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33 A. I L Y EviiisriN'a
Savannah WiPlS 01 r f m
VOL I.—No. 129.
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R. M. ORME, Editor.
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LORELEI
TRANSLATED FROM HEINE BY A SAVANNAH
LADY.
I know not what causes-,the trouble
That I should feel so sad,
A fairytale, a bubble
Will not come out of my head.
The evening is cool and fading,
And Quietly flows the Rhine,
'The top of the mountain glowing,
In ray’s of sunset shine.
A maiden fair reclineth.
Beautiful up there,
Her golden jewel shineth
She combs her golden hair.
She combs it with golden combe shin¬
ing,
And sings a song thereto,
Which has a wonderful rhiming
And powerful tuning too.
The fisherman in his boat there,
Is seized with passionate woe,
Heeds not the rocks in the water,
But looks at the maiden so.
I believe the water will swallow
The fisherman’s boat, yet and all;
And that with all her singing
Was Lovel ies siren call.
8. M.
MARRIED BY TELEGRAPH.
“You’ll marry him, whether you
wish to or not. As to that young
scapegrace, Saul Vernon, he’ll fare bad¬
ly if Abner he comes skylarking around here!”
and Bowen, irate and demon¬
strative, left the apartment (in which
sat his neice, pretty Edith Bowen), the
very picture of the indignant and ty
ranical guardian.
Dismay, sorrow, disappointment, a
host of sad emotions filled Edith’s mind
at this unexpected outburst on her
part. For over two years she had had
such delightful meetings with her ar¬
dent young lover, £5aul Vernon, in the
extensive gardens of her uncle's resi¬
dence; but at last discovery of the
clandestine interviews bad been made
by Mr. Bowen, and to her sur¬
prise he had intimated, the morn¬
ing upon which our story opens,
that he had selected a suitor for hsr
hand, a rich old gentleman who she hud
but once met, and whom she dimly re
umbered as an gouty individual.
Not only must she accept him, but sh.
must wed him at once. The anair had
, been .11 n arranged Wtr i and j on said the , i morrow
she must, uncle bad prepare
herself for a trip to Greenville, m the
adjoining county, where Mr. Arnold
resided. There her widding with him
was fo take nlace and at, once ‘
At Af first TiM Edith ik « was dumbfounded.— i uf j a
Heretofore her uncle’, w.ll had been
law with her; and, even now, while her
love lor Saul Vernon melted hsr to
open rebellion and defiance of the
mand.tes of her uncle, her timid heart
shrank from opposing Urn. Shewn,
of age, it was true, but her fortune was
controlled by her uncle until her mar
riage, and the provisions of her dead
father’s will invested him howeve
with large authority and discretion in
the So*, premises.
with a tacit consent, by silence,
to the arrangements made by her uncle
Edrth Bowen sent a tearful note
arewsll to San \ srnon, and the ensu
mg day Stepped hei intolire sell aud carnage hei guatdian
Was to convey
to the depot to tAke the train for
ville. bo absorbed was she im her own
grieved thougfus »nd her that, uncle as introduced the\ enteied her
the care,
to a tall, clerical-looking young acknowledg man.
as Mr. Porter, she simp.y
•d hi# presence with a cureless
tion of her head, and sank into her seat
utterly miserable and silent.
“Greenville!’ shouted the
after weary monotonous miles of
and the "next transition Edith
aware of was from the heated qar
the platform of a station standing isola
ted and lonelv looking in the midst of
a most unpromising section of
“Greenville?” repeated Mr.
in amazenu st, as he t urned to Mr.
ter. “Whv ! there’s 'no bouses here,
My friend, Mr. Arnold, has moved
fcere lately, and I have never been
here before. Lfet us enter the station
and make some inquiries.” solitary ticket-sailer
They did so. A
and telegraph-operator sat within the
little office.
“Is this Greenville ?” inquired Mr.
Bowen.
“Yes.”
“Where’s the houses—where’* the
town ?”
“Yonder.’’
As he spoke, the man pointed to the
flat , unbroken country to the west.
“I don’t see any town," said the old
gentleman, wonderingly. inland,”
“It’s ten milea said the
st&t’on agent, “the town wouldn't
donate the right of way to the com¬
pany, so they built the station here—
the nearest point to Greenville on the
road.”
Mr. Bowen groaned audibly.
