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D A. I L Y Kv mntn - g
Savannah fern] i&ruHCi s 05 JfCl ft Recorder.
VOL I.—No.
THE SAVANNAH RECORDER,
R. M. ORME, Editor.
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which will make six full issues for the week.
e do not hold ourselves responsible for
the opinions expressed by Correspondents.
[Written for the Savannah Recorder.]
To Miss Carrie,
Sweet girl, thou thus felt at last,
That you did wrong to cause me pain,
And dost thou now forget the past,
To call me to thy side again ?
I own the invitation’s sweet,
And sweeter far who gives the same,
But now I never could thee greet,
And call thee by thy former name.
That name which caus’d the winning smile’
To light the beauty of thy face,
When thy soft lustrous eyes the while,
Did each awak’ning doubt efface.
And what, dear girl, lias chang’d me thus,
Deeming it sweet to dwell apart ?
Alas! the cause of parting us,
And answer, dwells within thy heart.
Then fare thee well ! in after years,
When thou art happy, think of me,
Then thou may’st feel, with mem’ry’s tears,
’Twas better thus to set us free.
D.
FERE HYACINTHE.
Tho New Religious Movement in Paris
New Idea.
In religion as in everything else, there
is reform and revolution. Bold, orig¬
inal and independent men will think,
and it is such that give new ideas,
thoughts and principles to the mind
Pere Hyacinthe is one of those men,
and he has inaugurated a new move¬
ment in France. As he has something
of a world wide reputation, a reporter
of the New York Herald has‘had a
long talk with him as to the reform or
new church he has established. We
8 oivp some of the leading nuestions and
answers, bays the reporter:
I acquainted with Pere Hyacinthe _
am
personally, and knowing *1118 repug
nance for anything like “interviewing”
I have hesitated about asking him for
information which he alone can give.
Meeting him the other day I told
him of my desire and of my hesi
tation. He replied:—"Well, as I
know that you do not come to me out
of mere curiosity, but as a gentleman
and a representative the of information the Herald, I
will try to But give what you the you
des,re. are points on
‘Well, I replied, ft I should ,j like -l , to
know something of your ideas and your
plans, as well as of the programme of
the work you have undertaken here.”
“Ah! that covers a great deal
ground,” he said, "and would require
more than a casual conversation like
this to make it clear to yon.
„ ' r ^V“i°u“d 1 k f d ‘, beieVemhaV1Ilg “
“If, he 1 replied r calmly, 1 and , with ,1 no
show of bitterness, unique and “if arbitrary having a Pope
who is a himself spiritual
governor, arrogating to supen
ority over his brother Bishops and tem
poral rights over governments, no! And
if assuming to be, or even accepting to
be, what alone God is—inlallible—ten
thousands times no! But I have no oh
jection to having a central bishop in the
governmental’ the church, one among
the bishops chosen as dean or Indeed, president
of the College of Bishops. there is central as
in all governments a
man I think there is no reason why the
Universal Church should have as its
central or first Bishop equal a primate, them— one
who is of them and to
pi'imus inter pares —but not their
*ernor or ruler, for the Church of Christ
is a free institution, and, like all
institutions, should govern itself.
“But,” I asked, “if you reject the
sovereignty of *the Pope, do you really
feel yourself to be Catholic? You
know that those who do this are
©rally looked upon as Protestant?”
“Well,” he said, “I will ask you in re
ply if, when the English colonies in
America threw off their allegiance to
En ideuce, gland, did they, be in American the warofinde
pen cease to ?
It was only when they were rid of
foreign rule that they became truly
American, and therefore for us in
France to become really and truly
Catholic we must cease to be Roman
we must be French Catholics.
CATHOLICISM AND PROTESTANTISM.
“And as to being Protestant, if Pro¬
testantism consists in protesting against
the errors of Rome (or errors out of it,)
then I am ono; but if it means denying
the doctrines of the undivided Apos¬
tolic and Catholic Church as they were
taught and believed from their founda¬
tion down to the time of the separation
of the Church, then I am not Protes¬
tant. Then it is very difficult for me
to accept the infallibility of any man,
be he Luther or Calvin (and I respect
them both, and Luther the most,)
while I reject the infallibility of the
Bishop of Rome. No. I can accept
no man’s doctrine—no human Church—
I accept only Christ’s doctrine and
Christ’s Church! Men may create
institutions, governments and systems,
but they cannot create churches. And
therefore, when people talk about my
founding a new Church, it is nonsense.
