Savannah daily evening recorder. (Savannah, GA.) 1878-18??, February 19, 1879, Image 4
THE SAVANNAH RECORDER. Wednesday, February 19, 1879. GEORGIA NEWS. Augusta will celebrate the 22d with a grand military parade. Mrs. Wright, a well known milliner of Macon, died quite suddenly on Sat¬ urday. Dublin Post, Cotton picking, says the is in full blast at Mr. Fuller’s, two miles below here. The Bainbridge Democrat announces the death of Mr. Geo. Dickinson, near Bainbridge. He was one of Decutur’s most worthy citizens. Mr. David Duck is the oldest man in Muscogee, being now in his ninety- good, fourth year. His health is still and if his eyesight were not so greatly about impaired, he would be able to go with the ease and activity of a younger man. Two curiosities : There lives says the Dublin Post, within two miles of here a lady who has “passed the Cape of Good Hope,” but has never had a dream in her life. Within the same distance, but of another family, lives a young man who took a “square bait” of old broken dishes, spoons, forks, etc. when he was a boy, but they didn’t hurt him. The Horn Family Illness. The death of Mrs. Horn, and the se¬ rious illness of her daughter and son in-law and their servant girl, as sup¬ posed from the exceedingly rare disease, trichinosis, have created a small panic among pork eaters. The attending physician said that all of the patients were particularly fond of pork, fresh, dried, raw and cooked, and on the Thursday Sunday afternoon preceding taken the on which the family were sick, their d : er co is ; ed of two and a half pourds of iresh roast ham and one pound of pork chops. For supper the family partook of a portion of four and a half pounds of raw smoked ham, of which Mrs. Horn and Mr. and Mrs. Griefeldt ate heartily. Only a small portion of ths ham remained on a plate for Henrietta Dier, the servant girl, aged al iut 16 ye;.rs. It was rolled up in brown paper and hung up in the bath room. Next day it was eaten in its raw state at breakfast and dinner. Mrs. Horn and Mr. and Mrs. Griefeldt wore taken sick on Saturday, but it was not until the Tuesday morning fol¬ lowing that the servant girl, who had partaken of a smaller portion of the pork than any of the others, was pros¬ trated. The four patients were all af¬ fected alike, and the symptoms were all those accompanying animal poison¬ ing. Tne patients were all much better yesterd y, and there is not much doubt about their recovery. Henrietta Dier, the servant girl, is lying at the residence of her sister at 410 Atlantic avenue. She described her symptoms yesterday afternoon very clearly. She can hardly bend her arms one way or the other, and occasionally she is tormented with shooting pains in her feet as if ping and needles were being stuck into them. From time to time there is a ringing in her ears, re¬ sembling the sensation caused by a passing railroad train. Her physician takes a different view of her case from that entertained by the other physicians, and is treating her for malarial fever. When spoken to in reference to the suspected pork, and she said it was very palatable, have that she would gladly eaten more if it had not been the old lady, Mrs. Horn, tied it up and put it iu the closet. Sanitary officers are to be sent to day to the various pork deal¬ ers of the city for samples of tneir pork, and the Board of Health will have them analyzed, There was a general absence of pork from Brooklyn tables yesterday. — New York Sun. Had to be Material.—A young man, a candidate for a license as a local preacher, recently preached a speci¬ men sermon before the quarterly con¬ ference, in which he said that, while the body was material and would perish, the soul was immaterial. One of the official brethren objected peremp¬ torily to his license, for the reason that he had uttered the “strangest doctrine he ever heard from the pulpit,” for he had declared “the soul was immaterial —a thing of no value—when the Bible says it is worth more than the whole world.” Beautiful and True.