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D A. I Xj Y juvkning
Savannah Irm loljnl Recorder.
YOL I.—No. 150.
THE SAVANNAH RECORDER,
R. M. ORME, Editor.
PUBLISHED EVERY EVENING,
(Saturday Excepted,)
At 161 B AY STREET,
Ji >f STERN.
The Recorder is served to subscribers, in
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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.
All correspondence should be addressed, Re¬
corder, Savannah, Georgia.
The Sunday Morning Recorder will take
the pjace o 1 the Saturday evening edition,
which will make six full issues for the week.
WWe do not hold ourselves responsible for
the opinions expressed oy Correspondents.
A Cure for Drunkenness.
Dr. A. S. Hayward, of of Boston, writes
as follows to the Banner Light:
“Dr. Robert D. Unger claims to have
discovered a remedy that not only cures
intemperance, but leaves the drunkard
with an absolute aversion to spirituous
liquors. Mr. Tribune Joseph“Medill, editor of
the Chicago , is a strong en¬
dorser of the new remedy, and has
devoted many editorials to further its
general circulation who amongst a class ‘No!’ of
unfortunates cannot say
when asked to imbibe. It is claimed
that the doctor has cured twenty-eight
thousand persoi s of the worst form ol
intemperance with it, and that this is
the first remecy ever discovered that
kills the disease and the inclination to
drink at one arid the same time. For
the benefit of Jiumanity, I hope you
will find a spa^e to print the recipe, as
follows, which the doctor makes no
secret, but desires to give it the widest
circulation :
“ ‘Take one pound of best fresh,
quill-red Peruvian bark, powder it, and
soak it one pint of diluted alcohol.
Afterwards strain and evaporate down
to half a pint. Directions for its use :
Dose, a teaspoonful every three hours
the first and second day, and occasion
ally moisten the tongue between the
doses. It acts like quinine, and the
patient can tell by a headache if he is
getting too much. The third day take
as previously, but reduce to one half
teaspoonful. Afterward reduce the
dose to fifteen drops, and then down to
ten, and then to five drops. To make
a cure it takes from five to fifteen days,
and, in extreme cases, thirty days.
Seven days are about the average in
which a cure is effected.
Reason—Man-Brute.
A distinction has been drawn by
Rev. George Henslow between the kind
of intellect in brutes and that in men.
It is given for what it is worth: “It has
seemed to me that brute reasoning is
always practical, wonderful but things never abstract.
Brutes do suggested
by the objective fact before them, but
I think never go beyond it. Thus, a
fetch dog left in a room Had rang the the bell to
taught a servant. the bell, not dog been
to ring been (which on in¬
quiry proved to have the case,)
this would have been abstract reason¬
ing, but it was only practical. The
Arctic fox, too wary to be shot like
the first who took a bait tied to a
string which was attached to the trig¬
ger of a gun—would dive under the
snow, the and of so fire. pull This the is bait down below
line purely practi¬
cal reasoning, but had the fox pulled
the string first out of the line of fire in
order the to discharge bait, the gun and then
get that would Lave been
abstract reasoning. * * *
Brutes and boys are just alike, in that
nothing occurs to them beyond what
the immediate fact before them may
suggest. The one kind I call purely
practical reasoning, which both have;
the other abstract, which brutes never
acquire, but which the boy will as his
intelligence develops.”
At Last. —We were yesterday per¬
mitted to inspect the working model of
a machine, which , we think, successful
ly solves the problem of a’rial naviga¬
tion. We are not permitted to describe
the machine, as its inventor has not
yet patented it, but we can say that
we saw it in operation, and though raised it
weighs weight but eight pounds, pounds it and three a
of twenty-one
ounces and kept in the air for nearly
half an hour, and propelled it against
the wind as fast as a man could run.
I nlike the generality of serial machines,
this one does not depend upon any
baloon or gas bag for its buoyant pow¬
ers, and its propulsive machinery is
operated by a new motor that is ex¬
tremely Cincinnati light, reliable and powerful.—
Enquirer,
The Great Chess Player.
