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X> A- I L Y EVENING
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IS H
f ’ ST! La tAis
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YOL I.—No. 126.
THE SAVANNAH RECORDER »
S. M. OEME, Editor.
PUBLISHED EVERY EVENING,
(Saturday Excepted,)
At 161 BAY (STREET,
Ity J. STEliN.
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ters of interest solicited.
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twelve months a liberal reduction from our
regular rates will be made.
All correspondence should be addressed, Re¬
corder, Savannah, Georgia.
The Sunday Morning Recorder will take
the piace ol the Saturday evening edition,
which will make six full issues for the week.
4®“We do not hold ourselves responsible for
the opinions oppressed by Correspondents.
A Terrible Story.
A Beautiful German Girl Near Mendota, 111.
Looked Up For Sixteen Years—She is
Now Deformed and Insane.
A Chicago Tribune letter of Feb, 17,
dated Mendota, 111., says:
A case of cruelty and inhumanity is
being brought to light a few miles
south of this city which, it is hoped, is
without parallel in this generation, if
not in this century. It is that of a
young woman named Margaret Reck,
daughter of Peter Reck, a wealthy
German farmer of Troy Grove, who
was shut up in a room over sixteen
years ago and kept there to this day in
solitary confinement without ever
having left it.
A lew years after Peter Reek’s ar¬
rival in this country, and previous to
his locating on a farm in Troy Grove,
his wife died, leaving him seven chil¬
married dren—five daughters and two sons. He
again, and had two daughters
by his second wife. The daughters of
the first wife were obnoxious to her,
and lor the sake of peace they were
driven from their homes and made to
seek employment and shelter. Mar¬
garet, the girl finally locked up, was
too young to shift for herself, and in
order to get away from t he stepmother’s
harsh treatment was taken to Pera and
placed in a school kept by the Sisters
of Charity. While there she is said to
have given proofs of acquiring the
branches taught with facility, and to
have evinced quite a taste for drawing,
in which she excelled. She returned
home. She was the belle of the neigh¬
borhood ; lull oi life and fun ; courte¬
ous and kind to all, and possessed ot so
beautiful a voice that the young and
old would often go to hear Margaret
sing. The estimation in which she was
held by the people was not calculated
to raise her in the estimation of the
stepmother, who looked upon her with
jealousy as possessing advantages and
attractions which she herself lacked.
The stepmother insisted that she
should be degraded and her spirit
broken, and she was finally forced into
a room, where she has been kept'under
lock and key to this day. Through all
these weary years ot solitary confine¬
ment not her a living soul was permitted
to see save two or three inmates of
th# house. Not even her own sisters,
nor her cousin, a Roman Catholic
priest, wirhstanding could obtain that privilege, not
her oft-repeated demands.
In answer to inquiries by the neigh¬
bors they were first told that Margaret
was unwell; later on that she was 111 -
pane, and that, as she would wear no
clothes, they were not allowed to see
her. That she became insane is now
beyond all questions ol disputs, but
that she was so when first confined IS
not that, generally credited. It is thought
being a high-spirited girl, she re¬
volted against such harsh and unjust
treatment, and that her father, in his
obstinate tenacity of parental authority,
determined that she should be the first
to yield. Neitiiei wavered in the de¬
termination not to ne the first to ac¬
knowledge the wrong: so Margarets
coiitineaieiii continued, but with noth¬
ing to relieve the monotony but the
bare whiten .shed wails ol a small
loom, her ;ood passed in through
square aperture in the tiie wall, wall, placed placed on on
a shelf, the shutter replaced, and not
a word spoken.
When the dreadful calamity of in
sanity came the lather building sought to atone
for lus wrong by a
The stepmother died last April, and
the father followed soon afterward,
it is said that, his death was the result
of foul play.