“The wedding is set for to-night, and
must come off. I say, is there a ve¬
hicle to be hired near here?” he in¬
quired of the occupant of the office.
‘.'None nearer than Greenville,” was
the reply.,
Mr. Bowen hesitated, then ’f deeply
meditated. Finally, he said
“There’s nothing for it but lor me to
go to Greenville and get a conveyanee.
Edith could never walk ten miles over
these muddy roads.”
So he left them. The clergyman, for
such Mr Porter was, walked ap and
down the platform outside, while
Edith ynsocially seated herself in one
corner t)f the little station, thinking
deeply.
The hours sped by, but no uncle re¬
turned. Finally, Edith, after a long
period of reflection, arose and went to
the minister.
"I have been thinking,” said she,
“since sitting in this station, that
death itself is almost preferable to wed¬
ding a man I do not love—cannot even
respect.”
The minister stared at her curiously.
“Then you are not a willing party to
the proposed marriage?” he inquired.
“I am not.’’
“Then I certainly shall take no fur¬
ther part in this matter.. I cannot
solemnize a ceremony where the parties
are not of one mind. Mr. Bowen
assured me that there was no bar to
the marriage.’’
“Will you then aid me ?” cried Edith,
impulsively, be catching his arm. “Oh,
sir ! kind to a friendless, orphan
girl.”
“What do you mean, Miss Bowen ?”
kindly inquired the minister.
u I am in the power of my uncle,”
she said, and I dare not balk his will,
with no friend to guard me against his
influence. Since I have been here, I
meditated deeply. Yonder is the tele
graph operator—marry me by tele¬
graph. Unite me to the man I love
and then I can defy my uncle.”
The minister itared at her in startl¬
ed surprise.
repeated, “Marry—you—by—telegraph wonderingly. ?” he
“Yes," she said, quickly, excitedly,
will you do it ?” * ,
Mr. Porter hesitated. .
“To whom ?” he inquired, finally.
Edith flushed hotly.
“To—the man I love—to Saul Ver¬
non.”
‘<y eq j -q >•
W i(h Wing * heart and blushing whill
f ’ j EJi0l ent red tbe
the clergyman through , the ., amazed j
$ ,"o wheie on
erat0] . hed Eiverdale
gaul Vernon resided, and was soon
j - 3 - T . communication , with ...
* V ', ua
And A there ’ Wlth tbe ? 0Un S man over
,~ 100 miles at end of the wire,
^ i Ed,th away j one
„ B 0We n ' “ d 3 ofBa * tln g
$*■ , in , 0ti T
electrically, , strangely solemn
“essages. I rom the first (lrom lmpor
“iff? ..V', »ud earnest of the responses) “f
“ e Dt ' tbe 1 do ,' sound f d , ”"? nI » rl7
^ovT , \ ,U
And « r ‘ t what God hath ,orned together . ,,
't f* n0 mRn « ss complete, “"der pronounced surely
18 ceremony as
str i”f a oue “ eTer wasiconsumated,
hoar , at „ when Abner Br0 „„ return .
ed a carria B to wuv „ his neice
and Mr . Porter to Greenville: hut as
the ceremon> , waa U gal , a„ d his
j r ,g an< j raV mg were impotent to annul
the marriape and a lvorce the happy
couple> be 8Q bsiaed and
best of it.
Mr< Arnold was disconsolate at first,
bul event nally became a warm friend
of the lov , g’ lvy - ain wbo wer e married
r ‘
*
--
j An Alabama poultry fancier has ob
tained a beautiful fowl by a cross be
tween a guinea and a turkey, and
ought by to be able to produce
jmee crossing a trade dollar and a
woodcock.
; The leader and violinist of a
choir at Madison, Ind., got into a fight
a few days ago, and the* latter, a one
legged man, was getting the better of
his antagonist, and when a no-legged dis
interfered furbance, stamped out the
SAVANNAH, SUNDAY, MARCH 2, 1870.
Tlie Bible.
Professor Chandler’s Sunday Evening Lec
• ture.
[From the Hartford Times.]
My subject, continued from last Sun¬
day evening, is this : Is the Bible a
standard tor Christian faith and life,
or a standard of correct intellectual
belief and moral action ? Notwith¬
standing the enlightened age in which
we live, and noth withstanding all the
knowledge we have of what should
consist a true belief in God and man’s
destiny, yet there are great diversities
of opinions, of faiths and creeds, which
are not in harmony one with another.
