Newspaper Page Text
m
DAILY EVENING
■f0hiC.
% FJ)— Wli Ml. 11 i; 171
t /I «! gsri'miLp: A& 'wL di
VOJ. I, •No. 122.
THE 5IVANMH
R. M. ORME, Editor.
FU8LISIFED EVERY EVENING,
(Saturday Excepted,)
-A.t :iOJL
By ,T. STERN.
The Recorder is served to subscribers, in
every part ot 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 rules will be made.
All correspondence should be addressed, Re¬
corder, Savannah, Georgia.
The Sunday Morning Recorder will take
the j .ace o; the Saturday evening edition,
which win make six lull issues for the week.
tfsr-Wc do not hold ourselves responsible for
the opinions expressed by Correspondents.
The Antiquity of Man.
The Rev. S. C. Chandler, of Hartford,
is discussing some above very subject. interesting lec¬
tures on the We give
some extracts:
“There was a time when this non-in¬
tellectual race existed in Europe; and
Europe has now become the great in¬
tellectual centre of the world. So you
continue right along further east into
Asia Minor, India and Arabia; anc ]
tilt re you will find a long history ot
intellectual men and women that give
evidence of high culture and civiliza
tioi as far back as we can trace their
history. Then go still further into
India, and there you will meet with
another centre of civilization and
tel'ertual and and moral development. Go
sti 1 lurtber, you meet another,
“Now, here are these great centres of
civ :t Lion, where they have a long
his text of kingSftijd empires rising and
falfii But the intellectual current
flown on—it lias never been extinct;
wLil in the vety midst oh these
zaiions, the lowest classes—the more
primitive class of mankind—has
mairud. So we have it repeated in
this country as in India, China and
western Asia. While we have a civile
zatic-u here and pride ourselves on oui
intellectual and moral strength, yet we
havt had during our whole career this
under stratum ot human beings ; t,lie.-e
non-intellectual races have lived here
beyond the point ol history. The pre
historic races have occupied tbis
countiy—have hunted and fished, and
roamed the country ages unknown, and
have never been civilized. They are
to-d \y as savage and wild as ever ; and
they are wasting away."
Now l; . e hi e facts we must take
in 10 consideration; and I want every
Christian to look at t his. If the Adam
ic latuily gave birth to these savage
people that spent their lives hunting,
flslung, and living like the .............
li a also originated earth all the intellectual islands
races over »ill the and the
ot the sea what immense antiquity
does this involve! It is an antiquity
sufficient to destroy every sentence in
the Bible in regard to the genealogy ot
that la v in!y. li is not possible for the
time spec died by the chronology oil he
Bihli or by L,-her, the Jewish chio
no!op’ist, to cover such an antiquity.
It. is an error, and the sooner we cet
rid oi it, the better. Let us look at
the truth as God has made it. 1 her
aieslong the path of: history, epochs,
and monuments, and traces ot the his
teiy ot man, so that, we cannot be
taken in regard to the antiquity ol
man, though we cannot measure it by
montlis and years.
ihe White race originated ..... in
Minor and m not lien: Arabia. It
impossible to tell which lace is the o.o
est, but as far as we have any traces
believe the Arabs under the old Cush*
itea are 'as old as any. The Caucasian
is the whitest and most perfect in
physical, intellectual and moral devel
opuient ol any in the world m past
toi v. 8o that is taken as the
type ol Ue white race The
lai. includes tlie Chaldeans,
Cu-htes, Assy nans, Medea,
Lgyjdians, i-ndiyioniHiis, Gt-oiguuis, Jews,
CircnoMiins. Syrians,
an;’, floors of Nor:hern Alriea,
and Kc marts. These nations
figitied in Asia, western Asia nt fi
Asia Minor. The Jews do not
tend to be separate in their exis der.c
from this lucidity. They place
gard n ol Eden oi the valioy of
Er.p r; I es Tl i ugh we mav not
the I x :i! ot, tbet e is a tact we
rely ir. on, tor the vallev is stiti
ami i.e mu T o ancient
had * i. gu.tge . and the Cushites
dor me \ tabs : Many words
intvi i i a li. ). si . w’ug the t css;b: :
t) dr ir h>t : remote pei .■ <•
lias l n. c:;ett;t r I’t'en t H* bi t
and p 11 at A : mi nativ.: s, and .«.i
to the wiaie
have a particular language, and yet at
lthe same time there are ertain ele
merits and sounds, or representations
of sounds that seem to be identical
over that region, so taking that section
of the country, it has had a tremendi
oiis history in civilization. It is this
race that led the world in intellectual
ehievements. I know there is a civil¬
ization in India and China, but after
reaching a certain point it has come to
a stop. They stand still while the
white race still goes on to higher de
velopment. It is the great intellec¬
tual engine that draws the world. It
is the power of progress of the age in
all ideas, government science and reli¬
gion .—Hartford Times.
