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THE SAVANNAH RECORDER. |
'
isi BAY STREET. |
B. M. OBME, Editor. |
Terms of Subscription:
(INVARIABLY IN ADVANCE.)
One Year........ .85 00
Six Months.... . 2 50
Three Months. . 1 25
One Month_____ 50 Cs
Friday February 14, 1879.
After the Pension Voters.
The .Advertiser says: We shall
look over the ayes and nays upon the
passage of the Pension bill with much
interest. We are anxious to see if any
Georgia Congressman aided in voting
away one hundred and fifty millions of
dollars on a buncombe electioneering
scheme. This was about the sum voted
away,and that in substance, the object
aimed at. We propose to do a liberal
amount of free advertising for such as
aided in passing this gigantic plunder¬
ing bill.”
Yes, it would be well to advertise
that Southern claims,just in themselves
cannot be paid; but a big pension elec¬
tioneering bill can be passed and sign¬
ed without the least thought of rob¬
bing the Treasury. Demagogues all, who
voted for the bill.
The Macon and Brunswick
Railroad*
The Joint Committee of the Senate,
and House of Representatives, to ex
amine in'Lo the condition of the Macon
and Brunswick Railroad, and report to
the next Session, what should be done
with the same, met in Brunswick on the
11th inst., nearly all the members of
the committee were present. Hon. J.
C. Fain, of Calhoun, Ga., is Chairman
of the Senate Committee, and Hon.
Allen Fort, of Sumter, Chairman of
the House Committee.
The following resolution was
passed :
Resolved, That Messrs. Si lies, Tison,
Holton, Harris, Paine, Lamb and Fair,
* be appointed to investigate in detail, as
is convenient or practicable, the-trans¬
fer of the Macon and Brunswick Rail¬
road, and its franchises to the State,and
also, to investigate its prospects, of
betterments by donations or otherwise.
It is thought that a majority of Road, the
Committee are against leasing the
and are divided on the questions of sale,
or whether the State shall continue to
run the road. Under the management
of Mr. George W. Adams the road last
year paid all expenses, and also paid
$>50,CHj0 into the State Treasury.
The committee will try and be well
posted in all the affairs of the road be¬
fore they make their report. The
members of the committee paid their
own expenses to Brunswick, and their
investigations will cost the State noth¬
ing. Our fellow citizen, Hon. W. W.
Paine, is a member of the committee
and has just returned from Brunswick.
Editorial Responsibilities
There is difference of opinion on (his
subject. There are those who hold an
editor personally responsible whether for editorial, all that
appears in his paper,
communications written by others, or
selections. This opinion is not correct.
An editor in order to come up to the
full measure of his duty must not con¬
ceive that his own views of public
questions are right and set up judgment
against others. The editor is no more
than other men. He may be ever so
honest and his judgment and views
may be in error.
The Federal Constitution guarantee
the freedom of speech and the liberty
of the press. This is the line upon
which an editor should run Ins paper.
To refuse to publish discussions of pub¬
lic matters written by others because
they violation may not agree of with himself, would
be a one of the great prin¬
ciples of constitutional liberty. In an
experience ot thirty years in journalism
we have published did many articles with
which we not agree. We could not
refuse to do so according to our views
of the But, duty ol journalists in such mat¬
ters. at the same time, and by
so doing, we did not become personally
others responsible for columns. what was written by
for our
“A free press must give utterances to
free speech and freedom of thought, or
it cannot be truly the palladium of
public liberty. It requires a vast deal
judgment of egotism for an editor to set up his
others and on public questions above all
to^refuse to give any ex¬
pression to the views of those who may
differ with him. According to these
views ot what we conceive to be correct
editor in journalism, responsible we do not consider an
for what may be
written by his correspondents or con
tributors. He is responsible for
only what he writes himself.”
The above very sensible and wise
views, we take from the Cartersviile
Free . Press. The ideas in themselves
are just and right. The press which
declares itself independent, should open
oheerfully its columns to all.
A partisan press of course is ex
pected to admit nothing in its columns
but what may agree with the views of
a partisan editor. That is understood.