There is no unity of faith on all the
doctrines that distinguish Christianity,
so you see it is a matter of great impor¬
tance to know what is the truth. Some
, e ieve, is -r,.,, . guide, and
i e is our
others deny that it , 8 any better than
any other book. Some say it i. full
of contradictions and not to be relied
on Now it is my purpose to Bring
ou certain facts of the scriptures and
I think you will see that they did not
originate m human minde nor in h»
mam wisdom.
There are certain truths brought out
m the Bible that are beyond the wis
dom ot this world, and that no human
mind could ever have originated.
There are truths in the Bible that are
adjusted to our actual intellectual and
moral wants—truths without which
we grovel in darkness, doubt and per¬
Bible plexity, longing for just what the
furnishes us. The Bible de¬
clares to us a God and we need a God.
Without a belief and some knowledge
of the God and Creator of heaven and
earth, we are brought into that doubt
and longing after such knowledge
which amounts even to distress of
mind. The fact of the existence of a
God is revealed in the scriptures. He
bad a plan and purpose in his mind,
and that purpose must be carried out
And in spite of seeming opposite forces,
you will find that after all, these very
forces arranged themselves in harmony
with the Divine mind.
Let me illustrate my point by a lit¬
tle geology. In the course of the
formation of the earth there were
mighty upheavals of mountains and
consequent depression, or formation of
vallies. The great ocehns are only de¬
pressions in the earth s surface. If we
had been living when these convulsions
of nature were taking place, we should
have thought indeed that the world
was coming to an end. But when we
come along down in the history of the
world we find that all these revolutions
are in harmony with the divine mind,
aad that to bring about a world like
ouis, with all its varied surface, all
these convulsions were necessary. -Now
then it is just so in human society. We
have an antagonistic spirit of good and
evil. Agitating forces are brought to
bear on human minds, breaking up old
ideas and systems, and bringing in new
ones. Intellectual and moral revolu
tions take place, and many people
stand in great fear that their old faiths
and systems of religion are to over
thrown, and others think the world is
comipg to an end. But when we begin
to look at things in the right light we
find that the world is on the advance
after all. Look at the history of the
world—the rise and fall of dynasties
and kingdoms—the crash and roar of
arms, and the great crisis <?f the world,
when everything seemed to be going to
wreck and ruin. But looking over
this history you find these revolutions
were all necessary-that they had ft
tendency to widen and spread out the
channels of intelligence and moral in
fluence. There is a harmony in the
revolutions and changes '
Now then, these revolutions ar#
spoken of in Scripture, and we say
they were all necessary. God is not
only the creator of man, but he has
honored him, making him higher than
the brute creation. Every element of
matter is to come under the control
mind. That is tfie sentiment of the
Bible that God has given us, and it is
worthy to. be received as a tenet 0 »
faith. You mav say that these thin «
were known, and that God was believe 1
in That by other nations without the Bibb
is true; but there is a positivene*-
1 in the Bible statement that vou don r
[find in the Vedas, nor m the sacred
' n °^ s ot t.fnna, nor m- those of a
: other nstiou—not even in the Greek
and Latin ?- a clearnes- u
.Statement tne , B ihle that, bevonc
in goes
* hat of ar *7 religi.-,,,, -yen in iu
^heaven. t f a; , t>nguishes And the there Bible, s another and th tha, it is
that God predicted, long before the ad
; vhnt of Christ,that He would senda r-
30n i nto the world who should be „
Messiah and a Saviom to the" race, that
be should be a more perfect manifesta
j t i 0 n of Himsel; th*n any hitheito
g i ven .
j With India all the aval tr? or ncarnatiOLS
in none ever took place equal to
this told oi in the Bible. The incar
nation of Christ, the Saviour of the
j World, is a truth rational aod impor
tant to the human race. It seems /a
tional that the Creator should com
’municate to us something higher
any person could teach us. Now, let
people he honest; look at this matter
without prejudice, need and eay if the world
did not a more perfect character
than Moses, Joshua, or the priests,
prophets and kings of Judaa, and more
perfect than any in the Vedas, or
among the Greeks, Romans, dr Chinese.