Sad Attempt at Suicide.
Another Heart Bowed Down With Woe.
The good newspaper man is always
on the alert fora sensation, but Macon,
it seems—we are pained to chronicle—is
furnishing us with items of this charac¬
ter which we regret to record. The
taking of one’s own life is, indeed, a
serious matter ; and of late years sui¬
cides are growing alarmingly on the
increase. Home decided and effectual
measures must be adopted tc put a
quietus We to such folly. South
people inclined of the have not
hitherto been much that way ;
it has been left fer other sections ot
our large country to furnish to the
world, m this way, evidences of mental
failing. It certainly cannot be the
result of our system of education and
moral training of the young. It is,
j however, a noticeable fact that crime,
j J calamities tires, plagues, or whatever other dire
that Yiait us in rapid sue—
j cession, comes spontaneous and in
quarters from whence least expected,
shoots himself.
Thus it is with the case of Mr.
j Roland Lyon, a son of Judge Richard
i F. Lyon, who shot himself with a pistol
j in bis his city, room, at bis just father's before residence in
j |i last night 8 o’clock/
Mr. Lyon is a young man about
; f wenty-two years of age, and one much
respected, as also is his noble father,
who is one of the best lawyers in
Georgia.
HOW IT HAPPENED.
It seems that young Mr. Lyon has
been very despondent tor several days
past, and, indeed, beguiled himself into
indulging too freely in t*he leli destroy¬
er of man. A lew days before he was
tound upon the streets the victim ot
the fluid, and yielded only to very
earnest solicitations. Last night he
went home in a deplorable state, and
liter speaking to Ins father—his mother
being absent in Leesburg visiting her
daughter — he went, into his own room,
arid immediately thereafter his father
j , j was staitied by the
j REPORT OF A PISTOL.
Tr Hurrying to Ins son , s room T -i
Lyon loom! him lying upon the floor
1 ;lUl a P lM y neal '>’• bummornng aid
au ( p iv siCLins at once, it was
etei that lit. Lyon was shot through
the It t bieast, the ball entering just
»bove the left nipple and lodging ,n
the back near the shoulder blade. Die.
a lived and ,^n^Th took the ^woun wounded l /n?Thi man in
‘ :b «rge. Ihe ball was cut from bis
back and the wounds dressed.
today
Mr. Lyon is suffering very much. A
reaction has not yet set in, and some
; e a,s are entertained for him when it
,] oe8 . Last night he spit blood, but
j ibis morning vomited twice
jemitting blood. If he recovers it will
\ certainly be on account of good medical
treatment. Leesburg Judge Lyon went down to
: this morning after Mrs.
Lyon, that he himself might impart to
j her the sad news, and will return with
; her this afternoon. Meantime a kind
I neighbor lady is taking care of the
j wounded young man, who was visited
his physicians this morning, after
having been with him all last night,
Macon Ledger.
| i The ■ * --------
Kentucky Giant's Baby—A
few weeks ago the wife of Capt. M. V.
i Bates, the famous Kentucky giant,
‘
lives on a farm about half a mile east
this town, gave birth to a child, the
second since her union of
with her present husband, and in
both insi ances the child was still-born,
it is to becrcatiy regretted bv all that
lue ,-U uld'have been extinct from this
ilk bo.lv which is nothing less than
a wonderful piodigy of nature for it s
remarkable size, li the child should
have uvea ana grown up to maturity
we would have beheld a being be u '
which we would be nothing bill mere
dwr.ris. The child, fully developed in
every sured feature on the day f i its birth,
me 30 inches, a length which
many children of normal growth have
m>t attained alter two or three years
» f age. It weighed !2 pounds; its
t est measure was R» inches, and its
et 0 inches lou To the sorrow of
i and more } !• -1.1.11 i us par nts,
.1 aiiu into tne world dead,
mid never saw thelight of day .—Seville
O., Later in 0<*Avtand Leader,
SAVANNAH, FRIDAY. FEI>RUARY 21, 1879.
