Newspaper Page Text
daily evening
X \N.\AH fnf[B| iir . , I vak 'Mr^N 1171 Recorder.
VOL I.—No. 132.
THE SAVANNAH
R. M. ORME, Editor.
PUBLISHED EVERY EVENING,
(Saturday Excepted,)
1GI 3BA.Y STREET,
By J. STERN.
♦he Rkcokder Is served to subscribers, in
every part ol 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 rates will be made.
All correspondence should be addressed, Re¬
corder, Savannah, Georgia.
The Sunday Morning Recorder will take
the pjace ol the Saturday evening edition,
which will make six full issues for the week.
XQS-We do not hold ourselves responsible for
the opinions expressed by Correspondents.
General W. T. Sherman.
Gen. Willard Warner Gives Some Interest¬
ing Reminiscences—The March to the Sea
—Killing Gen. McPherson.
[Extract from an Interview in the New York
Tribune.]
“Do you regard General Sherman as
a man of original ability?” “A very
able man,” said Mr. Warner, “and an
original thinker. You may have seen
some discussion as to who conceived
the March to the Sea. Now, you know
I was with Sherman, and close to his
person all the time. As early as May,
1864,when we were about Chattanooga,
I said to him one day : ‘General, what
do you want to get to Atlanta for ?
You will be 500 miles from y° ur
general . , ba.se of supplies Louisville .
at ;
for Nashville and Chattanooga are only
secondary bases, and Louisville is your
real base. Won t you get away out
tbere in the middle of Georgia, with a
long line and nothing to eat \ What
are you going to do when you get to
Atlanta ?’ Sherman, in his rapid way,
brushed the ashes from the end of his
cigar and said: ‘Salt water! salt
water! I thought about that a little
while, and finally said : ‘Do you mean
the sea?’ ‘That is it,’said Sherman.”
Mr. Warner continued in a moment:
“When we got into Atlanta the General
went into a room and spread out a map
before his chief of staff, and getting
down on his hands and knees, pointed
out the line of his advance. ‘General,’
asked the other, ‘how are you going to
live on that march ?’^ ‘There are one
million of people in Georgia,’ said the
General. 'Where they can live we
can’t starve. We shall have from
twenty to forty days’rations and coffee
and hard-tack,and will find the rest when
we reach the coast.' I never had any
doubt ihat Sherman saw that march to
the sea in his eye away back in 18G3.
,‘ 11 wdl it 11 you “other curious
thing, „ Mr. Warner added. “Sherman
was very fond of McPherson. They
were in close intellectual and social
friendship. headquarters I went out to MePher
son's about 2 o’clock on
the morning befoie he was killed. 1
woke him up, and we took a drink and
then started to get information as
the enemy in front that bherman want*
ed. 1 went back to bherman s house ;
it was what was called the Howard
House, now the Hurt House. Me*
I herson came there, and was there
when the attack was opened on his
command by Hood, and then Legal
loped off from that house. News
aftersome time that Hood was
but McPherson was killed.
said tome : ‘Warner you have been
over the ground to-day I want
to go back and find how things
from personal inspection and come
me. On my way, I met McPherson
dead bodv; he was shot in the
side the ball going upward. When
got back the body was lying on
porch, and Sherman was going up
down with slippers on his feet
bareheaded, crying.
Every look time he passed the body
would down and his eyes fill
again. All that time officers and
derlies were riding up for orders,
he would answer them, and then
l.nne his rapid walk, and look down
the body It was a very;
scene. That night I was riding
the front with bheaman, and we
several miles to go over All the
back he talked incessantly of
son, and he told me this:
he said, ‘I thought MePherson would
the man to close out this war.
and I are pretty sure to be
over before it is done, either by
enemy or public opinion; we will
make some mistake, or be accused
some mistake, which will set us
and 1 had looked on McPherson as
man to conduct our armies to the end
the war. He is a great, great loss.”
“Was Sherman always cool in
places'”' “Yes, he was instant
snappy, but perfectly cool for all
SAVANNAH WEDNESDAY, MARCH 5, 1879.
“I have heard criticisms on
man for dispai aging Hooker so
years after the war, when Hooker
paralyzed ?” “Well, even if one
paralyzed,” said Mr. Warner,
even the dead escape historic blame.