Dr. Goi bus describes her manner
moving fling as that of a wriggling opelled or by the
gait at the hips,
feet, the hands taking little or no
He left orders that she should be
dressed several times a day till she
comes accustomed to clothing, and that
the bed be so constructed that she can¬
not get out. The doctor speaks of her
case as being not oniy the worst he ever
saw, but the worst he ever heard of.
How long she has been kept in a nude
condition no one can ascertain.
An Amateur Mourner.
Falling & Martyr at Last to One of the Odd¬
est Whims.
[From the London Times.]
Mr. L. was a gentleman of indepen^
dent fortune, which he exhausted in
the course of a few years in gratifying
one of the oddest whims that could
ever enter the mind of a rational be¬
ing. His sole enjoyment was the at¬
tending of funerals. When he heard
of the death of any great man through
the channel of the papers, he immedi¬
ately made the circuit of the whole
town to know who had the job, and
then proceeded to accompany it. He
has often been to York and the con¬
fines of Scotland to be present at the
interment of a nobleman or gentleman,
and in this respect he was no way
biased by party or religion; it was the
same to him if he was whig or torv,
out or in; whether a Roman Catholic
or a Protestant, a Jew or a Presby¬
terian; they equally commanded his
respect and attention, provided the
funeral was magnificent.
His highest ambition was to obtain
one the little escutcheons, which he
considered as so many trophies of his
glory, and being known to most of the
undertakers, and their constant, com¬
panion in their peregrinations, they
seldom or ever refused him this re¬
quest. Being entirely inattentive to
his own affairs, he found himself in a
state of distress which he did not ex¬
pect it, yet though reduced to almost
the want of the common necessaries of
life, his passion for death-hunting still
prevailed, and when he could whenever not ride
he walked on foot, But the
journey was of any length he bribed the
hearse driver to let him be an inside
passenger with the corpse. In this
doleful state he traveled more than
once, but unfortunately fell a martyr at
length to his strange whim. Being an
inside passenger on one of these solemn
occasions, in very hot weather, and
there being no airhole, as there usual¬
ly is, in the hearse, when they took out
the corpse they found poor Mr L. dead
from suffocation.
A Sad Case.
A remarkable “trance case” at Fort
Edward, New York, recently, turns out
to have been an ordinary death from
heart disease. The story is a very sad
one :
On Friday evening Ihe week before
last, the “Mite Society” of the Baptist
church had one of its customary sScia
hies, and Miss Anna Carter was among
the biightest, merriest and prettiest
girls in the health, parlors. and She seemed to be
in perfect flow of spin made her her animation the lead,
and s
ing spirit of the evening. "I feel hap
pv,” she said to one of her friends,
"but I feel queer, as if I could fly away
with mysely." While in the supper
room she turned pale, and clasped her
hand to her heart. At the same in
stant she rose from the table and with
th.slmple word, “I don't feel well,”
fell hfeless to the floor
A physician arrived m a few mm.
ntes and pronounced it a fatal case ot
heart disease When the body of the
beau im! gir was tenderly carried to
the house which she had left only »
few hours be.ore m such merry mood,
her mother s tr lei was heartrending.
“She is not dead! She cannot be dead"'
was the cry 7 of anguish 8 uttered again
and again
On the next day it was noticed that
the body was unite A warm b
\\en. „ • ltu-pii ; • a i ia . ,i legn -v waain a. !
trance that was the counterfeit of death
then began the vigil ot love. Friends
watcaed . v p day v alter fa dav j and v night • , . r,
'-n, b i
mght • i, lor .. ■ of life. ,-r Physicians • -
signs were 1
summoned , and v extraordinary , v- tests . .
weie
made. v rpi The arm of the - r , bared
gin b was
and i a vein punctured , ,, bv a sharp v nee
die. j. A \ t v-' held v v under i ,be
nostrils and mirror something was like moisti : e ;
was discerned on its surface. A galvanic
battery was brought into requisition
and currents of electricity were set in
motion. But the breath of life had
? leuartei forever. Ou Wednesday pre
;
'parat ins were made for the funeral
y \v hen body was placed in the
i v ■ siudit tlinh withered on the
lieek of Die girl Hope was tel indled
qq ti u> un ,\elaved and
watche.s Wat resumed their place.-: and
u W(IS n0; un tdi there were manifest
signs o' decomposition that the mother
would consent to have the remains
b u ,ied.
