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VOL I.—No. 133.
THE SAVANNAH RECORDER
R. M. ORME, Editor.
PUBLISHED EVERY EVENING,
(Saturday Excepted,)
At 1GI. BAY STREET,
By J. STERN.
The Recorder 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
regular rates will be made.
A ll correspondence should be addressed, Re¬
corder, Savannah, Georgia.
The Sunday Morning Recorder will take
the [ jace ol the Saturday evening edition,
which will make six full issues for the week.
«h“ VVe do not hold ourselves responsible for
the opinions expressed by Correspondents.
A Dark Chapter of History.
The Persecution of the Jews in Spain—Lec¬
ture by Rev. H. P. Mendes.
In the fourteenth century, the Chris¬
tian power was restored in Spain, and
as its influence began to be felt, dark¬
ness settled down, under the pall oi
bigotry and intolerance, on the Jewish
race, and gradually persecutions were
set by dint on foot against them. They had,
of industry and great learning,
risen had to a high and favored position,
and as a people, amassed great
wealth of riches and of intelligence.
But, with the Christian soldier came
the Christain priest, and the conflagra¬
tion against of religious fanaticism was kindled
them, with incentive of avarice.
As a pretext, it was said that the Jew¬
ish physicians were murderin their
patients; that they had o
insulted the
Host, and every falsehood that might
excite ignorance to violence was utter¬
ed against them. Some of the prisons
were crowded, the sword of the execu¬
tioner was drawn, and the Inquisition
opened its terrors. Th * auto-da-fe be
came an affair of daily occurrence, and
hundreds were burned at the stake in
a single day. In Seville, especially, the
barbarities were ot the most revolting
description. In all, there were 31,912
condemned to the punishment of b u rn
ing at the stake, and 17,659 who fled
or concealed themselves were burned
in effigy, while 291,450 were condemn¬
ed to various other but severe punish
me r A p} here s - was no exact form _ of deter
mining the fact that a man was a Jew,
but once be was determined to be a
Jew his fate was sealed. If he worship
ed one God, he was a Jew; if he died
with his face to the wall,he was a Jew;
if he stripped the fat from meat when
dressing it, he was a Jew; if he looked
at the blade of his knife before
slaughtering an ox, he was a Jew. It
was in the inauspicious reign of Ferdi
nand and Isabella, and in th. year
1492, which saw the discovery of this
continent, that that land of bigotry,
Spain, the Jews, expelled her best inhabitants,
should by an edict requiring that
they quit the country in four
mouths or become Catholics. In this
infamous work Ferdinand was aided by
that brutal zealot, his Minister, Tor
leniency quemada, and when at last all hope of
or assnasion had passed, 600,
000 persons arose and left the graves
their fathers, th« synagogues 1 they loved
and the homes they had made and
cherished, and sought refuge in other
lands rather than abandon the faith
their fathers and their belief in
true God. In this exodus they
all reduced to beggary, for they were
iorbidden to carry any gold or jewels
or any precious thing, and instances
were known where a house was barter
yard ed in exchange for au ass, and a vine
lor a litte clothing. Those
escaped wed during that terrible ordeal C'
giers, to Portugal, place to Genoa, to
or to auy that chance
opportunity offered. Thousands died
ot and exposure, hunger, diee.ee, .lupwreck
every iorm of misfortune.
were a lew who so far forgot
selves as to become Christains, in
at least, but it would stand to the
lasting renown of their race that
instances were few, and their
quent. lives and fates were such as
warrant the belief that they
the anger of Israel's God.
There are men wiio would rather
door-keepers in the house of the
—when there is a church festival
ou dwell aud the receipts are large—than wicked,
in the tents of the
there is no opportunity to handle
ca»h.
ihe old statistical . works
thewoLds population at
Larcr n was faxed at
white the most recent authorities
pu e it at ,450,000,000.
Another Remarkable Invention.
A Machine fer Moving Grain as] if it Were
Water.
One of the most remarkable inven¬
tions of the times is now being perfect¬
ed and experimented upon by Alfred
Wilkin, of this city, For several
months Mr. Wilkin has been trying to
study out some more speedy and econo¬
mical method of elevating grain in bulk
than any now in use. The results, as
already shown by his yet imperfect
model, are astonishing, and promise to
work almost a revolution in the grain
carrying trade. The principle made
use if in this curious little machine is
simply the that of atmospheric pressure, or
exhaust process which has lately
been applied with such wonderful suc¬
cess in the great Westinghouse atmos¬
pheric brakes. The model which Mr.
