and low fields, light
ing up ragged mountain tope far in
advance. Ihey appear like little
of light lying off the coast of an
illuminated sea. High mountains and
walls near the shore of light
deep shadows. The circular rims
crater are illuminated, and shine
rings of silver, glittering upon a
of darkness. The advancing
now lights up the bases of the
mountains that but a moment
ago showed but a speck of light, an 1
new mountain tops are tipped with
far in advance.
The sunlight wall strikes upon the side of
a circular of a crater, and there is
a silver crescent, with a black space
between it and the sea of light. Slowly
the summit of other portions of the
sunlight wall invades are lighted the depths up, and of then the
the
crater, while the shadow of the wall
nearest the sun stretches half across the
lloor ot the chasm. Frequently great
gaps are broken in the crater walls,
streaks jagged of light stream across cold the floor,
The rocks, in calm, beauty,
shine and glitter in the fierce white
light. The mountains are mountains
of desolation, and the valleys are val
leys of silence and death. They are
wrinkled with the flow ol lava and
dead. torn with upheavals. The moon is
No air.no sea, no forest shade,
failing or living thing. The moon is a never
awful in source its suggestions of delight. of It is also
power and in
its loneliness oi utter desolation.
* • *
The Governor of Delaware has not
the veto power, but he has the appoint
ment ot various State and county
officers without the advice and consent
of the Senate.
SAVANNAH, FRIDAY, JANUARY 24. 1879.
BY TELEGRAPH.
NEWS FROM ALT.
A Suspicious Affair At
SWINDLER
The Vatican And
FLORIDA ELECTION FRAUDS.
Jacksonville, Fla., January
In the United States Court to-day,
the County Clerk of Brevard
was sentenced to three years in
Albany penitentiary, and
Sheriff, and Johns, Justice of the
to one year. Lee is also State
from Brevard.
The court has adjourned.
Hull’s case was continued until
May term. The Alachua prisoners all
gave bail.
MORMON WOMEN ANXIOUS FOR
AMY.
Washington, January 23.—The
morial of Emeline B. Wells and
Young Williams, daughter of the
Brigham Young, was presented to
House by the Speaker to-day and
ferred to the Committee on Judiciary.
It asks for the repeal of the anti¬
polygamy law of 1862 and for
tion to protect the women and children
of Utah.
INDIANS KILLED.
Fort Robinson, January 23.- -Later
news from the field states that only nine
Cheyennes, all of them wounded, were
captured. The balance of the party
(twenty-three iu number) were killed.
Seventeen are still unaccounted for. It
is supposed that some are dead from
their wounds and the others have es¬
caped.
BREATHITT county troubles.
Cincinnati, January 23.—Governor
McCreary has ordered the return of the
cavalry company sent to Breathitt
county. They accomplished the arrest
of William Fletcher, who murdered
Judge Barnett,
A suspicious affair at sea.
Lohdoh, [ Jan / 2 3.-The Q„[ Captain
f „ hj [: ecentl arriv(id at ens .
town w ites t0 Lloyds J that he saw, ’ fifty '
mlles west of Fast et otl the 10th inat .’
a The <te>mel . alongside g rdered of a burning g wrcck
etenmer 0 b , m to £ 0Q
his r3e and ' DOthi “ b ,
ff; d the nalt ot bei als0
burned . The steamer Bad not the ap
nc(! of be , a merchantman or
war . She had i50 or 200 men
on toard apparentiy u J EngUsh & .
swindler arrested.
New York, January 23. — The Chief
of Police received several days ago
from the Chief of Police of Dallas,
Texas, a communication asking for the
arrest of A. Ellis, of that city, who is
under indictment for swindling mimer
ous leather firms in Texas. This morn
ing the detectives arrested Ellis.
the Vatican and Mexico.
Rome, January 26,-The Vatican
will shortly take steps to re-establish
relations with the Mexican Govern
men t Negotiations prove unsuccessful,
the wants of the Mexican Church will
be supplied $ in the best manner possi
ble t hout the intervention of the
government
m y_
Ameriean an(1 J a , 1 )a „ ese Children.
It i . a generally thought, and with _
good reason, that American children
are the worst-behaved and, consequent
ly, the most disagreeable to everybody,
except their parents, of any children of
f-be globe. Their ill-behavior is usually
ascribed to their spoiling by excessive
indulgence, to their incessant coddling;
kut Japanese children, who are said to
ke also treated with extraordinary
deference and made a vast deal of, are
reputed to be ot the quietest and
pleasantest. Travelers in Japan say that nothing
. denied there to child; his her
is a or
question receives a ready answer from
the most silent, and his request is
granted by the most churlish. All
sons folks in every grade ot life show little
uniform courtesy and gentleness ;
aud why these do not take advantage
01 this over-regard and tenderness, as
they do in the L nited States, is beyond
explanation, umess we admit that there
1S a marked difference in race.