_ —
It is said that Crito, a wealthy gen
tleman, was attracted to Socrates and
afforded him the means or obtaining an
education. Originally Socrates had been
like his father, a sculptor the marble or staturer.
Hence his idea that as eon
tains beauty only abutting the touch
of art for revelation, so there is beauty
in the soul of every man only
the artist who has power to disclose it.
SAVANNAH. WEDNESDAY. FEBRUARY 1879.
BY TELEGRAPH
THE ANTI-CHINESE IMMIGRA¬
TION BILL.
A DEFAULTING TREASURER.
Trial for Election Frauds.
a „ ' EA C C0 lebruary-5. „ . The
’
ni Chamber l of f n Commerce unanimously
adopted a resolution of thanks to the
Representatives m Congress who have,
bv their votes on the bill for the regu*
ation of Coolie immigration, manifested
heu-smcere regard for the interests of
t e Pacific coast. Also a resolution
urgently requesting the President to
sign tne bill. Mass Meetings are being ^
ie.d throughout the State with the ob
jectin view.
St. Louis, February 25.—A special
from Jefferson City says the treasury
investigation committee, reported this
morning, Treasurer giving the amount of State
Gates’ deficit at three hund
red and forty-three thousand dollars.
His impeachment is recommended.
New Orleans, February iLchitoehee 25 -The
jury for the trial of the
election cases was takenfo-da/.^Of'the
a a d the evidence
fifty-bine persons named in the indict.
meats fifty-four answered to their
lotion names. of They the are charged with a vio
election law, in conspiring Ling
to prevent certain persons from lb?
for the candidate of their choice
members of Congress ‘
rp Renton, February 25.—-The Su
prerne unit met this morning. Im
met. ia e y presented on opening, Attorney General
oc ’ on the case of Graham,
ie riccomp ice ol Hunter in the mur
L 1 1 J J3S ^ 1 ® n g' 111 Camden county.
e u e ld i i that Graham was used by the
cu b ate, and without his testimony the
«a e could have made no case against
Hunter, and on principles of justice as
well as precedent, he should not be
pioseeuted. The court reserved its
decision.
Bridgeport, Conn., February 25'—
In the Bassett trial Mrs. Alexander
was the first witness for the prosecu
tion. She related the circumstances
of the murder very nearly as they
were told on her first examination.
Chicago, February 25. — At ten
o'clock this morning Madame Exelda
La Chapelle successfully completed the
task of walking, in addition to the 2,-
700 quarter miles in as many quarter
hour 8 ’ 300 W^er mile* in 300 con
. tve l’ eri0 s Hj minutes each.
Her last quarter mile was her fastest,
b *"« made ,n 1:5J -
Iaskxend, Turkestan, February 24.
A dispatch says: “Several days after
the departure of General Rasgonoff
from Tashkourgan with the Afghan
Embassy, the Ameer of Afghanistan
summoned the doctor of the Russian
mission, who had been left at his re
quest at that town. The Ameer said
he was suffering from pains in the
limta. The doctor at first thought that
‘he Ameer was deceiving him, but soon
perceived that the circulation was de.
