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13 A I L Y M KVKjSTIIsTG
Savannah Recorder.
VOL I.—No. 160.
THE SAVANNAH RECORDER,
R. M. ORME, Editor.
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which will make six full issues for the week.
4W"We do not hold ourselves responsible for
the opinions expressed ny Correspondents.
Alarming if True.
Hayes the Last President of the United
States
[From the Hartford Times,]
We find the following versification,
with explanatory notes, going the
rounds of the press, and we give it to
oui readers for what it is worth, and
doubt if it is worth much. It is stated
that “Dr. Albert Marsh, of Brooklyn,
N. Y. t has the original of this collection
of rhymes, which was composed in
1787, at Sherbrook, Canada, and after¬
wards Mountain published, (Vt.) in 1813, in the Green
Chronicle , a copy of
which Dr. Marsh has in his possession.”
Is there any such man as “Dr. Albert
Marsh, of Brooklyn ?’’ We have rea¬
son to think there is not, and that this
alleged prediction—which would be in¬
deed a singular thing if really made at
the time stated—is nothing more than a
hoax. But, such as it is, we give it,
and its explanatory notes (whose are
they?), for better or worse:
Columbia, home of Iibertle,
Khali not twenty rulers see,
Ere there sha'l be battle smoke,
And In waves of pu - il tossed,
The ancient ordei shall be deemed lost.
Ere peace shall seem to be broke,
[Hayes is the nineteenth President.]
The first shall, too, the second be,
If the Fates tell Truth as even he;
Where sits the sire as sits the son,
But not the son’s son, (1)
And ere the son shall ruler be
One Three place with shall shall send three;
one make four (2),
And there shall be no more.
(1) Charles Francis Adams can’t be
President.
(2) Tyler was the fourth from Vir¬
ginia.
The first, sprung from these fecund loins
In death his predecessor shall joins, (L)
Who beneath his son pass.
And In a house that different was,
The next one shall have peace and war, (2)
The third shall brook no kingly star;
When the quarter century run.
Where sat the sire shall sit the son, (3)
(1) Jefferson and John Adams died
on tho same day, July 4,182G.
(2) Madison’s administration had
war with England, and peace and
prosperity John afterward. Quincy
ted. (3) Adams inaugura¬
Then comes who should have been before
A soldier who shall not have any war.
(Old Hickory.)
After the fox the lion shall (1)
Be lordly death ruler shall over all;
But in the mansion wield
Sword surer than ou the tented field. (2)
After him there comes anon,
One who had lrlends, but shall have none. (3)
The hickory shall sprout again ; ( 1 )
A soldier come from battle plain,
But shall not long remain,
Nor shall his heir bear sway again.
Then a youth shall follow whofsic”)
Ail shall kuuw, though none knew. (5)
(1) Van Buren was called a fox.
(2) Harrison died almost immedi¬
ately after his inauguration.
(3) Tyler quarreled with his party.
(4) Polk was called young Hickory.
(5) Pierce was almost unknown
until nominated.
While the next to bear the rule (1)
To-morrow’s sage is this days fool;
There shall be trouble manifest,
North and South and East and West (2)
The strong man shall the weak befriend i3)
But it shall not be the end;
Under the next shall widows mourn (4)
Thousands be slain, but miltlions born
Death in the strife shall him ’
But when peace cometh pass he shall die’(5) by
A soldier after him shall be uh,
Who shall see his century.
(1) Jbuchanan.
(2) The War ofRebelion.
(3) Slavery the cause.
(4) Great loss of life by the war.
(5) Lincoln killed after the war end
ed.
(6) Grant Grant seeing the Centennial (?)
or—is it for the rest of the cen¬
tury?
Rule afterwards shall bo $;ot
By the one whoso it was not (1);
Men shall roar, a ml rage, and rave.
But he sitall have win* should not have (.2),
But when the tide of stonu is o'er ;
Four shall make six and not four (8);
He wlvo shall be no more.
And all that's past not make a score (.4).
(1) Hayes.
(,2) He shall not be turned out. j
(3) A proposition is made to make
the Presidential term six insted of four
years.
(4) What this refers to cannot yet
be told. It seems to indicate
there will be no President after Hayes
dies, when the Presidential term is ex¬
tended.
