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DAILY EVENING
Savannah ^ wnpaiMWMiiiiginmBnRiBp I ■iiii !iiiiii)i;iii'i)iiiiiiniMi si ii | ' -■■' y' • ?W d J ORDER.
YOL I.—No. 102.
THE SAVANNAH RECORDER »
R. M. ORME, Editor.
PUBLISHED EVERY EVENING,
(Saturday Excepted,)
At 1 G 1 BAY STREET.
By J. STERN.
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Correspondence on Local and general mat¬
ters of In terest solicited.
On Advertisements running three, six, and
twelve 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 piace ol the Saturday evening edition,
which will make six full issues for the week.
4®-We do not hold ourselves responsible for
the opinions expressed by Correspondents.
A Talk with Hamilton Fisli.
A Reminiscence of Over Forty Years.
We clip the following from the New
York Tnbune. Quite interesting read¬
ing. We condense a good deal:
MONROE AND JOHN TYLER.
“Are you old enough to he remember
President Monroe, when came to
New York City to spend the closing
years of his life?”
“Yes. You must remember that I
am just a septuagenarian. I was borr
in 1808. My father introduced Pres :
dent Monroe to his wife, Miss Gouver
neur, of Yew York.”
"You were not a Tyler man in any
respect?” “Not all. But I formed Tyler’s
at
acqaintance through my friendship for
his son Robert’s wife, who was a lady
of this city, and a very excellent one.
Mrs. Robert Tyler was the the mistress of
the Wnite House during widow¬
hood of the President. My acquain¬
tance with her took me there.”
“Was he not a man of mediocrity, or
below it?”
suasive, “I do not effective £hink so. public He speaker, was a per¬ like
most of the Virginia public men of that
day. havior, He and was had a gentleman, too, in be¬
a very respectable
mind.”
FILLMORE.
“Mr. Fish, were you a Silver Gray or
a Woolly Head, as the Whigs were
divided, about the time of your Gover¬
norship?” “I
never was a Silver Gray,” said
Mr. Fish, “nor did I belong to the Sew
ardites; I was against them, and was for
a good while Cabinet, a iriend of Fillmore. He
was in my as we may call it.
That is, he was my State Comptroller,
and kept that place for several months,
until he took his seat as Vice President.
When I wrote my first message, before
I had been inaugurated Governor, I
called the State officers, Treasurer,
Attorney General, Comptroller, etc.,
and read the message to them. In it I
took the position that all territory we
had acquired which had previously consideration in¬
hibited slavery was on no
to be subject to occupation by slave
property. Mr. Fillmore remarked
when I read this ; ‘ You ought to make
that stronger. That is the leading point
and I don’t think you have stated it
emphatically enough.’ I replied to
thia that as it was a State document, I
did not think it advisable to do more
than enunciate the view of the major¬
ity of the people of New York. Fill¬
more said again that he thought it
ought to be stronger. The others
agreed with me, and it was not quali¬
fied. Yet within two years Mr. Fill¬
more was turning the batteries of his
Administration on me, and slaughter¬
ing my friends, because I would not
applaud and indorse the Fugitive Slave
law.”
MARCT -
The conversation turning upon affairs
New York State many years ago,
Mr. Fish remarked that Silas Wright
was the ablest man whom he had known
. in New York, “No, but hesitating abler a moment
he said: not than Marey;
• Marey, I think, was the strongest man
we have had altogether. But Wright
wasnext.”
“How is it that you L. as Marey? a Whig think
so highly of William ’
I always admired his patriotism and
strength of character. It is true that
he was rather a relentless partisan,
but not for selfish results. responsibility Marey be
lieved that in party lay
the strength of administration. His
aims were lofty and well meant for his
times. In our foreigu policy he was,
according to my observation, the writer
of the very best dispatches ever indited
by an American Secretary. There There is is a a
nerve, meaning and vigor in his com
positions which always lifted up a mv
mind as a citizen to re ;ad bim in bis
fence ol our interests and of liberty, f
SAVANNAH, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 29 1879.
HENRY CLAY.
“Mr. Fish, which of the old Whig
leaders of thirty years ago was your
favorite—Clay, Webster, Corwin, or
who ?”
“Oh, Clay.”
“Do you think he holds the figure in
fame that his friends expected ?”
