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VOL I, ■No. 161.
THE SAVANNAH RECORDER,
R. M. ORME, Editor.
PUBLISHED EVERY EVENING ,
Saturday Excepted,)
A.% 1G1 BAY STB.BET,
By ,f. STERN.
The Recorder is served to subscribers, in
every part ol Lhe city by careful carriers.
Communications must be accompanied by
the name of the writer, not necessarily for
publication, but as a guarantee of good faith.
Remittance by Check or Post Office orders
must be made payable to the order of the pub-
1 islier.
We will not undertake to preserve or return
rejected communications.
Correspondence on Local and general
ters of interest solicited.
On Advertisements running three, six, and
twelve months a liberal reduction from our
regular rates will be made.
AH correspondence should be addressed, Re¬
corder, Savannah, Georgia.
The Sunday Morning Recorder will take
the iace oi the Saturday evening edition,
which wilt make six full issues for the week.
«i*We do not hold ourselves responsible for
the opinions expressed oy Correspondents.
Mr*. Bonaparte Patterson.
THE LAST SURVIVING SISTER IN-LAW OF
THE GREAT NAPOLEON DEAD.
In the Baltimore Federal Gazette of
Tuesday, December 27,1808, was pub
lished the following marriage notice :
Married, or. Saturday evening last,
by the Reverend Bishop Carroll, Mr.
Jerome Bonaparte, youngest brother of
the French Republic, to Miss Elizabeth
Patterson, eldest daughter of William
Patterson, Esq., had of this city.
It there been any doubt about
Napoleon’s pated the feelings it had been dtesi
by censors allowing to appear
in all the Pans papers a paragraph to
the effect that M. Jerome Bonaparte
rnight have have an American mistress but
could not a wile. ‘ Tbe Consuls
determination is now too plain, wrote
Robert Patterson from Amsterdam.
it from I he treacherous the editor Bonapartes of Columbian caught
the
Centincl, who called Napoleon “a little
low Corsican, born we know not of
whom, and whose name and family
were never heard of until within these
ten years -which was undeniably
true and printed an authentic sketch
of the genealogy of the Bonaparte
lamily, in which it is shown that Bo
naparte ^ mother mistress of Count
s was
Marbteuf, and his wife the mistress ol
Banas, and that Lucien killed his first
wile, a tavern-wench, with bad treat
ment, and that his sister Ebza married
the son ol^ a billiard maker, and that
his sister 1 auline s first husband a mo
ther s brother was sentenced to be
hanged for robbery. By the 3d of
May, 1805, reports that the marriage
had been annulled were published at
Philadelphia.
When at Rome in 1825 Mme. Bona
TwtvxliTf:
rectionately received^ heJ°w?thcirdWity received except by Mme.
- ptdiue
5 tj i , */ ,, , S °“ J T e ^? , le
e a ? aC ^
E>-*V on non ll CS if , Cardinal
leach, Mme. M Mere ]w ’’ half ip brother, » made
s
him a handsome bequest. 1 In 1849 4°
Mme Bonaparte-Patterson * t) u complained j
bat having been cheated out ol her
nbentanoefrom her - late rich and on
> 1 '' “lhe A 1 ' Emperor 0 a hurled only $10,000 a
year, me back
on what J most hated on earth-my
Baltimore obscurity. I have ever been
an imperial Bonapartist qua,id meme
and am enchanted that the prestige or
le name as elected (to the Ires.den
o e Second Republic) a prince
\\ i° ,' as m > most ardent wishes lor an
bmpiu. )i apoleon III. allowed her
son an aiunnt) of $14,090, discontin
ue(, owevtr, \\ en she contested the
X VU1 S° ei? phalia 8 will, in which
Jerome j ignored his son; still, the Em
peior lecognue is cousin at Court,
ant gran et o me. Bonaparte-Pat
■erson s grain son a pension of $6 190
that only ceased when the Second Em
pire foil, lhe fact that she had ob
tained a divorce in Maryland probably
weakened her case, tor the Pope had
always held her marriage legal and,
par consequnit, Jerome s marriage with
the Wurtemberg Princess invalid.