We want a more perfect representation
of God than the world had hitherto
furnished us. The Christian dispensa
tion gives us this; here we can come
nearer to God’s thoughts concerning
us. The Bible teaches • us on this sub¬
ject. Christians
charity and are uniting harmony. with a broader
more The per¬
secuting spirit of early New England
is dying out; and also the persecutions
of the Roman Catholics and of the
. early reformers. This spirit of intole
and 5 persecution is rapidly / J disap- 1 ’
' le unishe d
£ m ” nee [J we e
ni to tured entertaining a liberal
ide4 „„„ m New England But this
18s0 x nqHisition „ 0 longer * The longer tortures „f the
a e n0 ,f p03SJ Lie. Its
d has b And a these lhi
are the fll ] Sllme „ t of the predictions
in regard to Christianity. Even wars
_ w hieh are bad enough at the hest
are conducted in a more civilized man
ner.
The Bible lays the foundation for
these moral revolutions. But the Bible
does not reveal all that God is going
to reveal to the human race. He has
been making his revelations all the
way down from the time of Christ.
God is inspiring men out of^the church
as well as in. The'great truths of
science are brought out by inspiration.
The man who brings out a greet dis¬
covery—working at it, heart and soul
—is God inspired. Do you think the great
is not in it simply because the
man is outside the church ? That is a
libel on the Almighty. All great dis¬
coveries are by the inspiration of God,
irrespective of any creed. All truth
is not contained in the Bible. God
illuminates the mind with great moral
truths, and thus lays the foundation of
the great spiritual temple he is to rear
—the great kingdom that is to fill the
whole earth. Sin and death are to be
destroyed, for sin is the sting of death.
When you lay your loved ones away,
what consolation like these words, “I
am the resurrection and the life ; he
that believeth on me; though he were
dead, yet shall he live.” Do you find
such comfort as that in any of the false
systems of the world ?
A* 16 lower OI Love,
^ Princess has eloped with a Duke
. ^ His Excellency, the Gover
m amoa -
“ or of the Tan Massaga District in the
Wand , of Upola, had a charming sister
name baked ^ goose, P° e » a with cocoanut the complexion apron, a neck- of a
^ ace bird s claws, and a fancy that
VVa8 ^ re ?’ * de was ard ® n ^y attached to
ber r and could not be induced'to con
seut to her carriage under any consid
eratlon Malietoa - or political.- When Duke
f ell m *°ve with her the court
ah5 p was conducted clandestinely, and
-
eventually an elopement was agreed
“P 0Q and carried into execution The
Governor bethought himself ol a bit ol
strate 8? > recover possession of his
* ruant sist f r - sent a message to
roe pretending to be reconciled to her
ch ° lce - and requesting her to return
and marned und< r r the baronial
. ine dusky
P P. ro P e r styie.
Lothario fell into tins trap. f treat pre¬
Potions were made for the occasion,
and Toe, Lord Malietoa, accompanied by the
dair set out on his return, followed
b ? a11 h ! s relativea \ n au im P 08in g P^ 0 '
cession, bearing baked their pigs in pro u
f on ’. and timing march to the
beating of tom-toms. On bunday the |
Governor feigned a violent attack of
and sent a message for the lovely
ioe to hasten to the bedside of her poor
,r0ther - The ^suspecting one obeyed,
bllt n ? fooner was she inside the Gov
ernor s lines than she was bundled into
f capoe and conveyed to Sola bola, in
ber br0ther 3 domain ; detracted
^ Hl,etoa , a ? d hl8 retainers . remained
v nere they bivouacked assuaging their
by gorging themselves with baked
i f an d oli)er dehcac jes, not knowin
whal deposition , had been made oi .the
;ie 1 01 ^ iiei nd l ®- roe deoiareci proiesst tha great f sne re-;
i r b :d , ent,rel h for
^ 0Vei c °“ e e
Ma . toa, and 1 would l 4 hence be
n a
d ■ i si-ter. But she h; Hi not pi ed
to iier love. bae sent him a
v\ i i ti lew nours a war
ng seventy warriors, ai . mv.ii
ne ill, : into Sola Sola. i ! ie
i.ltmul ... I&ehad , , so anaLged , that , ,
gcaru oi old women, under whose sur
veiilanee $ti6 placed,
be out oi rea at the appointed time,
When the war canoe came inside of the
reei she rushed forth, and without
rying to cast off her simple t. pparel,
boklJy pldiigeti into the water, swam
t i it; • a*, and was taken on board
into the arms of her lover.