11 Clay,” describes said Mr. Fish, “was a tyrant.
That him—tyrant. While his
aims were lofty and patriotic, he allow¬
ed no contradiction on matters of
personal politics, and his own ambition
he regarded as a part of all reasonable
policy. But he was such a superb
leader ! I recollect that in 1835 I was
the chairman of the Whig committee
to receive Mr. Clay. He held a recep¬
tion at the City Hall, and it was my
duty to stand opposite him and intro¬
duce him to the throng of people. They
poured through that hall for four or
five hours, and he shook hands with
them all in his grand, sweet way. Said
I, ‘Mr. Clay, let me introduce you to
Mr. Hackett.’ Clay spoke to him with
that beautiful, deep voice which was so
pleasing to hear, and instead of going
on like the rest, the old fellow was
bound to say something, ‘Mr. Clay,’
he said, ‘aren’t you tired of shaking
hands with so many people ?’ ‘Oh, no,
sir,’ replied Clay, with his most benevo¬
lent face. ‘How can I be tired when
my fellow-citizens have been at such
trouble to call upon me ? Besides, Mr.
Hackett, you must remember that I am
from a State where they don’t tire.’
Those few words, spoken with such a
manner, had an extraordinary effect on
that man. He bawled out, ‘That’s so 1
Old Virginia never tires ! ’ And I
watched his course, and from that time
Grward he was a most enthusiastic
admirer of Henry Clay.”
blaine.
The ex-Governor, looking up at this
point, said :
‘ I think that James G. Blain has a
good deal ol the style and magnetism
of Henry Clay. There is an enthusiasm
for him in almost every section and
neighborhood quick, decisive that cannot and be repressed.
He is sharp in his
parliamentary work like Clay. His
address and smile and graciousness are
a good deal on Clay’s plan.”
fish’s idea of grant.
“What estimate of Grant is left on
your mind after that long experience of
eight years ?”
“Grant,” said his former Prime Min
ister, “is under-estimated in this coun
try. He is not only a man of ability
and firmness in character, and of un
wavering patriotism, but I never knew
any man more generous in his judg
ment, more open to conviction, and
who loved so little his own opinion
when it was shown to conflict with the
public that interests. make There him were that times
you had to see he
was wrong, and do it by argument. But
I have known him to change his views,
on both personal and political things,
when he had entertained them with the
greatest stubbornness.”
“Were your relations with the Presi- _
dent always mild and even ?”
“There were some differently things which the
President saw from my
view. Our intercourse, however, was
never rufiied by ill temper. I found
before I went into his Cabinet that he
was a man who meant to serve the
country and not himself alone, and I
addressed myself at times to that latent
element in his nature. I have said to
him : ‘General, you will not think to
rnorrow to-day—I on this question as you do
don’t bekeve you will.’ He
never repelled discussion, and listened
to every point advanced, even in favor
of men he did not like.”
VAN BLREN AND TILDEN.
uw Mr. t-v r ish, , you must , have , known ,
-n President • i , Van tt ’ -G Buren, well. - 1 , ttti What , rank ,
among Administrations ought his to
take?” i
„ It T ought ,, i. to , stand well. n , Mr. r , van 7
n
t-> Buren was an accomplished „ rir of r
man
State. Unfortunately, he liked to
manipulate. t* much, and make public
administration and * public life a per- 1 1
petual . i game of r chess. x His rr- views w*ere i
1 sound & j
x on bus.,less i questions i■ and i , he
was anvavs com teous, though embat
tle ,?A
On the n .....,, whole, have ,........... not the public .
P en ot New * ork Rnd lts P* rt y leaders
been as strong as anywhere , ’
Gredi table, at least. I sometimes,
th, .. . nk ■when I the blunder
see way we
‘°"' a ™ luck of an old saying that;
I rovidence takes care ot kings, fools
and .! 1 mted btates - j
" r ha , J views do you ... hold on relative . .
>°cal and federal power now.
am in favor oi Government. j
Is not Mr. iilden a scholar of \ an j
io l hts , \ T „ Buren his' , . .
extent: an was
atro .
P n -. fiiey lived near each other u F
,l ou f V1,u ci look, , '
GRANT AS A GENTLEMAN.
“I desire to ask you, Mr. Fish, if
the current criticism on General Grants
manners manners and and gentility is founded on
anything real?' 1
The Foreign Secretary looked up, as
glad to answer it, and said:
Gram was innately a gentleman. It
you were to place him in a certain cir¬
cle of society people, such as exist in
some of the exclusive parts of th s
city, it might be said there that he had
too little manner, and did net dance
nor flatter nor play the elegant creature
as well as he might. That is the view
some hold of a gentleman. But when
you come to the natural graces of the
heart, kindness and thoughtfulness, an
ingenuous and open spirit, respect for
good women and truthful men, there
was about him all of that which makes
the man. Many of his critics, more
fastidious, might have learned from
him that imputation is no part of a
gentleman. I repeat that he is under¬
estimated. I have in my mind a range
of nearly half a century of public men
whom I knew; he has as much of my
respect as any of them.”