Her son, graduated Jerome Napolean Havard Bona
rte, was at in
„ud studied law but never practiced,
He married the daughter of a wealthy
resident of Roxbury, Mass Miss Susan
Mary Williams, who bore himitwo
-Jerome Napoleon, born hi ljJ2. and
Charles Joseph, born in 18oL. The
elder was graduated at West point, but
soon after resigned hts commission and
eitteted I he French Army, ten-teg with
distinction iu the Crimea. He has just
ret urneti tnorn Paris, and his wife, form
F i S r k ’ f gl T
daughter of Daniel w. W ebster, to whom
he was married at. Newport, R I.,
soon follow him with their family.
brother was also with him at their
grandmother’s dying bed. For nearly
a year Mme. Bonapaate-Patterson solid food has
been unable to take any ;
after a paralytic stroke on Saturday
last, which deprived her of the use of
her tongue, she was kept alive on bran¬
dy, which on Monday her stomach re¬
jected. At 10 o’clock on Monday morn¬
ing she sank into a comatose condition.
Colonel Bonaparte’s grandmother al¬
ways had hopes of his ultimate accession
to the throne of France, and to that end
heaped together her own large fortune,
kept in such a form that it could be
converted into cash on short notice, to
reinforce that he received from his
father, who died June 17, 1870, and
was buried in London Park Cemetery,
near Baltimore. The dead woman
lived secluded, and a shrewd Baltimore
banker said of her that he knew “no
man more capable of creating legiti¬
mately with so small a capital the large
fortune she amassed.” In no branch of
art was she accomplished, though she
was an assiduous student till of late
years her failing eyesight deprived her
of this resource. It is said that she has
kept carefully with a view to its publi¬
cation a diaiy of her long and eventful
life, but that her magnum opus , a
Jerome “Dialogue and of tbe her Dead,” where King
father rehearse her
story in Hades, will never be allowed
to see the light. She was a woman of
intense vitality, and though several
times, notably in 138, her life was des¬
paired of, she recovered to repeat her
favorite prediction that she would live
to he a hundred years old.
-- -m m m -
Scene in a Dakota Revival Meeting,
-Not far from the old Missouri river
there is a revival in progress, and the
other evening a very amusing incident
occurred that is too good to keep out of
print. After the service on the even
jng we mention an invitation was given
to all those who wished to join the
church on probation. A large number
signified a willingness io become mem
bers, and among those who placed them
selves in a line for the audience to con
gratulate by hand-shaking was a woman
who has a case in the Union county
court, asking for a divorce. The audience
was singing some familar hymn, during
which time those who wished advanced
and shook hands with the probationist S.
Among the number that took in the
congratulatory part, was the husband of
the lady suing for divorce. He shook
hands with each until he came to his
wife, who was standing with her head
hung back at an angle of forty-one de
gress, and took her by the hand. She
seemed to know the touch, for with a
sudden jerk she loosened her hand. He
looked surprised and dumbfounded. A
large-sized smile spread every mouth
in the room. The conclusion we can
draw in the matter is lhat it takes con
siderable religion in a woman to drown
her desire to get a divorce when she
once makes up her mind to get one.—
Elk Point Courier.
-------^ ____
Abandoned on Her Way to the
Altar
, 0 t of aband I °T-? t r 6
wa !' e ' arrlved on tbe steamer Georgia.*
and the prospective bridegroom left
tbe vessel ostensibly to produce a mm
j g ^ er to solemnize the contract. That 7
of , D 1 w* 1 the u-i b [! d \ ele ^ Ct . of f him
She remained , on the boat . all day, td and ,
went with it 0 „ the tri (Jeo.giana doKn b
returni K with the “ again t
in bo a few f daya t0 resum lhe v gil ,
pi n g or the return of her absent
i over
Her efforts were of no avail, how
ever> as he did not turn up, and the
hea rt-sick girl returned to her home
in the ]ittle Diamond State. Inquiry
revea i ed the fact that after leaving the
i ooa t ) t) ie bridegroom got to drinking,
and) j a 8U pp 08ed( is still carousing,
or ^ pj g mone y and that of his intend
e d bride (which he had in his possess
j 0Q w hen he parted from her has
disappeared, “ ’ and is probably * ashamed
t0 turn and fac her.) She says
s h e knew' of his fatal appetite for
8 trong drink, but trusted in her itiflu
ence ( 0 reform him when they had been
marr ied .-Baltimore American.
m m m _
The Mexican veterans and the Mis-
8 ouri Legislature received General
James Shields in the Hall of the House
of Representative, at Jefferson City, on
Monday. pensions After referring to his efforts
, 0 secure for the veterans, he
j regretted that sectional prejudice was
taking such a strong hold at the na
tional capital, threatening the liberties
0 f the Republic, taking precedence in
debates and preventing
i legislation.