I could npt if I would, and I would not
if I could. In fact, the work we seek
to do is a reform of discipline and not
of doctrine. And when the injurious
usages of men—the cramping, galling
chains of unnatural and uprighteous
discipline—are placed God’s in their true
light, and when truth and
Christ’s love stand unveiled and free,
then will men be brethren, then infi¬
delity and hatred will cease and the
Church, united, will again be strong
and beautiful—strong to save and
beautiful to draw us toward heaven.
DISTINCTION BETWEEN THE CATHOLIC
AND ROMAN CHURCH.
“Yon distinguish,” I said “between
the Catholic and Roman Church ?”
“Certainly," he replied, “just as you
distinguish between Washington, with
its small District of Columbia, and the
United States of America. Rome is
an integral part of the Roman Catholic
Church. True, it is the seat of the
general government, and if she would
act wisely and loyally, allowing other
nations, as Washington does your State
Governors, their entire liberty of action
and development, then, and only then,
would harmony be restored to the di¬
vided Church. If you ask any Greek
or Anglican who ranks first to day as
Bishop, he will tell you, ‘The Bishop
of Rome.’ Therefore, I believe that
each State, country or nation should be
allowed to choose its own spiritual
rulers, as it does its civil Governors,
and not have strangers imposed upon
it.”
“Then you are in favor of the Epis
bopal form of government,” I said.
A great EPISCOPAL REPUBLIC.
“Certainly I am ; for when well in
terpreted and adapted it would be a
vast and sublime spiritu il republic ex
tending throughout the entire world,
with no earthly king and much less a
despotic autocrat. Chirst, our King,
j R lifted up with His kingdom, which is
DO t of this earth, and to explain fully
the idea 0 f the church —this earthly,
grand republic, —]’ something human and
Ji v ] ne a f a j r and loving
bride of the Heavenly Kin<? • this is
the Church of Christ.”
y° u na Diralv believe in tne
apostolic 1 inquired. .
succession ■.
y i do
neUd8 cauD0 °[ , 10t ’ understand “ jerstanJ this" thn,
Isaid 1 3a ff/
L know, he . natuiedly
‘ies, good
rejoined, but it, is very egotistical should think to
presume that all Christians
hkeoiie self, find then this is not sur
pitsing, after the excesses of the Roman
b “ b ?P^ th at <» ff** •» • »»
h ;
■■ toemal presence ?”
“I see «S von hUkindlysmilf are catechising me” he
replied lepueci, witn ms kindly .mue. -W*U '' ? •
we we men who feel ourselves full
^ov v, i-n e ec to earn our. cat ecffiism
“6 trust ana an V innocence io n oc“nce l in in which \vnu.n we \\e
first-leained it As 1 beliece in t e
a P Cb in that most exact ot all om
feauoiu s doings and savings at His
heve ^ as *- Supper, in riis real 1 do presence most certainty in the aolv be
commumon, aini that it should be per
!ec * jj 1 * oim j}. P 1 1 ;l d ministeie ^
j° a “ taithtul , , in . thetiue , loim
“read and vine.
benefits and evils of confession
“Well, as to confession,” he con
tinned, “I think that it may be and
has been a means of scandal and evil,
but may also be a means of immense
good to a soul burdened with doubt or
to find a worthy pastor who can
help him in his struggle much with I doubt
and temptation. As as
the inquisition of the confessional oi
the forced confession, 1 shouM certainly
feel myself an unworthy castor of
| people and minister of God if the any eonfi- P
sinner should come to me iD
; dence of confession, asking to be helped the
j out of bis sin, aud 1 refused him all
aid in my power. No
believes that confession to fiian
SAVANNAH SUNDAY, MARCH 30, 1879.
is anything if it does not lead to or fol¬
low absolute repentance to God, and
when I find such a one to be really and
truly repentant, with a full determina¬
tion to abandon the sin, I could in all
conscience say—not in my own name,
for I am but the servant of the Great
High Priest, who is Christ, but in His
name and in the name of the Church
against which he has also sinned—I
should say: ‘Your sins are forgiven
by the grace of repentance and of
Christ’s love; go in peace.’ Confession
should be entirely left to the option of
the individual.