But Columbia shall again
Rise and fairer than ten [sic.] speak
Brother shall with brother
Whom he hath not seen a week ;
Letters shall go ’neath the deep, (1)
Likewise over the mountain steep;
Men shall speak to brazen ears,
That shall he months in after years, (2) post,
Words spoken shall be sent through
So no syllable be shall lost; have (3) then
A drop of water
The force of many thousand men. (4)
(1) Submarine Phonograph, telegraph.
(2)
(3) Telephone.
(4) Keeley’s motor (?) perhaps.
All these things shall happen when ?
They Six shall happen—not before
years shall be reckoned four, (1)
Thirteen shall be thirty-nine; (2)
This shall be a certain sign ;
Nine and eight reversing take,
When (Eight and one the nine shall make,)
All ninety-two are eighty-one, (3)
these marvels shall be done.
(1) President’s term lengthened to
six years.
(2) Thirteen States to be thirty
nine. Another Territory to be made a
State.
1789, (3) Washington was inaugurated in
and ninety-two years from that
is 1881.
What He Found.
He was a saving man, with an eye
on the mam chance and the sidewalk.
He was walking down the street with
several friends. He saw a bit of green
paper in the slush. None of his com¬
panions noticed it. He excused him¬
self and stepped aside. The walk was
crowded with pedestrians. He kept his
eye on the bit of green paper, which
ever and anon was stepped upon and
ground still further into the snow by
the feet of the careless crowd. Visions
of ten dollar greenbacks floated before
him. It might be a ten, it might be a
fifty, it might be a hundred dollar bill.
A momentary opening in the crowd en¬
abled him to swoop down upon the
treasure that was his by right of dis¬
covery. He gobbled it up. If it proved
to be a small bill, he would keep it ;
if a large one, he would advertise it in
the papers and get a reward, With
hands tightly clasped be hurried to an
adjacent stairway to size his pile. As
he unfolded his prize with trembling
fingers he found it to be a canceled rev¬
enue stamp from a tobacco package.
With unsteady steps and haggard face
he stumbled into a convenient drug
store, and, with one hand firmly clasped
upon his equator, gasped faintly for a
glass of water in which to drown his
feelings .—Home Sentinel.
Go on With the Ceremony.
The natives of New Caledonia are
confirmed polygamists, and treat
women as laborers or pack-horses. It is
but rarely that the worthy missiona¬
ries succeed in inducing them to em¬
brace the Christian faith and mono
gamy.
One day,however, a native presented
himself as a candidate for baptism. He
had two wives.
“My son,” said the missionary, “if
you really want to be an angel and
with the angel8 stand, it is absolutely
necessary that you should renounce the
devil and all his works. I mean one of
your wives.”
The candidate went away very sor¬
rowful, but the good missionary's
words sunk deep into bis heart, and a
few days later he returned joyfully.
“I have only one wife now,” said
the convert ; “baptize me,”
“Only one wife !” exclaimed the
missionary ; “where is the other? You
had two.”
“I’ve killed her, and if you don’t be¬
lieve me I have her head here to prove
it,” cried the convert, producing in evi¬
dence his last spouse’s head tied up in
a bunch of banana leaves ; “and now
go on with the ceremony.”
A Woman’s Double Life.
I From the New York world.]
A farm laborer of Ridgewood, N. J,
married in New York, in 1862, a young
girl who had recently arrived from Ger-!
many. She w«, only sixteen, pretty
and well taught. She became the mo- !
ther of three children and was a dutiful
wife except for her penuriousness She
frequently allowed the children to do
without necessaries to save a few cents
from her husband’s scanty earnings.
She New^York kept an account in a savings bank
in “pen^Tillne^ city A few days dTd, a^o aid
afteran e .be
her husband went to to New new York lortto to
draw the balance of $10—all that was
,
left—out of the bank. The cashier told
him that his wife had two accounts,
$10 in her own name, and one of
$1,500 in the name of her sister in trust
for a person said to be residing in Ger
many and unknown to the" husband
He found his wife’s sister, who confess
ed that his wife had a child in Germanv,
now a lad of 17, and that she had d'e
posited this money of his in bank for
the benefit of this child. The $1,500
has been accumulating for 16 years.
- , M , •
“Mamma, I don’t think the people
who make dolls are very pious people,”
saida little girl to her mother, one day.
