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BAIL Y EVENING
Savannah rdljn] & f4 m ECORDER.
VOL I.—No. 104.
THE SAVANNAH RECORDER,
R. M. ORME, Editor.
PUBLISHED EVERY EVENING,
(Saturday Excepted,)
At 1G1 BA.Y STREET.
By J. STERN.
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
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 oi the Saturday evening edition,
which win make six full issues for the week.
V&fWe do not hold ourselves responsible for
the opinions expressed by Correspondents.
Hattie of Kettle Creek in Wilkes
County, Ga.
[From the Washington Gazette.]
Messrs. Editors : The centennial of
the Battle of Kettle Creek will occur
ou ihe I4th of February next, and pei
haps a brief account of it will be inter¬
esting to the people of Wilkes county,
as it was the only battle fought in this
county during the Revolutionary then war,
and the only one fought in the
set led portion of North Georgia, of any
cur Vhis sequence.
battle occurred on Kettle Creek,
ab< ut ten miles southwest of Washing
te n and two miles above Slaton's mill,
Th creek still preserves its Revolu
fcioi.aiy name, and its waters flow into
Ln ie River, thence into the Savannah,
According to histoiy, the fall of Sav
annah on the 3d day of January, 1779,
and the loss of Howe’s army, had a
mo:4 distressing effect upon the patriots
of the whole State, Gen. Prevost and
Col. Campbell, of the British army, lol
lowed up their victories so vigorously,
that in a very short time, there was
very few of the American army left in
Georgia. Savannah Col. Campbell pushed up the
last January, river rapidly, and about the
of 1879, took possession of
Augusta. After resting there a short
time, he marched into the interior of
the State, ruthlessly destroying pro
perty of every kind, and insulting the
people as he went. A great mauy of
the people fled into South Carolina;
but the true patriots who did remain,
were rallied by Col. John Dooley. His
party under was soon re enforced by 250 men
Col. Pickens. Being menaced
by Col. Campbell as they were, their
situation became worse when it was
known that the famous Boyd hed re
ceived a corps of 800 notorious Tories
and British, whom he was leading to
wards Georgia to desolate the State,
Pickens and Dooly, now joined by Col.
Clarke, determined to attack Boyd,
and save if possible, upper Georgia
from utter desolation.
Or. the morning of the 14th of Feb
ruary, 1779, Boyd halted at a farm on
the west side of Kettle creek (now
owned by S. A. Daniel or Hon. H. F.
Slaton) and a good many of his men
were dispersed in various direction^
engaged m killing hogs, and cattle, and
gathering other supplies. This was the
patriots greatest opportunity, they ad
vanced in three divisions, the centre led
by Colonel Pickens, who was the com
mander of the day, the right under
with Dooley, and the left under Clarke, all
strict orders not to fire a gun until
within thirty-five yards of the enemy.
Pickens skillfully gained the flank cf
Boyd, and immediately attacked with
great fury and invincible bravery,
This was on the west side of the creek,
Boyd was shot down, but not killed,
and was taken prisoner, his men fled,
am; were on a hill on the other side ot
the creek (now known as Battle Hill),
Colonel Clarke, with all possible speed
quickly crossed the creek in pursuit and
soon charged impetuously up the hill
in the rear of the enemy. His impet
uous charge and deadly fire soon com -
Tolies pic ed fled the victory, in and the British and
utter defeat and eonfu
si> 1 ., not more than two hundred and
fift> of Boyd’s three hundred men evei | j
re*, hed Augusta.
b« Loyd died died on the heroic battle Col. field, Pickens j
fore he the
was at his side, ministering to his wants|
and trying to alleviate his sufferings, as i
all brave men will do; when at last
growing breath getting weaker, shorter he turned and his bis pulse to j
eyes
Od Pickens and requested him to
write to his luved wife who was
in England, giving tier address, and
inform her of his death, where he
how he died, and when he died, and
tell her his last thoughts were of her,;
and his last prayer was for her welfare;
he also gave Pickens some articles ot
value which he had about his person,
tc seud to his wife and it is said to
the lasting honor of the brave Picket ,
that he faithfully complied with the
request of the dying soldier on the
bloody battle ground of Kettle creek.
Seventy of Boyd’s men were killed
on the field, and their bones are now
lying somewhere near by. Who be knows
where? Can their resting place iden ¬
tified? Seventy-five others were wound¬
ed and were taken prisoners of war.