General Hooker had an important
mand under Sherman, and Sherman
had to rely on him for the truth.
he told Hooker to feel the enemy before
him, and to report whether he could
hold his ground or was overmatched,
Sherman expected the very best judg¬
ment. Hooker almost always exag¬
gerated the force opposed to him, and
his this might line compel Sherman to weaken
at some other point to
Hooker moro strength. I think
was Hooker’s fault in the
much imagination, weak judgment.’
A Curious Will.
Disinheritance of Heirs on Change of
gious Faith.
[From N. Y. Commercial Advertiser.]
The will of Mr3. Emily Grace
widow of Benjamin Nathan, whose
rible death created so much
ment several years ago, was admitted
to probate by Surrogate Galvin on the
24th of last month. The will contains
a clause, after the special bequests,
giving the residue of her estate to the
United States Trust Company to set
aside an equal share for each of her
surviving children; the iuterest and
income to be paid to each of them dur¬
ing life, and afterwards distributed
among the next of kin.
A subsequent clause prescribes that,
should any of jier children, before her
death or after, “intermarry with any
person not of the Hebrew faith or
religion, they, or the one so intermar¬
rying, shall be treated as if such child
or children so intermarrying had never
been born unto me,” and the share of
such child is to be divided among the
other children,
^ l awyerj vyho has had a very large
experience in wills, thought that the
clau8e wa8 not worth the p r 0D
which it is wr itten, and that, in the
event 0 f a contest, would have to be
set aside on account of its restrictive
character. In this country there is no
state re li g i 0 n, consequently that could
no ^ foe taken into account; but there is
a j aw ma ki n g vend any clause which
prohibits the marriage of persons after
the death of the testator.
Another prominent, lawyer who did
nofc w i s h his name to appear until he
b ad time to look up authorities, said at
g rg ^ gi ance it appeared to him that the
c i au80 wa8 vo i di but on consideration
b e thought it mmbt only be marriage', voidable.
q^e c j a y 8e d ; d not prohibit
but only prescribed how the person
should marry. The clause was so close
] y worded that he scarcely liked to ex
p reB8 a decided opinion, 'of as he had re*
gpect j or tb e learning the lawyer
w b 0 had drawn the will and thought
h e had exam i ne d the subject before
committing it to paper.
Another equally prominent lawyer
t hat a decedent had a right to
dispose of property according to his or
her peculiar fancies providing that he
or she W as of sound mind while making
the will. A mother or father might
have a prejudice in favor of or against
a child, but that alone would not de
pr j ve either of willing property in ac
cordance with such prejudices, no
matter how unjust it might seem to
other6 . It was the “will” of the de
cendeut . This decedent has created a
trugt and the trustees had to pay the
inC ome, unless prevented by the action
0 f a cour t. He did not see that the
proba te of the will would affect the
oaBe if there was auv desire to
’ a8 a contestant would have twelve
m ontlj8 to file paper3 * b for 8ettiug it
'
aside
0ne of the witnesges to the will
tbat the claU8e a n uded towas not
re8trictive than a gimilar one in Mr.
Nathan ’ s wi]1 . As a l awyer ,
the will had been so carefully drawn
to admit of no dispute, and he
that there would be no contest,-as
wag onl further carrying out
wishe8 0 f the late Mr. Benjamin
than, whose will had not beeii
He believed that Mrs. Nathan had
perfect f right fl to / prescribe how her
en ahou ma rv when bv her
her property was to go to'their
*
ecendan t g The will had taken
matter out of lbe hands of
alld placed the property in trust,
be thought the courts'would see
j J ustice was done to all the children.
_ m m . Montreal,
At St. Paul’s Church,
Sunday last a the telephonic apparatus
rigged which up sick in member pulpit, of the by means 0
j tion heard a the distinctly in
sermon
quarter of a mile away.
— m * *
* ,<d h. I m good for another
years, was the laughing rejoinder 0
Prince Hearg of the
urged to make his will. He has
’“testate, and his vast possessions
probabiy pass just where he didn
want t hem to go-
1 i D Eoeland Bre" Hart Ts the most popular
American authors.