In an out-of-the-way country place
in Hancock county, Ohio, lives a Jill. girl
five old who charm* at
Buds tly into her hands and upon her
snoulders, showing signs of gladness,
h 0 ?“ , f g bl t d8 X t0 to
And ail | day long birds hover about Ler
window. Her parents are ignorant
poor.
SAVANNAH TUESDAY, APRIL 8, 1879.
BY TELEGRAPH.
YELLOW FEVER AT NEW
HAMPSHIRE.
AFFAIRS AT THE CAPE OF
GOOD HOPE.
THE ROUMELIA DIFFICULTY.
London, April 7.—Among the num¬
erous Hope telegrams there from confirmation the Cape of Good
is no of the
Daily News' special dispatch reporting
that an insurrection has broken out in
the Transvaal presumably among the
Boers. The statement is improbable.
Calais, Me., April 7th—Wm. H.
Boardman, Republican, was elected
Mayor to-day by one hundred and fifty
majority over the Democratic and
Greenback candidates. The Republi¬
cans elect six Aldermen and the Demo¬
crats one.
Rome, April 7.—A letter from the
Cardinal Vicar is published, complain¬
ing of Protestant bitterly of the existence in Rome
schools supported chiefly
by foreign money. It announces that
the Pope has appointed a vigilance
committee to increase and improve the
Catholic schools, and appeals to the
their nobility and clergy to subscribe for
support.
Albany, N. Y., April 7. — Tbe
charges against the Police Commission¬
ers of New York city and the certifi¬
cates of their removal were submitted
to Governor Robinson to-day.
Portsmouth, N. H., April 7-—There
United is only one case of yellow fever on the
States steamer Plymouth, and
that is convalescent. Only one has
died from the disease. As a matter of
precaution, the United States steamer
Guardian, in quarantine last fall, hav¬
ing had yellow fever on board, will re^
turn to quarantine to-morrow.
London, April 7.—A Berlin dis¬
patch to the Globe says the Porte re¬
the fuses the Russian proposals relative Roumelia, to
occupation of Eastern
and insists upon the execution of the
treaty of Berlin.
Charleston, April 7.—The jurors
in the United States Court having been
summoned for to-morrow. Judge Bond
adjourned the court to-day after read¬
ing the docket.
Trenton, N. J., April 7.—In the
matter of Thomas Graham, indicted
for the murder of James M. Aim
strong, at the Camden Superior Court,
the Judge refused to order Attorney
General Stockton to enter a nolle pros¬
equi, but said lhat if Graham is convic¬
ted on the confession made by him at
the trial of Hunter he will be entitled
to mercy.
Paris, April 7.—Complete returns
of twenty-one supplementary elections
for members of the Chamber of Dep¬
uties on Sunday, show that thirteen
Republicans and one Legitimist were
elected. In seven instances second
ballots will be necessary.
American Girls with Titles.
The following American ladies have
been married to British peers or the
sons of peers since 1825: In 1S25 Mrs.
Patterson, eldest daughter of Richard
Caton of Maryland, to the Marquis of
Wellesley; in 1828 Louisa,third daugh¬
ter of Richard Caton, and widow of Sir
Felton Bathurst Hervey, hart., to the
Duke of Leeds; in 1836, Louisa, second
daughter ot Richard Caton to Lord
Stafford; in 1845 Mary, daughter ot
n MeTavish oi ba timore, to the
„ Ion. Henry brother ot
lhe lale Earl of Carlisle aud tbe
of Sutherland; in 1850 Elizabeth sis
te- to the late Gen* Wadsworth of Gen*
esee, to the Hon. Sir Charles Augustus
Murray son of the Earl of Dunmore ,
Dwight n ^ of ^ Boston, Pn » daughter to the Hon. oi Edrnunl Edward
lurner Boyd Swistleton, son ot Lord
oaye and Sele ; in 1S/4, Miss Jerome,
daughtei ot Leonard Jerome of New
® r '• \° Lord Randolph Churchill son
of the duke of Marlborough; iu 18.6,
Miss Consuelo Yznaga of New York, to
Viscount Mandeville, heir apparent of
the Duke of Manchester ; and in 1877,
Sophia, daughter of S Wells Williams,
of r New Haven, u to the Hon rr Thomas m,
f™**? 1 fc .° these Gr0 sh ^ ™! el “° d r ! be 8on ***<?. ,? W the Ebury ’
• of American ladies wedded to grandsons
0 ^ e e [ 3 ’ baionets or Smgbts, e ist
| would , be considerably extended.