They were tried for treason and con¬
demned to death, but only five of the
ring leaders were executed, Some
more of them were afterward captured;
but no one knows to this day how
some of them passed off the stage
of life. Some skulked in the mountains
and swamps, and Boyd’s whole organ¬
ization was totally destroyed. This
victory saved Georgia, and infused new
vigor into the drooping cause of liberty
not only in Georgia but in the Carolinas.
Should we not celebrate the day?
Uncle Billy.
How 0 oi IOHGW 81 ii I Died. tv i
“General Jubal A. Early, in a eontri
bution to the Southern historical papers,
says of the fatal wounding of Stonewall
Jackson; “Instead of riding to the front
to reconnoitre the enemy, and then im
prudently galloping back toward his
own line, General Jackson was slowly
riding to the front, while making every
effort to hurry forward the troops, when
he was fired on by a portion of his own
men on the right (south) of the road
obliquely from the rear, and then
horses of his party that were not
down wheeled to the left, and he
into the woods on the left to
the fire, when he was fired upon
another body of troops on the north
of the road. It was by this last
that General Jackson was wound
.”—Savannah Recorder.
“We publish the above to show the
of history. The above is
high authority, and should be cor
but contains enough of error to
the truth of history. The
participated Chancellorsville, in the celebrated and
of was
within seventy five yards of Stonewall
when the gallant hero was
Gen. Jackson had passed through
lines to reconnoitre the position of
enemy. The time was abont 8
at night. In passing his lines
he gave the order to shoot any one ap
preaching from the front. The two
armies, at this time, were not more
than four hundred yards apart, some
of the Federal artillery being not more
than two hundred yards in our front,
and in reconnoitring the enemy’s posi
tion rode too close to one of the Federal
batteries, above alluded to, which open
ed fire.on him and his escort. Jackson
and his entire escort then turned their
horses heads in essayed rapid flight towards our
own lines, and to pass in at a
point a little north of the plank road,
The order, which had been given to
the southern part of the line when the
party went through, was obeyed, and
the result was the mortal wounding of
Jackson, and the almost total destruc
tion of his entire staff. The shooting
was done by a North Carolina regiment,
—ToIbotton Register.
-^ ^
One of the very few just and proper
remarks made by Hon, Zach. Chandler
was in the debate in the Senate on the
back-salary grab, which iniquitous
measure Mr Chandler manfully resist
ed. Mr. Chandler, whose personal and
family expanses in Washington ranged
from $30,000 to $40,000 a year, said
that he spent that amount because he
afford to do it, and because it
him. But he stoutly maintained
that $5,000 a year was a sufficient com
pensation for any Senator or member,
an d that all his necessary obigations
could be met out ol it. In answer to
Mr. Logan he said that if he had no
other income but the $5,000 he “should
most certainly live within it, and most
probably lay up a Congressman little.” He said and
further “the avei age
the average Senator is paid all that he
is worth tor the services rendered, and
if a large moiety ot both houses should
conclude tb<Tt they could not possibly
aflerd to remain with the salary, and
should therefore resign, I do not think
ihe country would suffer.” Mr.
ler was not a “ free pass’’ man, and he
meant that $5,000 was enough to
lieve any Seaator or member of the ne
cessity of being a dead-head .—Baltr
more Sun.
----- — --
The Jewish Chronicle finds “a proph
fulfilled" in one of ihe results
the new understanding between
Britain and Turkey, and thus speaks
cf it: “The report that the Porte has
a concession to an English
company for the construction of the
Euphrates Valley Railroad, and to a
French company for the Jaffa-Jerusalem
line, has been very favorably received
by the Jews in Jerusalem, especially
according to their belief, a prophecy
in the Scriptures will thereby be
filled. Isaiah, xix, 23: ‘In that day
there sliall be a highway out of
to Assyria, and the Assyrian shall
come into Egypt and the Egyptian into
Assyria, and the Egyptians’shall serve
vrith the A«syti»n§.'
SAVANNAH, FRIDAY, JANUARY 31 1879.
BY TELEGRAPH.
PRESIDENT MACMAHON RESIGNS
“Little Johnny” Davenport
Investigated.
J. MADISON WELLS
THE PLAGUE IN RUSSIA.
macmahon’s letter of resignation.