BY
EXTRA SESSION OF
BUTLER ON THE
INVESTIGATION.
All Indian War
PROCLAMATION FOR AN EXTRA
Washington, March 4.—The
mation of the President calling for
extra session of Congress, to
on the 18th inst., was issued this
noon. *The proclamation recites
an extraordinary session is
for the reason that the
Congress adjourned without making
usual and necessary appropriations
the legislative, executive and
expenses of the Government for
fiscal year ending June 30th, 1880, and
without making the usual and
sary appropriations for the support
the army for the same fiscal year.
butler’s individual views.
Washington, March 4.—The
vidual views of Mr. Butler on the
ter investigation were presented to
House last night. He maintains
the appointing of Judges of the
Court on the commission to decide
late Presidential election has done great
harm to the cause of justice by impair*
ing the reverence that the people
always justly had for the integrity
the decision of that court, and the ex¬
periment ought never to be tried again;
that the counting in of Mr. Hayes was
obtained by a series of gross and un¬
justifiable irregularities and frauds,
which cannot be too strongly condemn¬
ed and reprobated ; that if any tittle to
the Governorship of Louisiana result¬
ed from the late election in that State
it was Governor Packard who was
legally elee'ed.
BLOODY INDIAN WAR IN OREGON IM¬
MINENT.
San Francisco, March 4.- -A Port
land > Oregon, dispatch says : “A few
Father Wilbur, Superintend
dent of tbe Yakima Indian reservation,
received orders to have Chief Moses in
r ^ a( finess to go with the other promi^
aent chiefs from the Umatilla reserva
^ion to Washington. Moses looked
upon the matter with suspicion, think
ing it a device to get him to the Indian
Territory. To remove this suspicion
Father Wilbur gave him a furlough
thirty days to visit his people. Moses
left the reservation last Thursday. He
bad been absent about three
wben a crowd of citizens arrived from
Yakima City and the Fort Simcoe
A-gency with headquarters, headed by an
officer a warrant for the arrest
Moses. The grand jury of that county
bad found an indictment against him
as an accessory to the Perkins murders,
Moses has gone direct to his camp be
yond Priest’s Rapids. He is doubtless
aware of the intent of the people, and
will prepare himself accordingly. An
injudicious and precipitate action
likely to involve the country in a
lentless and blood war. The situation
one °f great peril, and war
Moses’band and other Indian tribes is
considered inevitable.”
London, March 4.—The Pall
Gazettes correspondent at Berlin says
“It is stated that negotiations are
ing for a compromise between
and the Duke of Cumberland. If it
arranged it is believed that the
will take up his residence in
wick with the view to succeed to
Duchy” *
- -+ • $.
Cure for Hog Cholera.
y lou will nna d enclosed enc]osed a a jec lecipe -
^okraTn "hoes ? “i*
^ cure a usin® cas thL of cholera since I is“
i fthTnk enced cuJe rrena, evLv iLon in
f it wiU d hease a
g incident t0 bnt. I do'think if used
as healthl a rreY entive it will keen ’mm “av n
fho condition Hence hoa?’t I
co-t®but e who are rv it
i / litUe and will “ do 1 no iniurv J
tc vour hoc "quai - •
i ^ Ilx nortions P of
lirae and <=oda
o Mix 1 rortions 4 ‘ alum ’ * d,
-ndaaltnetre one'onart
3 To auart? of “tnre mixture Vo \
1 add two of n 1 1
n E ho/ore n , iv
veaVoL* "
to ° * each • ^
^ocn.ni nfid tAuce .vuct a a week w eek To 1 o cure .11 e a ca...
| ( - r10 ! ‘l’ 00b / a er q day uun.
oie e ^ te,d ’^ U is- >-.*t tu gi\e
ir } meal , bu. .1 ma\ be given m
,
!r ‘°P
that .
{ 11 hog was
.
t0 eat r h« meal !iimiik*w arm
aa«. a v.aie^was ci 1 .n .ess tui.i >
: j 0 aai8 ie j ‘ a -p e f : ' aU . n . a c j -° f‘'j'" 1
‘ ; " k
.
en ^ ' Ui -
-
■“ • ^ . I it ‘ ‘ L
.
