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D A. I L Y EVENING
Savannah [cf[p| i*“ If mi 17 [oTpl Recorder.
VOL I.—No. 145.
THE SAVANNAH RECORDER
R. M. OBME, Editor.
PUBLISHED EVERY EVENING,
(.Saturday Excepted,)
At 161 BA.Y STREET.
By J. STERN.
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the pjace ol the Saturday evening edition,
which will make six full issues for the week.
*fWe do not hold ourselves responsible for
the opinions expressed by Correspondents.
The Issue to he Made—Congress
and the President.
Says the New York World: It is
important that candid and reasonable
men should get a correct idea of the
sort of legislation Mr. Hays which "the pledge 8talwart8 him- ,r
are pressing to
self to veto. One of the bills which it
is to be expected that Congress will
present to the Executive will repeal
sections 820 and 1821 of the Revised
Statutes. The first section was origin
ally enacted in 1862, and runs thus.
“Section 820. The following shall be
causes of disqualification and the challenge
of grand United and petit States, jurors addition in courts the
of the in to
causes existing by virtue of section 812,
namely: Without duress and coercion
to have taken up arms, or to have join
ed any insurrection or rebellion, giving
it aid and comfort; to have given,
rectly, assistance any in money, “ arms, ;>
or horses, for clothes .e use oi oi itncfi -anylhiy
w/tom the giver of sue i assistance knew
to have rebellion, yarned, about to to join, have any resisted or m
surreCoion or or
or be about to resist, with A farce of J arms, \
the .i execution . oj e the .7 laws ; of tne ,- o United T7 ■.
States, or whom he had good ground about to
believe to have joined, or rebellion, to be
to join, any insurrection or or
to have resisted, or to be about to re
sist, with force of arms, the exeeution
of the laws of the United States; or
have counseled or advsed any person to
join any insurrection or rebellion, or to
resist with force of arms the laws of the
United States.
The breadth and scope of this war
section are apparent. It was in fact
repealed on April 20, 1871, and put
into the Revised Statutes by mistake.
It forbids any and every loyal man to
be a juryman if he has ever given so
much as a cup of cold water to one
whom he knew to be a dying rebel,
rgraudTurToTUmhB^al^alma^ A Ah,. ■
may have sate actually void. 1 here is
fUra A..„
• Ai i r a • • i’ 1t i• "
’
fblT Tho m>Tf Rueiinn tn to repealed l j • •
“Cir-pJ^r, l! D n fl0 J p is in
‘ Section *ooi 821. At A*. every pvprv f term prm ol n f
any court of the United States the die
trict attorney or other person 1 acting ® on
i behalt l. ot the United or States , in • said -J
court may __________, move, and the court • their .v ■
in
_______■,„ Li, ,
tend to everv ner-nn ’finmmone t tn
nirpm»nGrtfllPfmiftn in enifl nnnrt tlin
f i] in^nUmnlv • nath nr affirmation nnmplv •
4 y i ou do solemnly awpar sweai tnmffirrnWbat (oi affirm) that
you will support the Constitution of the
iinD^ri nf a ma.inn
have nnt with nnt i nrM o fl nd constraint
taken ^rebellion arms nr Lainat ininet anv inaurreo
tion or Dm United
^rn;nl Statea • that a ^n?n^r v have b e^l^ nnt vin’ a fbere Lv/nnt e nt t tn it
•J d mfnrt • that aiv/n
rlirfiotlv y or monfi indireetlv inf n^b »nv r^bin! t
„ Lfimi/ivhnm
ftnvtiprsonor hid hplipv/ vm Uip\v
nr good nrto\p ground to tn havn
ioinpd abrmt to inin «nid in
siated^or surrection to°be or aboutto^esLt^i^force rebellion to have re
ot f arms orma tb« the PAPuntion execution nf ot tbpliu- tne laws nf ot
th. United States ; and that you have
not counselled or advised any person to
join any insurrection or rebellion
against or to resist with force of arms
the laws of the United States.’ Any
person declining to take said oath shall
be discharged by the court from serv
iug on the grand or petit jury or venire
to which he may have been summoned."