Professor Anderssen, of Berlin, Ger¬
many, whose death has been announced,
was a teacher of mathematics at the
principal Berlin college; but his fame
as a chess-player was world-wide. He
came off victorious in the world’s chess
tournament held at London in 1851,
defeating Howard Staunton, who was
supposed to be, at that time, the chess
champion of the world. In his prime
he was unquestionably the peer of any
living chess-player except Paul Mur¬
phy, the American prodigy, who de¬
feated him in a match at Paris in De¬
cember, 1858. Subsequently, in 1862,
he carried off the highest prize in a
second London tournament. Of all the
men whom Morphy encountered to con¬
test the palm of superiority, none were
so generous in their reception of the
boy player as the noble German pro¬
fessor, Mr. Anderssen. While some of
the European players were disposed to
sneer at the boy’s pretensions, Profes¬
sor Anderssen, from the first, took the
proper measure of him, and, by con¬
stant practice and by studying Mor¬
phy’s style of play, prepared to meet
him. Staunton, the English champion,
evaded him ; Harwitz, the French
and champion, badly proud and arrogant, then met him
was beaten; Anderssen,
the chess champion of the world, con¬
fident of his strength, and yet doubt¬
ing his ability to cope with the young
American, boldly met him, and was
also defeated. While the match was
progressing, one of Anderssen’s friends
said to him, .“Why, professor, you don't
begin to play your game with Morphy.
Wfiat is the reason ?” “The reason is,”
calmly answered the professor, “Afor
won’t let me. He is a wonderful
player.
After the match was ended Profes¬
sor Berlin, Anderssen urged Morphy to visit
and with tears in his eyes,
said : “You must promise me to come
to Berlin. My German friends thought
I was invincible, and they will not be¬
lieve you can beat me unless they can
see you do it.”
But they were compelled to believe
it, as Morphy was unable to visit Ber¬
lin. Professor Anderssen was born in
Breslau, in 1818.
The First Ice to Calcutta.
It is half a century since Mr. Tudor,
thought an enterprising he merchant of Boston,
that might make money if
he forwarded a cargo of ice to Calcutta.
Before that gentleman undertook the
venture a little natural ice was ob¬
tained at a place forty miles from the
capital of Bengal.
Shallow troughs were dug in the
ground, pans of porous earthern ware
were placed therein, a layer of straw
being interposed between the bottom of
the pan and the ground, and a little
water was poured into each pan. If
the wind blew from the northwest
during the night the water in the pans
would be frozen before the morning.
This ice fetched a high price in the
market. In 1838 there was no longer
any necessity for resorting to this pro¬
cess for getting it, as in that year Mr.
Tudor's first ship sailed up the Hooghly
with a cargo of ice on board ; the cargo
was sold in the market for 3 pence per
pound. Since that day the export of
ice from Boston has become a regular
and most profitable branch of trade. In
the warehouses there are as many as
300,000 tons of congealed water stored
away at a time.
An Eel That Traveled.—G eorge
Bryant, train-master at High Bridge,
N. J„ and William Hibbler, conductor
on the Central Railroad of New
Jersey, were fishing from the Newark
Bay bridge three years ago. Bryant
lost a sinker, and substituted for it a
switch key. He then got a “huge
bite,” and in drawing in his line dis
covered a large eel on his hook ; but
before he could land him, the eel
broke loose, carrying away the hook
and switch-key. Eight months after,
an eel was caught by ' Captain Simon
Chapman, in an old barge at Chap
man’s wharf, on the Thames river, three
miles above New London. When the
eel was cut open the lost Central Rail
road switch-key was found inside.
Recently the son of Captain Chapman
introduced himself to Mr. Hibbler,
happening father to be on the train, and said
kis still had the key in his
session. Arrangements have been
made to have it returned to Mr. Bryant,
High Bridge. '
at
If there be one industry in the
Dominion which can stand on its own
bottom without being propped up by
a protective duty, it- is the ice trade,
If the Canadians cannot compete with
the world in making and keeping ice,
they can do nothing. The schedule
duties which was read by the Finance
Minister last week has no entry for
ice. Now that this staple is no longer
subject to a duty of 17T per cent, as
under the former tariff, mint kinds juleps,
catawba cobblers, and all
cock-tails will be invested with heated patri
otic significance during the
°
term.
SAVANNAH WEDNESDAY, MARCH 26, 1879.
BY TELEGRAPH.
ALLEGED ELECTION FRAUDS.