* . • ,\ n 1
t Ll1 v, - v “ * • • ' j
^
'
_ t a t _
Sir Julius Benedict is a slender old gect
a closely shorn chin
The Throat and its Functions.
A Lecture in Popular Science by Dr.
Elsberg.
In a lecture on “The Throat,”
Tuesday evening, Dr. Louis
interested a large audience which
assembled at Association Hall,
formed the second of the course of
tures delivered before the Academy
Sciences. On the platform were
ranged a number lecturer of mechanical
which the frequently used
experiment ivith, and on the walls
maps showing the throat in
conditions.
The throat, said the lectuicr,
the same relation to the neck that the
face does to the head, and as there
no distinct boundary line between the
face and head, so there is none between
the throat and neck. Swallowing and
breathing are the two most momentous
functions of life. During health .-wal¬
lowing is performed so quickly ai d easi¬
ly that it seems a very simple process.
You bring a morsel of appropriate food
or a drink under your nose, your jaws
mov# apart, your mouth receives it, a
little muscular action follows, and it
has gone on its way to the stomach.
You would hardly believe that the
act of swallowing is exceedingly com¬
plicated, that its investigation has en¬
gaged the patient research of a large
number of physiologists for more than
one hundred years, and that the mys*
tery of its mechanism has been solved
and tbe process thoroughly understood
only within the last ten or fifteen years.
There are three safeguards, and it can
easily be understood how, when the
epiglottis is inclined backward, food
can pass from the back of the tongue
over it and into the food pipe without
falling into the windpipe. It is often
supposed that by the morsel passes along
the gullet its own weight, but to
correct this error we need only recol¬
lect that in the horse and cow the mouth
is on a level with the ground when
feeding, and that the morsel is conse¬
quently propelled upward into the
stomach against its own gravity. It is
well known, also, and often made a
matter of public exhibition, that a man
can swallow even liquids when stand**
ing on the crown of his head with the
natural position of the stomach re¬
versed.
In natural breathing the mouth is
closed. When we breathe wholly or
partially through the mouth the posi*
tion of the parts involved is entirely
changed. Breathing through the mouth
takes place perfectly during violent,
forced and deep respiration, also dur
ing singing, talking, and and whenever the
mouth is not closed the uvula is
drawn down. If from any cause the
uvula is relaxed while it may touch the
wall of the throat behind or the raised
back of the tongue in front, the passing
current of air may set it to vibrate
sonorously, that is to making the in
harmonic music, “snoring.” In the
jfirst ing the plane sleep the with horizontal the mouth position dur* and
open,
in the second place, very profound
j sleep as, after severe bodily exertion,
mental work or emotional shock, pro
: etuee snoring. All things that interfere
with natural and easy breathing during
sleep, such as clothing tight around the
fbroat or chest, heavy covering and
l a te suppers, especially exciting drink,
wdb well tilled stomachs in corpulent
P er90 ns < predispose to snoring. W ho
, has catar r h or a,1 7 nasal dlsease
ever
must 8n ° re T W T 0 tetl atte the
* [ ne J
cessity for breathing through the mouth
has P as0ed awa 7 hablt kee P s U P> alid
it is on this account that a little iuven
tion of mine for the cure of snoring was
successful. It consisted of a night-cap
f muzde wbicb for f d the patient to
,^ eep t he m outh , shut. The natural
! mo f e of b T thin S is throu S b tbe n08e >
am mou t h - breat mng is only an acquire
* me t0 death f ’ A 1choked Vew*born infant lts would choke
nose ‘
As t0 the dlfteren !' mudlficatl on 3 oi
br?athin • , r S ° far as th e throat 18 C0D *
cer,,e,i ‘ the most of f them , are accom '
'^d by the production of some sort
1 noiw - poking is a suction. The
' moke 13 whaled either through the
ao uth T' tbrou S h tbe nose without en
fenng . the larynx, for at the , very mo
iaent 11 approaches begins, the epiglottis, ex
pi ration ex :ept in the Turkish
! mode c -mofeing, which alone consti
tutes inbrt,ution of,be smoke
, ‘ ,sr of the divis,0, * s » ,P bona *
tl0I “ Human voice and speech con-
8liture lhe distin ^ bili ^ charactens
, t ; C s of humanity. Tneir .ichanism
sembles that of the reed organ. The
' su h;ect of their perfectly production of the
human voice is
owing to the recent invention of
“laryngoscope." The instrument has
revo l Q tionized human knowledge
the throat How does the throat
able us to and sing When
* v -al »oumi 1 * to be pi oiuced the
bands are brought together, the
. expelled4'rom the lungs, strikes
them from below and drives them
ward. Air escapes, and as the
pressure is removed the vocal bands
j wsendidown to and below their
1 vious level, then go up again and
PRICE THREE CENTS.