Houce, a party paper is narrow, con¬
tracted aud limited m iu views. The
party press speaks and writes for a
party, and will not admit articles which
conflicts or will refute the arguments
of the editor. The editor of a partisan
press speaks only for those who may
think like him, and nobody else.
The independent press, however,
says to the public: “ Here are the
views of an independent editor ; they
are our individual views; we speak and
write to convince, educate and mould
public opinion. If you, the public,
differ with us,you shall be heard; write
and your views will be given to the
public for what they are worth.”
The independent press encourages j
independent thought, and the editor of
such a paper, assumes no critical pro
scription of the opinions of others,
There is not such pride of opinion on his
part that every article which finds a
place in his columns must represent his
views, and accord with the known
opinions of the editor.
That editor is indeed an egotist or
ass, who imagines he carries in his
pocket, or represents the opinions of an
intelligent community on any subject
he may wri.e, whether of politics,
morals, science, finance, or questions of
a local nature. The . time is ripe for a
free and an independent press, and the
more we have of them, the more in
dependent will the people become of
partisan papers and political leaders,
An editor’s editorials represent himself
and nobedy else. If his readers endorse
his views, well and good. Communica
tions represent the individual writers,
We have published a number of com
municafioas which we did not endorse
either in matter or spirit, and expect to
publish many more, and the writers
must be individually responsible for
what they write.
EDITORIAL NOTES.
How is it that the species of ant
which is taken in battle by other ants
to be made slaves should be black or
negro ants? No one kno.vs.
Why does the lonely woodpecker,
when he descends his tree and goes to
drink, stop several times on his way,
listen and look round before he takes
his draught? No one knows.
New York State ought to buy out a
couple of coal mines as soon as possi
ble. It takes a thousand tons of coal
a month to heat the little corner that
is finished of the State Capitol.
A kind old negro man, seeing a lady
trying vainly to cross a swollen gutter
on Vine street, Philadelphia, during
the late thaw, offered to carry her
over. She told him she feared she was
too great a weight. “Why, de Lor’
bress you honey,” he said, “I’se used
to lifting bales of cotton all my life, I
was.’’
A carriage comes suddenly upon a
flock of geese on a narrow’ road, and
drives straight through the middle of
them. A goose was never yet fairly
run over, nor a duck. They are under
the very wheels and hoofs, and yet
somehow they contrive to flap and wad
dle safely off. Habitually stupid, heavy
and indolent, they are nevertheless
equal to the emergency.
A French jeweller in 1870 sold a
lady a 5,000-franc set of jewelry, giv¬
ing a written promise to take the arti¬
cles back if they were not approved.
She wore them six years and then ask¬
ed to have them exchanged for some¬
thing of a newer fashion. The courts
have finally decided that he must do
so, and a London tribunal has render¬
ed a similar judgment w’here the custo¬
mer wore a diamond ring three years
before returning it.
A naturalist has found !
german that
the papaw fruit in an unripe state, j
when boiled with tough meat, will make
it tender and perfectly d.«eet.ble, tbe
$ame results being obtained ii the meat
be merely washed with the juice of the
fruit. Salt meat is affected in precise¬
ly the same way. The thick white
creamy juice of the greeu fruit contains
properties similar to those of pepsine
and it may become a valuable medicine,
though ° if taken in too large doses the
substance , dangerous, , i having ■ the i
^ is uc > a iU o
effect of permeating and actually des
troying the thin mucous membrane of
; stomach and intestines.
A number of members of the Reform- I
i e d Episcopal Church i in Philadelphia v j
propose to discontinue the observance
of Lent that as a season oi fasting. They j
urge the indulgence in worldly
pleasure before and after Lent is in
creased by wav of compensation for i
! enforced abstention during the season
■ of fasting; while they also urge that
uniform moderation of life is the
1 Church's great need, aud that this may
be better secured without L-uteu ob
' eervauces than with them.
In 1807 England captured from
Denmark the little island of Heligo¬
land, in the North Sea, end has held it
ever since. This Island is not larger
than an ordinary Illinois farm, being
only one mile and a third of a mile
wide. But it is only 210 miles from
the mouth of the River Elbe, is strong¬
ly fortified, and has a good anchorage
for naval vessels. It gives England a
military station on the coast of Ger
man y. nrid the re P ort that rruasia is
negotiating for its purchase is proba
bly true,
The distresses of the present day
will teach the British people more
about the inequalities in classes in that
country than they would learn under
ordinary circumstances in a generation.