• *“ T
| Mohkc although , he , has re
cently passed the sixtieth anniversary
of his entrance into the Prussian army
has an astounding ,LaAnn,vLar bodily strength fhe and
.Civ, te On y Em .
peror \\ tliiam presented to the marshal
a decoration once worn by Frederick
erai staff made “l a collection 1°, °. erS in order d g T to
give him a token of their affection and
lesteem. (
The Land Tax,
“H. H. J. in the Macon Telegraph
and Messenger, thus gives the history of
the Land Tax, and Georgia’s position,
which was assessed in 1861. The ag
gregete of that tax was $584,000, of
which the officers of the government
collected from individual citizens of
This Georgia in 1866 and 1867, $71,000.
leaves a balance of $513,000 at
SIX per cent, interest. Nothing more
was paid, because in 1865, the Secre¬
tary of the Treasury suspended all
sales of lands under the act.
Iu 1867 and 1868, Congress by
special enactment, made a farther sus¬
pension of the tax laws until January,
1869,since which time the government
has done nothing, on account., as alleg¬
ed, of the
poverty-stricken condition of the
SOUTH.
The original tax, it is now thought,
will never be enforced, among other
reasons from the fact that in 1874,
when all the United States tax s were
codified, the land war tax w> s omit¬
ted. The act, at first, gave the .-.tveral
States the option of
ASSUMING THE TAX
with a reduction of fifteen per cent, as
an inducement to do so, provided the
matter was settled up before February,
1862.
All of the Northern States, save
Delaware, accepted the proposed terms,
and paid the tax within the prescribed
eriod. Afterwards, when the war
ad ended, Texas offered to
ASSUME HER SHARE OF THE TAX
but was denied the 'privilege by the
government.
The tax in question was a
DIRECT WAR TAX
upon the landed estates of the whole
Union, and. the Supreme Court has
twice decided that no other property
individual was subject to it. Moreover, it was an
tax, which could 0 nly be
collected by execution and levy upon
the real estate of private persons.
The Tax Act in June, 1862, was so
amended with reference to the Southern
States as to withdraw the option of
each to assume the obligations of its
citizens, and a direct lien was constitut¬
ed upon all the landed proprietors. To
carry into effect this provision
THREE TAX COMMISSIONERS
were appointed officials for each Southern State.
These followed the Yankee
army, and whenever any district was
overrun and occupied by the Federate,
the land was seized, and
SUMMARILY SOLD
at short notice, in the necessary ab-
6cence of Southern bidders, to Northern
speculators or army officers.
Large areas of the most valuable land
in Beaufort District, South Carolina,
and other portions of the South, were
thus disposed of, and it is a notorious
fact in many instances when the pro¬
ceeds of the sale happen to
EXCEED THE AMOUNT OF THE ASSESSED
TAX,
the overplus was withheld from the
owners, and has never been refunded to
them.
This Colonel Tuggle learned from the
government officials themselves, Was
ever such wholesale theft and spolia¬
tion known in the annals of civilized
nations? The United States government
still holds and continues to let out at
a nominal rent, equivalent really to
nothing, much of the best land ot
Beaufort county, which, like the Arling¬
ton estate, was wrested from the un¬
happy owners.
jj e wag a y 0lU) g man — a blonde.
He entered the office of an up town
merc bant a few days ago, and said a
“Good morning.” The merchant
r( ded ffl
.. Do T0U know '• said the young
ma „ softI , <that Vanderbilt bought
t ^ ‘ ie EeraldT'
“ The devil j i s that so?”
“ ’Tis a fact,’ answered the £\* young man
„ w H Vanderbilt bought t HeraldT
muttered the merchant, laying ° down
his pen
“h' ac t J I assure you,” murmured the
y 0 ung man, as he moved tow’ard the
door
much “Stop!" did he cried the for merchant. it ?” “How
pay
“Three cents !” closed replied the young
man, as he softly the door after
him.
--——-
j Moral discharge Courage,-H the debt while ave the courage have
to you
the money in your pocket. To do with
out that Cvhich you do not need,
ever much you may admire it. To
g P eak your mind when it is necessary
that you should do so, and to hold yoor
tongue when it is better that you
should be silent To speak to a nnnr
friend ,0 . threadbare
street, and when a nch one is nigh The
effort is less than many take it to be,
“ d i hc aot » -Orthy » ting. To face
a difficulty, , lest it kick you harder than
jthieves, you bargain for. Difficulties,
offen disappear at a glance.