tinue for a time to oscillate-upward and
downward, .This vibration, occurring
a sufficient number of times in a second
is perceived as sound. The vibratory
movement of the vocal bands set
columns of air dancing up and down,
the sound of these vibrations, mixed
with various noises and changed in
timbre, constitutes the voice.
ITEMS OF INTEREST.
At the present rate of increase of
the Slav race, Russia will have 300,
000,000 of inhabitants in fifty years.
A Presbyterian church at Rockford
has divided its debt into $4 shares and
issued certificates of indebtedness there*
for, presumably bearing interest.
One of the Rev. Jo Cook’s recent as¬
sertions is that “the Italian priesthood”
has hired Gov. Robinson to oppose
public high schools.
The St. Gothard tunnel beneath the
Alps has been bored more than seven
miles and a half, which is about seventy
feet more than the length of the Mont
Cenis. It is expected that the two
gangs of workmen will meet in Janua¬
ry next.
The two thousand San Francisco
Baptiste who are said to have stood up
to record their earnest protest against
the vetoing of the Chinese bill are those
who are under the spiritual guidance
of Brother I. S. Kalloch, of curious
memory.
By the cooperative plan of purchas¬
ing introduced by a New York dealer
a clergyman can obtain $22 worth of
groceries for $11, among the articles
being ten quires of sermon paper, bottle a
minister’s record, a four-ounce of
castor-oil and the same quantity of
Epsom salts.
During a debate in the Maine Leg¬
islature, a few days ago, a lawyer sneer
ingly remarked to a journalist who had
the floor, that it was the function of
the editors “to ferret out rogues and
thieves.” Whereupon the editor mild¬
ly rejoined that it was “the function of
lawyers to defend rogues and thieves.”
Kate Field writes to the New York
Graphic about the Shakespeare Mem¬
orial at Stiatford-on-Avon. The mem¬
orial will cost $100,000 ; $40,000 are
needed to complete the amount, and for
every <$5,000 given by the public, Chas.
Flower, of Stratford gives a similar
amount. Already he has given the land
and $25,000.
A decoration is very dear to the
heart of a Frenchman, and he does not
like to let his honors bloom in secret.
Successful exhibitors at the recent
Paris Exhibition have been exhibiting
their orders of tbe Legion of Honor in
their shop windows, and have been
officially warned to withdraw them,
under pain of expulsion from the Le¬
gion.
It is now reported that Mr. Harfc
ran ft decides to take the Philadelphia
h Postmastership, even though its yield
a g sare nominally only $4,5000 a year,
! fie single feature in the business seems
to be the cool assumption of Mr. Hart
ranlt aQ d all his friends that he must
be provided with something—it was
on bip )y a question the between to the Berlin Postmaster* possible,
s sure, mission
a nomination for Sheriff with an election
uncertain, and so on.
Near Ashland, Oregon, early one
morning recently, a forest of pine trees
was seen bending down as though
bowed b y a terrible £ ale °/ w j nd - At
tlie 8ame tim « n ? fc a ‘ breatb of air was
m motion. During the previous night
a furious storm had passed over the
forest, accompanied steady by rain and snow,'
and the force of the wind had
bent the trees and held them in that
position until the fastened falling snow and the
freezing rain had them in un*
y ieldin & bounds of ice, and so they re
mained until the sun set them free,
The whole story of the Centennial
safe was not 8 iven at once ‘ The ar ‘
tides, to be treasured a century and
opened hy the chief magistrate of the
nation in July, 1976, had to be paid for.