COLLISION ON THE ELEVATED
RAILROAD.
A DISASTROUS CONFLA¬
GRATION.
New York, March 25.—At noon to¬
day, as the twelve o’clock down train
from Harlem on the New York Eleva¬
ted road reached Forty-second street,
it came in collision with the upward
bound train. Both engines were utter¬
ly wrecked, and one section of the rails
was precipitated into the street below.
About sixteen persons were more or
less injured, "but none fatally.
A fire this morning in the marble
building Nos. 178 and 180 Pearl street
entirely destroyed the stock of Stratton
& Storms, manufacturers of tobacco and
cigars, who occupied the third, fourth
and fifth floors. They employed three
hundred hands, mostly girls and wo¬
men. The loss is about $75,000.
London, March 25.- -In the House
of Lords to-night Lord regard Lansdowne’s the
motion of censure in to Zulu
war was rejected by a vote of 156 to 61.
Washington, March 25.—The Sen¬
ate select committee to inquire into the
alleged frauds in the late election, Mr.
Wallace, Chairman, will hold a meeting
to-morrow to examine, witnesses, in¬
cluding ex-Secretary of the Senate
Gorham, on the subject of assessment
for political purposes, one of the points
embraced in the resolution under which
the so-called Teller conmittee, now
reorganized with a Democratic ma¬
jority, was appointed.
London, March 25.—A limes Paris
dispatch says : “The pure and extreme
Senators at the meetings on Monday
unanimously favored the return of the
Chambers to Paris. The Left Centrists
by a vote of 38 to 5, took an opposite
view, on the ground excited of uneasiness the
which would be in
country.”
Cincinnati, March 25.—A dispatch
from Detroit says Robert McClelland,
ex-Governor of Michigan and Secretary
of the Interior during the administra¬
tion of President Pierce, was stricken
with paralysis last evening. His con¬
dition is critical.
Lahore, March 25.—General Tytler
yesterday defeated three thousand of
the enemy near Pesbbolka. The enemy
lost two hundred men. The British
loss is trifling. The Bengal Lancers
made a brilliant charfie.
The Make Up of the Body.
thereabouts?-1 Supposing your age to be fifteen or
have bones can figure Ind muscles you to a dot.
You 1G0 ; your
blood weighs 25 pounds ; your heart is
five inches in length, and three inches
in diameter ; it beats 70 times a minute,
4,200 36,792?000 times per hour, 100.S00 per day,
and per year. At each
beat a little over two ounces of blood is
thrown out of it, and each day it re
ceives and discharges about seven Ions
of that wonderful fluid. Your lungs
will contain a gallon of air, and you
inhale 24,000 gallons per day. The
a gg re g ate surface ot the air cells of
your lungs, supposing them to be spread
out, exceeds 20,000 square inches. The
weight ot your brain is three pounds ;
when you are a man it will weigh eight
ounces more. Youi nerves exceed 10,
000,000 in number. Your skin is com
P ose ^ three layers, and varies in
thickness. The area ot your skin is
about 1..00 square inches, and you are
subject to an atmospheric pressure oi
fifteen pounds to the square inch, Each
square inch of your skin contains 3,500
sweating tubes or perspiratory pores,
eac h which may be likened to a little
drain tile, one-fourth of an inch long,
making an aggregate length of the en
tire surface of your body of a drain or
tile ditch for draining the body of 23t
miles long .—Dio Lewis.
— —-» — —
Sunday Morning Charity Break
fasts. —There is in Philadelphia a
1 charitable organization called the
I‘‘Sunday Morning Breakfast Associa
’ which, in a cheerful and quite
! novel way, has been doing a good deal
of good the past winter. Every Sun
Jay moving members have assent.
bled at the association rooms and spread
a bountiful breaklast, free to all de
serving persons who choose to take
advantage of their hospitality, and at
a meeting of the society on Monday
evening it was stated that in all 10,500
persons had been fed in this
The cost- of this charity was less than
$l,o00, though 40,300 rolls, l^bo
pounds pounds of meat, of o40 and pounds 520 ot coffee,
495 sugar quarts ol
milk were consumed at the
Of this labor of love Bishop Simpson
said that when he heard the report of
what had been done he thought the
loaves must have been multiplied al
most miraculously.
Royalty—How it Looks.