Wilkin has used so far is a small air
pump, rather rudely constructed, yet
answering for all practical purposes at
present. Connected with the pump is
a once-inch tin pipe, syphon shaped,
and at the elbow, or top (some three
feet above the pump) is a cylinder
somewhat -larger than the pipe and
connecting both parts of i J . Inside of
this is a smaller perforated cylinder,
while at the lower end of ’t is a valve
through which the grain drop* out.
The other arm of the syphon is extend¬
ed down into the grain pile.
When the machine was first ready to
be started some wheat was put info a
common vessel, envelope box to represent the
ear or and the grain was suck¬
ed up at a rate that was astonishing.
As some one remarded, at this rate
the complete machine would “draw
the insides out of a vessel in less than
no time.” This was making an eleva¬
tion of about five feet, and some who
viewed the remarkable effects of the
crude air pump reasoned that it would
be possible to raise grain only about
thirty-two feet, or as high as the air
will sustain a column of water. But,
without arguing the case, Mr. WilLIn
quietly had an additional lot of pipe
made, and planting his machine in the
third story of the Custom House, forty
feet from the ground, had the satisfac¬
tion of seeing it fake up the wheat and
corn out of the box placed on the
ground as easily as a whirlwind would
take up the dust from the road. The
next step was to place the air pump in
the fourth story, over fifty feet from
the ground, where the result was simi¬
lar. The only diawback were the me¬
chanical defects in hi* appliances. This
settles the question about raising grain
to great Toledo heights by atmospheric pres¬
sure.— Blade.
A Californian Crusoe.
mi The „ &an „ Jrancisco journals contain
an account what they ca ^ a Cali for
man Crusoc < an Indian woman who had
\ or 18 ? eara > llv « d alone on a dreai 7
d f ert l sland ' and w f finall I r dls cover
ed a nd Liken ofl by the crew of a
. . ^~
VP88e ‘ sparc °‘ ier ’ an y y ears
a S° a sma|l schooner , was sent to the
i sdand cd $ an Nicholas in the Pacific,
80me l0 ^ unles southeast of Santa Bar
bara ’. t 0 h [\ a Z awa J a ” nm t er of In f>
an8 kving there and settle them on the
land ’ Nineteen men, women, and
c ^ ddl en had been got on board, wuen
of . them, a mother, tound that two
h er oft ;P r,n .8 had b ® en left behind
She immediately . jumped , overboard
to the island where she sought
> n ™in tor her children. Having
turnedto the shor9 ’ ® h * 8 aM [ the schoon ’
sailing and tried .
er away, m vain t0
aUrac t atteat I on ’ ihe lsla “ d was ,lot
y^ffed , again for 16 years, lhen George
NMever, an otter-hunter commanding
f s f a11 ve f e1 ’ landed then p aad de
ec ted evldence * of human habitation, ,.
but , c0 ^l d DOt stay * on S enou S b to P™*
sec ut f bl8 quest._ lwo years after, he
8ailed , tbere a S iUn and roamin g over
-
be is ^ and ' oame upon the woman, who
was not at all wild, and made no effort
|° Sbe '' a8 clad ln A garment
fasbl °ned of . the skin of a sea-fowl, and
wblcb occupied had formed m skinning the ^eal-blubber,
hw greater pari oi
Show*, quite good-looking,
se ®med about , oO years old, and spoke
a lan g ua g* nobody could understand.
* *•" r.ach.ug
ba ”. 4 Barbara, while living in the house
ldeTer ’
| ihere ara in Russia ^ obscure
many
j sects whose rites are on a level
j * bose tbe most barbarous savages.
disappearance of sundry children
h* 4 resulted lately in the discovery of
a hold that real blood should
taae tho place of wine at the Lord
Supper, and whose agents abducted
K1 “ ed infant s to supply thsi.
j. "* 7
A *alt well at Le Roy, IS. \ . , ,
j been bored to a depth of 450 jeet,
a rush ot gas was ignited at the
, by contact with a stove, and the
r0 ® e a hundred feet into the air.
volume ot water came uext,
and tasting strongly ot sulphur
superstitious workmen fled in
that the internal regions
ibeeu tapped.