THE QUESTION OF CELIBACY.
“5 ou speak of a married clergy,” I
said, “and from the fact of your own
marriage I infer that you are decidedly
opposed “You to the celibacy of the priest.”
are mistaken,” he replied, “I
am not opposed to the celibacy of the
priest when it is voluntary and real,
when it is a virtuous state, a holy sac¬
rifice made for God, for the good of
one’s own soul and for the good of
others. Such a sacrifice can only be
made by great and pure natures for a
holy cause. And such a sacrifice is
sublime and will have a great reward.
But I am opposed to vows, for they are
useless in such cases as these we speak
of, and in cases where celibacy is not
free and joyous as it should be, vows
become worse than useless—harmful,
and often chains of perdition. Then
throughout the Roman Church in the
Orient the clergy are married, with the
full approbation of the Pope.”
“But when vows are once made ?” I
asked.
“Well, the harm is in the making
and not in the breaking ; for any pro¬
mise we make in all sincerity, as in
youth it is often done, but which we
find is not only a mistake but a fatal
error, and a cause of actual injustice,
wrong and sin—then God, who knows
how to unloose all bonds and set free
all consciences, is sufficient to relieve
any one from all imprudent and rash
promises. Then the forced celibacy of
the priests makes of them a caste,
separating them from the rest of the
faithful, from the family, from the
State, from citizenship and from human
society; and thus cut off from human
ties the priest becomes the instrument,
the machine, the valet of a foreign
power.
THE BIBLE AND THE MASS.
“And what other reforms do you
propose ?" I asked.
“One of the most pressing is that of
putting the Bible into the hands of all
the people,and that of having the mass
and all the religious services celebrat¬
ed in the language of the people ”
“And the mass,” I asked, “do you
expect to change that?”
“You might as well ask me if I in
tended to change the holy communion,”
he replied, “for the mass is only
that with certain forms. We may mo
dify forms, but we shall certainly not
attempt to change principles or modify
sacraments. Then what can be more
beautiful when recited in the language
nnderstood by the people than those
sublime psalms and magnificent bibli- j
cal prayers? for tho mass is composed
of them. There are many superfluous
forms and genuflexions, and then we
are preparing the our liturgy—that is our j
service tor mass and vespers—from
the old Gallican services before Rome I
interfered with it.”
“Well, if you can carrv out ]our vour
and if'Caiholic. wilUccept
' dea t "j 1 ' c * rta,nl J r brl,, S about »
revolution,
I had scarcely uttered the last word
before he recovered the earnestness
Wlt b which he usually speaks, exclaim
ing .
n0 j ] will have no revolution,
but reform , j would glve mv ljle _
and I intend to give it—for 'reform,
b nt n ot a La lr of “/ head lor revolu '
. , revolution , destroys and , reform
bmUb T’ « x P ect ? ave
any real and lasting success, and above
a ]] t jf we expect the blessing of Heaven,
ai l things must be done calmly, with
^ reflectl0n ’ st ead 7 P" r P ose and
earnes j t pra and yer, combatting . with words
0 f ove earnest charity, suffering
wrong without resentment, for the sake
0 f truth.” He held out his hand, say
j Q g . “And now, goodby. Tell the
Q a tboliea in America to think of these
things carefully and seriously, as
comes that great and free people,
the Protestants, too, for they have
Igreat part to play in Church, the future, not
only of the Catholic but of
Christianity.”
_ m m -----
p r ; nce Louis Napoleon, thev say
London, having had his ‘‘baptism of
at Saarbruck, is about to seek his
“ cou f irinatl ou m blocd” in Znluland.
____„ ^ _ _______
- Lond copvriffit'of publisher who paid
-Z^ 11h dfw Frirb’«
pmnt ng tie Kail ay ^atiian
° * or
‘ 1 it
— _ ^
j _
M ell did that impoitaat personage,
Mrs. Partington, write : “ Ihe strangest
thing in all natur is human natur.
Assassination of a Judge.
Tliomas Buford Shoots Chief Jus¬
tice Elliott, of Kentucky.
He Attributes His Deed to a Decision Ad¬
verse to His Sister.
[From the New York Herald.]