The condition of British trade is such
as to make the outlook for the working
men a terrible one indeed. There is no
sign of substantial improvement any
where. The iron, steel and metal trades
generally are depressed to the very
lowest, and the losses of old markets
are reported continually. The mercan
tde and manufacturing societies every
where are in a state ot alarm,
Gen. Grants presence at Minister
Welsh’s reception, according to Mr.
Conway, arroused an uncertainty in
the British mind The writer thought
that the English guests seemed some
what at a los3 to know just how they
ought to approach the ex-President.
Several of them squared off and dodg
ed down or courtesied, as people do
when they approach the Queen. “I
also thought,’ says Mr. Conway, “I
s:iW a shade of surprise pass over the
General s face on one or two occasions,
&ud a misgiving as to whether he
ought to dodge down, too.”
W. J. Houston returned from New
Orleans by Atlanta and West Point
railroad a few days ago, buoyant with
his success in securing emigrant rates
from Texas to ail points in Alabama,
Mississippi, Georgia, North Carolina,
South Carolina and Virginia. He
states that he can bring full grown
emigrants from Houston, Texas, to
Atlanta for less than half the value of
a 500 pound bale of cotton, and hopes
when another crop is made to see the
countrymen of the Northeast returning
from the Southeast in large numbers.
We hope to be able to give details
fully in our next issue.
Charles Etheridge of St. Paul, Min.,
defrauded a hank of forty thousand
dollars, and fled from the State. He
was overtaken by remorse, and has
fully reimbursed the swindled institu¬
tion by turning over to it the bulk of
his real and personal property, and he
now asks to be reinstated in the church
of which he was a member. In a letter
to his former pastor he says of his
crime that ‘‘the step was one boro of
desperation, leaping blindly as it were
off the high ground of integrity into
the deep and to me unknown abyss of
crime,” and he adds that “atonement
for weakness in yielding to temptation
and prayer to be sustained in that ob¬
ject and to keep me from temptation
will be a daily and hourly self-imposed
duty.” Etheridge appears to be really
a penitent man, proving his repentance
by works.
CONGRESSIONAL SUMMARY.
What Was Done in Both Houses.
In the Senate, Mr. Kellogg introduc¬
ed a bill to secure the completion of a
line of railway from San Antonio,
Texas, to a point at or near Fort Clark,
and thence to a point at or near El
Paso, upon the Rio Grande, to be known
as the Mexican and Pacific extensions
of the Galveston and San Antonio
Railway. He spoke briefly in favor of
the construction of this road, which
asked but $10,000 a mile from the
\ ov ^ nment ' ^‘ ie was reterred t0
xhe Seoate discuased without final
action the bill to restrict Chinese immi¬
gration. House, Mr.
In the Cobb, of Indiana,
moved to take up for consideration the i
contested election case of Finley vs. ]
Bisbee, from the First distiiet of
Florida.
Mr- Atkins, of Tennessee, antagn
ni ze d t;he motion, desiring to proceed ;
with . L the appropriation bill. If the leg- P
islative • , .- i bill n is not ,. passed , this • week, , he
did not see how the Appropriation
Committee could get the civil sundry
bill ready in time to be passed.
The motion to proceed with the elec- i
tion case was defeated. Previous to :
the announcement, Mr. Cobb changed
his vote to the negative, and then
moved to reconsider.
^ r " Atkins moved to lay the motion
l ^ e ta ^ e * Inis motion was defeat
gj
The question recurred on reco nsider
ipg the vote by which the House re- (
tused to take up the contested election
case and it was agreed to. The Repub
lie ms then resorted to filibustering
tactics.
til The W election case was postponed un- 1
eduesday next. The House then
discussed the legislative, judicial bill. After and
executive appropriation the
disposing bill, remainder of sixty-three pages day’s of session
the of the
was devoted to memorial services in
honor of the late Julian Hartridge.