SAVANNAH THURSDAY, MARCH 0, 1879.
BY TELEGRAPH.
A LIBELLER SENTENCED
A War Between China And
Russia Imminent.
LAWLESSNESS IN TENNESSEE
THE.GREENBACK PLATFORM
Charleston, March 5.—John H.
Pendergrast has been convieted of libel
before Jedge Mackey, at Kingstree, and
sentenced two years hard labor in the
penitentiary and to pay five hundred
dollars fine and costs of suit. The libel
consisted in the publication in the
Washington ber, Reioublican , last Novem¬
of a letter charging certain citizens
with voting more than once.
Hong Kong, Feb. 6.—The anti
Russian spirit is increasing in govern¬
ment circles. If difficulties are placed
in the way of Chung, the present Min¬
ister at St. Petersburg, it is expected
that immediate war will be declared.
At Pekin confident reports come from
the interior that the army under Tso
outnumbers the Russians tenfold.
Nashville, March 5.—The Ameri¬
can will publish to-morrow the follow¬
ing information from Coffee county in
this State : “On Saturday night, about
10 o’clock, a party of six or eight mask¬
ed men called at the cabin of an old
negro named Abe Wooten, living in the
Ninth district, eight miles from Man¬
chester, and demanded admittance,
which being refused they set fire to his
house in two or more places. Finding
that h« and his family, wife and four
children, would be burned if they re
rnai.ied, the old man rushed out, was
seized by the maskers, who carried him
one hundred yards or so, and shot him
to death.”
Chicago, March 5.—The Greenback
Gub Convention to-day elected R. E.
Hoyt, of Michigan, President. A plat¬
form was adopted affirming the here¬
tofore expressed creed of the Greenback
party, and declaring that postmasters
should be elected ; Inat the govern¬
ment should prohibit the importation
of Chinese servile labor ; that a la¬
bor bureau be established advocating
the psssage of a law disfranchising
any person who offers to purchase or
does purchase votes, and calling for
other innovations in the government.
The resolutions strongly favor labor re
forms of various kinds.
Troy, N.Y., March 5.—Mr Murphy,
Democrat, was re-elected Mayor by
over 1,600 majority over the Republi
can Greenback candidate, and 2,054
plurality over the Republican.
Cincinnati, March nr i o—Bishop - T v , Ed— -rp i
j t> i !
ward , Purcell i to-day i made au assign- •
t u J °
mentto * * John n B. Manmx. - mi The property
thus ,i assigned • i-ii includes the ., v>. Bishops \ •
residence, • i °.i the • at , tbe ,, 1 I
seminaries corner
of f mu• Ihird j and j -oi Plum streets, , . and i on ... War*
saw like, T 3 i seventy-six , ot
acres
lots and a number of smaller pieces of
property in various parts of the city.
There has been another shi leu" I
^ | gt ^ J Petersburg An order h oi
ig e to tnuisnoi l to Siberia I
twenty-three ' student- who had at
t t d to hand a rem0 nstrance to the
Czarewitch and who had not been tried
^ committee was sent with a petition
■ h i of the
tQ t e pa ace heir-presumptive number
tQ the c rown w hile a e re at of
other students were wailing for the re
! su i tdlt p e ^ioinins streets The r.o
! j lice endeavoring ” to' irre.-t the deputa
t - • ■ bv awhile
umphantly } fescued by their fellow
studenta _ g 00n ’ however Ltrol’ thev were
I met bv a, larger DO i; ‘ ce
mflde * r,
U8P of j ts w 0 ns • am ] then a
struggle 7f ensued the' in which the crowd 0
s ; de wl qh students Cries were
heard, such as: “Down with the honnds :
of despotism!” “Down with the hum
men The licQ bginc The , dnven AWd y
(be peop ] e ae j-ed that petition to!
(he Czarewitch «honld be read .lnnd !
| theleader of the d.putatTou "took
Qzarowski C j ’ f a medical ' heiran student ’re his
Coi.cka j fud to Jndarme" i I the
t { ien appeared in strong force ' and ar
rested 300 persons.