D seems, however, that in that
country that the mother is so wholly
subordinated to the child as to be
j injured and degraded. The father
: 0Iten beats her because the child has
fallen dowu or met with an accident.
*he has only two functions in his eyes
—to bear children and enslave herself
for them alter their birth.
- ----
Boston's fine Masonic Temple is mort
gaged for ^265,000, and the Masons of
tkat city dislike to either shoulder the
burden or sacrifice the property.
The Japanese Government has en
gaged, at a high salary, a German
military bandmaster at Metz.
The Feminine Mystery.
Why Women Marry—Something that
Fellow Seems to be Able to Find Out.
[Vanity Fair.]
The question which we
last week Why Men Marry,” is
interesting one; but it must be
nounced inferior in interest to the
tion “Why Women Marry” in the
gree in which men are in all
Tess interesting than women. The
ingness of women to marry is
and more patent than that of men;
we will add, that it is a great
more wonderful. That women
to use a colloquial phrase, the worst
it all through life, we entertain
doubt, and that the matrimonial
as understood by experience has, as
rule, fewer attractions for them
for men, we also believe to be
Yet, while there are many men
from choice, abstain from
and still more who put off
till the last practicable moment,
doubt if there are any women
mentioning who refuse the
state from option and deliberation,
not many who postpone marrying
a late period of life from a general
pugnance to having a husband.
That womau refuse individual
and sometimes go on refusing
after their man, is true enough ; but then
objection is to the man and not
the condition of life that man proposes;
or not unfrequently, their refusal
arises from mere skittishness, from
feeling they may do better, cr from
cheerful conviction that there is plenty
of time to “ think about it.” As a rule,
however, women who have the chance
of marrying, marry, and they would
marry yet more that promptly than they do
were it not they are frequently
h id back from taking a foolish step by
wise parents or dissuading friends.
How is this apparent paradox to be ex¬
plained There ? induce
is less to a woman to
marry than to induce men; yet men
hesitate to marry and women jump at
marriage. Some will answer that man
is a rational and woman an irrational
animal; but over and above the dis¬
tinction being too uncomplimentary to
be true, it is one of those plausible ex¬
planations that explain nothing..
Again, it is sometimes affirmed that,
in marrying, men sacrifice liberty,
whereas women in marrying acquire it.
But this is an epigram easily disposed
of. V hen men sacrifice what is called
their liberty by marrying, they are
already tired of their liberty, or that
particular hood enjoys, form and, of it where which bachelor¬
the point
thoroughly examined, we suspect it
would be found that they abandoned a
form of liberty of which they are
weary for another form they have not
yet possessed.
Due-half to the Informant.
An “Old Doctor” contributed to the
Charlottesville (Ya.) Chronicle the fol
lowing amusing story :
"In colonial times, when Col. Archi
bald Cary was a magistrate, living at
Williamsburg, neighbors a man who was much dis
on account
hls vmdl citiveness and general mean
ness, came before the old Colonel, and
informed him that his neighbor, John
Brown, had violated the game law, by
killing a deer before the 1st oi Septem
her. Now, although Brown was a
good, honest poor man, much esteemed
^ h ‘ 3 a c 1 uaintan<!es - Esquire Cary
bound . to warrant for his
was issue a
arrest, and when Brown appeared be
fore him he confessed that lie had killed
the deer, knowing at the time that he
was’violating the law, but that his wife
had a great longing for venison, and
knowing that deer daily frequented bis
corn-field, she gave him no pence. He
had begged her to wait a little while,
till the 1st of September, but she vowed
she could not wait, So he killed the
deer. The old magistrate, seeming full
0 f compassion, said :
“Brown, the law is explicit; you
will have to pay the fine, which is £5.”
“Lord bless your heart, Col. Cary,
ga jj Brown,’ ‘all I have on earth would
not sell for £5.’’
“Well, then,’ said the Justice, turn
j j^g j 0 tlie j a w, an ff reading, without
paying strict attention to punctuation
0 r the exact position of words : “Who
j ever shall be guilty of shooting, suar
j i Jeer n g, trapping, this, or in his any way killing a
within Majesty’s colony
of Virginia, at any time between
1st of May and the 1st of September,
p a y a fine of £5, and if he is un
a ]q e ffo this, the punishment shall
be awarded by thirty-nine lashes on
the bare back, well laid on, one-half to
ke given to the informant, and
other halftothe King.” “Mr.Constable,”
said his Honor, “as we are enjoined to
do justice " and love mercy, and where
au odd amount, which is not
divided capable of between an equal division is to be
a rich man and a poor
maQ) j always give the poor man
larger share;' you will, therefore, give
the informant in this case the twenty
flashes, and whenever you catch his
Majesty, the King, in this colony, you
will then give him the nineteen.” So
the majesty of the law was maintained,
much to the satisfaction of all who
knew the odious informant.