CALEB CUSHING.
Did you find the late Caleb Cushing
a useful aruxiliary when you were Sec¬
retary?’’
“Highly so. His information was
extensive, his experience great, and he
was a cheerful worker tor the govern¬
ment.”
“Supposing he had been confirmed
as Chief Justice, would he have been
distinguished in that place ?”
“He would have made a capital
Chief Justice ! There would not have
bt.en one element of the partisan about
him, and he would have been a pure
Judge. I think that the public under¬
estimated him. It was said that he
had no convictions. I know that he
had convictions, and very strong ones.
He believed in government, as I do.
Mr. Cushiqg believed that this was a
government where the majority ruled,
and that having expressed its will, any
person was bound to labor in the gov
ernment, no matter what his party. If
you keep that in mind, you can see the
consistency of Cushing’s life. To the
public, however, he appeared to be
jumping about from party to party,
aT1 q generally in order to take place,
Yet, however employed by the govern
men t, the work was well done. Being
seu t to China by John Tyler, he made
that splendid treaty, the first made by
that government with a Christian
power.” The hesitated
Secretary here after a
question, and then said that to the best
°f treaty his China belief, had Cushing’s with was Christian the first
a
power. He added that a man who
could go into a vast closed empire like
that and conclude such a treaty, was
no common person,
“Next,” said Mr. Fish, “as Attorney
General for Frank Pierce, Cushing de¬
hvered some of the ablest opinions
ever given. They have been celebrated
8 ioce as models of law and of state
ment. als0 served under President
Johnson in Colombia, and made a treaty
there which the Senate has never taken
U P- His services at the Geneva Con
vention and at Madrid were up to the
standard of his previous work.”
grant, iiayes and the next elec
tion. 0
From what . , T I . hear and . read, , Mr.
Fish, Grant has spoken well ot Piesi
c Hayes.
J? , be veral ia8 » an f .^ wr Otters 1 i es kindly from General cf him,
0 ’ °, my
Grftnt , bear reference to this Adminis
^ ra f 10n - Not long ago, General Grant
wr °f e me a , ver di&cu / philosophical letter
concerning the ties and troubles
^at ^ r - Hayes would have to encoun
and, expressed his warm wishes for
ine President s success.
Fish, that ^ n0 we ^ have as vve a » rather ader a negative “> "* r *
Administration, to give the country a
rest for two or three or four years 9 ”
**-p Probably it ** is. * T 1 suppose ,, ,1 this ■ Ad- a i
ministration • • , ,-jf may be u compared i * to
M . ‘ H ; g eight years were re
garden , i q as rather fiat. v Ihere ri no
was
point 1 about them. He did one signifi- 6
cant . thing, i however—he u put . into ■ ,
f our
f - the Monr-co dootrirre.
"You had a f good deal to do with the
ma ; nlerlance 0 that
„ Vo ies „ u,,* but n this • Administration . , • • . .. , has
not maintained j it. r ri lnevliave T allowed ,,
1
K n Governments 'to sell and buy
j 8 i an q 3 j n the West Indies. I don't
think Mr. Evarts should have allowed I
that to be done without sneaking out. i
I wouldn’t.” i
“I f 0r g 0 t to ask you, Mr. Fish, what |
' vou think of the next.Presidential elec-1 i
tion t O' ■ !
"You mean the Kepubl ican nomina- ’
tion? If the convention were held' |
to-dav, General Grant would be nomi* | i
natpd *. There are nearI y two years vet
to come before the convention, and :
many changes mav ' happen, Secretary, * I C &U S R y ;
to VOU, ’ said the “ that
General Grant does not want to ran
again. He has no connection with the
movement among the people in his
favor.”
A dancing idiot, ten years of age, is
a resident he of has Indianapolis. Ever since
his birth been going through
the motions of a waltz to silent music.
He is never still in his waking hours.
mother had danced ;o «x««s at
baa just before he was born.
BY TELEGRAPH.
THE CIPHER TELEGRAMS IN¬
VESTIGATION.
Damaging Testimony Against
Republicans.
THE PLAGUE IN RUSSIA.
Emigration to the United States.