The usual resolutions were offered by
Mr. Cook, of Georgia, and eulogies on
the life and character of the deceased
were pronounced by Messrs, Cook,
Hendee of Vermont, Knott of Ken¬
tucky, Cox of New York, Frye of
Maine, Harrison of Illinois, Davidson
of Florida, Goode of Virginia, Cutler of
New Jersey, and Bell and Felton of
Georgia. The resolutions were adopted.
The House then adjourned.
Hew Advertisements.
L OST—A TRUNK, containing Artist’s
Tools, Paints and Pictures, The finder
will be suitably rewarded. Address.
Prof. J. EDWIN CHURCHILL, Artist.
P ROF. J. EDWIN CHURCHILL, Portrait
and Landscape Painter, has permanently
located on BOLTON ST., between Abercorn
and Lincoln street, north side, where he is
prepared to PAINT Portraits and Landscapes
of all sizes, Photograph, Ambrotypes, Tin¬
types and Daguerreotypes, enlarged from
card to life-size.
All orders intrusted to his care will receive
prompt attention. He will paint 8x10 size for
live dollars, 14x17 fifteen dollars, and life-size
twenty-five dollars. Give him a call,
febll
1844. —ESTABLISHED— 1844.
Wm. M. Davidson,
Wholesale Dealer In
WINES, LIQUORS, SEGARS,
&c., &c., Ac..
Nos. 158 & 160 BRYAN STREET,
CONVENIENT TO THE MARKET.
My large stock of Liquors comprises
All grades of John Gibson’s Son & Co’s, well
known brands of WHISKIES.
From SINGLE X to CABINET.
The best and choicest importations of
Old Foreign Brandies, Wines Liquors.
Claret and Light Wines, best quality.
—ALSO—
Claret, Light Wine Sauterne, Ac., for table use.
Vinegar, Etc.
Champagne, sparkling Moselle, Etc,, Etc.
I am also sole agent for
WM. MASSEY" & CO.’S Celebrated
Philadelphia Ales and Porters, viz:
Cream, X, XX, XXX, and East India
PALE ALES,
Which will be sold at wholesale or retail, with
a guarantee for all goods as represented.
As I make a spceialityof Gibson’s Whiskies,
I will sell the same at Philadelphia Catalogue
prices, according to quantity, with freight
added.
Being now located in my new and spacious
premises on Bryan street, with a mammoth
cellar that has a capacity for storing sell '0,000
barrels of Ale, I am in a position to on
better terms than any other House in the
trade, I will therefore he pleased to serve my
friends and the public at my new quarters,
feb!4
Valuable Real Estate For Sale.
That valuable BRICK HOUSE, v. w. cor.
State and Montgomery streets, containing,
120 feet on State street and 90 feet on Mont¬
gomery street; with Garden, Out Houses, Ac.
This house is situated on the healthiest belt of
land in the city. Will he sold on accommo¬
dating terms—it is one of the finest built
houses in this city for a large family or Board¬
ing House—or will be exchanged for smaller
property. Lot No. south —ALSO-
16, of Anderson street, con¬
taining 5)4 Acres, equal to 75 lots. Also,
Lot No. 17, containing 5V£ Acres, equal to 75
lots as this section of the County has been
thoroughly drained, it is healthy, and is not
subject to city taxes. Desirable property for
a Country residence and fine Garden, or can
be divided and sold in lots. Also,
3 Acres Land west of the Arkwright Cotton
Factory can be divided into City Lots—or
used as a Garden as it now is. Also.
100 Acres Land at 13 mile stone, Augusta
Road, pa-t cleared. Also, situated
60 Acres well-wooded Land, 3 miles
from the City, on the Skidaway Ferry Road,
about 30 acres cleared. Also,
about 115 Acres High and Low Land, well Mtooded. 3
40 acres cleared ; between the 2 and
mile-posts on the Seaboard and Skidaway
Railroad, we it side; an excellent stand lor a
Grocery Store 2 miles from Anderson st. Also
5 Acres of Land on the Bonaventure Road,
about 3 miles distance from the city. Also,
Ga. 19)4 This Acres is of Land on Marietta st., Atlanta,
desirable property and ean be di¬
vided into Lots for fine residences. Will be
sold or exchanged for City of Savannah, im¬
proved property, or property on the DILLON, Salts.