—..... m ,
Never Speak in a Hurry.— The
Hospitable old Jones : “Yes, we’re in the
game place where you dined with
os last vear. By the by, old man, I
you and your wife would come
an j take pot-luck with us again on
’
tbe ”
q' be Impulsive Brown in the eager
ness of his determination never again
to take pot-luck with the Joneses)
dear fellow! So sorry! But
we’re engaged ou the—a—on the—er—
on th-th-that evening!”
Poor Jones i pathetically) : “Well,
0 fq man, you might have given me
time just to name the day .’’—Punch
'
--
A negro woman ot South Carolina,
gave birth to two children, one
and the other white.
Life iii Washiugton—Northern
and Southern Manners.
Since the South and her peculiar in
stitufons ceased to impress Washington
politically change and socially, there has been
a in both elements: but he is a
bold man who shall venture to declare
that the change has been for the better.
Politically the standard has been so
lowered that, but for the return of
Southern men to Congress, there would
have been u complete reign of corrupt
tion as there was an attempt to make
a monstrous reign of terror. Mr. Lamar
has demonstrated too that, with the
possibly sole exception of himsell,every
Senator with has his pocket boob stuffed
tree passes, and that mt'l: uiies
and corporations of all kinds and
character furnish the statesmen of the
Republic with a thousand and one priv¬
ileges, which are not bestowed for noth¬
ing. In the House as well as Senate,
many of the members are little better
than the feed attorneys of railroad , id
other institutions, and it is a note’ ■ "IS
fact that many Northern men, \
started on $5,000 per annum,have Cun
trived during a comparatively few
years of public service to become enor¬
mously or comfortably rich. And then
too, what a scandal has the lobby be¬
come, with its male sharks and female
anonyma! So much for the political
part of the subject. It is but a glimpse,
but it will do.
We will, however, let the “lookers
on in Vienna” attest the truth. We
have seen, within a few days past, a Sen¬
ator's description to a friend of the
sueue in the supper room at the Eng¬
lish Minister’s reception, and it is not
calculated to make one proud of the
“human critter,” at least not of cer¬
tain cheeky cattle who manage to work
their way into decent society. The
tables were loaded with every edible
luxury, and wine flowed in abundance.
Hut, so fierce were many of the guests
to be helped, that for instance, when
the cork of a champagne bottle would
be drawn, a dozen arms would be ex¬
tended over heads and under elbows,
with glasses m hand to catch the con¬
tents; dozen ol plates of soup and cups
of coffee were spilled on coats and
dresses, and quantities of chicken salad
and ice cream were landed on the car¬
pet and trodden under foot.
That was bad enough, in all con
cience, but here is the companion
picture. This time the scene is laid at
the Mexican Minister s, Senor Zama
cona. Look at this :
W hat. will he thought of a man who
so far forgot decency as to scoop up ice
cream from a pyramid with his hand ;
ot a female who wts bearing in triumph
fln oniamyIi t of iridescent glass from
the dining room, when it was politely
taken out ol her hand by a gentleman
and restored to its position on the sup
per table; , im or one who, i passing • a i bottle
7 champagne to , gentleman; 8 told , ,,,- him
oi J a ° ’
to . put . it under i i his • coat » and , take , it up
1 ^
, and . wait •. removal , to , their
st.uis, rooms
at the . note! . . , of f who , stood , ,
; or a man
witn .• one , bottle of c wine • , between , , his •
while he emptied another from
the mouth of a bottle; or of men who
gathered up Victoria Reina cigars by
the handful and carried them off ? For
! for shame ! The minister might
well have imagined that the border
ruffians from the Rio Grande had
found tbeir wa v and were holding high
-
revel ln hls dutiful dining rooms,
Scones like these made the people, in
G ,ite oi their love for “old customs,”
hono1 ' ^ rs - Hayes for the stand she has
taken 011 the wine question, and long
lor the 'Owning of a new era, when
wine Wll! be banisbed from all large
gatherings of last promiscuous character,
For the seventeen or eighteen
yours this has been tne type of Wash
ni S ton “society’ Tne old South pre-
8ei ved lba Planners and the morals of
Washington politically and socially,
Tl»»t old Soniii was not perfect. It had
some serious blemishes; hut it was as
H ^P erion to the modern Satyr, The
neW Soulh returnB F oor aud shorn. It
may stay the tide of venality and de¬
baucbe ry, but, we fear, the chances ul
»»vei.,’. timately are that the whirlpool dole, will
all save a tea- noli > like
Bayard and Lamar, and then—the de
^ U S P -— Augusta Sentinel.