Our excellent cotemporary, the St.
Louis Republican, tells an amusing and
significant anecdote to this effect: Soon
after the accession of Victoria to the
throne, a young American sailor hap¬
pened to be in London, and was natur¬
ally very anxious to catch a glimpse
of the royal lady. He had never seen
a queen, except in picture books, and,
drawing his ideas from them, he
cied that queens and kings were some¬
thing order of altogether humanity out of the common
; that their personal
appearance that was majestic and awe their in¬
spiring; and they always wore carried
crowns purple robes and
the sceptre, and were, in short, a sort
of dim reflection of divine majesty. He
was, therefore, highly delighted to learn
that on the following Sunday the queen
would attend services at St. Paul’s
Cathedral. Finally, about 11 o’clock,
the thunder of guns announced the de¬
parture from the palace, and soon after
a large force of police drove back t he
eager crowd, and made room foi ihe
procession.
A superb military band led the way,
followed by a battalion of horse guards,
glittering in scarlet and gold, and a
half-dozen ponderous and gorgeous
coaches, containing the members of the
royal household. All this pomp and
circumstance confirmed our sailor
friend’s picture-book theory, and he
opened his eyes and mouth in anticipa¬
tion of the stately personage with
crown, scepter and purple robe, who
was yet to come. A plain carriage,
drawn by four handsome black horses,
off brought up the rear. The crow’d took
their hats and shouted till the air
rang the again. The trumpets sounded,
drums beat, the troops presented
arms, crimson velveted footman opened
the door and flung down the steps, and
the sailor stared as if his life depended
on it. And he saw—a young lady in a
light muslin dress, light silk shawl and
a white straw bonnet, trimmed with
green ribbon, not half so pretty as his
sweetheart at home.
This was “Her Majesty, Victoria, by
the grace of God, of the United King¬
dom of Great Britain and Ireland,
Queen, Defender of the Faith.” He
disgusted. went away He disappointed and slighly
had seen a Queen, and
she was only an ordinary woman, or¬
dinarily dressed.
A Mighty Mean Man.—A promi¬
nent, wealthy manufacturing jeweler of
Newark one day carelessly dropped
his pocket book in a Broad street horse
car. The pocket book contained $2,200
in money. The jeweler did not obseive
his loss and walked away. A lady in
the car noticed the pocket book and
called the conductor’s attention to it.
The conductor took possession of it and
learned who was its owner and what it
™ » r n took ‘» i ? el |-. his He leisure got excused long enough from to duty, go
Personally with and return all safe he pocket the hook
its contents to owner,
What do you suppose he got for his
rewai - A Simple thank you , no
m ? re - The of the Pocketbook,
recovered $2,200, did not even
f ' 08es a h,m ™>ney a cent - it .f!*" is to tbat be hoped that
ble b f w stl ‘!‘ “ ever R ingratitude et lfc a f and Ibe r oss1 '
”g‘ ne8s ' has mean- been
? e8s 01 buman nature not y et
a ^homed.
m m __ ______
Professor Swing, in the course of an
article in The Advance, remarks sen
tentiously that while no machine has
y e t been invented for picking a goose
or shearing a sheep, the arrangements
f or plucking a poor man are tolerably
com pl e te. Within the last twelve
months, it is safe to say, that the sim
plicity of the poor people that have
lived among the Calvinists at Glasgow,
and among the Catholics of Cincinnati,
An j among the enlightened Pagans of
Chicago has cost them, at least, twenty
ff V e million dollars,
• ~
Laughter. r How much ties m
—
laughter the cypher key wherewith
we decipher the everlasting whole man. barren Some
men wear an sim
per; in the smile ot others lies a cold
glitter as of ice. The fewest are able
to laugh what can be called laughing,
but only sniff and titter and snigger
: irora the throat outwards; or at least
produce some whiffing, husky cachina
tl0n - as they were laughing through
wool i DOne such comes good .
I Electric eiallylda“d liehTin? »economteal in Paris has Site., been
offi
ac tual cost of the light, when
pare * q L w ith 7 rms t' bein reduced <• a- 73 is the*" to 23 limit and
j yer(? t ^ e c s to
w hich electric engineers consider pos
“ there would still “ a threat diffe
enC g in favor illnSinating Qt aas There is a great
waste o{ the power of th Q
electric light by the necessary use of
opaque glebes to mitigate n the intense
g;are °
—-—— m —
Slavery in the empire of Brazil is
giving way slowly to the “ free birth
act’’ of 1871. It is estimated that
350,000 slaves and 192,000 children
have received their freedom since the
passage of the law.