Frankfort, Ky., March 26, 1879.—
Col. Thomas Buford, of Henry county,
and a brother of Gen. Buford, shot and
killed Judge John M. Elliott, of the
Court of Appeals, at a quarter past one
o’clock this afternoon, in front of the
ladies’ entrance of the Capitol Hotel, in
this city. The weapon used was a
double barrelled shotgun, loaded with
twelve buckshot in each barrel. Judge
Elliott, in company with Judge Thos.
Hines, wa3 coming up Ann street when
they were met at the steps of the side
entrance of the hotel by Buford,who ap¬
peared equipped for hunting. Buford
spoke ‘Judge, first to Judge Elliott say in;;
I believe I will go snipe hui -
ing. Won’t you go along?’ To in:
Judge E. repliad, ‘No.’ ‘Well then,
said Buford, ‘won’t you take a drive?’
WHY DID HE SHOOT?
At this point Judge Hines turned
away, and had gone about six feet when
the gun was fired and Judge Elliott
fell upon the sidewalk without uttering
a word. Buford looked down upon
him and said, ‘I’m sorry.’ He then
lifted his head and put his (Buford’s)
hat under it. Judge Hines turned
back and tried to raise the body, but
found that life was extinct. He thought
the shooting was done by accident until
Buford spoke to the Deputy Sheriff
and a policeman, who came immediately
to the scene.
ARREST AND COMMITTAL OF BUFORD.
Buford immediately gave up his gun
to the policeman, saying as he did so :
‘Be careful with that gun. I put twelve
buckshot in it for Pryor ’ He made no
resistance whatever to the officers who
arrested him, and immediately took him
before Esquire Gwyun, who, after a
brief examination, committed him to
jail. office, On his way to the Magistrate’s
or just before he started for it,
he handed a letter to the Deputy Sher¬
iff addressed as follows : ‘Whoever may
get this note I ask earnestly to deliver
it to the person to whom it is directed.’
Capitol Hotel, March 26,1879.
Whatever may happen to me I de¬
sire that my niece, Annie P. Wallace,
shall have everything both in equity
and in law that belongs to me. I only
ask that my body shall 'be laid by my
sister, Mary F. Buford, whom I loved
so well, whose robbery and assassina¬
tion I w : sh to try.
T 11 1 AS bUi ' 0RD
-
AX IN ? UEST H ® LD *
The body ot Judge Llliott was taken
to a room in the Capitol Hotel and a
Coroners inquest was held. The fol
lowing verdict was rendered by the
jury:
‘We, the jury, find that the dead
body now before us is that of John M.
Elliott, of Boyd county, Ky., who was
at the time of his death Judge of the
Court of Appeals, and resident tempo
rarily at Frankfort, and was killed and
murdered in said city on the 26th List.,
by being shot through the body bv
Thomas Buford, with a double-barrelled j
shot gun.’
interview with colonel buford
I n ten minutes after Mr. Buford was
called taken to jail the correspondent
upon him and held the following
interview*
the*sublet Qnv a;..,- . f
'
Wit »'“ q me “ e '“£ on 8ub J ect of 01 th» ,he killing kll,ID S
.'vA , i IM i ”- , r 1 wl :n “ tel! X«° vnn
'
He then entered into the particulars
of the land suit lately decided entitled against
him in the Court of Appeals,
Buford, administrator, ’ vs Guthrie. He
W p T1 f nV pr tl-o wimlo Q - i
i,; a \fa "murdered rv F Pnfm 1 1 \ w n
robbed and by the decision
of him the Court trive of Appeals/ I then asked
to ^ me ti p narHrii]*™ ' of the ‘
h-Pinu r
‘ D ’
bT0Ri ot Tl!; ' KILLIN ‘- x -
Oh, that is easily told, said he. ‘I
made U P m Y ,ni >id to kill him. I
, Monday I would kill
on both
m and ’fudge Pryor, and took a walk
t0 see d I could not save Pryor on ac
coun t of his children. I finally con*
eluded to do so. twelve months ago,
in March or April, I came to Frankfort
determined to kill Judge Pryor, and
twen t Y** our buckshot in a flannel
lor . and somebody else, but I
°k RR S ed mi H d ;
did ,
L- W V '* ou ca ange your
'
•
mina.