'
THE FAMOUS CIPHER TELEGRAMS
Washington, Jan. 28.—Gen. Brady,
Second Assistant Poi^master General,
was before tbe Potter Committee to¬
day, and was examined relative to th>
package of papers given him for s •
keeping by Bullock. Brady suspecti...
the contents, and opened the package
and had copies made of them. He then
gave a portion of the originals to W.
E. Chandler, and sent another portion
anonymously to Whitelaw Reid, of the
Tribune. The balance of them was
given to Chandler and Hiscock.
THE TELLER COMMITTEE.
Charleston, Jan. 28.—The investi¬
gation was continued to-day, and tes¬
timony was presented similar to that
heretofore given. The committee will
probably close its inquiries to-moriow.
FAMINE IN EGYPT.
Cairo, Jan. 28.—News has reached
here of a serious famine in Upper Egypt,
and two parties of Englishmen have
been sent from here with relief.
THE PLAGUE IN RUSSIA.
St. Petersburg, Jan. 28.—The
Galos states ‘that the plague has ap¬
peared at a hamlet thirty-four miles
from Witlinnka. There is considerable
alarm in Moscow by the news that a
number of recruits for the Imperial
Guard arrived in that city on the 13th
inst. from the infected district. The
recruits were met by doctors, and were
disinfected and isolated, and their
clothing was burned.
threatened resignation of
MACMAHON.
Paris, the'Cabinet Jan. 28.—At to-day’s meet¬
ing he of MacMahon declared
would not yield with regard to the
military command ; he would rather
resign.
SERIOUS ILLNESS OF CARDINAL
ANTONUCCI.
Ancona, Jan. 28.—Cardinal Antonio
Antonucci, Archbiahop of Ancona, is
at the point of death.
EXTENSIVE EMIGRATION TO THE U. *S.
New Yore, Jan. 28 —The Secretary
of the Emigration Commission says the
ship European correspondents of the steam¬
large companies report an increasingly
number of prepaid passage tickets.
He anticipated that of operatives alone
20,000 will arrive on our shores with¬
in the next few months.
Facts an# Fancies.
The Duchess of Edingburgh hates the English:
Montana pays ten per cent, on her bonded debt.
French heeled hoots for dancing must match
the dress
The White House receptions are not well at¬
tended.
Chicago male dry-goods clerks use paint and
Wear corsets.
The salary of the Mayor of Havre-de Grace is
$50 a year.
Stephens is said to be the best whist player now
in Congress.
Afternoon marriages are fashionable in Eng¬
land.
We must be a cleanly people else why do all
soap men get rich?
Gentlemen of means and elaborate taste wear
senlskin vests.
A collector sets out with bills and always likes
to return with bills.
pecause a lady has a duck of a bonnet, it's no
sign it’s canvas back.
Georgia is harvesting its own ice—a thing ne¬
ver attempted before.
Adelina Patti is likely to have a leg amputated
the result of a fall.
Reposing on a snow drift affords a cheap and
easy method oi suicide.
New York had 162 suicides in 1878, being
twelve more than in 1S77
Diogenes-' would never have carried his 'antern
through Louisiana.
Barry Sullivan will return to this country next
season
King George III was very loud of apple
dumplings
Resumption appears to have stimulated a good
many golden weddings.
The man who gets a pew must come down with
the pewter. !
The Indian with a sick wife alwavs has
souaw ill.
the Solomon blacksmith O. Swigglehammer trade Chicago. hammers away at
at
People still talk of tight times, but Talmage
S; '- vs }ie never knew them so loose.
A man in Illinois has found a way to make
good lumber out of compressed straw.
A girl 12 years old recently died at Liverpool
from drinking too much whisky.
A set of false teeth was found on the hall floor
after a grend ball in New Haven.
k mu:e - bind :eet are built on tko plan of an
letie—you can t keep v em down.
. adorne
beS ' 1 with
for the world, York .bU tofuraisli'gj^r ^ 1 ' Milm
CONGRESSIONAL SUMMARY
What Was Done in Both Houses
The legislative appropriation bill
been reported to the House and refer
red to the Committee of the Whole. The
House has now under consideration the
bill to restrict the immigration of
Chinese.
Bill to restrict the immigration of
Chinese passed—yeas 1.55, nays 72—
after which the House, in Committee of
the Whole, discussed the post office
appropriation bill, and without final
action the committee rose.
The session for to-night on the levee
bill was abandoned and postponed till
this day week.