“Why not, my child?” “Because you
can never make them kneel. I always
her to lay my doll on her stomach
fay prayers.”
SAVANNAH MONDAY, APRIL 7, 1879.
How a Wyoming Girl Thrashed
a Man for Flirting:.
[From the Rocky Mountain News.]
A gentleman just over from Wyo¬
ming gives an account of a little epi¬
sode which transpired iu Cheyenne a
few days since. He says that a young
lady, residing a few miles from that
city, had been the recipient for some
time of very marked attention from a
well-known young man. So much so
indeed, that a promise of marriage had
passed between them, and their friends
looked forward to a speedy union. It
seems, however, that the young man’s
attentions were not of that kind, and
he recently expressed to a mutual
friend die fact that he was only flirt"
ing with the girl. Being in town Sat¬
urday on a visit to a friend, the remark
of her reputed lover found its way to
her in some way, and she determined
to make him a visit. Ou her way,
about dusk, to his place of business,
accompanied by a gentlemen and his
wife, she met the object of her search,
and immediately proceeded to inter¬
view him. To her inquiry if he had
made the remark ascribed to him, he
gave an indignant denial.
“You never said, then, that you had
been flirting with me?”
“I never thought of such a thing,”
he replied,
TURNING WHITE AND RED BY TURNS
as the gentleman who attended the
girl, although silent, looked as if he
might take a hand in the discussion at
a momoment’s notice.
“But you are engaged to me, are
you not ?” presisted the girl, I want
to know just how we stand, and I want
these friends of mine to know, too. I
have been a subject of calumny in some
way and I want the matter put to
rights. You have engaged to marry
me, have you not?
The question was clear, explicit and
admitted of no evasion. But the man
hesitated. He looked around—looked
every way but in the face of his indig¬
nant questioner; aud that was strange,
for the face, if all reports be true, was
gards. pretty enough to win any man’s re¬
“Well, I don’t know*,” he said, hesi¬
tating and flue-ring hotly beneath the
eager, cited Hebe, questioning who glance of the ex¬
had come up close to
him and was looking into his face with
eyes that fairly burned in their hot
flashes.
“You don’t know? Have you no
recollection of anything of the kind ?”
The question was wrathful, impera¬
tive, and to the point. It was plain
that she meant to have no fool¬
ing, and what little courage
het man had was fast oozing
away. No doubt he wished himseli
anywhere but where he was. But
wishes do very little good under such
circumstances, and a man with half an
eye could see that he had to face the
racket music.
“I may have said something of the
sort,” he muttered at last; “but this is
sides, no place to talk about such things ; be¬
we are not alone.”
“Don’t let that fact disturb you,” in¬
terposed the girl’s male attendant.
“We shall be very discreet ”
The tone in which this was said
more than the words, made the yoimg
man believe that the climate around
that spot was
GRADUALLY SROWING EXCEEDINGLY
UNHEALTHY.
“You may have said something of
the sort,” the girl interrupted. “Don’t
you know that you have given me
your solemn promise to marry me?”
“I might have done so.”
This was more than the rural damsel
could endure. She had acted very
discreetly so far, but now patience
overleaped its bounds. She was mad. |
W hat woman would at be under the
circumstances? Suddenly she doubled
her h9t and struck him full in the face,
The man fell back in disorder. She j
advanced with fury a»d struck h. m
a 8 ain *» Dor were the blows which this |
buxom country girl launched from her
shoulder to be laughed at. One left a
>»»* «»d the other brought blood. The
man cas ^ 0De despairing glance around
to see if the incident attracted alien
and seeing no one near, he
abruptly terminated the interview by
bis. heel. It was, perhaps,
the best solution he could have made;
ofth edifficuU y, for the man who came
Wlth the Sirl looked as it he meant to
take P art in tiie argument. This aidn tj
a ^
As there is no more to chronicle, the
record of the incident may be'closed
remark that there is not.
likely to be a wedding in that
£1^ engagement has been brought to a
close, and both parlies are open to any
.thing which Cupid may have instore
i * or them.
. . . longer the , mother , of ,
V irgima, no
Presidents, is, however, the parent of
Senators, being represented in the Uni
ted. States Senate by six Senators, to
"it: Johnston, Withers, Hereford,
Davis, Coke, Thurman. The two latter
Texas and Ohio, but were
born of Virginia pirents in Virginia.