Apply to DAVID R.
febl2-lm No. 2 Whitaker st.. Savannah, Ga.
Amusements.
The Catholic Fair
TO RAISE FUNDS TO
Plaster the Exterior of the Cathe¬
dral of our Lady of
Perpetual Help,
—AND TO—
Assist in Building a New Church
for St. Patrick’s Parish,
is now open
— AT—
Cathedral Hall,
Corner of Abercorn and Harris Streets,
Afternoons and Evenings. i
:
| j*| MllfiliU PDAMH ETAID Ml j
I II |
Is iu charge of the Ladies of the Cathedral
and St. Patrick’s Church, and surpasses any
similar effort made in this city.
Therubiicgeneraliy are invited to attend,
Adml8Sl °n free. febo tf
_ . ■*. Fl&IitS . - BiTuS -
■
-
H AVE constantly on baud a large and well
selected assortment of
Garden, Field & Flowei Seeds.
Handsome GERANIUMS of Apple, Rores,
Spice, Fish, Etc. 1
low. Choice Hyacinths Roses, Camelias and Bulbs. Azaleas—very
andother Jars, Cages
aud German Canaries
Bouquets, Wreaths, etc., made to order.
All orders receive my personal attention.
GEO. WAGNER,
Seedsman and Florist,
oclStt Savannah Ga
FISH .
liOO Boxes Herrings,
luO Half Barrels Mackerel.
25 Boxes Codflsh, !
For sale by
C. L. GILBERT A CO.
*b9 8. B. Wholesale Grocers*. iW.
cor. trnry arm Banrard
Groceries and Provisions*
i^BOPENED!
Tks Tea aid Coffee Emporium,
139 BROUGHTON ST.,
formerly conducted by the late A. J. Moloney
has been reopened by the undersigned with
entirely new Machinery and Improved full Roasting and
Grinding and a and fresh line
of Teas, Coffees and Spices direct from Impor¬
ters hands, Our Teas have been selected on
their drawing merit and our Coffees for their
body and flue llavor. Wc solicit a continu¬
ance of the patronage of the late Mr. Moloney,
and invite new patrons. We guarantee to
sell all who may favor us with a call if quality
and price are a consideration.
Coffees of all kinds roasted daily. The pub¬
lic are cordially Invited to call and see our
the new South. Roasting House, the most complete In
jan31-tf RETLY & MOLONEY.
New Goods.
A TMORE’S MINCE MEAT, Londou Layer
New Raisins, Citron, New Layer Prunes, Raisins, Dried New Figs, Currants,
Pre¬
serves, Jellies, Florida Oranges, Choice Apples
Kiln Dried Oatmeal, New Boneless Codflsh,
Bologna Sausage,
Fire Crackers & Fireworks.
Choice Hams, Shoulders and Strips, arriving
by weekly steamer. and Cheek & Whitlock’s
choice Flour in sacks barrels, Bell Logan
Flour, also the unsurpassed Town Talk Bak¬
ing Powder, the best in the market, give it a
trial and be convinced
31. Foley F. & Co.
decI9 S. W. cor. Broughton A Barnard sts.
J. H. A. Wildk. A. Meyer
WILLE & MEYER,
CHOICE
FAMILY GROCERIES,
173 CONGEES ST.,
Lippman’s Block, Market Square.
W E have opened the above named place,
with a complete stock oi choice family
groceries, superior quality and are fully goods prepared remarkably to furnish
a of at low
prices, guaranteeing satisfaction in every in¬
stance. We request our friends and the public
iu general to give us a trial. janltf-lm
FRESH DRIED FRUIT
AT THE
Blue Grocery Store
No. 156 CONGRESS ST.
F RESH Peaches DRIED and Prunes. CHERRIES, £ Heed Apples,
New Almond, Walnuts. Pecai .» **ud Brazil
Shoulders. Nuts, Ferris Fine Hams, Pig Pork llreakfas Bacon aud
and 1 niton Market
Beef, BolognaSausage. Beef Tongues at 50 cents a piece, Fresh
New Linsen, £ put Peas and
Marrow Beans, Ilollandischen ( ieam Cheese,
Oat and Buckwheat Grits, G ooanuts and
New Tennessee Peanuts. Fine t ]»)plesalways
on hand. By
J. H. VON NE WTON.
FRESH GOODS.