In order that our readers may per
fectly and clearly understand the whole
issue which is to be presented to Mr.
Hayes, we give the language of the
proposed repeal which aims at the
establishment national of a system of impartial
jurors in all courts : Revised
“Sections 8*20 and821 of the
Statutes of the United States are hereby
repealed, and all such jurors, grand and
petit, shall be publicly drawn from a
box containing the names of not less
than three hundred prescribed persons possessing suction
the qualifications in
800 of the Revised Statutes, which
names shall have been placed therein
by the clerk of such court and a com¬
missioner which to be commissioner appointed by shall the judge be
thereof, a
citizen residing in the district in which
such court is held, of good the standing
and a well known member of prin¬
cipal party opposing that tc which the
clerk may belong, the clerk and said
commissioner each* to place one name
in said box, alternately, until the whole
number reqnired shall be placed there*
in. But nothing herein contained shall
be construed to prevent any judge in a
district in which such is now the prac
lice from ordering the names of jurors
to be drawn from the boxes used by
the State authorities in selecting jurors
in the highest courts in the State. AH
general and special^ laws in conflict
are hereby repealed.
the It is impossible effect of .ections for any one 820 to exhibit
legal clearly and concisely han and 821
more was
done m the unrivalled analys.s and
logical statement of Senator Thurman
in the Senate. Senator Thurman said;
“We have three sections in the stat
, , , ■ , e •
3ec ue 10n . ^on^oor? ^ S91 6 °
’ * .’
to detain . the , Senate , by reading ,. it
be drawls nearly
f ^ , • V M in acc0rda n ce with the
awg P f e Q . a . 0 U? V1or ■ A - f ®
drawing of jurors . m . the State courts
o ®‘chaUensre Tn a suit on *a °biU of ex*
chan e drawn yes terday and payable
, • . . drawn J between ner upon two a partners partner!
drawn b / y a subject of Great Britain
nnon £ a lb W of Great Britain On
bill if a euit be instituted, any
„ engaged ^ S in aiding S or
oomtorting, anv any man a n who wno gave 2 ave to to a a
knngry and suffering °L Confederate dnD sol
dle r a cr ust ° r a k di o(
. disqualified , to sit f the . -
water, . is on jury,
That to is section 820, ' That bare fact—
h ^ mR Mjr fanyprson w y whatsoever aideJ
rebeB , on —is made; the! a principal cau«e of
oballe nge which ei of the parties
3 and thus drive
,r , the ,, • , ho • Caled n ,
and 7 against b whom a ,“ the an ob * ection ,. 13 lies.
Thafc gectioa 820>
., Whafc ig sec tion 821? Mark it.
gection 82Q creafceg R f inci f al cauge of
challen How can that be taben
, fonii r
parties <l van ,a to ^ e the , 0 suit. •, n Itonly -Z ^ ° authorizes ne fV,° • 6
of the parties to the suit to insist
^ut But what^s ™ hat ^cUon^T? sectl0n 8 " il ? ° Sectl0D
provides that , a person who - h is no party
to tbe 8Ult . a person who has no inter
* ene and “ a ^ cal1 ° D the Jud S e to
dnve from tbe jury-box - not .