The Education of Girls.
Whatever we may think of what
girls ought to be, and however
ly we may criticise some of their
dencies and characteristics, we must
all our discussions start with the
of the case, and see our daughters
they are, before we try to make
what they should be. Thus, there
be no doubt that the American
such, differs much from her
sisters, because she is born in this
country and in this long-established
Republic, and that she is thus
in conditions that alike stir her
tion and task her strength.
Her brothers are born with right
suffrage, and she in her way has
ly the same right, although she cares
use it, not by her vote, but by
social freedom, or by having her say in
the choice of a husband, and in all
other matters within her sphere. What
is quite memorable, and not in all re*.
freedom, spects advantageous, this democratic
which gives the brothers a
certain dashing independence by going
with a certain homage to womei j as -nek
and making them a kind of aristocratic
caste who have high expectations, and to
whom all men are to pay deference. So
the American girl is at once tempted to
queen it over men as her vassals, and
claim tribute from them, and also
obliged to a great and often painful ex
tent to stand upon her own feet and
make her own way in the world. The
proudest of queens, and often the hard¬
est of workers, she has a peculiar lot,
in view of which the topic of the educa¬
tion of our daughters has now a great
and growing interest. Yet a better day
is coming, and many of the most honored
teachers and the most prominent lead¬
ers of society are ready to go with us
ought in maintaining that well-educated girls
to know how to do all the work
of the house, even if they expect only
to see that it is properly done by their
servants. How to wash, cook, cut
garments and make them, to nurse the
sick, care for the garden, provide for
the table, and look after the whole
economy of the home belongs to a well
trained woman, however gentle her
blood and breeding, quite as much as
to know the etiquette of society aud the
arts of dress and the methods of amuse*
rnent
Of course, those useful branches do
not exhaust the range of practical edu¬
cation, but they belong to it; and few
women much, and go through making life withoutsuffering
others suffer, from
their ignorance of plain household uses.
These do not by any means sacrifice
the elegances and accomplishments, and
may sometimes serve them in a dark
day, or a perplexing emergency. As
health secures to beauty its wholesome
and lasting bloom, so economy secures
home comfort, and, prosaic as it seems,
it rises into poetry like pure water and
good bread, which give light to the eye,
bloom to the cheek, and music to the
step .—Hew York Times.
The Zulu War.
Advices from Capetown, to March
18, says: “Ohom, Ceteway’s brother,
with bis eldest son and three hundred
warriors, surrendered unconditionally
on the second of March, and are now
in Col. Woods’ camp. Ohom is sup¬
posed to be an aspirant of Cetewayo’s
throne. There has been no important
military movement against the
Zulus. Ekoweis was still surrounded,
the road leading there defended by a
large force of Zulus. The relieving
force under Col. Lowes is still on the
lower Tugela river’ . °\
three companies each of the ^ 1 bird and
Eighty-eighth regiments, and a portion
ot the naval brigade ot the iron-ciae
Shah. I he r lily-seventh Regiment
has landed at Durban, from England,
and 13 now marching to join Col. Lowe.
The latest intelligence from Ekow is
that the garrison are well, but their
provisions are running short.
A Compromise.— -----, ‘Stranger, said ... he,
‘I want to sell yer a horse.’
‘Stranger,’was the reply, ‘I don t
want him.’ .
'Stranger,' rejoined the wayfarer,
‘yer reely must buy him. You never
see a better horse for the price.
‘What is the priee, stranger?’ asked
the contemplative man
‘A hundred and fifty dollars, and
dirt cheap at that.'
The inquirer meditated for a few
moments and then blandly remarked :
Saanger, 111 give yer five.
Bismarck is willing now to give the
Alsace-Lorraine people autonomy. He
represents the imperial province in the
Bundesrath, or Federal Council, and
there are fifteen deputies in the
Reichstag, but the people about 1,600,
000 in number, are under the heels
Governor Von Muller, who has about
him a horde of petty imperial officials,
who account to Bismarck.
Four thousand men assembled in
Boston theatte to see a wrestling
Thirty thousand persons in New
paid a dollar apiece to witness
worn-out men walking around a
ITEMS OF INTEREST.
The municipality of Besancon, France
has resolved to affix a tablet on the
bouse where Victor Hugo was borne,
and to rename the street after hi m.