— Flowers are not trifles, as one might know from the pains God has taken with them everywhere; not one unfinished, not one bearing the marks of brush or pen¬ cil. Fringing the eternal borders of mountain winters, gracing the pulseless j heart of gray old granite, everywhere j they ordinarily are charming. Murderers do not ! wear roses in their button- 1 holes. \ illains seldom train vines over • cottage doors. Flowers are for the j young and the old, for the grave and the gay, the living and the dead ; for 1 all but the guilty, and for them when ■ they are penitent. Matrimony as a Paying Institu¬ tion. —“Every man should provide t liberally for his family,” says Mr. 1 Smith. .. Ever since my marriage I have kept my wife surrounded provided by with fine a •ewing-machine, mirror.” What is the mirror a for?" ., ; inquired a party present, "Well,” said ’ her that when she th or tcie, “I tell ge,: so lazy that she can t run the ma uh ae she can sit still and see herself starve to death. tf Arresting the Man that Saved his Life. —As the New York express, which leaves President street depot at 9:55 a. m., was passing out Canton av¬ enue yesterday, one of the officers of the train signaled to Policeman Gor¬ don, who was standing near Broad¬ way, to come aboard. He wanted the policeman to arrest a colored man named Edwin Green for unlawfully riding on the cars, Officer Gordon attempted to board the train, which was moving rapidly, when one of his hands missed the rail and he hung by one hand. He would have been un der the cars in a few moments had not Green caught him by the collar and held him until he recovered his footing. The policeman then arrested Green and took him to the Eastern Station house, before Justice Farlow. Here he preferred the charge, but added that “the man ’saved my life,” in consider¬ ation of which the Justice dismissed the charge.— Baltimore Gazette, Feb. 11, How Mrs. Senator Bruce Crossed the Color Lute. — Mrs. Senator Bruce yesterday put the social problem to the test. It appears that among the ladies of the Riggs House, one of the fashionable hotels, two of them called at Mrs. Bruce’s residence some time ago and left their cards, All the ladies of the hotel receive on Monday together in the public parlor. Yester¬ day, when the reception was at its zenith, Mrs. Senator Bruce, accompa¬ nied by a lady friend, as dark as Ere¬ bus, w 7 ere shown into the parlor. Sing¬ ling out the twain who had kindly left their cards with her, she engaged them in conversation some few minutes and then left. The other ladies thought tna^ the episode shocking—not so much Mrs. Bruce had called, as the fact that she allowed her dusky friend to accom¬ color pany her. She was too much off to be squeezed through tony society, although the Senator’s bride is nearly white.— Washington {special Cincinnati Enquirer. Rich and rare were the gems she wore,” is a fashionable tune in San Francisco. There is a lady at one of the leading hotels who never appears in the dining room with less than from $25,000 to $50,000 worth of diamonds on her person. There is another lady at another hotel who wears a pair of solitaire earrings worth $50,000. They belonged to the collection of jewels of Queen Isabella of Spain, and were pur¬ chased at auction in Paris. These two stones were bought for $24,600. Another lady with a brooch shaped like a fern leaf and glittering with fifty or a hundred diamonds is esti¬ mated as having a superficial value of from $15,000 to $20,000. Some thieves recently crept into a lady’s room at a hotel while she was dining with her husband. They ransacked trunks and drawers and obtained a watch and chain and some coin. But they got no diamonds. The lady had gone down to dinner with every jewel glittering in her toilet. How to Extinguish Chimney Fires. Mr. Queynet, a French chem ist, recommends, as a means for rapidly extinguishing fires in chimneys, that about 100 grammes (1,543 grains troy, or be 21 pounds) of sulphuret of carbon burned upon the hearth. The best way to burn the sulphuret is to turn it out of a broad tin plate, It ignites at once, burns rapidly, and pro¬ duces great volumes of the noxious sulphuric acid gas which extinguishes flames at once. The sulphuret of car¬ bon, a liquid combination of sulphur and carbon, should be kept in large bottles, to allow for its great expansion. In Paris the firemen, by using this compound as directed, in three months extinguished 251 fires out of 319, and that, too, without needing to go upon roofs or deranging apartments in any way. How Lincoln Got His Pass Re¬ newed. — The Bloomington (111.) Pantagraph the says : “Here’s a souvenir of great Abraham Lincoln. It is a true copy of a letter on file among the archives of the Chicago and Alton road, at the superintendent’s office at Bloom¬ ington. It is a modest request for the renewal of a season pass on the Alton road : Morgan, “Springfield , Feb. ^3, 1858.—R. P. Dear Sir Supt. C. & A. Railroad.— old : Says Sam to John : ‘Here’s our rotten wheelbarrow. I’ve roke it usin’ on it. I wish you would take it and mend it, case I shall want to borrow it this afternoon.’ Acting on this as a precedent, here’s your old ‘chalked hat.’ I wish you would take it and send me a new one, case I shall want to use it the 1st of March. Yours, truly, A. Lincoln. ♦ : rYrca * * I o UR book for orders for Passover Bread is now open. Our Machinery being new and of 'he best kind, we will be able to luruisba first-class article. Our price will compare favorably with Northern and Western manu- i facturers. No charge for drajage. Please send your orders to * Cor. Bay and Barnard sts. ; , firtfffcerw •AVAHNAU, GA Wines and Liquors, ESTABLISHED— 1844. Win. 31. Davidson, Wholesale Dealer In LIQUORS, SEGARS, Ac., &c., &c., 158 & 100 BRYAN STREET, CONVENIENT TO THE MARKET. My large stock of Liquors comprises All grades of John Gibson’s Son & Go’s, well brands of WHISKIES. From SINGLE X to CABINET. The bpst and choicest importations of Old Foreign Brandies, 'Wines Liquors. Claret and Light Wines, best quality. —ALSO— Claret, Light Wine ^ Sauterne, &c., for table use. Vinegar, Etc. Champagne, sparkling Moselle, Etc., Etc. I am also hole agent for WM. MASSEY & CO.’S Celebrated Philadelphia Ales and Porters, viz: Cream, X, XX, PALE XXX, ALES, and East India will be sold at wholesale or retail, with a guarantee for all goods as represented. As I make a speciality of Gibson’s Whiskies, will sell the same at Philadelphia Catalogue according to quantity, with freight Being now located in my new and spacious that on has Bryan street, with a mammoth of Ale, I a capacity for storing sell '0,000 am in a position to on terms than any other House in the I will therefore be pleased to serve my and the public at my new quarters. febl4 and ROCK! RECOMMENDED BY THE MEDICAL FACULTY FOR Colds and Affections ol the Throat and Lungs. PER GULLONi $1 PER BOTTLE. PREPARED AND SOLD BY WM. HONE & CO., Corner Bay and Bull streets. F. J. RUCKERT, Cor. St. Julian and Barnard Sts. Calls special attention to his NATURAL MINERAL WATER, —Of the celebrated— TAUNUS BRUNNEN, M., GROSSKARBEN, Germany. Near Frankfort o. Also dealer in all kinds of Imported OCtl4-tf .and Domestic Wines Medicinss. DR. ULMER’S Liver Corrector, trade OR <: FOR 1C3L / 3 Vegetable l J DISEASES Mar* From a Disordered State of the Liver, Such as Dyspepsia, Obstructions of the Vis¬ cera, Stone in the Gall Bladder, Dropsy, Jaundice. Acid Stomach, Constipation of the Bowels, Sick Headache, Diarrhoea, and Dysentery. and Enlarged Cutareous Spleen. Diseases, Fever and Ague, Anthony’s Eruptive such as St. Fire, Erysipelas, Pimples, Pustules and Boils, Female Weaknesses. Piles Affections of the Kid¬ neys and Bladder, and many other dis¬ orders caused from derangement of the Liver. This preparation, composed as it is of some of the most valuable alteratives known, is in¬ valuable for restoration of the tone and strength to the system physicians debilitated by disease. .Some ol our best who are familiar with the composition of this medicine attest its vl rtues and prescribe it. It is a pleasant cordial. Prepared by EEL F. ULMER, SAVANNAH, GA. Price One Dollar. For sale by Druggists generally. oclaeod-tf 7* am i j m 1 ■ -j- . tir- - - ! *“#t I Wi SB ■ :• ■ \ . t m'»: B-.tf 7 s * PIT** : - • arsa I- a compound of the virtues of sarsaparilla, with stillingia, mandrake, yellow powerful dock, blood- the iodide of potash and iron, all making. blood-cleansing, and life-sustaining elements. It is the purest, safest, and in every way the most effectual alterative medi¬ cine known or available and to the chemistry public, have The sciences of medicine never produced so valuable a remedy, nor one so potent to euro all diseases resultin ,1 from impure blood. It cures Scrofula, an al! scrofulous diseases, Erysipelas, Rose, or St. Anthony’s Fire. Pimples and Face-grubs, Pustules, Blotches, Boils, Tumors, Tetter, Humors, Salt Rheum, Scald-head, Ringworm, Fleers, Sores, Rheumatism, Mercurial Disease, Neu¬ ralgia, Female Weaknesses and Irregu¬ I.iver, larities, Jaundice, Affections of and the General Dyspepsia, Debility. Emaciation, it By its soarchinj and cleansing qualities which purges out th foul corruptions eontamin: ite the blood, and caust lerange inent and decay, It stimulates and enlivens the vital functions. It promote ; energy and strength. It restores and pres rves health. It infuses new life and vigor th ugliont the whole vstem. No si Tcrer from any disease which arises from inn iritvof the blood need despair, who will give Ayer - Sarsaparilla a fair trial. Remember, the earlier the trial, the speedier the cure. Irs recipe has been furnished to phy cians everywhere ; and they nizing i supe rior qualitit s. administ n their practice. For nearly forty years Ayer’s Sarsapa Rii.r.A has been widely used, and it now pos sesses the confidence of millions of people who have experienced benefits from its mar¬ vellous curative virtues. Prepared by Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co., Practical and Analytical Chemists, Lowell, Mass. SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS EVERYWHERE. fe!2-lv W. B. FERRELL S Agt. RESTAURANT J No. New Mar t Bas aent, (Opposite Lippman’s Drug Store,) jaul3u SAVANNAH, <3 A Advertisements, Savannah Recorder. 