Each senator and representative whose
name is in the album m the safe paid
five dollars for that immortality. In
this way $1,840 came in. But that did
not pay for the whole thing A balance
of $1,500 is still due, and the lady who
(“presented the gift to the nation now
asks Congress to appropriate $1,500 be
|sid ; s ^ s \ ttle the ac c j > “ Dt *.
One|of the most widely . circulated . , , of ,
English provincial newspapers gives
the following marvellous description 0
the doctrines of the Reformed Episcopal
Church: “The doctrines of the new
Church, which claims to be modelled
on the Episcopal Church of Scotland,
> exclude from the Book of Common
Prayer the services for tbe visitation of
the sick, for use at sea, and tae
j mi nation. The other services are much
cut down, and all reference to any di¬
rect intervention of the Holy Spirit is
struck out. The only vestments
lowable are the surplice and
preaching gown, and the express
the movement is to establish
Church in which episcopacy
without prelacy, and
Romanism.”
-
Xj°t£j£ wiu , , r™, ,
Artist.
Business Cards*
VAL. BASLER’S
WINES. LIQUORS, SEGARS 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
Square House, 174 BRYAN ST. Savannah, G*.
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.
feb23-3m
Dr. A. H. BEST,
DBNTI ST
Cor. Congress and Whitaker streets.
SAVANNAH, GA.
T EETH extracted without pain, All work
guaranteed.
I respectfully beg to refer to any of my
patrons. octl-brno
C. A. COBTJ.NO,
Bair Cattine, Bair Mu, Carlin? and
SHAVING SALOON.
HOT AND COLD BATHS.
der ltifi'A Planters’ Bryan street, opposite the Italian, Market, un¬
Hotel. Spanish, Qer
man. a nd English spokon. neiS-tf
RESERVOIR MILLS
Congress and Jefferson streets.
CHOICE GBITS AND MEAL,
Grain, Hay, Feed, Flour, Provisions,
At LOWEST market figures.
E. L. MEECEE.
feb 12-1 m
GEORGE FEY
WINES, LIQUORS, SEGARS, TOBACCO, &c .
The celebrated Joseph Sclilitz’ MILWAU¬
KEE LAGER BEER, a speciality. No. 22
Whitaker Street, Lyons’ Block, Savannah,
Ga. FREE LUNCH every day from 11 to 1.
r-z31-lv
HAIR store:
JOS. E. L0JSEAU & 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.
Fa ncy Costumes, Wigs and Beards for Rent
JOS. H. BAKER,
BUTCHEB,
STALL No. 66, Savannah Market.
Dealer in Beef, Mutton, Pork nd
All other Meats in their Seasons.
Particular attention paid to supplying Ship
and Boarding Houses. augl2
Carriages*
A. K. WILSON’S
CARRIAGE MANUFACTORY *
Corner Bay and West Broad sts.
CARRIAGE REPOSITORY .
Cor. Bay and Montgomery streets.
SAVANNAH, GEORGIA
The largest establishment In the city.
I keep a full line of Carri wes, Rockaways,
_ Bu iggies. Spring and Farm
an d Falling Top Baby Canlages, Wagons, also Canopy full
line a
of Carriage and Wagon Material. I have
engaged chanics. in my factory the most skillful me¬
Any orders for new work, and re¬
pairing, will be executed tc> give satisfaction
aud at short notice. may!2-ly
Leather and Findings
.3L
COMMISSION MERCHANTS
And Dealers in
HIDES, LEATHER AND FINDINGS,
108 BAY STREET,
SAVANNAH, GEORGIA*
—o
H IGHEST Market Price paid for Hides,
Wool. Sheep Skins, Furs, Deer Skins,
Beeswax and Tallow.
A full supply of the best French and Ameri¬
can Liberal lannages constantly kept on hand.
advances made on consignments.
No business transacted on Saturday.
: r hmd : rmeo
() U R book for orders for Passover Bread Is
now open, Our Machinery b •• ■ new and of
the best kind, we wi;i !,< .Lie to aim 1 **> a
tirst-clas.* article. Our price will compare
lavorably with Northern and Western manu
facturers. No charge for drayage.
Please send your orders to
GtmNBsm, mm & ca
Cor. Bay and Barnard star;
feblJ-jw SAVANNAH,