Versailles, January 30.—The fol¬
lowing is the text ol President Mac*
Mahon’s letter of resignation: this session of the
“At the opening of
Chambers, the Ministry while presented afford- to
you a programme which,
ing satisfaction to public opinion, might ap
peared to the Cabinet such as be
voted without danger to the security
or Hie administration of the coun
try. Putting aside all personal views,
I had given the programme my appro
bation, for I was sacrificing no princi
pie to which conscience commanded me
to remain faithful. To-day the Minis
try thinking to respond to the opinion
of a majority in the two Chambers pro
pose to me, in regard to high military
commands, some general measures
which I consider contrary to the inter
est of the army, and consequently to
those of the country. I cannot sub
scribe to them, and any other Ministry
taken from the majority would impose
on me the same conditions. I consider
myself, therefore, bound to shorten the
duration of the mandate which the Na
tional Assembly confided to me, and I
therefore tender my resignation.
“In quitting power, I have the con
sedation of thinking that during the
fifty-three years I have devoted to the
service of my country, either as a sol
dier or citizen, I have never been guid
ed by sentiments other than honor and
duty and absolute devotion to my
country. I request you to communi
cate my decision to the Chambers
(Signed) “MacMahon,
“Duke of Magenta.”
disastrous storm. J_
p j on a • 1
*. ’ *
,• , re .P or 8 A - s
1,q ,^ a < ;,. r q-^‘ ’
T .
1 a * 1 S '- 1 SSI PP 1 - ' P ; ‘ 1
P 0rte ° to- hav » been killed, and great .
iaina e £ e e e g ra f 3 P . 1 wire • aie , 11 i n L P
- ‘
TIIE davenfort investigation com
MITTEE.
New York, January 30. — The
Davenport Investigation Committee to
day examined the witnesses who had
been arrested on election day for at
tempting to vote on the strength ol the
1869 naturalization paper.
After a recess, several witnesses were
examined who had been arrested on
presentation of the 1868 naturalization
papers, and were held in custody until
the close of the polls. Judges Blatch
ford and Freeland’s decisions holding
that the 1868 papers were legal taken were
put on record, and testimony was
showing the great distress and hard
ships to which the arrested parties were
subjected.
a gang of railroad forgers and
counterfeiters captured.
fmrAnn Tannery 30 The nnlira
’
L ave caDtu | red a °dunng sane of counterfeiters
and foi er8 who the past two
( g have, by means of counterfeiting
etter heads and signatures, obtained a
crreat number 0 f passes from the rail
road corporations and scalpers.
notes ikom VRnM hussi^ PTTq8T .
St. Petersburg, January 30. -It is
officially announced that the plague
has appeared at Sciitrevoi and Gorod
dom on the \ olga.
3 3:16 Colos in ^ reference to the
says,
movements of Russia in Central Asia,
that these operations had a deiensive
and not an offensive character.
J. madison wells indicted.
New Orleans, January 30.—It is
rU mored that J. Madison Wells, Sur
veyor 0 f the Port, has been indicted
by the United States grand jury, ‘ for
malfeasance in office.
--- m m ^---
| The London Court Journal tells of a
man who has lived thirty years on
vegetables and fruits, to the total
'exclusion of alcohol, flesh and fish, and
says that he deserves to be heard u-n
the suoject of vegetarian diet. Mr.
Ward, the gentleman sound in question,
ports himself in wind and limb,
He is a fellow oi the Horticultural
Society and President of the Vegetarian
\ j Association. Probably uone could ad-y
vance a better claim 10 the latter
tinction. He brings his long experi
ence to bear for the purpose of reeom
mending lentils. A pennyworth
lentils, he says, contains as much nutri
nient as three shillings worth of lean
beef. A peck small of lentils would, he
adds, last a family the
*
winter.
— m m.
Gen. Ewing believes that the
lican candidate for President in
will be either Blaine, John Snerman
: Grant. He does not think the
‘mtfWment has mush strength.
A Great Life Ended.
Death of Espartero, the Spanish Soldier, who
Carved Out His Fortune with His Sword.
Spain mourns a great man dead, Don
Baldomero Espartero, Duke de la Vic¬
toria, Marshal, and some time Regent
of the Kingdom, soldier and statesman.