J g6 PlT ° r u' the P artlcu . *
, C beer, / e ' ^ n d , ew and % w could
have controlled wronge
the decision, but the 1
case was not yet decided and I deter
mined to wait,’
■ Ted me about the killing of Judge
tKott.
T made up my mine to kill him, not
‘ because he was’the first to decide
case against me, but because he gave
me a Judas kiss, He came to me after
the decision and said, “Dnlnnol ooione T i did did
all I could for ,
lie. I knew you.’’ 1 knew that was
a the profession was against^
me.’
HARPING ON HIS LAWSUIT.
Here he went again into the particu¬
lars of the case, and, upon being asked
to tell about the shooting of Judge
Elliott, said : ‘My gun was loaded with
twelve buckshot in each barrel. I
thought this morning I would go snipe
banting. I met Elliott and said to
him, “Judge, I believe I will go snipe
hunting, won’t you go along ?” He
said, “No.” I then asked him if he
wouldn’t take a drink, and raised my
gun and pulled bell. the trigger. It went
off clear as a
HE WAS SORRY.
‘He fell upon the pavement, and then
I was sorry. I leaned down and placed
my hat under his head. I wished to
treat him with as much courtesy as he
had shown in the robbery and assassi¬
nation of my sister by his decision. It
was the most ignominious game that
my gun ever killed. I was arrested
then, and gave the Sheriff a letter to
my niece, Annie P. Wallace. You can
see the letter. I simply gave her all
my estate in law and equity, and asked
to be buried by my sister. I did not
intend to kill Judge Hines or Judge
Pryor. I killed Elliott to try my case,
to show that they could not rob and
assassinate with impunity.
' TO HIS sister’s GRAVE.
‘Last week I was down in Henry,
and I knelt on my sister’s grave and
swore to gain this case or die with her.
I know what I have done. I made up
my mind, and I am ready to take the
consequences. I had a pistol in my
pocket, and I intended to use it if the
shotgun failed, but it did not fail.’
PUBLIC FEELING,
The announcement of this horrible
the tragedy put an end to all business in
city. The streets have been crowd¬
ed with people all the afternoon, and
it has been seriously apprehended that
there will be a riot.
All Honest Legal Opinion.
An honest farmer once called upon
the late Roger M. Sherman, the cele¬
brated lawyer, and told him he wanted
an about opinion. He had heard a great deal
the value of Mr. Sherman’s opin¬
ions, and how a great many people
went to him to get an opinion, and
John, who never had had, nor was like¬
ly to have, a law suit or other difficulty
for a lawyer to help him from, thought
he would have an “opinion.”
“Well, John, what can I do for you?”
said Mr. S., when John, in his turn,
was shown in the room.
“Why, lawyer,” replied John, “I hap¬
pened ing to do, to be I thought in town, I and would having noth¬ and
come
get your opinion."
“State your case, John. What’s the
matter?”
“Oh, nothing. I ain’t got no law suit,
I only want to get one of your opinions,
they say they’re very valuable.”
“But, John, about what?”
“Oh, anything, sir, take your pick
and choose.”
Mr. Sherman, seeing the notions of
his client on the matter in hand, took
pen, and writing a few words, folded
them up and handed them to John,
who carefully placed the paper in his
W hat .. to pay, sir ?
‘ Fo “ r andslx P ence - Yankeemoney,
75 cents,
When John returned home the next
morning, he found his wife, who pretty
mac h took the lead in his business mat
leni - anxiously discussing with his
chief farm servant the propriety of get
-lay, ting in wh'ch a large had quantity been ol oats the on that
cat on one
P-'e™us, or undertaking some other
kb * r ,
John was appealed to decide. settle the ,
but he could not At
len ?% he .f aid :
tel1 y° u wbat . . * p Poll ,, y’. 1 ve ^ , en
to a lawyer, and . got an opinion that
cost me four and sixpence. There it is
—read her out; it’s a lawyer’s writing,
and I can’t make head or tail of it.”
John, by the way, could not read the
plainest print, but Polly, who was
something of a scholar, opened the pa
per, and read as follows:
“Never put off till to-morrow, what
can be done to-day.”
“Enough said!” cried John; “them
oats must be got in.” And they were
got in, and the same night such a
storm came on, as otherwise would
have ruined them entirely.
