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I> A. I L Y EviiiNiisrQ
Savannah [cljngy/ f,il [nTjcl 3 Recorder.
VOL I.—No. 144.
THF. SAVANNAH RECORDER,
R. M. ORME, Editor.
PUBLISHED EVERY EVENING,
(Saturday Excepted,)
ufiKt 3 ex BAY STREET.
Jiy J. STERN.
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every part oi the city by careful carriers.
Communications must be accompanied by
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Remittance by Check or Post Ofttce orders
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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.
AIL correspondence should be addressed, Re¬
corder, Savannah, Georgia.
The Sunday Morning Recorder will take
the |,jace oi the Saturday evening edition,
which vvil i make six full issues for the v/eek.
4 f®“\ye do not hold ourselves responsible for
the opinions expressed by Correspondents.
Whipping in the Public Schools.
For a half century or more the courts
and law books have been saying in a
routine way that a school teacher has
the right by law to inflict moderate
chastisement upon disobedient or disor¬
derly pupils. Some of them have also
said, however, that a husband may
chastise his unruly wife if the rod is
not thicker than his little finger, and
this doctrine has been so much weak¬
ened by age that one might well doubt
the other if it rests on only the same
authorities. Moreover, the alleged
foundation of the teacher’s right was
that he held by delegation the authori
i,y of the parent. That is fully true of
private schools, but how far does it
apply under the modern public school
system? Considerations like these have
rendered the rule very uncertain.
II enceQt is good news that an Iowa
girl has elicited from the Supreme
Court of that State a revised a >d cor¬
rected statement of the law of whipping
in the schools.
The case marked arose in a public peculiarity, school,
and was by this
that the young lady in question was a
month or so .past the age of twenty-one.
She was, however, not of firm health,
and her father wrote a request to the
teacher" that she should be excused
from afternoon schools, and also from
the sidered study of algebra, because he con
* her health required this remis¬
sion of study. Pupil brought this
letter, but teacher declined to grant the
request, and required her to join the
algebra class. She did so, but the de¬
gree of her attention was not satisfac¬
tory to him, and when recitation was
over he called her to account. She
^•Urged the excuse she had brought from
her father. He said, “None ol your
sass, or I will take the hickory to you,”
and thereupon he reached for his whip,
described as about four feet long and
about half an inch in diameter at the
largest end, and whipped the young
lady severely. She testified to a dozen
blows which produced marks that lasted
two months. And she bore witness
that'ehe did not know for what offense
she was punished.
The teacher was criminally pr®ecut
ed for assault and battery. The case
was twice tried, and has been twice de
cided in the Supreme Court. No dis
cussion is bestowed on the question
whether a authority public school teacher corporal has
not some to use
punishment; that he has was taken for
granted. A poiut was made that such
authority could not apply to pupils
more than twenty-one years old. But
the Court held that entering one’s self
as a pupil, and attending and claiming
the advantages of the school, was a
submission to its rules and discipline,
and a consent to be treated like
younger pupils. Hence, the only
question was as to the degree of the
punishment. Upon this question the
Court has decided squarely against the
teacher for two reasons’ One was that
the whipping was excessively severe,
A toacher has only the right, in any
case to inflict a moderate puuishment.
When this is done, the question whether
it was necessai v under the circumstan
’’i : s confided to the teacher’s
^ no misconduct or
n -a
*
1 . t l„
1 Anv TDinishment with a rod which
" iieAvarf welts isQonoLeed the
l in or on person
' P cl by
the t immoderate and excessive.
rri.a 1 he ,-vthAr other reason teason Riven mveil IS that the
pupil was not appliedl of the ff , .
Whether she was
from afternoon bchool, for
to algebra, or tot sa^s. au
declare that the legal ob J ect
mente in schools are three
of the pupil, ;i enfouement ot n f dwioline uim p
and example to others In no case can
given^rr^tlXthtThe
ment is for that offense. Punishment
inflicted when the reason for it is un¬
known is subversive, not promotive, of
its objects. The pupil need not be in¬
formed in any set terms, but the teacher
must see to it that the reason for the
infliction is really understood.
In respect to the father's excuse, the
court held that a pupil cannot be chas¬
tised for absence or for declining a
study, if the father has authorized it.