The sub-committee of the House Ju¬
diciary Committee, consisting ofLynde
of Wisconsin, Frye of Maine, and For¬
ney of Alabama, began investigating
charges of malfeasance against Daven¬
port. -The inquiry will take broad
grounds.
In the Senate, Mr. Davis, of Illinois,
presented a memorial signed by 3,190
persons, praying representing the sixteen States,
for establishment of a
bureau to collect statistics in regard to,
and to have special charge of, labor in¬
terests, and the appointment of a
special commission to inquire to what
extent machinery has taken the place
of manual labor in general production
and manufacture. Referred to the
Committee on Education and' Labor.
The Finance Committee of the
Senate, by a vote of five against four,
decided to recommend the reduction of
the tax on tobacco from the present
rate of 24 cents per pound add to 20 cents.
It was also decided to to the
House bill a provision to admit free of
customs duty all licorice paste and
licorice rolls, these articles being im¬
ported almost wholly for use in the
manufacture of plug tobacco, to-day in The
committee took no action re¬
gard to the tax on cigars and cigarettes
and snuff.
The Seriate again considered the bill
to pay Warren Mitchell for cotton
taken from him at Savannah, which,
after considerable discussion,was defeat¬
ed by the rejection of a motion to pro¬
ceed to the third reading of the bill.
The Senate then agreed to take up
Edmunds’ resolution, after which it
adjourned.
ITEMS OF INTEREST.
Mr. Tiny B. Tompson and Mrs. Ma n as
gie Lyon, were joinecLin holy wedlock,
in Augusta, on Monday last.
At the funeral of Mr. C. K. Williams,
of Rutland, Vt., the remains were
taken to the bedside of the widow, who
was sick away from home, for her last
farewell.
A night shirt, a tooth brush, several
keys, three lead pencils, some manu¬
script and $12 in cash, were taken
from a Chicago journalist one night
last week by three footpads.
Iroqpoia county, 111., has 200 Ar¬
tesian wells, all of small bore, within
a radiu* of twenty miles. No one of
them exceeds 72 fee« in depth, and
they yield a total daily supply of 53,-
500,000 gallons.
Work has been begun on what has
been known as A. T. Stewart & Co.’s
wholesale store, with a view of altering
it into offices. In a short time the
great dry goods establishment brokers, will be
occupied by insurance &c. The men, wholesale
lawyers, agents, portion of the
store will occupy a
building heretofore used exclusively as
a retail establishment.
Albany News : The people in the
neighborhood of Pelham, Mitchell
county, are somewhat in a state of ex¬
citement on account of a terrible crime
which has just been committed in that
usually quiet community. On Saturday
last Sam Scarborough, who lived in
Decatur county, just on the edge of
Mitchell, and John Kierce, living near
Pelham, together with several other*
were going out from Pelham. Some
dispute arose between the two parties
named, about a trival matter, Kierce,
who was considerably under the in¬
fluence of liqnor, became very much
offended, and tried to borrow the a pistol
from his brother who was in party.
The brother rf fused to let him hava it,
when he (Kp rce) rode back about one
mile, to the residence of a Mr. Howell,
snatched a gua from a rack, and again
overtook the party, Efforts were made
to get the gun away from him, but he
promised and paid not to trouble further Scarborough, attention
they no to
him. After traveling along about one
mile Kierce made no demonstration,
until suddenly he rode up by the side
of Scarborough, planted the muzzle
against his side and fired, the ball
taking effect. The wounded man
walked a quarter of a mile after he
was shot, and on the following morn¬
ing died. No effort was made to arrest
Kierce until Sunday J evening, a and by J
that . time ,• , he . had j a fled •, to . parts . un¬
known. He is a married man and
about thirty years old. Scarborough
was single and about 22,
PRICE THREE CENTS.
Boarding.
Gr°p£w eod-janl7-lm B eek. KD AND ^^ryan^t per
Below Lincoln.
To Rent*
T O Bluff RENT.—A Road, small (CJ4 niiles Farm, from on Savannah,) the White
containing good fencing, 15 acres of cleared land, under
Blacksmith with good Dwelling , Store and
est terms, by Shop. (Jan be rented at t.he low
at Mr. C. Mehrtens’ applying Grist to C. H. G. WITTCAMP
and Charlton streets. Mill, corner deoJl Jeffer¬
son
Wanted
W anted, Ap pl a good servant girl.
y at the Recorder office.