ITEMS OF INTEREST.
The Paris Univers says : “The Catho¬
lic Bishop Reinkens is about to marry
in Boppard.”
The capacity of the Chicago elevators
is 14,375,000 bushels, and on the 11th
of January they contained 10,462,994
capacity bushels of grain, leaving an unoccupied
of 3,912,006 bushels.
England wants to buy out and and out
certain Crown lands in Cyprus,
offers Turkey £15, 00 for them. The
Turks, however, pay Fngland the com¬
pliment of asking £150,000, on the
ground that the value of. the lands will
largely increase under a beneficent
British administration.
Governor Smith, of Wisconsin, in
his recent message says : “If we con¬
tinually assert and hear asserted that
we are poor, that the times are dull
and hard, it is the inevil able law that
we shall come to think so without re¬
gard to facts or reason. ” The Governor
believes in looking at the bright side,
of things.
The imperial ideas are being sown
broadcast in the Dominion. The title
of violinist to Her Royal Highness has
been conferred upon Mr. Deseve, of
Montreal. The Governor-General,
moreover, has had an aviary constructed
&t Rideau Hall, in which the birds from
the woods adjoining the Government
House are housed and fed.
Hard times in Berlin. More than
200,000 persons, according to a state¬
ment prepared by Herr Zimmermann,
were last year prosecuted and for the non-pay¬
ment of income tax, in great
majority of cases a seizure of the effects
of the defaulters yielded nothing.
More than 120,000 persons were prose¬
cuted for having failed to pay their
rent.
A co-operative store has been estab¬
lished iu Paris by English capitalists,
which employs about ninety persons,
and deals in almost everything required
by housekeepers. The capital is $500,
000. The London co-operative One socie¬
ties report handsome profits. con¬
cern, upon sales of $5,200,000, is said
to have realized $130,000 clear of ex¬
penses, though selling about twenty per
cent, below the ordinary retail prices.
The Austrian newspapers remark
upon the extraordinary diminution
which has taken place in the number of
marriages concluded in Vienna. The
disinclination on the part of the men
to in marry district has risen to such marriage a pitch that
the of Wieden por¬
tions provided by charitable foundations
are now actually going a-begging.
There are plenty of female applicants
to claim them, but they can find no
mates.
f he official . to
permission marry
given by the Old Catholics, led by Dr
Boihnger, to their priests, is accom
P aniec * with such restrictions as must
Extended 0
B e h 0D ? must S be consulted
h e fi tn ess of the woman
ge j 0( , tef j f or connu bial honors by the
ecc j es j ast j c an j aeC ondlv she must it
j 8 Sion jj ^ please the raaiority of the
con OD b re g aaon ovtl wuicn ne presides.
A touching begging story with a
good moral is told' by the P«fai«rp
Telegraph. three-days’ A young debauch man who wander- had
been on a
ed into the reading-room of a hotel,
where he was well known, sat down,
add stared moodily into of the about street,
Presently a little looked girl timidly about ten
years came in and
the room. She was dressed in rags, but
1 she had a eweet. intelligent face that
could scarcely fail to excite sympathy,
There were five persons in the room,
and she went to each begging. One
gentleman gave her a five cent piece,
and she then went to the gentleman
spoken of and asked him for a penny,
adding, “I haven’t had anything gentleman to eat
for a whole day. ’ and The he said crossly was
out of humor, :
“Don’t bother me; go away! I haven’t
had anything to eat for three days.”— shy
The child opened stared her him eyes in
wonder and at for a mo
ment, and then ■walked slowly toward
the door. She turned the knob, and
after hesitating for a few seconds,
up to she him, and received gently laying
the five cents had on his
knee, said with a tone of true girlish
pity in her voice. “If you haven’t had
anything to eat for three days, you
take this and go and buy some bread.
Perhaps I can get some more some
where.” The young fellow blushed to
the roots of his hair, and lifting the
I Sister of Charity in his arms, kissed
1 her two or three times in delight. in^the Then
; he took her to the persons room,
and to those in the corridors and the
and told the story and asked
contributions, giving himself all the
money he had with him. He succeeded
in raising over $40 and sent the little
one on her way rejoicing.