one man,
, tbafc P^cular to
m case ex
clude a “ an f r om tbe jury-box, but to
exclude 1 from the . , grand jury room and
3 ^tsoever, every manwhS
aid or comfort to the
rebellion against the United States; ’
d , therefore, the I T , have
an in case sup
posed, and a suit is brought on that
bill anywhere in the United States, in
Rhode Island, ; in Missouri, ; in Virginia, 8 ’
- n Louieiana anywhere and t e]v
men are called to sit as the jury, J and
, bo ,, b the partis .. are perfectly c ., content . ,
with that jury, want the caae tried by
that J lury, against their will, against
their ,, . protest, a district-attorney of the
tt United *a j ol States * may ask i the .1 court i to , ex
c ^ u de from that jury box, not only in
but for the whole term,
every man who had given a crust of
bread or a drink of water to a Con
federate soldier in the late rebellion,
,p, AQM i* • section pct : on S‘ b-1, 7 1 that that a a person r>ersnn not nnt
& party to the suit, in no wise interest
e d * n the suit, in a civil action the
cause which accrued but yesterday,
ma ^ a8 ^ a court to drive from the
court bouse every man who gave a
cruat of bread or a drink of water to a
hungry or thirsty Confederate soldier,
sixteen, seventeen, eighteen years ago.
“Mr. President, is that a law that
ou gbt to stand on this statute book ?
^ that a law that any man in the
wor ld can defend with any shadow of
P r0 P ri ety ? I think not; and until I
sbaB bear some defense of it, I shall
assume that such a law as that is a dis
f“>«« stalut aaiii ?, book and jj- » dls 8 race
,0 onr cmllaatl °° -
' — “
The Boston Library, which .
It',W0;000 onn j ed JJ volumes, has and lss J e d has to 400,000 be read
volumes on its catalogues. In a single
sent out 1,000,000 volumes, and
J he re have been days in which it circu
tated iU.tXW ooofcs to ils readers, who
numbered lUU.UOU souls per month.
—--
that A Philadelphia paper ascertained
21,974 on a recent and Sunday there were
women children and 11,314
meu present at twenty-nine churches,
Of this number 22,000 attended four
Catholic churches.
SAVANNAH THURSDAY, MARCH 20, 1879.
BY TELEGRAPH.
THE VANDERBILT WILL CASE
DECIDED.
TEE SULTAN OF
THANKS ENGLAND.
FATAL SHOOTING AFFRAY.
Lynchburg, March 19.—The grand
jury of Judge Rives, of the United
States Court, were engaged to-day in
examining witnesses with a view of in
dieting the county Judges, but adjourn
ed until to-morrow without making any
presentments.
New York, March 19.—Surrogate
Calvin this afternoon rendered a de
cjgicm in the long litigated Commodo.e contest over
^ be 0 f Hie | a ^ e Van
derbilt. His opinion j is that the probate
0 f wd j an( codicil should in all
t b i n g g be confirmed
Calcutta, March 19,-The origin «
f he Ue b the B
and Britlsb reaid Mandalay J is
V , tne fauer , ,, protects * t and A refug( reluses to
deliver V up to alaughter two royal
pnn
ces and their families, who have taken
re Burmah, * u g e afc who the residency. The King of
is said to be mad with
drink and urged by fanatics and the
party, -threateM to force
the res ' d ency. S uch a bostl!e measure
on the part of the , government, it is
believed, ’ would be a signal K for a general 8
ma8sacre of Europeang
Vicksburg, Miss., March 19.—A
fire at midnight in Lowenthal & Co.'s
store caused the following losses:
Lowenthal’* Dollar Store, loss $12,000;
full y 1PSured - D. Davidson & Sons,
grocers, loss $2,500; insured. Louis
Hoffman, hardware, loss $26,000 ; in¬
sured for $11,000. The Woodbine
Saloon is badly da ™ged.
Constantinople, p .. TO _.Yr March , 19. 10 Mr. ,r
-
Alexander Mallet presented his creden
tials as Minister Plenipotentiary of
Great Britain on Saturday. The Sultan
declared that he wished to publicly
recognize the services rendered to him
by the Queen, ^ the British Government
and the British fleet, / during 5 the hour of
S“ » • . • 1 d i ?f ‘“ , A A d 7
„ “ n 0r neS 8 ra ”
'
State banquet will be given to
Admiral and officers of the British
fleet at the Palace to-night. The fleet
wi n i eaV e Gallipoli for Bessika Bay on
Wednesday.