Few lives have been more brilliant than
this that came to an end on Thursday;
for few beginning so humbly have
ended in such high estate. Espartero
was born the son of a poor wheelwright;
he died a grandee of Spain. children, He was
the youngest of nine and
was born at Gratula, a little town ©f
Da Mancho, February 27, 1792. _
At the time of the French invasion,
1808,hejvas & student in training lor
holy orders. Spain was electrified by
the inroad of the French, and under
the influence of the old martial spirit
that for centuries made the Spanish the
war nation of the world, the Spa ; ^irds
flocked to arms. Espartero was ums of
the battalion of students, the “ Sacred
Legion,’ as it was called, and his
patriotic impulse decided his career,
When Napoleon was driven back
across the Pyrenees this warrior-priest
in embryo forsook the cross definitely
and took up the sword. He volunteer
ed in the expedition sent out under
General Morillo to reduce to order the
rebellious Spanish colonies in South
America, and his services there in the
field won for him the honorable promo
tion—while his not too scrupulous use
of his opportunities This latter won materially for him a for
tune. was aug
mented by his marriage with a daught
cr of a rich merchant of Logrcno. In
1824 he came back to Spain rich and a
brigadier. His first step in political
life was in the year 1832, when Ferdi
nand VII. declared the repeal of the
Salic law. He espoused the cause of
Isabella, with Christina as Regant.
Going out against the Carlists, he dis
played signal energy and ability, and
speedily was made Commander-in-Chief
of the Army of the North, Viceroy of
Navarre and Captain General of the
Basque Provinces. British In fleet, December, drove 1836, the
a, A e d by the he
Carlists from Luchano. A year later he
defeated the Carlists before the very
walls of Madrid ; in 1828 he crushed
the Generals Negri and Guerque, and
in 1839 his final conquest of the Car
lists set the seal fo his previous victories
and ] ed to his being created a grandee
of the first-class, with the title of Duke
de la Victoria and of Morelia,
Queen Christina placed the Duke at
the head of her Ministry, with a view
to strengthening her power. But the
hate of her subjects was too great to be
overcome, even by a coalition with the
most popular man in the nation. She
was lorced to resign the Regency in
1840, and Espartero, the son of the
wheelwright, became Regent in her
stead. Here he reached high water
mark. His arbitrary administration of
the affairs of State led to his fall. In
1843 his political enemies declared
Isabella of age, enforced this proclama
tion at the sword’s point, and Espartero,
deserted by his followers, was forced to
retire from the Regency and take
refuge in England. The dowager
Q ueen Christina, once more in power,
stored him his honors in 1847, and
when f he w f s a S am <lnv ? n s f vea
? ea T * rshe sabel3a 3 c ° ahtlon plac , catnnet J? a th position ® ^
: ’
that he filled for two years. After his
resignation he continued more or less
allied with the party in power ; but not
so firmly but that he w s in a position
to support the Provisional Government
decreed when Isabella actually was expelled offered in
1868 . In 1870 he was
the Crown by a taction in the Cortes,
But the ofler was not sufficiently sub
stantial to make it worth his while to
accept it. He was an old man and
feeble and childless. The offer was
put aside. Since then be has been no
long 61 ’ a leader and a tower of strength.
He has been sinking under his weight
of years and of labor. Ana now the
j soldier, t;.e Duke, the ex-Regent, tue
f on of the wheelwright, is dead. the Of
j his triumphant career, remains only
| legend and the name.
* • *
Wonderful Motor. —An applica
tion was recently made before the Eng
lish patent office for a patent for a new
motor. In the specification that has
been filed it is described as “an im
proved apparatus power.” for raising water princi- and
obtaining motive The is
pie upon which the new motor
founded is that “an apparatus raising
water twenty feet will raise twenty
times as much water as is necessary
work itself, less friction, the aparatus
being connected with and worked uy a
waterwheel.’ In other words the in
ventor has set out to prove that a
machine can oe made which will not
only work itself, but generate sufficient
power to work any fixed machinery or
propel vessels. Next to perpetual
motion, and akin to it, this new self
acting device, if its practicability can
be demonstrated, would be one of the
,most remarkable yet recorded in this
i age of grttat inventions.
ITEMS OF INTEREST.
A man and his wife and twenty seven
of their children work in the factories
at Cohoes, N. Y.
Lizards, flies, miniature squirrels and
mice are now stuck here and thereover
Parisian bonnets.
By way of consoling the share¬
holders of the City of Glasgow Bank,
the Lord Provost tells them that the
£5,000,000 sterling lost represents but
six months’ expenditure.of the inhabi¬
tants for liquor.
After all the experiences and lessons
of the past few years, the German army
still remains superior to all others in
point of organization and discipline.
In France, as in Austria, soldiers do
not all pass through the same school.
Ostrich-feathers are down. At Gra
hamstown, in South Africa, perfect
white feathers can be had for $725 a
pound, fine white plumes for $ 200 ,
black ones for about $70, and drab and
fancy colors for $ 20 .
