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T> A. I L Y jrvMisriisrG
Savannah Recorder.
VOL I.—No. 162.
THE SAVANNAH RECORDER,
R. M. ORME, Editor.
PUBLISHED EVERY EVENING ,
Saturday Excepted,)
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coRDEit, Savannah, Georgia.
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J 9 ®“We do not hold ourselves responsible for
the opinions expressed oy Correspondents.
From Washington.
Passage of the Army Bill by the House
Colored Migration from .he South, &c.
[From . lie Baltimore Sue,]
THE ARMY EILL.
Washington, April 6. —The House
passed the arrnv bill yesterday afler
noon bv the quile considerable majori¬
ty of 26, no less than ten of tbe Gieen
backers voting with the Democrats in
the aflhmative. The bdl will be re¬
ceived in the Senate to-morrow, and
will be referred to tbe commit!ee on
appropriations. The committee will
report it back at the earliest momeni.
There are a number of the Democ, a f ic
Senators who are disposed the to Louse, take the
bill just as it comes from as
in this way it can be disposed of in a
shorter period, and the desiie is to
economize time as lar as may be pos¬
sible; yet the pressure to put on amend¬
ments, as is always the case, will be so
great that it is not improbable the bill
will be reported back with new propo¬
sitions incluued. It is cal dialed that
the debate on the b* 11 in the Sena ; e
will last from ten days to two weeks,
but the measure of time requiied wiil
depend entirely on the tactics that the
Republicans Several of the see Democ proper a.'ic io Senators Pursue.
have exp essed themselves to the effect
that the best policy for their side is
not to debate the bill at all, but let
the Republicans expend themselves and
then pass it. This, however, cannot at
all be expected, the Democrat as there are a few
Senators on ie side who
could not under any ciicumstances be
induced to give up the pleasure of
hearing themselves talk. Now that
the bill has passed ihe House, it has
been developed that the Republican
side was far from unanimous in ap
proval of the course taken in opposi¬
tion by their party, and were only in¬
duced to sanction it by a sense of party
fealty.
It is said that an Illinois Republican
Congressman carried delegation of
capitalists from that State to the White
Honse the otner day, who said to the
President that in case he would stand
firm and veto the appropriation bills
they would advance the necessary funds
to carry on the government. The Presi¬
dent thanked them, of course, but, of
course, was also necessitated to inform
them that their offer could not be ac¬
cepted.
COMPOSITION OF CONGRESS.
Out of 362 members of the preseut
Congress 241 are lawyers, 10 are edi¬
tors, and 18 are gentlemen of leisure.
In the Senate there are 19 ex-Confede¬
rate soldiers and 4 Union soldiers. Jn
the House there are 58 Confederate
soldiers and 51 Union soldiers.
course, as there are plenty of Union
soldiers in every State of the West and
the North, and hundreds of them of the
most creditable record, the only reason
that there are not more of them in the
Senate is because the Republican Legis¬
latures preferred who belouged to send loud-mouthed
politicians, class during the to the
at-home war.
reason why there are so many
rate officers in Congress is
there were so few stay-at-home
in the South.
THE COLORED MIGRATION
Louisiana politicians, arr.ved that the here
the last day or two, say
dus of negroes Lorn portions of
State continues to be very large.
exodus is mainly iiom the cotton
Senator Kellogg, who is largely received inte
rested in sugar-planting, his brother the to
day a letter from to
effect that there is no dearth of
in the sugar parishes, as very few
groes are leaving. This is ascribed to
the fact that there is not near as much
uncertainty in regard to the sugar crop
as the cotton crop, and the wages are
much better. Senator Kellogg
that the bill introduced by Senator
Windom last winter to colonize the
negroes in one of the Territories is the
main cause of the present exodus from
certain sections of the South, and that
the negroes have imbibed the idea that
Kansas is the promised land where they
are to get their forty acres and a mule.
If the exodus continues.lt will soon set¬
tle all difficulties as to race supremacy
in Louisiana and Mississippi in favor of
the whites.
Diamonds.