-t Vicksburg, T Miss., March 19.—A .
shooting affairoccurred lastmght be
tween 8lde Capt.W.F d Fitzgerald on the
n ’ aQ W- L. Andrews and W
p Greene °. n ibe otber Andrews and
Greene killed u almost r instantly,
were
and Fitzgerald dangerously wounded.
Hibernian n K ‘ meeting 7 f . 0ri § inat on ^ Monday about night, - tbe
at which Andrews was elected Presi
dent Fitzgerald claimed still to be
President o the Hibernian Society, and
denounced the election of Andrews as
*
---------
Quickest Time on Record.
The quickest time ever made across
the n Continent was made , last , , w’eek , , by
ex-Governor’Jno. Whitaker, Democratic
Congressman from Oregon. When the
President called an extra session of
Congress for the ISth the Democratic
managers •,® at Washington telegraphed ° tA,
Whitaker wu to come immediately. . i W hit- ..
aker took a special train at h, Oregon
home on March i, took a steamer to
r> Portland .1 j on at March i 8, o and j arrived i at
San o u brancisco on Wednesday, j j March at i 12 10
twenty-four hours after the train had
left which he must take to reach
Washington in time for tbe organiza
tion of Congress. A special train was
provided for him at San Francisco, and
he he went went flving flymg over over the the country, cnnntrv some- <?nmp
times at the rate of forty-five miles an
hour, and never less than twenty-five
miles. He left San Francisco at 10.25
a. in. on March 12 and arrived at
ba at 3,30 a.m. on Saturday, having
made the run of 1,923 miles in sixty
four hours. The usual fast time between
those hours/ points is one hundred and one
He arrived at Chicago at 5.15
p. m. on Saturday, and there took his
first regular schedule train. He arriv
ed at Washington at 9.02 a. m. on Mon
day, thus making the trip across the
Continent in five days, the shortest
time on record. Governor Whitaker
las } . «ossed the plains , . in 18o2 with .
an
? x team ' and was doing
1 •
9 m ^ _
The Bible Society has had the book
translated into above one hundred and
£f ty ] anguageg j tb bist tbree .
quarte rs of a century 115 000 000 vol
u mes 0 f tbe Scriptures have Ibis >?one forth
int0 tbe WQrid i/ . tbe object of enor
mous c i rcu l at n being to put a copy
into the hands of everv man, woman,
or young person who could read it.
" n
----^ m —-
Since his encyclical, Pope Leo has
several times been threatened by So
cialists. He forwards their letters to
the governments of the countries
which his threatened appear to belong,
The New Congress and the New
Issues.
There is much that is both signifi¬
cant and suggestive in the changed au¬
spices under which the Forty-sixth
Congress meets in extra session to-day.
For the first time in eighteen in years a
Congress which is Democratic both
branches will assemble within the walls
of the capital. The resposible houses—the control
of legislation in both con¬
stitution of the important committees,
in which so much of the work of legis¬
lation is elaborated and prepared, depends— and
upon whose action so much
passes into new hands.
In the House the Democrats have
been in the majority for four years, and
the transition will be less marked than
In the Senate, where the reorganization
of the committees, with Democratic
chairmen and a majority of members of
the same party, will amount to a little
revolution. Fortunately for their own
prospects and for the country, the
Democrats in the Senate are not with¬
out the able and experienced committees, men to pi
at head of the and 11
will be their own fault if a proper dis¬
tribution is not made. After the work
of organization is completed comes the
business for which the extra session has
been called. -
The passage of the more important
appropriation bills, without which the
government cannot be carried on for
another year, has been made depen¬
dent upon the, President’s assent to
the repeal of certain measures which
the Republican party passed when in
possession of power, the constitution¬
ality of which is doubted and the policy
of which^is for the most part condemned
by Democrats. At the late session of
Gongress the measures of repeal and
the appropriation bills to which they
weie attached failed because of a disa¬
greement between the two houses. They
consequently never reached the Execu¬
tive.