The consumption of beer in the whole
German empire last year was 841,
058,768 gallons, or nearly twenty gal¬
lons per mouth of population. The im¬
portations amounted to 3,333,814 gal¬
lons and the exports to 19,098,266 gal¬
lons.
The young cod, when first hatched,
are almost invisible to the naked eye—
indeed, the smallest fry known—and it
was easy, comparatively, for the mind
to grasp, with these minute fish in sight,
the idea that one adult cod in prime
order can deposit three million eggs !
An ominous paragraph in the New
York Herald , alluding to fainting turns
recently suffered by H°nry Ward Beech¬
er, raises the suspicion that the heavy
mental wear and tear endured by this
wonderful nr an for so many years is be¬
ginning to tell at last.
The books of the National Life In¬
cording surance Company, of New Haven, ac¬
to yesterday’s dispatches, fur¬
nish a sum in rule of three. If it took
$35,000 to keep the Conueeticut Legis¬
lature from repealing a charter, how
large * sum would it have taken to in¬
duce that body to grant one ?
A fair estimate of the consumption
of quinine in this country is 1 , 200,000
ounces a year. It is probably, there¬
fore, no exaggerAtien to say that the
American people have for years been
paying seven hundred and twenty thou¬
sand dollars a year to two firms whose
estimated wealth is twenty million dol¬
lars.
A new tenor, by name Tomaguo, who
has the just appeared at Milan, is spoken of
as coming man. He is described
in the Musical Journal , of that city,
as “an archangel of the St. Michael
type, of fair complexion and powerful
yet graceful form, with the loveliest
voice imaginable, great dignity of bear¬
ing and grace.”
Disestablishment is hereafter to be
the rule in Burmah. Under the old
King the clergy cost the state some¬
thing like a lac of rupees every month,
but his successor has discovered that
for a longtime past prominent religious
authorities have been stealing on an
average hence two his pigs a day from the royal rela¬
sty, of Church new light on the
tions and State.
The growth of New York during the
P a ^ eleven years is shown by the re*
cords of the operations of the Building
Department. It appears that 19,811
new baildinea have been erected at an
e8timated C08t of $284,328,495. The
4Ver age number erected each year was
1,801 at an average cost of about
£14 ’ 300 ' During the last eleven years
the av e annua] expenditure has
been nearlv $26 ’ 000 ’ 000.
. . .. . ,
ine wnippmg post is said to nave
' vot " e We irgima. ases 0 P e T
k and . the6 imlnal charges of the
a r< ; en 7 [
. a ®. ave 8e n8 aHen since its
^ , ° P ■ n ’ ';j , | •£, ^rftv on
g i bv £ a da ed ma tJ J ’ on a motion
, , , ■ -.
V f nine hundred °negroes
0
WQ lj- 8 ■ Pender countv adonted* iK Cl
1 ^ y have voluntarily 7 P the
.
tbenroTlvPs 0 8Up ^ re8S 16 ving
H °. becoming ' . ’ to send
is common
children by express and a number of
boys and girls in diflerent parts of the
country have b-en transferred safely in
this novel way. The express agents
care them - 0T their human hotels freight, the giVtng road
mea;s at aiong
and accommodations in tiie express car.
When a transfer is made from one line
oano 3 'h er . the lad or lassie, properly
bioed, is handed over to the expressman
4 that line.
I ae j- 'Iw lork Evening . Rost is on
the war path against the quinine { ax
; It says the wholesale price^of 4 iiutn
ln this country is about $3 60 a; ounce,
ar >d in the foreign market about $3 an
ounce, duty a price at which, but for the
of twenty per centum ad valorem,
; tt could be placed on sale in our own
markets. The difference of sixty cents
an ounce goes, almost without deduc
tion, into the pockets of two PhiladeL
phi* monopolist*.
PRICE THREE CENTS.
Boarding,
G ood board and lodging $5 00 per
per week. 60 BRYAN 1ST.,
eoci-janl7-lm Below Lincoln.
To Rent.
T O RIANT.—A small Farm, on the White
Bluff Road, (0'/$ miles from Mavannah,)
containing 15 acres of cleared land, under
good fencing, with good Dwelling, Store and
Blacksmith. Shop. Can be rented at the low¬
est terms, by applying to C. II. G. WITTCAMP
at Mr. C. Mehrtens’ Grist Mill, corner Jeffer¬
son and Charlton streets. deeSl
Wanted
W ANTED, A GOOD SERVANT GIRL.