eot'Ve m he limbs of he Ameer, and
‘h»t the functions of the heart were
feeb-y susta.ned
‘ “able 0 ptocure leeches the doc
tor wished to lesort to cupping the
patients leys to blisters, out persons
‘he suns: of the Ameer opposed this
P lan > antl tne Afghan doctor present
declared that he would answer for the
safety of his royal invalid. All the ef
forts of the Russian surgeon, therefore,
became useless. It was only after an
of several days that the
Amporacain wnf fnr Mm
q^he ]h «urueon ^"raadi-tt then for fn that hlrLT fWnm
position „ l nail already set in on on his ie.t
e R- Tbp ine npvt next mnrn morning :„„ a „ spot ol;
g jonorpno an gtene hod nad appealed onnoivori on on his i,i. c-'L side, rp, lue
onrtvann suigeon, *u„ tneretoie, immediately ( j,. sent Bant
lQe letter received V0 „ 0 :„ 0l i yesterday alter 0 f tar
,q 'jeneial An „,. a i L-asgonott, mliiofinw piedicting on as eer
urn, ,' be hp almost .mmed.afe immLioto death eloofii ° f lhe
The Emperor of China, unless he is
in exception lo all of the monarchs
1 is race, knows very little, and cares
iess * about what goes on in the United
^f-ates. His government ia really an
oligarchy, the so-called Six Boards, and
the four great Ministers being the gov
srnment. In theory, the Emperor, who
to be of divine origin, is
'’’p^me. He has absolute power over
Lie lives, happiness, property, and con
dd ’* on of his subjects. His Ministers
atjd * lie ^ i6ads ol the Sis Boards are
required to submit their opinions to
him, or “lay them at the foot of the
throne," as the phrase is, and the sov
ereign glance sometimes deigns to turn a
of contempt upou them. '
—-—
Cocoa, it i3 computed, is used by 50,
000,000 human beings, coffee by 150,
000,000, hashish by 300,000,000,opium
in one form or another, by 400,000,000,
tea by 500,000,000, and
co by 800,000,000 persons.
Won by a Photographer.
An Enthusiastic Collector Providing a Wife
For a Wealthy Old Judge.
[From the Louisville Courier Journal.]
In Mason county there lived a man
two or three years ago who had a pas¬
sion for collecting photographs of
women with whom he became acquaint¬
ed or whom be casually met. He
never turned his attention to any par*,
ticular trade or profession, but worked
around on farms, staying but a short
time in one place. After having been
j n a neighborhood he generally took his
departure possessing the pictures of ail
the girls. Some gave lrm their pic
and others refused do *
tures, to so- It
remained an open question cf how he
obtained those he did not get by gift,
fj e was one (j a y seized with the idea
0 f going West. Packing his trunk,
therefore, and putting into the tray
the two or three hundred photogranhs
0 f women that he had, he started, ar
riving at length in Sedalia, about 200
miles west of St. Louis, where he cou
eluded to remain at least for a season
^ be could procure work.
About a mile from town Judge Geo.
Heard resided. He was a gentleman
about 60 years of age, a native of
KentU0 R- ? nd a wi >?°wer. He had
“o/f , wJ
C °.'? Sldered one of the most prominent
^ ““T
-the Mason county wanderer a walk
- d ed
W A T tT °7 ° D6 ? y ' 8t °? P
<“ Heard s farm and,.ascertain- -
,ng that he »’« » Kentuckian, felt in
E 0me J“P ecto at home ' I ud / e He \ rd
desired , an overseer > and . filldlD , g his
acquaintance . search of
new was in
employment, gave bim the place. One
Sunday, two or three weeks after his
arrival, the new overseer got out his
greatly valued stock of photographs,
an( ] looked them over one by one.
Judge Heard also became interested
j n the pictures, and examined each one
critically. Suddenly he came to a
f ace that forcibly impressed bim, and
showing it to his overseer, asLed who
6 he was, whether the was married or
single, and if she was respected and
admired at home. The overseer could
remember nothing of her except he
knew she was a resident of Mason
couuty. He told Judge Heard, how
ever, that Mr. Richard Dawson, an
old resident of Mason"county, could in
all probability tell said just that who day she was.