----—---
The Instinct of Migration —If
the young of our migratory birds are
taken from the nest, and reared by
hand they become perfectly do contented
in confinement, and not pine for a
freedom which they have never
They make no effort to escape from the
cage, and seem to enjoy in lull measure
the happiness of mere animal life, with
i all its wants supplied. But as the
^ea-on for the migration of each species
approaches, manifested by a the strange caged restlessness bird, is
which
was before so contented, although the
-ge is well supplied with its favorite
rood, and it is kept in a warm room,
Ihis restlessness incresses, until the
bird spends several successive nights
beating against the wires of its cage in
a vain endeavor to get away. After its
relatives have all sought their Southern
^return, homes, its quiet and content gradually
ITEMS OF INTEREST.
There is yellow fever in ITayti. The
diatance between that Island and
isiana is but short. Contagion is liable
to be brought over at any moment.
An Indian has just died on one of
the reservations at the advanced age
of—well he couldn’t just say how old
he was, but remembered distinctly
when Ole Bull began his farewell tour.
Mr. Edison is quoted by a corres¬
pondent of the Indianapolis Journal as
saying that the electric light “is just as
certain as sunrise.” “They must give
me time for it,’’ he added, “and if they
don’t, I shall take'time. I have never
said I could have it done in a week."
Within the last two years two men
have been killed by the explosion of
whisky barrels. In both instances the
bairels were empty. These fatal cas¬
ualties teach the importance of always
keeping your barrels at least half full
of whisky.
There is no necessity for any legisla¬
tion on the monumental question. Mr.
Stephens secured the free importation
of the marbles, not only for the monu¬
ment in Augusta but for all monumen¬
tal purposes throughout the land—
North as well as South. No special
acts, therefore, are necessary in special
cases.
The Viceroy of Canada seems to rea¬
lize that his functions are social rather
than political, and is doing his utmost
to make people like him, and the
Princess is helping him not a little.
Lord Lome is seeking personal acquain¬
tance with the members of the Parlia¬
and is inviting them to call at
his official residence.
The indications are that the question
the partition of Texas will Boon as¬
prominence and intrude itself into
politics. The State ia already rent
spirit by the internal schemes and
of sections, and an army of
politicians, the eager for place, are
to make agitation lively and
Professor Swift, the Rochester astron¬
has a young son who has already
a remarkable interest in the
of his father’s study, and
promises to develop devotion than to the
not less intense that of his
parent. The little boy, when four
old, one night saw the full moon
and gazed at it with curiosity. A few
days after, when it was quartered, he
looked body’s at it again,and observed: “Some¬
been up and cut off part of pa’s
moon.”
“See h’yar!’’ demanded Deacon
Hastings, as he fished a tin suspender
button out of the contribution box;
“who’s been dessycratin’ de house ob
de Lamb dis way ? Hit am my solem’
dat de brudder who ’tempts
to cheat the Almighty out ob dis fer
rage ober de Jordan, to de sween green
beyant, he’l crawl in under the
arter he gits dar, insted ob goin’
past de ticket wagon and obtainin’ his
credenshuls along wid de oder bredrin.”
The story of Rich, th* h*rlequin,
who was recommended by a physician
who did not know him off the stage to
go see himself, has just been paralleled
in London. A sufferer from depression
of spirits consequent on chills on the
top of intermittent fever, called on a
fashionable West End doctor for advice.
“Try change of air,” was the prescrip¬
tion. The sufferer was a special cor¬
respondent, who had just completed
professional journeys extending over
*eventeen thousand miles within eight
mouths.
A Boston youth committed suicide
because, a* he thought, he would sooner
or later become insane. He fancied
that already his mind was losing its
balance, but the only evidence of it was
his foreboding*. He wrote a letter be¬
fore swallowing laudanum, in which he
defended his act, and said : “I expect
to go down to blackness and oblivion
Maker, but, if so be that I shall confront my j
I can but plead in my defence
that I am as I was created— a poor un
c >r«ep*u«kU .,. , being, .