_
"VVT"ANTED—Two Furnished ROOMS with a
sister, If with stove, for a Professional man and his
located. References privilege of exchanged. cook stove. Centrally 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
Square every day House, from 171 II to BRYAN 1 o’clock. ST. At Savannah, the Market Ga.
F. BINGEL,
WINES, LIQUORS AND SEGARS.
Milwaukee and Cincinnati Lagor Beer on
draught. Free Lunch, Fresh Oysters always
on hand. 21 Jefferson st.., corner Conngress
street lane._ mchlO-ly
Dr. A. H. BEST,
DENTTI ST
Cor. Congress and Whitaker streets,
SAVANNAH, GA.
T EETH extracted without pain, All work
guaranteed.
I respectfully beg to refer to any of aay
patrons. octl-bmo
C IGAR rer of FACTORY.—F. Cigars, and dealer KOLB, in manufactu¬ Cigars, To¬
bacco, Snuff - , Pipes, Ac. Call at 121 Broughton
Street. 23gy
FKAMmiUS’ COPYING INK.
In Pint and Half Pint Bottles.
Doez not mould or thicken when exposed
to the air. Saves the Pen. Copies excellently.
TRY IT.
GEORGE FEY,
WINES, LIQUORS, SEGARS, TOBACCO, *0.
The celebrated Joseph Sclilit/,’ MILWAU
KEE LAGER BEER, a speciality. No. 22
Whitaker Street, Lyons’ Block, Savannah,
Ga. I REE LUNCH every day from 11 to 1.
r-z31-lv
HAIR store:
JOS. E. L0ISEAU & CO.,
118 BROUGHTON ST., Bet. Bull & Drayton
K EEP on hand a large assort ment of Hatr
Hair Switches, combings Curls, Pud's, and Fancy Goods
worked in the latest style.
Fancy Costumes. Wigs and Beards for Rent.
JOS. H. BAKER,
BUTCHER, STALL No. 66, Savann Market.
Dealer in Beef, Mutton, Pork nd
All other Meats in their Seasons.
Particular attention paid to supplying Ship
and Boarding Houses. aug!2
Theodor G
TAILOR.
Wo. 30 1-2 WHitaltor St.
Suits made to order in the latest styles.
will Clothing with ejenned and repaired, All orders
meet prompt attention. jaul3-lm
W. B. FERRELL'S Agt.
RESTAURANT,
No. 11 New Market Basement,
(Opposite Lippman’s Drug Store,)
lanlSU H\ VANNAH. ga.
Clothing*
The Popular Clothing House of
B. H. LEVY,
<) FFERS for the next thirty days his entire
stock of all styles Men’s, Youths’ and
Children’s CLOTHING, at the following re¬
duced prices:
20J Men’s Casslmere Suits, dark or light, solid
colors or stuped, formerly sold at 810 00,
now 812 50.
from Dress 30 00 Diagonal Coats and Vests, ranging
and upwards.
500 pairs Casslmere Pants, different colors and
styles, ranging Boys’ from $2 00 and upwards.
300 Children and suits from $3 00 and up¬
wards. Great reduction in Overcoats!
.500 Overcoats at the low figure of 83 00 and up
warde, must he closed out, rather than to
carry over the season. Anyone wishing
to purchase will find it profitable to call at
this popular Clothing House. B. H. LEVY,
jun.i Corner Congress and Jefferson sis.
Plumbing and Gas Fitting.
CHAN. E. WAKEFIELD,
Plumbing, Gas & Steam Fitting,
No. 48 BARNARD STREET, one door north
ot South Broad treet.
Bath Tubs. Water Closets, Boilers, Ranges
Jonoiug Promptly attended to.
Also, Agent of “BACKUS WATER MOTOR,
ebli
T. J. McELLIN,
PLUM BIN AND Ga.S FITTING.
Whitaker street, One door North of State at.
N.B. Houses fitted with gas and water at
short notice. Jobbing promptly attended to,
and all work guaranteed, at low prices.
33R:Zgy
Carriages*
A. K. WILSON’S
CARRIAGE MANUFACTORY,
Corner Bay and West Broad s:
CARRIAGE REPOSITORY .
Cor. Bay and Montgomery streets.
SAVANNAH, GEORGIA.
The largest establishment In the city.
I keep a full line of Carriages, Rockaways,
and Buggies. Falling Spring Top and Baby Farm Wagons. also Canopy full
line of Carriage and Wagon Carriages, Material. I a have
en gaged in my factory the most skillful me*
chamcs. Any orders for new work, and re¬
pairing, will be executed tc give satisfaction
and at short notice. iuuyi2-!y
f