PRICE THREE CENTS.
To Rent*
-—
SSKiYUf Blacksmith Shop. Can be rented at the low¬
est terms, by applying to C. IT. G. WITTCAMP
at Mr. C. Mehrtens’ Grist Mill, corner Jeffer¬
son and Charlton streets. decSl
Wanted
W ANTED—Two Furnished ROOMS with ft
stove, for a Professional man and his
sister, with privilege of cook stove. Centrally
located. References exchanged. Address
J. E. C. 136 HULL ST., Savannah, Ga.
Business Cards.
VAL. BASLER’S
WINES, LIQUORS, SEGARS and TOBACCO
The best Lager Beer in the city. The well
known TEN PIN ALLEY reopened. Lunch
every day from II to l o’clock. At the Market
Square House, 174 BRYAN ST. Savannah, Ga.
JOS. H. BAKER,
B TT LJ HP I J— v«/ “HIT * * - HP ■■■ImLJ HP. iii t-W y
STALL No. 66, Savann Market.
Denier In Beef, Muttou, Pork nd
All other Meats in their Seasons.
Particular attention paid to supplying Ship
and Boarding Houses. nug!2
Theodor Gronwald,
X 1 A-ILOJR.
3VTo. 30 1-2 WHitaltor St.
Suits made to order In the latest styJ-js.
Clothing cleaned and repaired. / J orders
will meet wMrh prompt attention. * Janl8-lm
W. B. FERRELL’S Agt.
RESTAURANT,
No. 11 New Market Basement,
(Opposite Lippman’s Drug Store,)
laiilHt.l HAVA.NNAH, GA*
FRANCELIUS’ COPYING INK.
In Pint and Half Pin t Bottlft fcw 1
Doez not mould or thicken when excellently. exposed
to the air. Saves the Pen. Copies
TRY IT.___
GEORGE FEY,
WINES, LIQUORS, SEGARS, TOBACCO, *0.
The celebrated JLosoph Schlitz’ MILWAU¬
KEE LAGER BEtKR, a speciality. No. 22
Whitaker street, Levons’ Block, Savannah,
Ga. FREE LUNCH dwery day from 11 to 1.
Clothing^
The Popular ClotliiiigVi House of
B. H. levy;
/^VFFERS for the next thirty days liis entire
Children’s 1/ stock of all stylos Men’s, following Youths’ and
duced prices: CLOTHING, at the re¬
203 Men’s Casstmore Suits, (lark or light, solid
colors or striped, formerly sold at 116 00.
now |12 50.
Dress Diagonal Coats and Vests, ranging
from $6 00 and upwards.
500 pairs Cassimerc Pants, dilferont colors and
300 Children styles, ranging from In 00 and upwards.
and Joys’ suits from S3 00 and up¬
wards. Great reduction In Overcoats!
300 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
jan3 popular Clothing House. B. II. LEVY,
Corner Congress and Jefferson sts.
Stoves and Tinware*
v
sg;
THOMAS J. DALE IT,
PRACTICAL TINNER and dealer in HTOVE8
House Furnishing Goods, Willow
and Wooden Ware,
manufacturer of
Tin Ware. Tin Roofing, Gutters, Leaders, Ac
177 Congress Street,
SAVANNAH, GEOrv l A
novlO-Om
Plumbing and Gas Pitting*
CHAS. E. WAKEFIELD,
Plumbing, Gas & Steam Fitting,
No. 48 BARNARD South STREET, Broad one door north
ol treet.
Bath Tubs. Water Closets, Boilers, Ranges
Jobolng Promptly attended to.
ebll Also, Agent of “BACKUS WATER MOTOR.’
T. J. McELLIN,
PLUM BIN AND UaS FITTING.
Whitaker street, One door North of Htate at.
N.B. Houses fitted with gas and water at
short notice, Jobbing promptly attended to.
and all work guaranteed, at low prices.
^_ 33B:Zgy
Carriages*
A. K. WILS IN’S
GAnnIAljt p ADDlAPr .. IY1 AN . Ur Ao TOR n
T«
Corner Bay and West Broad sts
na-o-orA CARRIAGE REPOSITORY
.
Cor. Bay and Montgoi,»ry atreeta.
SAVANNAH, GEORGIA.
The largest establishment in the city.
I keep a full line of Carriages, Rockawavs
Bu and Farm Wagons, Canopy
an line d of Falling Carriage lop Baby Carilages, also a fuU
and Wagon Material. I have
engaged in my factory the neost skillful me¬
chanics. Any orders for new work, and re
ami pa ff in at .*\ short wlu notice. be executed to give satisfaction
mayiZ-Iy