ITEMS OF INTEREST.
“As to having half a husband,’’ says
a Mormon lady spitefully, “that is a
good deal more than many of you east-'
ern women are likely to get.” Op¬
pressive silence.
The discovery has been made in
Hanover that glass can be tempered
and prepared so as to form an admira¬
ble substitute for marble. For table
tops, floor tiles, etc., it is said to be
even superior to the former in hardness
and smoothness.
An Omaha belle recently received a
present of a pair of twenty-four button
kid gloves from one of her admirers.
She wrote him a letter of thanks in
which she frankly told him he had
made a mistake in the size, but she had
remedied it by cutting off the feet and
only wearing the legs.
Turkey rejects the scheme for a mix¬
ed European occupation of Roumelia.
Turkey’s objections, now-a-days,and however, are united not of
much account a
representation from the powers is sure
to cause a withdrawal. The Sultan may
have to choose between a European
occupation and something worse.
As a rule, those in the community who
are the most trusted are the best men
at home. When a man opens his front
gate radiant the with pleasure,and hears “Papa the
shout from eager children,
is coming,” it is safe as a rule, to lend
that man money. He is honest, and
will repay it if he can.
Mr. Williams, of Wisconsin, spoke
true Republicanism the other day,
when he said “all government was
founded on the bayonet.” The Demo¬
crats, however, do not believe this in¬
famous doctrine and think that all
government rests on the free consent of
the governed.
Mr. Pendleton has again offered his
bill allowing Cabinet members seats in
Congress in order that they may answer
questions put to them—as in the Brit¬
ish Parliament—which he offered in
the House seventeen years ago. It is a
w ; se measure and should pass, though
its fate is doubtful.
There was an extraordinary scene in
a Roman Catholic church (at Warring¬
ton, England, the other day. During
mass a sergeant iu a militia cavalry
regiment drew his sword and leaping
to the altar, proceeded to cut every
thing upon it to pieces. The unfor
tunate man Loril had gone mad. j xie rr
declared j 1 j that .v 1 Christ /-.1 • had * appeared , to .
mm him find ana o Oiaerea -dprpd mm him in to dp<jfrnv aestioy thp tne
Pope *'
.
At a party the other night 0 a humor-
1st was called 11 j upon to . get . up a new
style of amusement. Seeing an electric
battery he started it, and taking one of
the handles himself he gave the other
handle to the prettiest girl in the room,
proposing that they kiss each other.
As their lips met, two million needles
seemed to break in all their effulgence
upon the startled beauty, and now she
knows what kissing is.
The Massachusetts Senate voted for
woman suffrage, but the House defeat¬
ed the bill by the close vote of 83 to
81—3 majority, pleased The Springfield Re¬
publican is not with the result
and raps the anti-women men very
sharply. It says : “It is surely time
that Massachusetts, which was once
foremost in the battle for the princi¬
ple of no taxation without representa¬
tion, should step forward into line.
Worth, tbe dressmaker, in spite of
his long residence in Paris, is said to be
a thorough John Bull in everything
but appearance, in which latter respect
the women form no bad double for
Bismarck. American women are
notably Mr. Worth’s best customers,
Oi his own country women he speaks
with a mournful shake of the head, and
Fiench women no longer dress as ex
travagaDtly as in the days of the Em¬
pire.
In Germany, where the most perfect
census system is to be found, the
census is taken in 24 hours. Early in
the morniDg th« census-taking ma¬
chinery is put in motion; the thousands
of enumerators start their canvass in
every village and hamlet, and the
thousands of compilers have their
pencils digging into the figures. By
*be next completed, morning ah is over. The
I census is and the German
'government is in absolute knowledge of
extent and scope of its personal and
industrial resources.
| Of the twenty-five Generals h^French who hold
the highest tS^^k appointmentsin “he LSw
| army
eight cavalry? on the general staff enineers two in the
and two in the he
artillery being, therefore, the only arm
0 f the service which is not represented
! | among the officers filling
portant tan* posts in the army ,1 The ave-
68*^’^ fU c c > •
I beino thTyoucgeetLo Gen d» Lvho i. fin
chief of being Gen
the general staff, and Gen. de
: Gallifet commanding the Ninth h
of the latter °two being yet od
(years of age
PRICE THREE CENTS.