BY TELEGRAPH.
ARREST OF MINERS.
AN EXPRESS TRAIN WRECKED.
Massaci e by the King of Burmali.
THE BRAZILIAN SUBSIDY.
Hartford, February 20.—The ex¬
press train from Boston due here at I
o’clock to-day was thrown off the track
at Vernon. There were four extia
coaches, containing the Kellogg opera
troupe and an extra baggage car, mak
an unusually long tram, which was
running about twenty-five miles an
hour. No one w T as seriouslv injured
except the engineer, Charles Gales.
Washington, February 20. —The
Senate lor twelve continues hours has
been office discussing the amend ments to the
pos appropriation b,l providing
tor the Brazil mail service, to run from
New York ODce a month by the way
of Norfolk, and once a month from New
Oi lcans by the way of Galveston.
Philadelphia, February 20.— A
special from Pittsburg says that great
excitement prevails at Brownsville,
Fayette county. Sheriff Work, 0
Vi ashington county, with two hundred
and thirty armed and mounted
ties, has gone into Fayette
arrest the miners charged with parti
cipating in the riot at California, arrested' Penn
a few days ago. He has
three miners. His authority to
arrests outside of his own county, es
pecially without a warrant, is disputed.
Many of the miners are armed, and a
conflict is feared.
Calcutta February 20 _ A report
from Mandalay asserts that the King
of Burmah has murdered all the
Princes and their families, removed the
new Ministers and replaced them by
M nistera who were formerly in office,
this restoring the former 1
government.
London, February 20.—The limes,
in an editorial article, says : “Neither
England nor France would be disposed
to witness with indifference the suc¬
cess of a covp d’ etat which 'would place
Egypt again under the personal rule of
the Khedive.”
Two Years on Horseback. —Mr.
Henry Tudor started from New York
Wednesday night with the avowed in
tention of riding on horseback all the
way from that city to Patna Arenas,
the most southerly point of Patagonia,
South Atnena. He takes with him as
attendant a young man who will no
doubt help him to pass the time as
pleasantly as possible, he being an ac
complished song and dance genius. Mr.
Tudor u ilipressed w ith the i,lea that
j bj goint , tbrougb , he 8evera l republics
1 0 j- £j entra i an q South America, and
ascer taimng what articles of American
. manufacture can be introduced with
: profit,a. ' large trade may be established.
H e ia going to vi.it every town of im
p0 ,tance along the route. Mr. Tudor
wil1 pass tbrou 8 h Philadelphia, from
; that city to Washington via Baltimore,
tQ Ricluu0nt ] ; thence to Mobile, to
Brownsville, San Luis Potosi, City
Mexico. Here they will deliberate as
to the next move, and will be guided
altogether by the state of the roads,
Anyhow, an effort will be made to
reach Guatemala by traveling along the
Pacific coast as near as possible. It is
| expected will the journey to Punta Arenas
occupy two years.
“ —----
Bible Lecture — Professor
lectured on the Bible—“Can we make
it the rule of our life and conduct?”
! He took the affirmative of this, saying
that there are veins of gold running
j appropriate ali through the Bible which and we make should
to our use, not a
stumbling block of the part that cannot
be interpreted literallv. Thus the ac
count of the fiery turnace and the three
Hebrew children cannot be taken
ally. Much that is in the Bible should
be' tak**n in its spiritual or symbolic
sense. They taught largely "the parables in
those days No doubt account 1 of
she fires the Hebrew children went
th ough was given as a symbol ot the
fires of} ersecution. If a' man stands
; firm to his honest convictions and to
U ’o
ihe truth, he will edme out uninjured
by such fires. He spoke of the dan ’er
of driving the Bible out entirely and
0 f making iufidels by the too literal in
lei pret.ition ‘ many Christians put upon
it. It is time we took the true cold o’’
| the Bib », and belittled it no longer in
the iasl of old orthodoxy. °
on
j
N< A Japanese Haven, student at Yale College,
w called on a vounc lady
an i was invited to call ...n soon. He
lied gain in about 0
ca an hour. Another
Htudent, be invited out to dinner ,
w*s fitting at the table when \ j ir of
u r at lv an™ was passed to him. // He
ve i V dexterously turned
ti.e jarful cf jeilyout on his plate and
. ieit jolly ali tue evening over his
INTERESTING LETTERS.