Now ,, ... w anticipated .. . . , that the two
, houses will the
agree in f, passing meas
ur9a of repeal „f ’ and t e aiternative wiU
be ed t 0 the President of 8i 8
; them in wbich eTent he win c er ,
J i MonM B
n 0 ° ]din« ?'rl?am hi. olonature ? 'Crisis P nrerinilatin e„lefbe B
L a 1 'n P n rv a ^ ‘
tween the legislative w and the executive r
branches of the government.
Itia . true that, . by requiring the Presi
J ent e assent to every bill before it
0an b eco f e a law or P assa « e b y a
two-thirds f , vote of f each house in order
to overcome his veto, part of the re¬
spons ^ ibility the^ of legislation is devolved
P President. But this veto
p wer> as it is called—this right to re¬
turQ b ill toJCongree* s with hia objec
Uong and witbout his hia appr0V ^ P al_
bas ftI } been spoken of m r e in the
Hght of a chec k unon the Legislature
than as having ° the effect of making the
Executive a P art of the Legislature
Primari | y ^ it is assume d to have been
7 iven t0 th Pre8 ident for his own pro
ectlori _, or the protection of the exec
utive against the encroachments of the
legislative branch of the government.
a •> ili!coSe“r^ i * u
. legislation. . . t It intended .
. to ,
® never was tV
.. It
he e resi en a °ve ongress.
18 a , ne S atlve power simply, and in turn
e ovei ' con ^ y e passage of the
bill which . the President may have re
W1 10U 13 ^PPi°va y a wo
thirds vote instead . of
a maiontv in
h H j . ; therefore, a f power W e J
fce , ; u cauti ai d r
M serve, and, j according q. to , the practice .. of f
the earlier I r d Presidents -j ? f U1
sparinglv . ,
verv vei y. 0 D ailu g*y
T n Case 0 a C ecided and confirmed
djAerenceoi aU f e ,? resi opinmn dent, - ot between a persistent Congress de
^ ■ the
er f li na 10n ol two houses to pass
. without
command oei a ' n measuies, the being able to
requisite two-thirds vote
in both “ Houses to ° pass pass them mem over over the cne
J eo , Mhe question . naturally arises, how
fai 18 tb Y Executive justified m mter
P. 0S1D o bis veto : Equally, the ques
tlfaed 10nma y an8e 1iailu .bowlarisCongressjU8- the Pr dei
}. n Z u P on es } ] t s
as8entm g to measures ot f which 1 1 he dis
a having PPf ove8 the > underpenl.it he refuses, andap- of
necessary supplies
P 10 P natl0n3 for the carrying on of the
SC A ernment cut oil an d Withheld .
These are just the questions which will
P f" r °bjd>ly tbe °" arise e at the P re , *fi d ® nt it
that f the President, attei . - *
ecutive '’ not enfJrce^the a legislative officer. His
^ “ ; t o laws, not to make
Only incidentally is he called upon
to assume part of the responsibility geneially of
j legislation. Otherwise and
he bis not responsible for what may be
°r may not be upon the statute book. I
Theoretically, also, the President of
the United States is not the represen
tative of the people in the sense
that members of^the House of Repre
sentatives are. They are \he imme
diate choice of the people.
In theory, at least, the President is
not the choice of the people at all, but
of the electoral college, which, accord
to the intention of the framers of
the constitution, were designed to be
deliberative bodies, exercising a real
power of choice, and not simply per¬
forming forming a a fnrtn lormai ^ 1 ana snH TninNfprfll mimsterai act opt Tn in
tbe present instance the House of Re
preservatives pie, comes fresh from the
its members having been elected
only four months ago. The question,
in case of a radical difference of opinion
between the President and Congress
should arise, it obviously a nice one.