Wanted*
ARPENTERS W ANTED—Apply to A. G.
Ybanes, No. 99 Bay street. tf
w ANTED—Everybody to know that I am
with Jos. now Hclilit/,’ prepared Milwaukee to serve Beer, my customers, also with
the finest of choice WINES and Articles, LICiUORS,
Segars, Tobacco and Smokers’ at my
old Stand, the C. R. R. HOUSE,
Cor. West Broad & Harrison sts.,
to which I have now removed.
THEO. RADERICK,
mh2ltr
Business Cards*
JAMES RAY,
—Manufacturer and Bottler
Mineral Waters! Soda, Porter and Ale.
15 Houston St., Savannah, Ga.
feb23-3m
W. B. FERRELL’S Agt.
RESTAURANT, No.
11 New Market Basement,
(Opposite Lippman’s Drug Store,)
inn mi SAVANNAH. GA
C. A. CORTJNO,
Hair Cutting, Bair Dressing, Curling and
SHAVING SALOON.
HOT AND COLD BATHS.
der 166)^ Planters’ Bryan street, Hotel. opposite Spanish, the Market, un¬
and English spokon. Italian, Ger¬
man, sel«-tf
JOS. H. BAKER,
BTJTOHER,
STALL No. 66, Savannah Market.
Dealer in Beef, Mutton, Pork nd
All other Meats in their Seasons.
Particular attention paid to supplying Ship
and Boarding Houses. aug!2
MAIjR store .
JOS. E. L0ISEAU & CO.,
118 BROUGHTON ST., Bet. Bull & Drayton
K EEP on hand a large assortment of Hair
Hair Switches, combings Curls, Pull's, and Fancy Goods
worked in the latest style.
Faucy Costumes, Wigs and Beards for Rent
GEORGE FEY,
WINES, LIQUORS, SEGARS, TOBACCO, <fto.
The celebrated Joseph Schlltz’ MILWAU¬
KEE LAGER BEER, a speciality. No. 22
Whitaker street, Lyons’ Block, Savannah.
Ga. FREE LUNCH every da/ from 11 to 1.
r-z31-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,
T I keep „ a 7 full ,, line ,, of ,,, Carriages, . Itockaways, „ ,
Buggies, Ftl 'ling Spring Top and Farm Wagons Canopy
!ln line “ of Carriage and Baby Wagon Can Material. lages also a full
I have
engaged chanlcs. iu my factory the most skillful me
Any orders ior new work, and re
pall ing, short will be executed tc give satisfaction
and at notice. maylH-ly
EAST END
Carriage Manufactory.
P. O’CONNOR,
Corner East Broud, President aud York sts.
Savannah, Ga.
A beg loave to inform my friends and the
hand public full in general that J always keep on
a supply of the best seasoned mate¬
rial and am prepared to execute orders for
Wagons, Buggies, Drays, Trucks,
Etc., with promptness and dispatoh, guaran¬
teeing all work turned out from my shops to
be as represented
nishing. He pairing polishing, in all its brandies. Painting, Var¬
done iu workmanlike lettering and trimming
a manner.
Horse-shoeing a specialty. meli2tf
Ice*
Kfiickerbocksr Ice Gompasy.
Wholesale and Retail Dealers in aud
Shippers of
EASTERN ICE.
— DEPOT; —
144 BAY STREET.
SAVANNAH, GEORGIA,
J. F. CAVANAUGH, Manager.
mchi-Om
Candies*
ESTABLISHED I860,
M. FITZGERALD
■Manulliicturer of—
PURE, PLAIN AND FINE
CANDIES.
Factory and Store, 176 BRYAN STREE
Branch Store, No. 122 BROUGHTON ST..
One door east of Bull street,
_ SAVANNAH. GA
CONCORDIA PARK.
T H SORT, ir„£n E f\ the U L finest IFUL and A ND only POPULAR park for pleas¬ RE¬
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 beeu made, aud no
pains menting or expense have been spared in orna¬
and beautifying this
PLEASURE SPOT.
i r^ortednror^Hi^V'art" Th» o’ in”
pee” ..u , . i i.u-t »i Jo
to u,e
thd“«K ‘\Z Io So^^WanoJ?
direct to the park cents? cr. run
for only 5
! cu™fon S \ha n n thifpa^
|reenable rates. C. SEILER, Proprietor,