An *old, respectable and rich farmer
of Iona county, Mich., recently went
over the hills to the poorhouee, "select
ed a young and good looking orphan
girl, married her and took her home
him.
Why William Sharp Went to Bed.
The passion of love often reacts
strangely on undisciplined minds, and I
looked-results. frequently produces on them most un->
At Keithley, at. the.
beginning of the present century, lived
a He young fell desperately man named William Sharp.
the daughter of in love with a girl,
Everything a neighboring farmer. wed¬
went smoothly till the
ding morning, when the fathers could
Dot agree how much to give the young
couple to start them in life; and lite¬
rally at the last moment in church the
match was broken off. This was too
much for the weak mind of William
Sharp ; he went home, went to his bed,
and never rose from it again He was
just 30 when he thus isolated himself
from active life, and he died in his bed
at the age of 75. His room was about,
nine feet square. The floor was stone,
and generally damp. The window was
permanently fastened; some of the
panes were filled in with wood; and at
the time of his death it had not been
opened for 38 years. In this dreary
cell did this strange being immure speak, him¬
self. He obstinately refused to
and gradually all trace of intelligence
faded away. His father left an ample
provision for his eccentric son, and he
was well looked after. He ate as much
as an ordinary day laborer, and at his
death weighed above 16 stone. In
Harrogate, several years ago, lived a
woman who for the Same cause behaved
in exactly the same manner. Her pa¬
rents having prevented her marriage
with a worthless character, she took to
her bed, and had kept it lor 15 years,
and if not dead, is probably keeping it
still.— Chamber’s Journal.
A Revolution in Hair Dressing.
A noted revolution has just been ac¬
complished. I allude to the sudden
and marked change that has society passed
over the head of the female
leaders of Paris in the matter of ar¬
ranging their hair. All puffs and bows
and braids and fussifications on the
top ot the female head have vanished
into thin air. The Parisian belles now
wear their hair simply crimped parted in front best
and either waved or as
suits the style of the face, and coiled
at the back in a braided knot placed flower
rather low. A single large knot and
placed at one side of this
drooping on the neck is the only orna¬
ment that fashion now sanctions. This
new coiffure is not only simple and
natural, but it is wonderfully becom¬ the
ing, the beautiful shapeliness of
feminine head coming fully into view
for the first time in many years. The
suddenness as well as the universal
way in which this new style has been
adopted is very remarkable.
When a Woman Will she Will.
The Rome (N. Y.) Sentinel has a euri
story about a married couple in
Springfield. It says: "When a Massa¬
chusetts woman forms a habit it is all a
waste of time for her husband to try to
break her of it. Well knowing ills
wife’s disposition to make him a present
regularly at the anniversary of his
biithday, a citizen of the Bay State,
who likewise forcibly realized the fact
that economy was an absolute necessity
in his household, said to his wife. ‘This
year you must not undertake to make
me a present, I insist. It would be
absurd to do so at this time, when we
need everything we can rake and
scrape. I give you fair notice that if
you do carry out your former custom
this year, I will burn up the present as
surely as you make it.’ So the wife
bethought herself. She .could not bear
the idea of being Therefore deprived she ; of gathered her an*
nual pleasure. dimes and bought for her
together her birthday
dearly beloved, as a present, a
ton of coal.”
Sheep as Beasts of Burden. —In
the “Colonies and India” we find a
upte respecting the burden. employment of
sheep as beasts of In Eastern
Turkistan and Thibet, for instance
borax is borne on the backs of sheep
over the mountains to Leh, Kangra,
Rampur on the Sutlej. Borax is
f oun q at Rudok, in Cbangthan, of such
excellent quality that only 25 per cent.
is lost in tbe process of refining. The
ftudoj borax is carried on sheep to
Rampur, which travel at the rate of
two miles a day ; but, notwithstanding
t he superior quality and the demand
f or it i n Europe, the exf^nses attend
its transportation seriousiv hamper
lhe (ratio, wdich, bm isjL the sheep,
would hardly exist at all.- —Nature.
Facts and Fancies.
Gen. Dix gets $8,000 per year for managing
Trinity corporation s affairs.
A Fort Wayne cook Fa- been caught “peculati *o j
tbe table ware.”
A pedantic exchange says Wilhelnij goats are
a nuisance in Gordon, Ga.