Nothing more was about
matter, but the next day Judge
Heard asked the overseer to let him
have the picture, and his request was
complied with. The face, it seemed,
b«d haunted him ever since he first
8a ]Y He wrote „ , t°Mr , Dawson,enclosmgthe n. wvln ...Winotl,.
P"*"™' if,' "*? +L. f .hoCs.
\r,. c ven i;ia nf av
‘
ce m.nd, K 01 and, /*? 1 although about , do , ® - n ol
years
age ,' wa8a lov abl e AUe r
“i2. . d , u![ D .
‘ 12® i'.i ° e 'N ’ * ''’ S °
letter he , started for Mason county,
uurylll . 8 **J’h h ' m P'oper . ciedentlals
S?” 0 ?!' 1 ' 0 ®.Help.”
Mr. Dawson, and Mr Dawson deter
mmad “ pa “ C rl " d - !” ^ atc ! tdle j°,” d
t he ?a dy 's home :
Sbe had j J ust ad ^ j ourned her school as
the v i sl(o rs app ared , and had on her
^ t calic0 dres3 Jlldgei
Heard “ a i ready ; n ) 0 ve ' was dress
a f l y a a y of lg jjr. anJ Daw-' „ ot i
ld „ st aa 1 ,. /’ , ’• I
“Vf,. - , m, rh ple ftroduced, . , >
« C °“ ]] aS ,
and all three went to the house. She
axcu9ed h( ; reel1 '. but s00n appeared, elegance
dressed with niooh rate and
^ey spent a delightful evening, and ;
alter the Judge and Ml Dawson took,
their leave the former was, in the ian
guage TV of Mr. Dawson, ’ a clear goner.
He could m __* not * talk n,„f or anything else ex
B
cept the , , lady A had m, ihe next .
1 q ne met.
<fay , , be called ,, tosee her , , by himself, . • o /f f and nnA
J
another pleasant evening. In t„
1 °
U ' ttiiiti & week after their first meet
they , were engaged, and „„v in • ...^ t\AO
,0 raed. k site At marriage the wedding ceremony a large was con- per-j
course ol iriends were gathered, an(
when the newly-married couple started
Missouri they were the recipients ■
01 scores of good wishes irom^ the de
vot A d inends of the bride.
at home Mrs Heard was placed 1Q
possession ol a fine residence, an 1 was
surprised to learn that her husband was
one oi r ^ ie nc ^ 12611 ot t26 county. He
mok- ten years younger than he diu on
that Sunday morning '•vnen h:s over
S6er shewed him the picture or his
future w::e.
~ ---
“First class ■ in astronomy stand up.
Where does the ■ sun rise °
sir. down in < lr meadow ; I seed it
yesterday." “Hold your tongue, you
dunce. Where does the sun rise?" “I
know: in the east.’ the “Right; and why
does it rise in east '.'" “Because the
east makes everything rise.”
-
Mrs. ^ E.D. E. N. Southworth has just
finished her fifty-ninth ”
novel.
ITEMS OF INTEREST.
The Peabody institute owns $364,000
worth of Tennessee bonds.
Kaolin being the resulting clay from
the decomposition of aluminous min¬
erals, especially the feldspars of granite
and gneiss is always more or less mix¬
ed with free quartz.
Said a friend to a bookseller: “The
b 0( # teide is affected, I suppose, by
tta , geiSeral depression. What kind of
liftlSns:feel most?” “Pocket-books,” was
the laconic reply.
Aunt Phillis, a colored woman of 60
years, living near Yanceyville, N. C.,
has given birth to twins, and she insists
that they had no father, but that the
trouble all came from drinking min¬
eral water.
The President does not seem to have
made up his mind in regard to the anti
Chinese bill. Connecticut’s Legislature
has unanitnonsly condemned the mea¬
sure, and the clergymen of various
denominations are beginning to protest
against the consummation of the out¬
rage.