10 Casks Strips Magnolia and shoulders, Hams, 10 Ferris’ boxes Hams. Cream
Cheese, Peas 15 boxes Italian Maccaronl, French
and Mushrooms, Choice Maple Syrup,
Fresh Buck wheat, 10 barrels Malaga Grapes.
VERY CHOICE STOCK.
Fresh Crackers, Lemon Snaps. Ginger Snaps.
Cocoanut Snaps, Nic Nacs, Cream Soda Bis,
cuits, Koekaway Graham Wafers, Water Crackers,
Fruit, Chocolate Macaroous, Etc
at
BRANCH & COOPER.
feoll-tf
NEW GOODS.
At No. 19 BARNARD ST.,
[Gomm A Lelfler’s old stand]
W ESTPHALIA HAMS. Goose meat in
Sardines, Gelee, Goose Fat, Roll Herring, Spiced
Swedish Anchovies, Kieler Sprot
ten, Smoked Buckitige, Pickled Eels, Holland
Cream and RoquefortCliee.se, Dried Apples,
Peaches, Tennessee cherries, Pears and Prunes full Cocoa
nuts, Peanuts, etc. A line of
CHOICE FAMILY GROCERIES.
OSCAR ZAHN.
feb6tf
________
HEM O VAL!
Savannah Steam Coffee and Spice Mills
I N moved order to to No. gain 157 BROUGHTON more room we ST., have where re¬
we wi’l sell Teas, Coffees, Spices, Sugar, etc.
Our selections oi stock is made with care, and
our facilities being unsurpassed we feel confi¬
dent to please all who may favor us with their
patronage. We
have now in stock a fresh arrival of
Oolong, English, Breakfast, Young Hyson.
Gunpowder, Teas Imperial, llyson (uncolored( Ja¬
pan Coilee fresh COFFEES, parched daily. Rio, Java, Mocha, etc.
BYRNES & HICKEY.
janI5 157 Broughton Street.
Fish.
«|. m. Sulliv&h 4 Son,
Wholesale Dealers in .
OYS1ERS, SHAD,
fresh 4 Salt Water Fish, Terrapin, Game,
VEGETABLES AND FRUIT,
Florida Oranges a specialty.
Families served with oysters by the quart
or gallon.
ISO BRYAN ST.
SAVANNAH, GEORGIA.
All order* punctually attended to. novl-4m
Geo. A. Hudson,
—Dealer in—
FRESH FISH,
Open & Shell Oysters,
C3-A3VEE, ETC.
Market .Stall, No 33 also 139 Bay street.
Families supplied in any quantity with best
qualities at reasonable prices.
Shipping octl7tf orders reoeive prompt attention.
GRITS! MEAL!
We are agents for the
Enterprise I ;
Grits Mill. |
)
A NY driver orders of left either at our of our Store wagons or given will to the be i 1
fromptl,
A. C. HARMON & CO.
jam*- a WklteOcvr rtrtrt
Dry Goods.
7f Cloaks.
500 ON CONSIGNMENT.
SALE POSITIVE WITHOUT
REGARD TO COST.
Ladies' and Misses' Berlin Beaver.
$30 Cloaks at $20.
$25 Cloaks at $15.
$18 Cloaks at $12.50.
BOYS’ SUITS.
Full line 3 to 14 years, long and knee pan ts.
Boys’ BLUE BLOUSE TRICOT OVERCOATS.
Boys’ DIAGONAL BLOUSE OVERCOATS.
Boys’ MELTON BLOUSE OVERCOATS.
Gents’ city. NECKWEAR, the largest stock in this
50 dozen Gents’ SCARLET FLANNEL
SHIRTS and DRAWERS.
20 dozen CANTON FLANNEL SHIRTS and
DRAWERS.
130 dozen UNDERVESTS. Ladies’, Gents’. Misses and Boy* J
Ladies’ KID GLOVES, Opera Shades, 2, 3
and 6-buttons.