The following letters kindly, furnish¬
ed us, will be read with interest. The
writer of the first was one of the gal¬
lant defenders of Savannah when it
was captured by the British during the
war of the revolution, and whose de¬
scendants now reside and hold honor¬
able positions among us, and the an¬
swer is from Gen. Washington, who had
just been unanimously elected President
of the United States for the first term.
The letter of Dr. Sheftal was an ad
dress from the Hebrew Congregation
of Savannah of which Dr. Sheftal was
President, congratulating Gen. Wash
; t0D on hiij eleotion t0 the Pres i de ncy.
Both letters are rue full of patriotism, • •
and breathe a reverential spirit which
it would be well for our whole country
were it emulated at the present dav.
f or Davld said . ..Blessed is that people
L God is the Lord." But to the
j letters:
Sir We have long been anxious of
congratulating you on your appoint
ment > bv unanimous approbation, to
the Presidential dignity of this country
and of testifying our unbounded confi
dence in . your integrity and unblemish-
1 ed virtue. Yet however exalted the
stat ^ on you now R is still not equal
10 tbe mei 'R °f y°ur heroic services
through an arduous and dangerous
con ^^ ct which has embosomed you in
tbe bearts of her citizens.
^ ur eccen t r i c situation, added to a
diffidence founded on the most pro
!ound res P ec L bas t bus l° n g prevented
our address, yet the delay has realized
anticipation, given us an opportunity of
P reseutan g our grateful acknowledg
I ? ent8 lor tlie benediction of heaven
lhrough , the 4 , magnanimity oi Federal
1Ijtiue nce and the ° J<>" ad
f f . \oui unexampled liberal
^ a “ d / X ‘ et ! slv ® pbilanthrophy have
K P e e a CI ? U< 0 1 S n an
superstition which has , long as a veil,
shaded religion—unnvetted he fetters;
o all enthusiasm-enfranchised the privileges and immunities us withij of
hee citizens, and initiated into the j
grand mass ot legislative mechanism. us | 1
Bv example, you have taught us to!
endure the ravages of war with manly .
fortitude, and to enjoy the blessings of
peace with reverence to the Deity and
benignity ° and love to our fellow crea
lum
May the Great Author of the world
grant you all happiness—an uninterrupt*
* e( T[ series of health—addition of years
t 0 the number of your days, and a
continuance of under guardianship to that
freedom which auspices of hea—
yen your magnanimity and wisdom
have given these States.
t ,f „ VT T ! Qucttit P elw*/
'
1,1 T beh , . » lf the Hebrew „ „ Congregation.
To which the President was pleased to
return the following
answer
To T & TJ , Omgrenatwn r of the
.
Gentlemen : I thank you with
P r( ‘ at sincerity for your congratula
lation on my appointment to the office
wblch 1 haV ® the h ® nor \°} old b 7 the
unanimous choice of my fellow-citizens,
and specially the expressions you are
pleased to use in testifying the confi
dence that is reposed in me by y° ur
■ congregation ....
delay which has naturally . ..
intervened . between my election and
your address has afforded me an
tunity tor appreciating the merits of
the Meral Government and for com
mumcating vour sentiments ot its ad
ministrat io n . I have ratner to express
m y satisfaction rather than regret at a
circumstance which demonstrates ( u pon
experiment) your attachment to the
ormer aa ue ! as a PP rooa tion ot the
1 ultter
I lejotce \ . spirit of liberality
a
ptiuanthrophy is much more P r
va ^lightened / ,;t tban lt nations formerly of was the among earth, the
tbut y° ur brethren will benefit thereby
! in F^portion as it shall become
moie ex tensive; happily the people of
1 lhe Ua it f d S j ates hd ^ e in ma "y
ces exhibited l examples worthy of
tbe sa’utary influence of
doubtless , extend much farther it
gratefully enjoying those blessings
P eace wblcb (under the favor ot tea
ven ) bave they been shall attain conduct f i b y^fortitude themselves
m war, and
wi h revyren ce to the Deity
chant y toward thei1 ; le.low creatures,
* NIa >' the Sdme '■'* c j aaer f °. rkin g Deit J>
wbo lou g 3ince dehvered tbe Heb rews
their Egyptian plant- .
from oppressors,
ed them in a promised land, whose
providential agency has lately been
c&1 ‘ iieuous m establishing these Lnit
battes as an lndepen* ent nation,
811 , 1 c0,ltinue t0 water L “ e P 1 ^ ltb tbe
dews of heaven and make the inhabit
aii’q Oi evei> denumina'ion participate
Ili temporal and .-piritual b.essings
o 1 . that people whose God is Jehovah.,
George Washikgtok.