“No woman of proper self-respect,”
says a woman’s rights journal, dis¬
cussing the marriage ceremony, “ will
submit to be given away.” Perhaps
not; but, my dear woman’s righter,
to be “given away” is not the worst
feature of the ceremony. She is too
often “sold.” And if she isn’t, the
chances are that the man is.
Socrates is credited with the saying
that if a man marries he will be sorry,
and if he does not marry he will be
sorry. A trainer of spirited horses, he
said, would not shun a refractory ani¬
mal : “In the same way I married,
confident that in case I should be en¬
abled to endure her, I should be
enabled to endure all others.” He cared
for his wife and pleaded with his
children not to forget her.
Marble is a limestone that has be¬
come crystalized and hardened by heat
so as to be capable of receiving a high
polish. The action of heat on ordinary
limestone is seen wherever such strata
have come in close proximity to granite,
the heat from which, when in a molten
state, having converted the limestone
into crystalline marble. The various
colors of the marbles are due to the
admixture of organic matter and of the
oxides of metals, iron giving the red
and brown tints, copper the green, and
manganese the black.
“Chinaman, he smokee opie ; you
smokee cigal. Alle samee/’ continued
the defender of his race. “Chinaman
pay fot his opie; you pay for cigal. He
wolkee fol he moaey; you wolkee fol
youl money. Alle sammee one way ;
alle samee lullo way. Melican man
dlink whisky, gettee dlunk, laise hell,
gettee locked up in staddy house, no
pay fol whisky. Chinaman no gettee
dlunk; he mind he business. He smokee
opie ; all life.”
Ah Gin Sing, a Chinaman, was ar¬
rested in a Massachusetts town last
week for stealing a chromo of “Wash¬
ington Crossing the Delaware.” He
told the astonished court that he
’wantee much Melican man makee icee,’
whereupon the arresting officer said
that some one had told the Celestial
that the picture was a rare patnting,
by Michael Angelo, of the Father of hi,
Country getting in his winter's ice,
and that the pole in the hand, of the
man in the bow of the boat was the
North Pole. The infatuated man im
mediately stole it.
A curious list might be made of the
..range , methods employed , in • transmit- .
ting many important historical mes
sages. The intelligence which enabled
Cyrus to overthrow the Med,an Mon
archy was him conveyed in the body of a
hare sent as a present. The m
stigttor of the Ionian revolt against flave,
Persia sent his agent, a trusty
with -.i verbal , , orders , to shave his r head,
’
when , the necessary instruction ap
peared , traced , on the skin , beneath, F,
During • Mohammed at u s Avars letters i .. of ,
this kind j were treqcently plaited in the
, long hair , - of e female c i 1 slaves. , 3 r
|,ehop haB Whittle, addressed Episcopal circular Bi.hop letter! of
Virginia, vestries a of the Dio
to the clergy and which
ceS m of Virginia, in he says:
“Trig services of the church should be j
con ducted as prescribed by the rubrics,
j n t h e Book of Common Prayer, with
out adding thereto or subtracting there
f rorQ- The decoration of the churoh
building at Christmas, being a custom
as 0 jj a * the church itself in Virginia,
ma y lawfully and properly be contin-'
ue( p The introdoct'on into the church
0 f evergreens or flowers at Easter, or
0 f flowers, fruits or vegetables on
Thanksgiving Day, or on any other oc
casion, Virginia, is a novelty and and an innovation
j in aPowed. The ought not to be doce
or decoration of ‘the
cloths, Lord’s of table,'pulpit and desk with
j one color for some occasions
and of another color for other occasions,
the different colored cloths being
changed according to times and seasons,
is a new and strange thing in the
‘ church in Virginia, and ought not
be done or allowed.”
PRICE THREE CENTS.
g*0t
L OST—A Tools, Paints THUNK, and containing Pictures. The Artist's / tinder
will be suitably rewarded. Address,
Prof. J. EDWIN CHURCHILL, Artist.