Great Britain is becoming alarmed at
the decrease in her exports to the Uni¬
ted States. The outlook is said by those
who are interested in the carrying trade
to be exceedingly gloomy.
Cornelius Vanderbilt, Jr., writes to
a friend in Washington, that as soon as
William hands over that $1,000,000, he
intends to pay the Greeley girls the
money he borrowed from their father.
Mr. Belmont shows that New York
receives only $25,000 per annum from
taxes on its bonds, while if it could
save two per cent, in the rate of inter"
est by exempting them from taxation,
it would save $2,000,000 per annum.
With seventy thousand armed Bui"
garians in Eastern Roumelia, it seems
almost an infatuation on the part of
some the European powers to suppose that
province can be kept permanently
under the Turkish yoke by such de¬
vices as a mixed occupation.
Alexander Stewart, of Proctorsville,
Vermont, the alleged cousin of the late
A. T. Stewart, has returned to his
wood"pile. Hilton, Mrs. Stewart and Judge
it is said, have given him a sum
of money which places him beyond the
reach of want for the rest of his days.
There was an instance of the disa¬
greement of doctors in France recently
which led to a duel in Bois de Vin
ceunes. The participants were army
surgeons, who had had a dispute. One
of them was wounded, and his antago
nist dressed the wound and helped him
to the carriage, and subsequently com¬
mitted suicide.
Last year the lower House of the
Pennsylvania Legislature consumed
$23,000 worth of stationery—about
$100 worth to each member ; and the
Senate $11,000, or $220 to each mem¬
ber. An investigation has therefore
been ordered to ascertain how the mem
bers managed to use up so much in th
one hundred days to which the sessioo
is limited.
A short time ago a little boy went with
his father to see a colt. He patted the
colt's head and made quite a fuss over
it, until finally the stableman told him
to be careful that the colt did not turn
round and kick him. When the little
chap went home his mother asked him
what he thought about the colt. “J
like him pretty well,” was the reply.
“He’s real tame in front, but he’s aw¬
ful wild behind.”
England and the United States are
the only two countries of the whole
world that can float a four per cent,
loan at par. France can almost do it,
and the German 4’s are worth 96.
Russia’s 42 ’s are worth but 76, and
the 5’s of Italy are at par. On the
other hand Spanish 3's are worth but
14 cents, and the market value of
Mexican 3’s is to-day only 8 cents on
the dollar.
The Smithsonian Institution at Wash¬
ington has just received a collection of
one hundr°d and thirty-four species of
Japanese fish, being very nearly a com¬
plete collection of all the known species
in that empire. The specimens are
beautifully arranged, and are correctly
labelled both in Latin and English.
They come under the exchange system
so widely practiced among the scientific
societies of the world.
Put in a nutshell, says the Word,
this is the position of the stalwarts at
\ Washington. When the Republicans
j controlled and the Senate and the House,
Andrew Johnson showed himself
t0 ^ e a disobedient President with an
intended PV e in tho GnnatitnHnn tbtt
that Congress was the Exe
cutive Now that the Democrats con
trol the genate and the House and Mr>
“aX Haves ^TthT^ithrPrM^t ia in the White House the stal
is the Legislature.
A . lact . ofte ramarked , , by
ver £ ? upon
foreigner who visit this country is the
8mA •“»»'“ 0 as ed k L im »;
cans who are temporarily . residing at
are «« lepton wnat '^fZTVthe is Known as we
American plan. One taking dinner at
clt ? £.'&£!?'„ canr } ot ta “ 10 P be' oe struck LckTy\h. by tne ap! ap
.parent abstemious habits of those who
a f e f ue tables W1 ^ b turn, f° r R 13
often the case that not more than one
in one hundred is drinking anything
stronger than water.
A kind of traffic in children has been
carrried on in the Russian province of
Pskov, under the stress of hard times.
A canvasser will go among the poor
peasants, and induce them, by orders of
small sums of money.to surrender their
boys, between 7 and 12 years of age, to
be put in apprenticeship for three or 5
years. He takes them to St. Peters¬
burg, where he furniehes supplies of
them to the factories, receiving from
ten to fifteen roubles for each boy.
There are women who scour the pro¬
vince and for girls, also from 7 to 14 years Peters- old,
these are taken to St.
^ ur f5 to hired out.