6 EB n 1 H. 6 Subscription: $5 per annum. PA TABLE IN ADVANCE It is the Paper for the People. It is the Paper for the Merchant to advertise in. Advertise in it. It is the best ad¬ vertising medium, reaching all classes and that portion oi our people, who procure their sup¬ plies at home. Cor. Bay & Barnard I EITRUCE Oi r STREET, Furniture, Carpets and Oil Cloth, D. G. ALLEN, w. j. Lind© ay. Furniture, Carpets f Window Shades, &c •9 NOS. 169 & 171 BROUGHTON STREET, Where in addition to a large and well selected Mock of Furniture, I will open a fin* >t*«k «f CARPETS, OIL CLOTHS, MATTINGS, WINDOW SHADES, &c. &c. ijhave visitedfall the principal markets in the United States, and have taken|great car# in the selection of my Stock at LOW CASH PRICES, which will allow me to sell very Cheap My Stock is all of the NEWEST and LATEST styles, both it FURNITURE and CARPETS. I have now a full stock of Furniture which I am offering ehoap rather than move it. 50 rolls ol assorted Mattings just receive! to-day. Don’t buy until.you have examined.my stock. ALLEN & LINDSAY, Nos. 169 and 171 BROUGHTON ST. National Wire Mattress, the best in the market. Upholstering and Mattrw* making. 31 Tobacco and Cigars. J.S SjjaK^imWI^S premmjm HEALTH. 1 k jJGMLL Philadelphia. TRADE MARK T it } T * ry;ir i',.« A*., ESfKnt 1 14LV« T2 ■T?3?W Pop6 ,V i»i :< i: 7 , 1: f |> g .T.BLIIC KW ELIa & CO. Dtl«OM N.C: Hotions and Furnishing Goods* AN EXTRAORDINARY CHANCE To purchase Winter Dry Goods cheap, extraordinary cheap, is herewith offered.! i C IIRISTMAS sacriflce.ratherthanbecompelledtDcarrythe.se being over, we have facts. concluded offer to close goods out over our the entire summer. Wintor We stock mean at » business, their and every pairs word of we WHITE say are BLANKETS, W e from 10(1 CLOAKS at a reduction of one-thlid value. 500 $1 25 a pair and upwards, 300 single and double SHAWLS at unheard of prices. Woolen Dress Goods, Black Alpacas, Blade and Colored Cashmeres, and all other Dres Goods at such prices that they must sell. PBRA speciality we offer in a large line of BLACK DRESS SILKS! These goods really deserve the special attention of the public as we have determined toclose them out at less than cost. In HOSIERY and UNDERWEAR we offer also inducements to turyers. Children’s fancy Stockings which are cheap at 10c. wo have reduced to 5c. per pair, reduced and others in proportion, CLOTHS for Men's and Boy’s woar, we offer also at a price. 50 pcs. Calicoes, reduced to 3 cents a yard. 350 pcs. Rest Calico, warranted fast, at 5 cts. a yard. ""As we anticipate an extraordinary rush, we would request an early call to avoid dlsa p pointment, for we cannot duplicate any article at the prices at which we have determined to sell off our winter stock. DAYID WEISBEIN, dec29 153 BROUGHTOir STRUT. A GREAT BARGAIN. FRENCH CAMBRICS, yard wide, at 10c., worth double Large Stock of CAMBRIC EDGINGS and INSERTINGS, 3 cents and upwards. GOOD TOWELS 5 cents. MOHR BROTHERS, febl6tf . 165 CONGRESS STREET. DIRECT IMPORTATION. J HAVE received the largest and finest stock of HAVELAND A CO’S. 3 Such as Dinner Sets, Tea Sets, ChamberSets, and an endless variety of MOTTO CUPS AND SAUCERS of the finest kind. Vases, Toilet Sets Wine Sets, Smoking Sets, suiiable for Holday and W et'drng Presents. Also a full line of the finest SILVER AND SILVER-PLATED GOODS, from the best manufacturers. Parties desiring to buy goods in the above line, are cordially invited to call and examine my goods before purchasing elsewhere. THOMAS WEST, decl3-tf COR, BROUGHTON A JEFFERSON STREETS. BREAD and CAKE BAKERY C. A. VETTER, COR. WEST BROAD AND JOACHIM STS. I Red Stall No 1,001 City Market I wish public to inform generally my that many the patrons only place and the to buy the LARGEST and BEST BREAD is at my store and at my stall in the City Market, wber. I will be pleased to serve all who may MKVi f avor i m at e wit tu elr a tbeir Jaufriflaa. patronage. Orders executed Customers] at 1 rretN-v Hr srtrtL parties. 1 Fine Gold and Silver Watches, Stem Winders, Swiss and American. Fine French & Ameiican Clocks, Full line of solid GOLD JEWELRY, For Ledies and Gentlemen. Rolled „ „ , I _ late Jewelry, Jet, Garnat Florida Jewelry, Gold Pens. Spectacles PKICEsP Onera ,1 * All sold at the LOWEST an war rant at as represented v , by j