ITEMS OF INTEREST.
The Boston Athenamm, with 108,000
volumes on its shelves, circulates but
33,000 annually, while the
Public Library, with a total but 48,000
volumes, circulates 400,000. The first
measure of value therefore is the extent
to which a library is used.
The visible supply of wheat is now
about 21,400,000 bushels. Notwith¬
standing the the enormous exports during
crop year thus far, the supply at
the chief points is over 12,000,000 bush¬
els greater than it was one year ago at
this time.
Two of the four 100-ton guns bought
by the British Government from the
Armstrong Company, for $81,000
apiece, are to be sent to Gibraltar, and
two to Malta, where they will be
mounted behind barbette earth-works,
before being shipped to these impor¬
tant positions they will be throughly
tested.
A young Hungarian noble has been
arrested at San Remo, Italy, for house
and highway robbery. He offered a
large sum of money to his captors for
his freedom, but without success. His
arrest was on the requisition of the
Austrian Government, and his time
since his incarceration has been large¬
ly occupied in corresponding with ladies
whose regard he had won without a
suspicion on their part of his true char¬
acter.
Senator David Davis has been giving
his views on the political situation. He
thinks that the Nationals wilL form
a distinct party, but not a dan¬
gerous one; that Grant will be the
Republican candidate in 1880, for, al¬
though he is not the choice of the ma¬
jority of the people, he will be regaided
by the party managers as the most
available man ; he does not have a very
high regard for Tilden, either as a per¬
son or as a candidate, but says that the
crucial question is whether Thurman
can carry Ohio for the Democrats.
Hon. Carter Harrison, of Chicago,
who has just completed two terms of
Congress, that has been nominated Mayor of
Harrison city by the Greenbackers. Mr.
in the past has not been with¬
out his specie proclivities. He once
expressed his financial views thus: “Let
the government purchase several tons
of gold and silver, melt them in great
solid blocks, set them up like monu¬
ments in a public square at Washing¬
ton, surrounded by strong, impregnable
iron bars; then let paper money be
issued as needed, and if anybody wants
to know on what it is based, let them go
and take a look at the security in the
gold and silver blocks.”
In the sixteenth century the supply
of silver became at least four times
larger than that of gold, and between
1492 and 1848 no less than 1,600,000,
000 of silver were poured into the
world, and only 400,000,000 of gold.
Nevertheless, the effect of this enor¬
mous excess of silver only lowered the
value of that metal relatively to gold
from 1: 111 to 1 : 15^. At this rela¬
tive value the two metals stood at the
beginning of the present century, al
though the annual supply of silver was
then three-fold that of gold. Down to
that time, at least, silver was the stand¬
ard money and general currency of the
world. The pound in every pound European
country was originally a of silver.
A painter commenced a portrait of a
young girl belonging to the best society.
For some reasou or other a misunder¬
standing arose between the family of
the girl and the artist. The painter
having begun the work, took advan¬
tage of the head, which was pretty,
and added the body a nymph destitute
of drapevy. The picture appeared at
the last exhibition, and was seen by the
family, accompanied by some friends.
“Oh ! mon Dieu !” said lady, on re
cognizing the face of the young lady,
on a very low necked torso, “Did your
daughter sit to the painter in that
way?” “You can’t think so,” replied
the mother, curtly. “The artist did it
entirely from memory.”
The banking mismanagment and
co llapse in Glasgow, have made Scotch
men bang their heads all over the
wor ld ) but there is at least one honest
man north of the Tweed, and he is a
lawyer. Six weeks ago an old gentle
maa named Kerr, died leaving a will
by which his relatives were cut off
wlthoufc a penny, while a fortune of
l£»000 ;F boma3 Thow, «. of given Dundee. to hie Although lawyer
the close intimacy which _ had
U rom ex
lstec * between Mr. Kerr and him
^ or many years, Mr. Thow would not
^ ave ^ een surprised at being named in
tte tacl no anticipation of so
^ ai '8 e a windfall, and fully expected
that relations, and more particular
a cousin > AlftX - Anderson, of Long
haugb, would have been among the
legatees. On learning the nature oi
the matler % settlement, the lawyer placed the
unreservedly in the hands of
two gentlemen, what they and considered asked them fair to and ar
range equitable with Mr. Kerr’s
terms next
l of kin. This they have now done,
PRICE THREE CENTS.