Except where “compulsory education”
has been established by Jaw, a father
has the right to limit his child’s attend¬
ance and studies so far that the child’s
obeying the father cannot be punished
as disobedience to the teacher. The
only remedy available to the teacher is
to send word back that if the pupil
cannot attend the sessions and take the
lessons of the school, he or she must
stay away altogether. well Upon this point
the decision is sustained by a
Missouri case. A lad attending public
school was told by his father “not to
study by geography,” and was whipped
the teacher for not studying it. The
court held that the authority of the
father in limiting the studies which his
child shall undertake is paramount.
While he cannot require that the child
shall be taught “extras,” he can say
that the child shall omit such and such
studies which he deems unsuitable or
too severe. And if the school authori¬
ties find it inconvenient to have a pupil
in attendance who is thus excused from
part of the course, they may expel
him. But they cannot punish him.
The Federal Election Laws.
It is urged as a reason for not repeal¬
ing the monstrous election laws that
they are necessary to secure a free bal¬
lot in the South, to prevent the coercion
of negroes and white Republicans. The
Attorney Geneial of the United States
has sent to Congress this exhibition of
the number and expense of supervisors
and deputy marshals in 1876.
There were 4,863 supervisors, at a
cost of $106,419, and 11,610 deputy
marshals at a cost of $121,612. Total
$275,296. cost, including certain fees, in 1876,
This money was expended
in the following States ;
New York.................................. .....1166,020
Pennsylvania............................ California.................................. ..... 33,590
Illinois....................................... ..... 10,208
New Jersey................................ ..... 11,876 6,745
.....
Massachusetts........................... ..... 2,083
Expense in Northern States. .8230,522
It will be seen that out of $275,000
spent in 1876 all but $45,000 was spent
in the North. In 1878 there were 1,599
supervisors and 4,467 deputy marshals.
Cost of supervisors, $101,621; of deputy
marshals, $65,202. Total cost in 1878,
adding fees, $202,291, and the distri¬
bution among the States was much the
same as in 1878. But this is not all,
for the Attorney Generalhas this year
asked Congress to appropriate $250,000
to supply a deficiency of funds for this
service of supervisors and deputy mar¬
shals.
Besides the cost of administering
these useless laws, which is entirely
unnecessary, the point is made that out
of $275,000 spent in 1876 on account
of these laws only $45,000 were paid
to supervisors and marshals in the
South. This exposes and makes ridicu¬
lous the pretence that these laws are
necessary to insure a free ballot in the
South-— Iroy Press.
Titles and Democracy.
As lar as can be gleaned from unpre
judiced sources, accounts seem to show
that the social relationship the happiest in France char
is not at present of
acter. Great walls divide classes. A
man with a handle to his name, a pat
ent of nobility coming a thousand
or more ago from Clovis, or obtained
but yesterday from Louis Napoleon,
will not yield that distinction which
European custom has given him. The
Jean- Teterol idea of the difference be
tween the Baron and the gardener mil
lionaire, that the former kicks and the
latter can be kicked, still holds its sway,
If the French Republic confines, then,
as has often been asked ot late, “What
is to become of these titles?" It would
be absurd to erase them as one wipes
off marks on a slate with a sponge, for
many of these names have certainly a
durability which cannotbeeffaced.be
cause they are intangible. Perhaps
when the Republic is older it may
pen that a law will be fulminated abro
gating in the future titles for
born of noble parents. It is practically
absurd to have Princes, Dukes,
I Marquises, and Barons brings in a
mainly because it into antago
j nisrn certain classes, and because,
.f .U. the first truth Wad,, .n
f •*“» “ U —
OOrn, at. least, equal.
----
° established
lom t io relations with all the Lau
nations of the earth. Chin
the Chinese embassador to the
States, is making preparations to
ceed to Spain for the purpose * Madrid. ot
dv • Jb legation at
S glt 3'eru j f?r ation ^ at Madrid
purpose of
»t lama.
SAVANNAH WEDNESDAY, MARCH 19, 1879.
BY
THE LOUISIANA ELECTION.
DARING ESCAPE OF PRIS¬
ONERS.
REMOVAL OF NEW YORK PO¬
LICE COMMISSIONERS.