ITEMS OF INTEREST. .
Natchez hat a funding and floating
debt of $25,000.
Judge Haggard, of Kentucky, has a
cat 27 years old.
The New York charity ball cost fifty
or a hundred thousand dollars, but left
only $12,000 for the orph ans.
Minister Welsh has written to Sec¬
retary Evarts for an increase of salary,
as he can t live in London on $17,500.
Beecher believes in exercise—boxing,
running, walking, playing billiards,and
the like.
A sporting man says that Charlotte,
N. C., is the best sporting place of its
size in the South.
The proposition to form a new stite
out of East Tennessee is popular with
men of all parties.
J _ 1f * j , ij ,,,
J , g ' "
o not be sued for a brcach of promi
w hen too intoxicated to wed
actress on
which pecuniary fortune has long smiled
Her income is from $30,000 to $50,000 Y ’
a year.
Montreal people care not a fig for
v °f‘ n g' Only 9,000 out of 30,000 rate
P a y er Wl11 _ ™ te at the coming election,
because that number alone had settled
U P their taxes to January 4.
Great climate changes on the Pacific
are predicted, whereby there will be
less and rain during the winter, and storms
showers in the summer time. Un¬
usually cold weather has been expe
rienced at San Francisco during the
December and January just past,
A Chronicle special from Newberry,
South Carolina, gives an account, of a
very destructive fire that occurred in
that place Monday night. Before the
flames could be checked nearly the en
tire town — store houses and residences
—was reduced to ashes. The loss is
estimated at $100,000, partly covered
by insurance.
Much sensation was created among
insnrance men at Nashville, Term.,
over the final passage bv
the Legislature of the bill requiring in-
8Urance compa £ nies to pay the full
amount wntt n in policies in cases of
destruction of property. It is un
d era t 00 cL Gov. Marks will approve the
j^jj 2
^ P e( RO’ °f ^ Brazi ... has confribut . ,
,
ed to the Washington monument a
8t0 "' w«jghin« , the nearly eight tons, “to
memory of the i lug.
trious lather of the American republic,
for whom he cherishes the warmest
admiration. The stone, which is en¬
graved and inscribed, is now in New
York.
Minister Kasson, writing from
Vienna, says that the Russian plague
excites great alarm in Germany,Austria
an d Hungary, that nearly all the pa
tients have died, and that six army sur
geousand with the neaarly dead all had who diedi come m con
, act altbough
disenfectants were freely used. The
mortality among the sick in some places
was equal to one hundred per cent,
The French SXTfifa Government has issued hv^n
a
^ national anthem. During the reign
of Louis Napoleon it was not permitted
t sins ^ thia gtirrins ^ hvmn ‘ An excep- ^
ti maJe h ver j allowir
the French soldiers to sing it just be
f Qre the storming the Malakoff i but it
Wftg cong jj ere( i t00 8t i mu l at i n » m elo
£ 0f the ordinary uses of the second
Empire.
Another dreadful horror has oc
curre j a p Waco- A Germau woman
an i IiVa lid, unable to walk or move out
j ier 0CCU pj e j a small house
wit h p e r hnsband, both being new
comer6 . During the husband’s absence
bouse took fire and before the
woman ’ s perilous situation could be
ji scoveie( j 8 ’ ue waa helplessly fiur
roun( J e d by flames. Persons saw her
^ her c b a ir unable to move as the fire
c i oge q on ber. Her entire body was
destroyed except the skull, some bones
anc [ jbe heart/
Funeral Flowers. —The flower |
business at funerals was next overdone
when people began to retrench in the i
matter of carriages. A flew flowers on !
the bier illuminate the darkness of the
closing scene sweeten the heavy air,;
and suggest pleasant thoughts-^ in the
midst of the gloom Foolish people,;
however, squandered their substance m
elaborate “floral designs” more or less
ugly and too often given in such pro*
fusion as to destroy the beauty and ;
Bimplicity of the effect which flowers'
produce when judicioualy used. So
odious did this fashion finally become
that people who were called by bereave
meat to make ready their friends for
the grave were obliged to add “no
flowers” to the funeral notice, precise
\y as “no cards” waa put after a mar*
r i a g e notice when card etiquette was
more severe than now. In a majority
of instances, friends are now requested
not to send flowers to funeral/. The
tender office of placing a last tribute of
affection on the bier is left, as it should
be, to the few nearest and deavesti;
the dead.— N. Y. Times.