Appl y at t h e Rkcordkk office,
_
w ANTED—Two Furnished ROOMS with a
stove, for a Professional man and his
sister, located. with References privilege of exchanged. cook stove. Centrally Address
J. E. C. 136 HULL ST., Savannah, Ga.
Business Cards.
VAL. BASLElt’S
WINES, liquors, SEGARS and TOBACCO
The best Lager Beer in the city. The well
known TEN PIN ALLEY reopened. Lunch
Square every day from 11 to 1 o’clock. At the Market
House, 174 BRYAN ST. Savannah, Ga.
F. jBINGEL,
WINES, LIQUORS AND SEGARS.
Milwaukee and Cincinnati Lager Beer on
draught. hand. Free Lunch. Fresh Oysters always
on 21 Jefferson st., corner Con tigress
Btreet lane. mchlO-ly
Dr. A. H. BEST,
JD ZEUfcT T X ST
Cor. Congress and Whitaker streets.
SAVANNAH, GA.
T EETH extracted without pain. All work
guaranteed.
I respectfully beg to refer to any of my
patrons. octl-bmo
C IGAR rer of FACTORY.—F. Cigars, Pipes, and dealer KOLB, in manufactu¬ Cigars, To¬
Street bacco, Snuff, Ac. Call at 121 Broughton
. 23gy
FKANCELIUS , COPYING INK.
In Pint and Half Pint Bottles.
Does not mould or thicken when exposed
to the air. Saves the Pen. Copies excellently.
TRY IT.
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-z31-l v
HAIR store:
JOS. E. L0ISEAU & CO.,
118 BROUGHTON ST.. Bet. Bull A Drayton
K EEP Switches, on hand Curls, a large Puffs, assortment and Fancy of Goods Hair
Hair combings worked in the latest style.
F ancy Costumes, Wigs and Beards for Rant .
JOS. H. BAKER.
B TT U rn JL O V-/ 1—I—m Jrd__JtLi JtrO TD ,
STALL No. 60. Savann Market.
Dealer in Beef, Mutton, Pork ml
All other Meats in their Seasons.
Particular attention paid to supplying Ship
and Boarding Houses. augl2
Theodor Gronwald,
TAILOR.
Mo. 30 1-2 W3xita.ls.or Ut.
Suits made to order ln the latest styles.
Clothing cleaned and repaired. All orders
will meet with prompt attention. Janl8-lm
W. B. FERRELL’S Agt.
RESTAURANT,
No. II New Market Basement,
(Opposite Lippman’s Drug Store,)
janlKt.t 84 VANNAH, GA.
Clothing*
The Popular Clothing: House of
B. H. LEVY,
V/ /~VFFERH for the next thirty days Youths’ his entire
slock of all stylos Men’s, and
duced Children’s CLOTHING, at the following re¬
20J Men’s prices: casslmere Suits, dark light, solid
or
colors or striped, formerly sold at *16 00,
now $12 50.
from Dress 86 Diagonal and upwards. Coats and Vests, ranging
00
500 pairs Casslmere Pants, different colors and
styles, ranging from 82 (XI and upwards.
300 Children and Boys’ suits from 83 00 and up¬
wards. Great reduction ln Overcoats !
300 Overcoats at the low lieu re of $3 00 and un¬
warde, must be closed out, rather than to
carry over the season. profitable Anyone wishing
to purchase will find It to cull at
this popular Clothing House. B. II. LEVY,
jan3 Corner Congress and Jefferson sts.
Plumbing and Gas Fitting*
CHAS E. WAKEFIELD,
Plumbing, Gas & Steam Fitting,
No. 48 BARNARD BTREET, one door north
of South Broad treet.
Batb Tubs. Water Closets, Boilers, Ranges
Jobolng Promptly attended to.
ebll Also, Agent of “ BACKUS WATER MOTOR,
T. J. McELLIN,
PLUMBIN AND G/vS FITTING.
Whitaker street, One 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.
33R:Zgy
_______
Carriages.
A. K. WILSON S
CARRIAGE MANUFACTORY,
Corner Bay :md We : jro .d sts.
CARRIAGE REPOSITORY .
Cor. Bay and Montgomery streets.
SAVANNAH, GEORGIA.
The largest establishment in the city.
I keep a full line of Carriages, Rockaways
Buggies, and Falling Spring and Farm Wagons, Canopy
line of Carriage Top and baby Wagon Can luges, also a full
engaged in factory JIaterlal. I have
fcbagics. my the rjost skill/hl me
Any order* Ggftuted for o*w work, and re¬ 9
pairing, fchdarshdrt wiu autfee. be t< Viva —------