As the government must be carried
on, and provision for the purpose must
be made by the passage of the x\Qce-i
sary other appropriation bills, one side or the
will have to yield. Concessions
made under such circumstances, to
avoid greater trouble and difficulty,
will reflect no dishonor on the side
which yields. It may become the
highest duty of patriotism .—Baltimore
Sun.
ITEMS OF INTEREST.
M. Renard, a French communist re¬
fugee in Louisiana, has won the grand
prize of the French academy of poetry.
Interest governs you and me, and
all men, and colors our opinions, as it
directs and controls our movements.
The Cuban sugar crop is estimated at
650,000 tons, an increase of 130,000
tons over last year’s crop.
The inhabitants of the Isle of Cyprus
have appealed to Queen Victoria
against Sir Garnet Wolseley’s oppres¬
sion.
“We old maids,” remarked Miss
Stibbens, “love cats because we have no
husbands, and cats are almost as
treacherous as men.”
The Australian dog and the shepherd
dog of Egypt never bark. We move
an importation of these breeds at once,
and an extermination of all others.
Senator Howe’s last official act as
Chairman of the Joint Library Com¬
mittee was to sign an order for the pur¬
chase of a portrait of General Grant
by Ulke, for the White House.
Of the inmates of the Iowa insane
asylums ninety-two (including through twenty;
one women) have gone mad
intemperance, and 420 (including forty
ni le women) owe their insanity to re¬
ligious excitement.
There are 3,682 public libraries in
the United States,containing 12,296,964
volumes, and the rate of increase is
estimated at about 408,000 books per
year. These libraries have, of course,
a distinct specific value of their own.
A careless bank teller in Cincinnati
gave two Chinamen four hundred dol¬
lars in gold for two hundred and fifty
dollars in silver and greenbacks, and
those Chinamen did not wait to be told
to go.
Cats do not count in law. A fellow
in Baltimore stole a Maltese cat “val¬
ued by its released, owner at the twenty-five dollars,
and was Justice holding
that taking possession however of a cat is not a
criminal offense, highly its
owner might prize it.
A Baltimore lady pursued a man
through the street, accused laid her hand upon
his shoulder and him of robbing
her. The pickpocket was so startled
that he took the pocketbook from his
pocket, and handed it to her, begging
her not to prosecute him.
Already more than 30,000 applica¬
tions for pension have been received at
Washington, and that number will
probably be doubled before the end is
reached. It is estimated that rather
more than half the claims will be al¬
lowed, and, as they will average about
$900, the government will be called up¬
on to disburse over $30,000,000 among
pensioners already on the rolls.
St. George and St. Andrew are men¬
tioned respectively at English and
Scotch, and St.Nicholas at Dutch dinners
and as the guardian of little boys and
girls about Christmas time. St. Patrick is
one of the most amiable characters in
the calendar. All the annals speak
well of him as a hater of slavery, as a
lover of education, as an exterminator
of reptiles, as the builder of churches
and religious houses.
According to letters from the merci¬ Cape,
“Cetewayo, the Zulu King, is as
less as he is bloodthirsty. I have
known him to kill fifty women and
children to feed his golden eagles. As
brave as a lion, he will fight until he
dies; and if he only sees a scratch on one
of his warrior’s backs when they re¬
turn home be is put to death, as Cete¬
wayo thinks he must have turned from
the enemy and have thus received the
wound.
The Supreme Court of Ohio has de
cided that where a drunken and un¬
ruly passenger is put off a railroad
train, and then run over by another
train, the railroad company is not liable,
It was the duty of the conductor to
protect other passengers against him by
ejecting him, and, if he was too drunk
to take care of himself after that, it was
only his own fault. New Similar law has
been laid down in York and in
most of the other States of the Union,
and it seems to be about settled that, if
a man will get drunk, the safest place
to do it is at home.
PRICE THREE CENTS.
I'ost.