John often afterwards consulted this
day opinion, and acted upon it, and to this
entertains a high estimate of law
yer’s opinions generally, and of the la
mented Mr. Sherman’s in particular.
-- -- --
We learn from a New York evemn im 5
paper, that as the friends of Bayar
have just as much moneyas Tilden,
they have concluded to have an organ
a t t h e capital of New York,
Albany and Times is therefore to be
issued as a morning paper.
PRICE THREE CENTS.
Wanted.
/CARPENTERS ^ WANTED—Apply to A.G.
Y banes, No. 99 Ray street. tr
W ANTED— now prepared Everybody to serve to know my customers, that lam
with Jos. Scnlitz’ Milwaukee Beer, 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*
JAMES RAY,
—Manufacturer and Bottler—
Waters, Soda, Porter and Ale,
15 Houston St., Savannah, Ga.
feb23-3m
Dr. A. H. BEST,
D El IT T 1ST
Cor. Congress and Wli itaker streets.
SAVANNAH, GA.
T EETH guaranteed. extracted without pain, All work
I respectfully beg to refer to any of ~ my
patrons. octl-hmo
W. B. FERRELL’S Ajrt.
RESTAURANT, No. 11 New Market Basement,
(Opposite Lippman’8 Drug Store.)
lanlStf SAVANNAH. GA
C. A. CORTJ.NO,
Hair Cutting, Hair Dressing Curling and
SHAVING SALOON.
HOT AND COLD BATHS.
16614 Bryan street, opposite the Market, un¬
der Planters’ Hotel. Spanish, Italian, Ger¬
man, and English spokon. se!6-tf
A FINE stock of Cigars on hand. Prices to
suit anybody. Call and examine my stock
before purchasing, and save money.
H. J. RIESER,
mh28 (lor. Whitaker and liryan sts.
JOS. H. BAKER,
BUTCHER,
STALL No. 66, Savannah Market.
Dealer in Beef, Mutton, Fork nd
All other Meats in their Seasons.
Particular attention paid to supplying Shi p
and Boarding Houses. augl2
HAIR store;
JOS. E. LOISEAU & CO.,
118 BROUGHTON ST., Bet. Bull & Drayton
K EEP on hand a large assortment of Hair
Hair Switches, combings Curls, worked Puffs, and Fancy Goods
in the latest style.
Fancy Costumes, Wig s an d Beard s for Rent
GEORGE FEY,
WINES, LIQUORS, SEGARS, TOBACCO, &c .
The celebrated Joseph Schlltz’ MILWAU¬
KEE LAGER BEER, a speciality. No. 22
Whitaker Street, Lyons’ Block, Savannah.
Ga. FREE LUNCH every day from II to 1.
r-z81-J 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,
Buggies, Falling Spring Top and Baby Farm Wagons, also Canopy
and line of Carriage and Wagon Carilages, Material. I a have full
engaged in my factory the most skillful me¬
chanics. Any orders for new work, and re¬
pairing, will be executed to give satisfaction
aud at short notice. mayl2-ly
EAST END
Carriage Manufactory.
P. O’CONNOR,
Corner East Broad, President and York sts.
Savannah, Ga.
I beg leave to inform my friends and the
hand public full in supply general of tho that best I always seasoned keep on
a mate¬
rial and am prepared to execute orders for
Wagons, Ruggies, Drays, Trucks,
Etc., with promptness and dispatch, guaran¬
teeing all work turned out from my shops to
be Repairing as represented. in all its branches. Painting, Var¬
nishing. polishing, workmanlike lettering and trimming
done in a manner.
Horse-shoeing a specialty. mch2tf
Ice*
Knickerbocker Ice Company.
Wholesale and Retail Dealers in and
Shippers of
EASTERN ICE.
— DEPOT; —
III BAY STREET.
SAVANNAH, GEORGIA,
J. F. CAYANAUGH, Manager.
mchl-6m
Candies*
ESTABLISHED 1850.
TUT tlCTliJAtAijJJ A T.T1
! -Manufacturer of
PURE, PLAIN AND FINE
CANDIES.
and store, 17« bryan street
Branch store, No. i22BRGUGiiToN ST*<
1 Q0 oor ea aAVAKNAEf,
QA?