Wante.
W mh23 8maH flSh ’ anda
- 3t DAVID R. DILLON.
W ANTED—Everybody prepared to to know that I am
with Jos. now Scnlitz’ Milwaukee serve Beer, my customers, also with
the finest of choice WINES and LIQUORS,
Segars, Tobacco and Smokers’ Articles, at my
old Stand, the C. R. R. HOUSE,
Cor. West Broad & Harrison sts., *
to which I have now removed.
THEO. RADERICK.
mh21tf
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 lano. mchlO-ly
JAMES RAY,
Manufacturer and Bottler
Mineral Waters, Soda, Porter and Ale,
15 Houston St„ Savannah, Ga.
feb23-3m , .
Dr. A. H. BEST,
DENTIST
Cor. Congress and Wli itaker streets.
SAVANNAH, GA.
T EETH guaranteed. extracted without pain, All work
I respectfully beg to refer to any of iny
patrons. oetl-bmo
W. B. FERRELL’S Agt.
RESTAURANT, No. 11 New Market Basement,
(Opposite Lippman’s Drug Store,)
lanliU.f SAVANNAH. GA
C. A. CORTI.NO,
Hair Ciittiw, Hair Bressine, Curlitft and
SHAVING SALOON.
HOT AND COLD BATHS.
1G6U Bryan street, opposite the Market, un¬
der Planters’ Hotel. Spanish, Italian, Ger¬
man, and English spokon. neltf-tf
HAIR store:
jos. e. loisf.au & co.,
118 BROUGHTON ST„ Bet. Bull & Drayton
K EEP on hand a large assortment of Hair
Hair Switches, combings Curls, worked Puffs, in tho and Fancy Goods
latest style,
Faucy Costumes, Wigs and Beards for Rent
GEORGE FEY,
WINES, LIQUORS, SEGARS, TOBACCO, &c .
The celebrated Joseph Schlilz’ MILWAU¬
KEE LAGER BEER, a speciality. No. 22
Whitaker Street, Lyons’ Block, Savannah,
Ga. FREE LUNCH every day from 1L to 1.
r-z31-J 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,
Buggies. and Falling Spring and Farm Wagons, Canopy
line of Carriage Top Baby Wagon Cari lages, also a full
and Material. I have
engaged chanics. in my factory the most skillful me¬
pairing, Any orders for new work, and re¬
will ho executed to give satisfaction
and at short notice mayI2-ly
EAST END
Carriage Manufactory.
P. O’CONNOR,
East Broad, President and York sts.
Savannah, Ga.
public beg leave to Inform that my friends and tho
in general I always keep on
a full supply of tho best seasoned mate¬
and am prepared to execute orders for
Wagons, Buggies, Drays, Trucks,
with promptness and dispatch, guaran¬
teeing all work turned out from my shops to
be as represented.
Repairing polishing, in all its branches. Painting, Var¬
in lettering and trimming
a workmanlike manner.
Horse-shoeing a specialty. mch2tf
Leather and Findings.
MERCHANTS
And Dealers in
HIDES, LEATHER AND FINDINGS,
100 BAY STREET,
savannah, GEORGIA.
H IGHEST Wool. Sheep Market Skins, Price Furs, paid Deer for Hides, Skins,
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.
wrkksr Ice Company.
Wholesale and Retail Dealers *
Shippers In and
of
EASTERN ICE.
— DEPOT; —
HI BAY STREET.
SAVANNAH, GEORGIA,
J. F. CAVANAUGH, Manager.
mchl-6m
Candies.
ESTABLISHED 1850.
M. FITZGERALD
—Manufacturer of—
PURE, PLAIN AND FINE
CANDIES.
Factory and Store, 178 BRYAN STREET
Branch Store, No. 122 BROUGHTON ST.,
One door east of SAVAtftfArf, Bull street.
GA.