Wilmington, Del., March- 18.—A
special from Dover this afternoon says :
“Last night three prisoners, Judah
Kent, colored, Hiram Griffin, white,
and Thomas Cox knocked down Prison
Keeper Walter Pratt, leaving him in¬
sensible, took his keys, and Kent and
Griffin escaped. Cox remained behind
to prevent Pratt from giving a speedy
alarm. He was discovered by the
Sheriff’s wife, but knocked her down
and followed his companions.”
New York, March 18. —The Police
Commissioners will meet in secret ses¬
sion to-day. They will probably confer
in regard to their course of action to¬
morrow, when they will have to answer
before the Mayor as to why they should
not be removed from office.
New Iberia, La., March 18.—But
little interest was taken in the election
to-day, which polled passed off quietly. The
Republicans a heavy vote, and
so far as heard from have elected Judge
Fortalion by a large majority, and
gave Judge Simon, the Independent
Senatorial delegate, a majority of about
eight hundred.
New Orleans, Mi$rch 18.—The
Southern Bank has suspended. De¬
preciation in securities, especially in
the consolidated city bonds, is assigned
as the cause. Thomas Layton, the
President, expresses a belief that the
depositors will eventually be paid in
full.
St. Louis, Maroh 18. —Senor Zama
cona was on ’Change this afternoon,and
in reply to an address of welcome by
the President made a brief speech, sta¬
ting in effect that Mexico desired to
establish more intimate commercial re¬
lations with the United States.
Washington, March 18.—At the
Cabinet meeting this afternoon, it was
decided that a United States man-of
war should be dispatched to Sitka as
early as possible. The Alaska, 12
guns, now at San Francisco, has been
selected. Orders were sent to her
yesterday afternoon to take aboard
stores. Her commander will be in¬
structed not only to affoid immediate
protection to the white residents at
Sitka, but also to investigate the con¬
dition of affairs in Alaska, and report
what is necessary to secure a perma¬
nent peace.
Reproduction By The Brain.
That which has existed with any
completeness in consciousness leaves
behind it, after its disappearance there¬
from, in the mind or brain, a func¬
tional disposition to consciousness its reproduction or
reappearance in at some
future time. Of no mental act can we
say that it is “ writ in water.” Some¬
thing remains from it whereby its re¬
currence is facilitated. Every impres¬
sion of sense upon the brain, every
current of molecular activity from one
to another payt of the brain, every
cerebral reaction which passes into
movement, leaves behind it some
fication of the nerve elements concern
ed in its function, some after-effect, or,
so to speak, memory of itself in them,
which renders its reproduction an
easier matter, the more easy the
often it has been repeated, and make it
impossible to say that, however trivial,
it shall not in some circumstances re
C ur. Let the excitation take place side by in
: one ox two nerve cells lying
side, and between which there was not
any original specific difference,
will be ever afterward a difference be
tween them. This physiological pro- the
cess, whatever be its nature, is
physical basis of memory, and it is the
j foundation of the development of
meutal functions.— Mandslc?/.
----- m • •----------
I A Texas camel breeder, speaking of
the rearing ot the “ships of the
serts,” says : “They are no more trou
j bie to raise than horses or cattle.
j colts for the first three or*our days are
j rather tender and require rather close
tention, after that they take their chances
with the herd. They feed on cactm
j and cattle brush, and eschewing horses all if the grasses favorite that
eat
j cactus can be ^Vi . had. The LY-JeS' female, with The
me price Hi luev diecUiu, UK
ease with which they are raised, their
! extreme docility, and the adaptability
j of to indicate climate to that their camel nature, raising would is seem
a F
fitable business in Texas. Mr. Lanfear
says there is one camel in the herd that
1 has traveled one at.ndied and >..t}
miles between sun and sun, and
1 almost J* any Ln well broken camel is ?a
‘day. lor oa, huadred mil*
A Garment of Glass.
A San Franciscan Manufacturing a Dress of
Woven Glass, Soft and Pliable.
[From the San Francisco Chronicle.]
In the large basement room of the
residence of S. Isaacs, at No. 1,434
Mansion street, between Tenth and
Eleventh, is now being woven the most
wonderful fabric of which the volumin¬
furnishes ous history of unique feminine apparel
any account. It is of matersal.
as flexible as the finest of silk. It is
being woven by the world renowned
artist in glass work, Prof. Theodore
Greiner, out of innumerable colored
strands of glass first spun by himself.