Gents’ KIDS, CASTOR A DOG SKIN GLOVES
50 dozen Misses’! ALEX ANDRE) KID GLOVES
in dark and medium shades.
10 pieces of very fine 8-4 and 9-1 Satin faced
TABLE DAMASK, at fabulously low prices.
100 dozen NAPKINS, beautiful designs.
50 sets TEA CLOTH and NAPKINS to match
at 85 50 to 812 set.
1,000 yards CRASH TOWELING, at 5c.
200 dozen HUCK TOWELS, at 123^c., worth JC«
5000 yards STANDARD PRINTS, at 5c.
BLACK CASHMERES, 30 pieces )nst opened
75c., former price 81 25.
GRAY & O'BRIEN.
decautf
Lines of travel.
{Savannah & Mellonville Steam boa
LINE.
HYLAND ALL THE WAY
SEMI-WEEKLY.
For St. Catharine’s,Doboy, Darien, Union Is¬
Ga., land, Fernandina, Ht. Simon’s, Brunswick and St. Alary’s,
Jacksonville and all points
on St, John’s River. Fla.
WEEKLY
For aSl landings on the Satilla River,
The low pressure sidewheel
SI EA31ER ROSA,
Captain P. H. WARD.
L EAVES o’clock, wharf P. m. EVERY foot Drayton TUESDAY, street FOR at 4
FLORIDA touching at all the above places,
and for SartJIa every Thursday at 4 o’clock p
M„ Brunswick connecting aud at Brunswick with Macon ami
roads. Brunswick and Albany Rail¬
and Through bills low lading rates of freight and passage
of given to all points.
Freights rivers for Altainaha, Ocmulgee and Oco¬
nee must be prepaid.
Freight received uaily, Sundays excepted.
w. F. Barry, ’ Agent. *
J. „ H. Smith, Manager.
O. S. Bknson, General Business Agent,
novlltf
Hogular Lie to Sati M
AND ALL WAY LANDINGS,
Touching Doboy, at St. Catharines, Sapelo,
Union Island, Darieu,
St. Simon’s and Brunswick.
T 1 ™ W. STEAMER C. Uj.mo, will CENTENNIAL, receive freight Captain for the
above Abercorn places at DeRenne’s Wharf, loot ol
A fferniion street,and 4 leave every THURSDAY
at o’clock, p. m. Freight received
at aii times, J. P. CHASE, -
febltf Agent. >a
W. H. FLEETWOOD, Commander,
U
WILL LEAVES WANNAH EVERY TUES¬
DAY AT 5 P. M., FOR
P* A Ii Be , •
T OUCHING at St. Catharine’s, Doboy, St
nandina, Simon’s, Brunswick. St. Mary’s, Fer
John’s River. Jacksonville, and all points on St
EVERY SATURDAY at 5 p. m., for Jack¬
St. sonville, touching at St. Catharine’s, Doboy
necting Simon’s, at Jacksonville St. Mary’s, Fernandina, with and con¬
steamers for a>»
points on Upper St. John’s.
Steamer David Clark,
TIIOS. WHITE. Commander.
Will leave Savannah every MONDAY at 4 p.
m. for Brunswick, touching at St. Catharine a
Doboy, Darien Union Island and,St. Simon’s.
The above steamers connect at Brunswick
wit). M.&B. and B. A A. Railroad* for ail
points in Southwest Georgia. At St. Mary *
with steamers for points on Ht. W. Mary’s Transit river.
At Fernandina with A. G. A J.
Co.’s Railroad for Waldo, .Starke, Gainesville,
Bronson. Cedar Keys and all points on this
road. At Cedar Keys with steamers for Kev
West Tampa aud Manatee. At Jacksonville
with Jf. C. R- K- A J. F. A M. R. R. for Litke
Cltv Live Oak, Monticello. Railroad. Tallahassee, and
ali points oi J. P. A M. At Palatka
with steamers for the Upper St.John’s aud
Ocklawaha rivers. At Tocol with Ht. John's
Railway for St. Augustine, New and at Ht. Augus
tine with steamers for Smyrna and all
points on Indian river.
Throhgb tickets sold ana wills of lading giv
en to ab.»ve points. For freight or paasag* ap
ply
J. I* ROUMILLAT_ *****