In Glasgow, Sunday morning break
Ev.ugeliitic lasts for poor persons are furnished at
Hall, i„ .lame. Morri.nu
street. On recent Sundays, as many
as 2,600 hungry persons hare been
present. At 7 o’clock the eating begins
The menu is simple, consisting chiefly
of hot tea and large sandwiches. The
tea is furnished in mugs, the sand
wiches in clean white paper. One
hundred and twenty pleasant young
women wait on the guests. A choir of
thirty or forty young ladies furnishes
sacred singing while the eating goes
on. When the breakfast is over,
short Gospel service is held. Attendance
on this is not compulsory, though many
a poor fellow whose empty stomach
has just been filled with gratuitous
breakfast feels that it would be hardly
the fair thing to turn his back on the
meeting. A missionary waitsonpeo
pie who leave word that they would
like to have a call from him at their
homes or lodgings The breakfasts
have been regularly served since
PRICE THREE CENTS.
I " OST—A TRUNK, containing Artist’s
J Tools, Paints and Pictures, The Under
will be suitably rewarded. Address,
Prof. J. EDWIN CHURCHILL, Artist.
Business Cards*
VAL. BASLE It’S
WINES. LIQUORS, SEQARS and TOBACCO
The best Lager Beer in tlio 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,
WIN EH, LIQUORS AND SEGARft.
Milwaukee and Cincinnati Lager Boer on
draught. Free Lunch. Fresh Oysters always
on hand. 21 Jefferson st., corner Con tigress
street lane. mohlO-ly
JAMES RAY,
■Manufacturer and Bottler—
Mineral Waters, Soda, Porter and Ale,
15 Houston St., Savannah, Ga.
feb23-8m
Dr. A. H. BEST,
3D IE3 3ST T I ST
Cor. Congress and Whitaker streets.
SAVANNAH, GA.
T EETH guaranteed. extracted without pain, All work
I respectfully beg to refer to any of my
patrons. octl-bnio
c. A. CORTINO,
Hair Cattiur, Hair Ms;, Cnilia? and
SHAVING SALOON.
HOT AND COLD BATHS.
der 166J4 Planters’ Bryan street, Hotel. opposite Spanish, the Itaivin, Market, (Mtt- wi¬
man. and English spokon. Hw-tS
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, SEGARS, TOBACCO, Ac .
The celebrated Joseph Schlitz’ MILWAU¬
KEE LAGER BEER, a speciality. No. 22
Whitaker Street, Lyons’ Block, Savannah,
Ga. FREE LUNCH every day from 11 to 1.
r-z!il-]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 Good*
worked in the latest style.
Fancy Costumes, Wigs and Beards for Rent
JOS. H. BAKER,
Butcher,
STALL No. 00, Savannah Market.
Dealer in Heof, Mutton, Pork nd
All other Meats in tbeir Seasons.
Particular attention paid to supplying Klii»
and Boarding Houses. augl2
Carriages*
A. K. WILSON’S
CARRIAGE MANUFACTORY I
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 lino of Carriages, Rockawaya.
Buggies, Falling Spring and Farm Wagons, Canopy
and Top Baby Carilages, also a full
line of Carriage and Wagon Material. I have
chanlcs. engaged in my factory tiie n»ost skillful ine¬
pairing, Any orders for new work, and rt
will be executed to give satis facMhu
and at short notice. mayI2-ly
Leather and Findings.
COMMISSION MERCHANTS
And Dealers in
HIU L0| 1 L CATIJCD tA I H LM A 4 U Ii n L) ClUniUPP IN LI I N
I uO|
108 BAY STREET,
SAVANNAH, GEORGIA.
W Market Price paid for Hides.
ool. Sheep Skins, Furs, Deer Skins
rseeswux and Tallow.
A full supply of the best French and Ameri¬
can Liberal tannages constantly kept on hand.
advances made on consignments
No business transacted on Saturday.
■
A UR book for orders for Passover Bread is
open Our Machinery being new and of
j the best kind, we will be able to furnish a
first-ciass article. Our juice will compare
favorably with Northern ami Western manu
facturers. No charge for drayago.
Please send your orders to
cccm'B mm i n
Cor. Bay and Barnard sta?
feb!2-5w SAVANNAH, C*A