Compared with the completed garment,
the mythical glass slipper of the fabu¬
lous Cinderalia will sink into vulgar
insignificance.
A Chronicle reporter called upon him
recently and he very courteously show¬
ed him the entire process. Breaking
an extra piece out of the solid bottom
of an already broken tumbler he sub¬
mitted it to the heat of a blow 7 ifipe
until it became incandescent and ft.
Then with a “stick” of glass he tou ca -
ed the molten portion, and with an
expert motion that may be described as
a/flip, it he carried a thread so fine that
was almost invisible till it caught on
the disc of a slowly revolving, wide
wooden wheel of nineteen feet in cir¬
cumference. At a certain number of
revolutions the strand was complete
and the w r heel was stopped and it re¬
moved. It then consisted of innumer¬
able softly gliltening threads, finer
than the finest of floss silk. These
strands are spun of all colors and are
then washed in a solution of water and
beet-root sugar, which toughens them.
The spinning is ail done, and occupied
many weeks. The weaving is being
done on an old-fashioned hand-loom,
the warp being nineteen feet long, and
the woof four feet, so that the material
will cut to splendid advantage.
Only about ten inches a day can be
woven, and the whole piece will not be
completed until some time in April. It
is of that now extremely and fashiona¬
ble loose and careless admixture of
colors known as the Oriental. When
the dress is made it is to be worn by a
young wax lady with a glass head,
blow 7 n expressly for the occasion by
the professor, and profusely ornament¬
ed with blonde glass curls.* The dress
is to be made with panier skirt, loop
sleeves and square neck. It is to be
beautified with box pleating, and
bound in blue. When the dress and
the wearer are fully constructed they
will be put on exhibition in this city.
At the coronation of Queen Victoria
she wore a dress the woof of which w 7 as
of spun glass, but the w'arp of silk.
This was then thought to be the great¬
est triumph which could ever be ac¬
complished in the glass business. In
18(33, at Cincinnati, Prof. Grenier spun
and wove a dress entirely of glass, for
which he was offered $2,500, butw 7 hich
offer he declined. lie w r as soon pretty
sorry foi doing so, for while he was
taking the fractional currency at the
entrance door the visitors were cutting
small selections out of his curiosity as
souvenirs of the occasion, until there
was actually nothing left to exhibit
but holes.
A New Theory Regarding Mum¬
mies.
Haling obseived that Egyptian mum
naies could be divided into two classes,
^ ne embracing those bodies which had
e n em balmed i n t ac L a pd the other
uiciuduig , bodies which had been
\ tnose
i eviscerated, Dr. Gauselback, a Swedish
, chemist , oi repute and 1 rofessor ol the
■
j Ln.vei.-u/ of Lp&al, has iorroed the
irnon the mummies of the first
Ga.-s, are not really dead, but are only
i a condit; not su-pended animation,
1 10U 6 n , uuiortunately for historians,
f ecre ^. 01 bringing them again to
; l! te “ a8 been lost. In support of this
, adduces the result of his
tne0! y no own
ie ° ealL ’k es and experiments, one ot
Q' 111011 consist.- in submitting a .-nuke to
a F roce ® s > Eie uetans of which are, of
coui^e, kept secret, winch petrifies it.
j u condition it has been laid aside
1 ' a }’ ear °f tw0 at a time > ana it 18
j then restored to life oy some equally
j jm\steiious been going \ i\ ilying about process. fifteen liii? has
now on years,
and the snake does not teem o dislike
it. Dr. Gauselback is said to have ap
pbed to the Swedish government for
leave to experiment on a condemned
j criminal, the understanding being
if the experiment is successful the
j criminal shall receive rendered pardon, because
oi the service thus to science
and possibly to humanity .—Journal oj
, Cic^ y.
■:I ____ _
i I* * W:, His bumbling hymns doth ■«
radiani sing; 8
i a lh , Spring with joyfulness
Tie skeeter spreads his wing ;
] ^
^Vnuio 1 the^n^ P '
'
Jn tLc
, Crawl the busy little ants;
j **
j E'en while the editor promptly shoves
The darned thing m the fire ;
In the Spring opoa the back-yard fence
‘
An Exhibition of Canine Sftvneit.vJ
[From the Stamford Advocate, 14tli.]