The Northwestern dairymen deprecate cheese
made from hay-fed cows.
All women who act are beautiful, so far as I
have heard.— Nym. Crinkle.
■ Quantities of fish have inexplicably died in the
laks near ifaukat. Minn.
PRICE THREE CENTS.
sCoitf.
OHT—A TRUNK, containing Artist’*
JL _j Tools, Paints and Pictures, The finder
II be suitably rewarded. Address.
Prof. .1. EDWIN CHURCHILL, Artist.
Business Cards.
VAL BASLER’S
WINES. LIQUORS, SEGARS and TOBACCO
The best Lager Beer in the city. The well
known day TEN PIN ALLEY 1 o’clock. reopened. the Market Lunch
every from 11 to At
Square House, 171 BRYAN ST. Savannah, Ga.
F. BINGEL,
WINES, LIQUORS AND SEGARS.
Milwaukee and Cincinnati Laser Beer an
draught. hand. Free Lunch. Fresh Oysters always
on 21 Jefferson st., corner Con ngress
street lano. mchlO-ly
JAMES RAY, *
a
—Manufacturer and Bottler—
Waters, Soda, Porter anil Hie.
feb28-3m 15 Hoxtston St., Savannah, Ga.
Dr. A. H. BEST,
DENTIST
Cor. Congress axrd Whitaker streets.
SAVANNAH, GA.
r r EEl'H extracted without pain. All work
respectfully guaranteed.
1 beg to refer to any of mjr
patrons. oetl-bioA
C. A. CORTJNO,
Hair Cutting, Hair Dressing Curling a&d
SHAVING SALOON.
HOT AND COLD BATHS.
der IflGj-o Flamers’ Bryan street, opposite Spanish, the Italian, Market, un¬
Hotel. Ger¬
man, and English spokon. seKHtf
RESERVOIR MILLS
Congress and Jefferson streets.
CHOICE OBITS AND MEAL,
Grain, Hay, Feed, Flour, Provisions,
At LOWEST market figures.
B. L. MERCER.
l'ebl2-lm
GEORGE FEY,
WINES, LIQUORS, SEGARS, TOBACCO, <fce .
The celebrated Joseph Schlitz’ MILWAU¬
KEE LAGF.R BEER, a speciality. No. 22
Whitaker Street, Lyons’ Block, Savannah,
FREE LUNCH every day from 11 to 1.
r-zJi-Jv
HAIR STORE .
JOS. E. LOISEAU & CO.,
BROUGHTON ST., Bet. Bull A Draytop
EEP on hand a large assortment of Hair
Hair .Switches, combings Curls, worked Puffs, and Fancy Goods
in the latest style.
JPamcy CosttHftes, Wigs and Heards for Ren t
JOS. H. BAKER,
STALL No. 68, Savannah Market.
in Beef, Mutton, Pork nd
All other \4eats in their Seasons.
Particular attention paid to supplying Ship
Boarding Houses. augi2
Coal and Wood
1 M I. TAGC 4 SI,
Best Family Coal I
deal only in tlie best qualities of Anthra¬
cite and Bituminous Coal.
LOW PRICKS,
EXTRA J’REPARA TION.
PROMPT DELIVERY.
Main OfRee: 12L Bay Street.
Special prices to Manufacturers,-Dealers and
Public Institutions. nov3-Cu,th,su-tf
Carriage * +
A. K. WILSON S
CARRIAGE MANUFACTORY,
Corner Bay and West Broad sts.
CARRIAGE REPOSITORY .
Cor. Bay and Montgomery streets.
GEORGIA
The largest establishment in the city.
I keep a full line of Carriages, Rockaways
Buggies. and falling .Spring and Farm Wagons, Canopy
line of Carriage Top Baby Cariiages, also a fu
engaged in apd Wagon Material. I have
chanies. Any my factory the r :ost skillful me
orders for ntw work, and re¬
pairing, will be executed t< give satisfaeMon
and at short notice. in ay 12 - 1 .v
: r-rraa : pto«d
() UR book for orders for Passover Bread is
now open. Our Machinery being new and of
the best kind, we wi : / iu is’i a
first-class article. Our price will compare
favorably with Northern and Western manu¬
facturers. No charge for drayage.
Please send your orders to
smsm scswarz & ta
Cor. Bay and Barnard stag*
feb!2-6w SAVANNAS,