V OKI—A. 1RUNK, ’ cont&ininjc \ ArtlRt's
TooI Palnta an d Plcture8t he flnder
Will be suitably rewarded. churchilL, Address,
Prof ' J - BUWIN Artist,
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 agrees
street lane.__mchlO-ly
JAMES RAY,
—Manufacturer and Bottler—
Waters, Soda, Porter and Ale,
feb23-3m° U8r0N ST '’ Savannau « Ga -
Dr. A. H. BEST,
denti st
Cor. Congress and Whitaker streets.
SAVANNAH, GA.
T^amnfeed. 1 CtedWltllOUtpain - AH WOrk
patrons. respectfully beg to refer to any of my
ootl-brno
W. B. FERRELL’S Aet.
RESTAURANT, No. 11 New Market Basement,
(Opposite Lippman’s Drug Store,)
lanlttt.r SAVANNAH. GA
C. A. CORTJ.NO,
Bair Cutting Hair Dressing Curling: and
SHAVING SALOON.
HOT AND COLD BATHS.
166U Bryan street, opposite the Market, un¬
der Planters’ Hotel. Spanish, Italian, (ief
man, and English spokon. seltfr-tf
HAIR store:
JOS. E. L0ISEAU 4 CO.,
118 BROUGHTON 8T. t Bet. Bull * Drayton
K EEP Switches, on hand Curls, a large Puffs, assortment and Fancy of Goods Hair
Hair combings worked In the latest style.
Paocy Costumes, Wigs a nd Beards for Rent
GEORGE FEY,
WINES, LIQUORS, SEGARS, TOBACCO, &c .
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 I.
r-z;d-] v
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 Carriages, Rockaways,
and Buggies, Spring and Farm Wagons, Canopy
line of Falling Carriage Top Baby Cariiages, also a full
engaged In factory and Wagon the Material. I have
chanics. my most skillful me¬
pairing, will Any orders for new work, and re¬
be executed to give satisfaction
aud at short notice. may!2-ly
Carriages;
EAST END
Carriage Manufactory.
P. O’CONNOR,
Corner East Broad, President and York sts.
Savunnah, Ga.
I bog leave to Inform my friends and the
public lu general that 1 always keep on
hand a full supply of the best seasoned mate¬
rial and am prepared to execute orders for
Wiigons, Buggies, Drays, Trucks,
Etc., with promptness and dispatch, guaran¬
teeing all work turned out from my sliops to
be as represented.
Re pairing in all its branches. Painting, Var
ntailing, polishing, lettering and trimming
done In a workmanlike manner.
Horse-shoeing a specialty. wcli2tf
Leather and Findings*
COMMISSION MERCHANTS
And Dealers in
HIDES, LEATHER A HD FINDINGS,
108 BAY STREET,
SAVANNAH, GEORGIA.
H mHEfST Market Price paid for Hides,
Wool, Sheep Skins, Furs, Deer Skins
Beeswax and Tallow. *
A full supply of the best French and Amerl
can Liberal Tannages advances constantly kept on hand.
made on consignments.
No business transacted on Saturday
Ice*
Knickerbocker Its Con.
Wholesale and Retail Dealers'In* and
Shippers of
EASTERN ICE.
— DEPOT; —
HI BAY STREET.
SAVANNAH, GEORGIA,
J. F. CAVANAUGH, Manager.
mchl-6m
P ROF. J. EDWIN CHURCHILL, Portrait
and Landscape Painter, has permanently
located on BOLTON ST., between Abercorn
and Lincoln street, north side, where he Is
of prepared all to PAINT Portraits and Landscapes
types sizes, and Daguerreotypes, Photograph, Ambrotypes, enlarged from Tin¬
card to life-size.
All orders intrusted to bis care will receive
prompt attention. lie will paiDt 8x10 size for
nve twenty-five dollars, dollars. Hxi7 fifteen dollars, and call, life-size
febll Give film a