On Friday last two bird dogs were
seen playing together on the ice, whictq
then partially covered the mill pond,
and as on the line of the river channel
there was an opening, one dog, going
too near in his gamboling, fell into the
water, and, swimming to the edge of
the ice, was unable to get out. The
other dog showed great uneasiness and
mental distress, and raced around,
whining, He as if perplexed as to what to
do. soon cautiously approached
the spot where his companion had fallen
in, and securely bracing his fore paws
in the ice as close to the edge as he
could get, reached over and caught
him by the back of the neck and pulled
him long up as far .as possible, and holding exhaust¬ him
as as he could, then,
ed, back he would be obliged to drop him
into the water. Taking a run
around on the ice, crying distressedly,
he would repeat the operation, and did
repeat it eight or ten times, but with¬
out success, as the dog in the water
could not help himself much—the cur¬
rent constantly drawing his body under
the ice, and there being nothing to hold
on to on the surface. Witnessing the
dog’s efforts to save his companion from
drowning were at least admiring a dozen this men,
all wondering at and un¬
usual display of canine kindness and
sagacity, and finally, when the poor
animal was exhausted in his efforts to
save his drowning friend, some of the
spectators got planks and pushed assist¬ them
out sufficiently near to venture
ance. When the dog was pulled out
and saved, the joy of his companion
was unbounded. The gentlemen who
were eye-witnesses of the whole pro¬
ceeding say that in all their lives they
never saw any canine sagacity to com¬
pare with that displayed on this occa¬
sion, nor did one or them ever give a
dog credit for knowing half as much
as was here manifested.
ITEMg OF INTEREST.
Only two men of the Seventeenth
English Lancers remain of those who
survived the memorable Balaklava
charge in the Crimea.
Horse-car conductors in New York
hereafter permitting washerwomen to
carry soiled clothing in the cars will be
puuished under the law.
The Louisiana darkies are kicking
out of the party traces. They control¬
led the Republican Convention at Iber¬
ville recently, which met to nomiuate
delegates to the Constitutional Conven¬
tion, and put up the 3traightest kind
of a Democrat, in preference to an old
party leader.
The Supreme Court of the District
of Columbia has decided that a girl is
not of legal age until she becomes
twenty-one. Heretofore, though the
question was not gone into so thor¬
oughly as in the case just decided, it
was held that a girl became of age, and
was her own boss, when she arrived at
eighteen.
A gentleman recently about to pay
his doctor’s bill said: “Well, doctor, as
my little boy gave the measles to all
my neighbors’ children, and as they
were attended by you, I think you can
afford, at the very least, to deduct ten
per centum from the amount of my bill
for the increase of business we gave
you.”
A Capuchin monk, as one sees him
walking about Rome, is an interesting
and picturesque object. Few human
scenes are likely to impress a stranger
more deeply, especially if the monk be
met in the famous cemetery of that
order. Some of these men have a his¬
tory which strangers wot not of. Fa
ther Pavest, Provincial of the robbed Capu¬
chins in Rome, who was lately
of a large sum of money, has a story
which is extremely pathetic. As told
in the Globe, of Loudon, it is that he
was an accomplished and under handsome Gregory of¬
ficer in the Papal army
XVI, and won the affections of a young
Roman beauty of good family and con¬
siderable wealth. The young girl’s pa¬
rents permitted the intimacy to but ripen
into a passionate attachment, at
last formed other plans for their with daugh¬
ter, and directed her to break her
valiant lover, and at the same time told ,
him they intended her for a more dis
tinguished alliance. The lovers were
astonished and pleaded in vain.
I riends mterleied, but the parents
would not relent. A total separation
took place, and for several months they
fents 1 foTbv fo thU’honef the' k h“
h went and was
ehown , ^to ■ , a darkened j , j chamber i , where ,
on a couch lay the young girl in the last
stage last of/atal farewell, Iness and on The the lover* following took
day the invalid passed away to her last
j siee geeat P; magnificence, Her f „ uneral * the aa obser *veai ™J
fashion of Rome being present. A few
weeks later Pavesi entered the Capa
chin couveut, forsak.ng the army,where
a brilliant career was before Lia.