PRICE THREE CENTS.
Wanted*
ARFENTERS \V ANTED—Apply to A. G.
Ybanes, No. 99 Bay street if
W ANTED—Everybody now prepared to serve to know rny customers, that I am
with Jos. Schlitz’ Milwaukee Beer, also with
the finest of choice WINES and LIQUORS,
Segars, old Tobacco and Smokers’ Articles, at my
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
Mineral Waters, Soria, Porter and Ale,
15 Houston St., Savannah, Ga.
feb23-3m
W. B. FERRELL’S Agt.
RESTAURANT, No. 11 New Markot
Basement,
(Opposite Lippman’s Drug Store.)
ianISt.t SAVANNAH. GA
C. A. CORTJ.NO,
SHAVING SALOON.
HOT AND COLD BATHS.
16614 Bryan street, opposite the Market, uu
der Planters’ Hotel. Spanish, Italian, Get
man.and English spokon. sel6-M
JOS; H. BAKER,
BUTC ZEE DE! IEL,
STALL No. 66, Savannah Market.
Dealer in Beef, Mutton, Pork ud
Ail other Meats in their Seasons.
Particular attention paid to supplying Ship
and Bo arding Houses. augl2
H AIR store:
JOS. E. L0ISEAU & CO.,
118 BROUGHTON ST., Bet. Bull * Drayton
K EEP on hand a large assortment of Hair
Hair Switches, combings Curls, Puffs, and Fancy Goods
worked in the latest style.
Fancy Costumes, Wigs and 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 1.
r-z31-J v
Carriages*
A. K. WILSON’S
CARRIAGE MANUFACTORY I
Corner Jiay and West Broad sts.
CARRIAGE REPOSITORY .
Cor. Bay and Montgomery streets.
SAVANNAH, GEORGIA
The largest establishment In the city.
Buggies. I keep a Spring full line of Carriages, Rockaways,
and Farm Wagons. Canopy
an (I Falling Top Baby Oaniages, also a full
line of Carriage and Wagon Material. I have
engaged chanics. in my factory the Eaost skillful me¬
pairing, will Any orders for new work, and re¬
be executed to give satisfaction
and at short notice mayl2-Iy
EAST END
Carriage Manufactory.
P. O’CONNOR,
corner East Broad, President aud York sts.
Savannah, Ga.
I public beg leave iu general to inform that my I always friends keep and the on
hand a full supply of the best seasoned mate¬
rial and am prepared to execute orders for
Wagons, Buggies, Drays, Trucks,
Etc., with promptness and dispatch, guaran¬
teeing all work turned out from my shops to
be as represented
nishing. Repairing polishing, In all Its branches. Painting, Var¬
done in workmanlike lettering and trimming
a manner.
Horse-shoeing a specialty. mch2tf
Ice*
Kanksr Ice Company.
Wholesale and Retail Dealers in and
Shippers of
ICE.
— DEPOT;
1*4 BAY STREET.
SAVANNAH, GEORGIA,
F. CAY r ANAUGH, Manager.
mchl-Om
Candies.
ESTABLISHED 1850
M. FITZGERALD
—Manufacturer of—
PURE, PLAIN AND FINE
CANDIES.
Factory and Store, 176 BRYAN STREET
Branch Store, No. 122 BROUGHTON ST.
One door eaut of Bull atreet,
savannah, *a
_
CONCORDIA PARK.
T his beautiful and popular re¬
sort, the finest and only park for pleas¬
ure and enjoyment in the city or state, will
be opened on the 1st of April, for the accom¬
modation of visitors at any time of the day.
Great Improvements have been made, and no
pains menting or expense and have been spared in orna¬
beautifying tills
PLEASURE SPOT,
The finest and ornamental trees and shrubs
imported planted. from all Th parts of the glohe, have
been oniy nod the bext of Jo¬
seph Schlitz’-s Milwaukee- LAGER will be sold.
No disreputable character will be admitted
to the Park.
Visitors will please take notice not to bring
their dogs grounds to the park hereafter. as no dog will be allow¬
ed on the
The Abercorn and Whitaker street cars run
direct to the park for oniy 5 cents.
There is no nicer place for Pic Nice or Ex¬
cursions than this park, which can be had at
reasonable rates.
JOh27 C. SEILER, Proprietor;