Business Cards.
VAL. BASLE It’S
WINES, LIQUORS, SUGARS and TOBACCO
The best Lager Beer In the city. The well
known TEN PIN ALLEY reopened. Lunch
every Square day House, from 11 to 1 o’clock. At the Market
174 BRYAN ST. Savannah.Ga.
F. BINGEL,
WINES, LIQUORS AND SEGARS.
Milwaukee and Cincinnati Lager Beer on
draught. Free Lunch. Fresh Oysters always
on hand. 21 Jefferson st., corner Conngress
street lane. mchlO-ly
JAMES RAY,
—Manufacturer and Bottler—
Mineral Waters, Soda, Porter and Ale.
15 Houston St., Savannah, Ga.
feb23-"rn
Dr. A. H. BEST,
DENTIST
Cor. Congress and Whitaker streets.
SAVANNAH, GA.
T EETH guaranteed. extracted without pain, All work.
I respectfully beg to refer to any of mjr
patrons. octJ-bmo
C. A. COETJ.NO,
Hair Cutting Hair Dressing Mu asi
SHAVING SALOON.
HOT AND COLD BATHS.
IQV/4 Planters’ Bryan street, Hotel. opposite the Italian, Marital, un¬
and English spokon. Spanish, Ger¬
shill--f
1 :xs
Congress and Jefferson streets.
GRITS AND MEAL,
Grain, Hay, Feed, Flour, Provisions,
At LOWEST market figures.
B. L. MEB013L
feb!2-lm
GEORGE FEY,
WINES, LIQUORS, SEGARS, TOBACCO, &c .
The celebrated Joseph Schlltz’ MILWAU¬
KEE LAGER BEER, a speciality. No. 22
Whitaker Street, Lyons’ Block, Savannah,
Ga. FREE LUNCH every day from U to 1.
r-zill-1 v
HAIR STORE .
JOS. E. L0ISEAU & CO.,
118 BROUGHTON ST., Bet. Bull A Drayton
K EEP on hand a large assortment of Hair
Hair Switches, combings Curls, Puffs, and Fancy Goods
worked In the latest style.
Fan cy Cos tumes, W igs and Beards for P.ent
JOS. H. BAKER,
IB "D" T O H IE3 IR,,
STALL No. 06, Savannah Market.
Healer in Beef, Mutton, Pork nd
All other Meats In their Seasons.
Particular attention paid to supplying Ship
and BoardingtHouses. aug!2
Coal and Wood.
GRANTHAM 1. TAGGART,
Best Family Coal I
I deal cite and only Bituminous in the best Coal. qualities of Anthra¬
LOW PRICES,
EXTRA PREPARATION,
PROMPT DELIVERY.
Main Olliee: 124 Bay Street.
Public Special prices to Manufacturers, Dealers and
Institutions. nov3-tu,th,su-tf
Carriages*
~
A. K. WILSON’S
CARRIAGE MANUFACTORY,
Corner Bay and West Broad tits.
CARRIAGE REPOSITORY .
Cor. Bay and Montgomery streets.
savannah havaaaah, _ _ _ — npmRiT* ulohoia
, and t arm wagons ttiw. canopy •
line of Carriage and XaterlaU S °_ a *
SM®?. ‘^de Wagon J ha ;c
y rot T) IC
pairing, win ™ o*w work whtfi’stalstion and
be executed to give
IMl 1 ' t,ort aotico ' ioiiyl2-iy
„ - : nwo
♦* 1
AUR book for orders for Passover Bread is
open. Our Machinery bejn-noAvm.d of
the es we wit ’.. lUilllS
flrst ' class artlclu - our piice will compare
favorably with Northern and Western mauu
lacturers. No charge for drayage.
Please send your orders to
, OUR, SCHWARZ & CO.
;
Cor. Bay and "Barnard akg
» fell Dow SAVANNAH, 3A