PRICE THREE CENTS.
L OST—A Tools, Paints TRUNK, and containing Pictures. The Artist’s tinder
will be Prof. suitably J. rewarded. Address,
EDWIN CHURCHILL, Artist.
FOR SALE.
T HE gomery LARGE and BRICK State streets. HOUSE, Terms: cor. 1 Mont- —Ten
per cent, cash, the balance of purchase money
In annual installments of ten per cent, with
interest at six per cent, payable quarterly.
mhlitf . Apply to DAVID R. DILLON.
No. 2 Whitaker st.
Business Cards.
F. BINGEL,
WINES, LIQUORS AND SEGARS.
Milwaukee and Cincinnati Lager Beer on
draught. Free Lunch. Fresh Oysters always
on hand. 21 Jefferson st., corner Con tigress
street lane._____mchlO-ly
JAMES RAY,
—Manufacturer and Bottler—
Mineral Wafers, Soda, Porter and Ale,
15 Houston st., savannah, Ga.
feb23-3m .
Dr. A. H. BEST,
DENTIST
Cor. Congress and Whitaker streets,
SAVANNAH, GA.
rriEETH extracted without pain. All work
J_ guaranteed.
1 respectfully beg to refer to any of my
patrons. octl-brao
C. A. CORTINO,
SHAVING SALOON.
HOT AND COLD BATHS.
der 166(4 Planters’ Bryan street, opposite the Market, Ger¬ un¬
Hotel. Spanish, Italian,
man, and English spokon. ho16*W
HAIR S .
JOS. E. LOISEAU & CO.,
118 BROUGHTON ST., Bet. Bull A Drayton
K EEP Switches, on hand Curls, a large Puffs, assortment and Fancy of Goods Hair .
Hair combings worked In the latest style.
Fancy Costumes, Wigs and Beards for Rent
GEORGE FEY,
WINES, LIQUORS, SEGARS, TOBACCO, &o .
The celebrated Joseph Schlltz’ MILWAU¬
KEE LAGER BEER, a speciality. No. 22
Whitaker street, Lyons’ Block, Savannah,
Ga. r-z.'ll-i FREE LUNCH every day from li to 1.
v
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 line of Carriages, Rockaways,
Bu iggies. Spring and Farm Wagons, Canopy
d Balling Top Baby Carriages, also a full
line of Carriage and Wagon Material. I have
chanlcs. engaged in my factory the raost skillful mo
pairing, Any orders for new work, and re
will be executed tc* give satisfaction
and at short notice. mayl2-ly
Carriages;
-
EAST END
Carriage Manufactory.
P. O’CONNOR,
Corner East Broad, President and York sts.
Savannah, Ga.
I public beg leavo to Inform my friends and the
in general that I always keep on
hand a full supply of the best seasoned mate¬
rial and am prepared to execute orders for
Wagons, Buggies, Drays, Trucks,
Etc., with all promptness and dispatch, simps guaran¬
teeing work turned out from my to
be as represented.
nishing. Repairing polishing, in all its branches. lettering and Painting, trimming Var¬
done in a workmanlike manner.
Horse-shoeing a specialty. mch2tf
Leather and Findings.
COMMISSION MERCHANTS
And Dealers In
HIDES, LEATHER A HD FINDINGS,
100 BAY STREET,
SAVANNAH, GEORGIA.
H IGHEST Wool. Sheep Market,Price Skins, Furs, paid Deer for Skins, Hides,
Beeswax 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.
Ice.
Kuckerbocker lee Company.
Wholesale and Retail Dealers in and
Shippers of
EASTERN ICE.
DEPOT; —
144: BAY STREET*
SAVANNAH, GEORGIA,
J. F. CAVANAUGH, Manager.
mchi-6in__
SUNDRIES.
A PPLES, Onions, Meats, Butter, leef, Cheese, Mackerel, Lard,
Ferris' Smoked
Coddsb, Lemons, Dried Apnu *, Beans, etc.
Now landing and for sale by
h O. U. GILBERT <1 CO.
Wholesale Grocers ,
memo ; 8. E. cor. E&y and Banuurd »ur.