PRICE THREE CENTS .
fost.
L OST—A Tools, Paints TRUNK, and containing Pictures. The Artist'* tinder
will be suitably rewarded. Address.
Prof. J. EDWIN CHURCHILL, Artist.
Business Cards*
VAL. BASLEli’S
WINES. LIQUORS, SEQARS and TOBACCO
The best Lager Beer in the city, The well
known TEN PIN ALLEY reopened, Lunch
every day from 11 to 1 o’clock. At the Market
Sauare Square House, House. 174 174 Bit BRYAN ST. Savannah, Ga.
F. BINGEL,
WINES, LIQUORS AND SEGARS,
Milwaukee and Cincinnati Lager Beer om
draught. hand. Free Lunch. Fresli Oysters alwaya
on 21 Jefferson st., corner Gon tigress
street lane. mchlO-ly
Dr. A. H. BEST,
DEhTTI ST
Oor. Congress and Whitaker streets.
SAVANNAH, GA.
rpEETH X guaranteed. extracted without pain. All work
atrona I respectfully beg to refer to any of my
» - nct.l-h.nn
C. A. CORTJ.NO,
Hair Cuttin?, Hair Drew, Mm ani
SHAVING SALOON.
HOT AND COLD BATHS.
der 166}4 Bryan street, opposite the Markat, u»
Planters’ Hotel. Spanish, Italian, Ger¬
man. and English spokon. «eltt-lf
RESERVOIR MILLS
Congress and Jefferson streets.
CHOICE GRITS AND MEAL,
Grain, Hay, Feed, Flour, Provisions,
At LOWEST market figures.
B. L. MERCER.
febl2-lm
GEORGE FEY,
WINES, LIQUORS, 8EGARS, TOBACCO, &«.
The celebrated Joseph Schlitz’ MILWAU¬
KEE LAGER BEER, a speciality. No. 22
FREE Street, Lyons’ Block, Savannah,
LUNCH every day from 11 to 1.
r-zJl-Jv
HAIR STORE .
JOS. E. L01SEAU & CO.,
118 BROUGHTON ST., Bet. Bull & Draytou
K EEP on hand a large assortment or Hair
Hair Switches,Curls, combings Puffs, and Fancy Good*
worked In the latest style.
Fancy Costumes, Wigs and Beards for Rent
JOS. H. BAKER,
B Ty L m JL pi O _tlL Tq--rji J±i JZ\j ~ i—> ,
STALL No. 66, Savannah Market.
Dealer ia Beef, Mutton, Pork nd
All other Meats In their Seasons.
Particular attention paid’to supplying Ship
and BoardingjHouses augl2
Coal and Wood*
COAL
OF ALL KINDS,
Sold and delivered promptly by
D. R. THOMAS,
OFFICE: 111 BAY ST.,
dec22- s2rn Yard foot of West Broad St,
GRANTHAM. TAGGART,
Best Family Coal!
I deal cite and only Bituminous in the beat Coal. qualities of Anthra¬
LOW PRICES,
EXTRA PREPARATION,
PROMPT DELIVERY.
Main Office: 121 Hay Street.
Special prices to Manufacturers, Dealers and
Public Institutions. novJ-tu.th.su-tf
■ j_— r** i —
Carriagss*
A. K. WILSON’S
CARRIAGE MANl'FACTORY l
Corner Bay and West Broad sts.
CARRIAGE REPOSITORY .
Cor. Bay and Montgomery streets.
8A Y N f AH ’ - - - GEORGIA,
a Tmu imt^SrTieT RocJawav*
i ke e P Wagon/'canopy
Bug-ies. spring and Farm
^ of ci^faKetnd W^on'i &
in my factory the no»t skillful mo.
pairing,' ^d^^«n-t_noUce^_ wu^be 0 ^^^ tVgive sati.facUon
mayig-iy
~
-------------—
CaHuI2S*
ESTABLISHED 1850.
M. PITZGERALD
.dull llt.UJi.ui .'I
PURE, PLAIN AND FINE
CANDIES.
Factory and Store, 170 BRYAN STREET
Branch Store, No. 122 BROUGHTON ST.,
Oue dour ea*t of Bull fcireet,
*AVAWA», ga,