A story comes from Parieall, India,
where diamonds are usually found—
Goleonda being and the polished—that place where they the
are merely cut
largest diamond in the world has lately
been discovered there. It is said to
weigh 400 carats, 33 carats more than
the famous stone belonging to the Ra¬
jah of Mattau. The story is, in all
probability, much bigger than the
diamond, and both will be likely to
diminish under careful examination.
Great diamonds are interesting because
they nearly always have curious and
romantic histories. The Regent or
Pitt diamond, I36f carats, cut, found
in Hyderabad, was taken to England
by Pitt, g’andfather of the first Earl
of Chatham, and sold bv him to the
Luc D’Orleans fora sum equivalent to
$650,000. it ornamented the sword
hilt Prussians of Napoleon, Waterloo, was taken and by tbe
at is now
among the c 'own jewels of the Emperor
of Germany. The Sanci, another cele¬
brated stone, once belonged to Charles
the Bold, Duke of Burgundv, who
wore it in his hat at the battle of Nancv,
where be fell. It then passed to the
hands of Anion, King of Portugal, and
he, being embarrassed, disposed of it
for $20,000. Then it was pur chased,
after divers changes, by a Frenchman
named Sanci, whence its designation.
One of his descendants, havi igdreen
set t as ambassador to Henry III., at
Soleuve, the King demanded the jewel
as a pledge. The servant, carrying it
to the monarch, was waylaid by robbers
and mur dered, but not before he bad
swallowed the diamond. His master,
confident of his fidelity, caused the
body to be opened, and found the
precious stone. Afier awhile it was
secured by the Gover nment of Great
Britain, and James II. carried it to
Fjance in 1688. After varied foitunes,
Louis XV., got hold of it and wore it
at his coronasi rn. Then it passed from
bis hand, and was bought, fifty odd
years since by a Russian nobleman, for
$400,000, and it is said io belong now
1o one of his heirs. As it is too valu.
able for almost anybody Io keep, i,'
will continue, no doubt, as the years
go on, to add to its memorable history.
L’amonds supply most of the romance
of precious stones.
Priests and Bankers.
Concerning Archbishop ihe proposed liqu’dai'on
of Purcell’s indebtedness,
perm't me -o make a few remarks. The
strongest reason that prevents a good
many Catholics from con* i Touting
money to relieve the Archbishop is an
apprehension difficulties, lhat, in case of other
chuich they will he asked
to do likewise.
I attend St. Alphonsus Church, and
I know personally that the priests con¬
nected wiih it do banking business on
a la’ge scale. It is not too much to sup¬
pose that we may be called on in the
near future to give a helping hand o
them also. Not infrequently do they
exhort the congregation to make tiem
the custodians of their money.
I think that the Cardinal should pe¬
remptorily prohibit priests and bishops
from becoming bankeis. The dut’es of
a banker and those of a priest do not
at all harmonize.
J. H. ScnUEBERT,
37 West Houston street.
Gastronomic n exploits . of ancient and
modern savages may gain an addition
al interest. How desirable it would be
t0 * now h J wblch vicarious virtue hi;
majesty the Emperor Vitellms could
atone for the often repeated sin of de
vounng three brace ol peacocks at e
sitting, which guetonius assures us did
cot prevent him from appearing in the
palestra an hour afterward and joining
in the games which were prolonged by
torchlight toward the morning hour,
vendome, the champion of France and
the one strategic peer ever opposed to
Marlborough, vvas as formidable at the
mess-table as on the battle field. He
would gorge himself till his joints
commenced to tremble, and the op
pression of his chest threatened him
with asphyxia. W oe to the waiter or
messmate who offended him by a word
or want of attention in such moments
A fierce blow, a hurled tumbler or a
tremendous kick was the mildest ex
pression Oudenarde of his impatience. After the
feast of he saved the
army by the a saddle masterly retreat that and kept
him in for two days two
nights, and then restored himself, not
by sleep, but by sitting down to a ban
quet of sixteen hours, during which he
mcoiporated as many believe pounds of
ton-pie, if we may Chateau-
SAVANNAH WEDNESDAY, APRIL 9, 1879.
What Does Egypt Tell Us of the
Jews ?
As soon as public hieroglyphic texts asked had
been read, the eagerly tbe
interpreters, “What do the monuments
tell us of Joseph and Moses, of the
settlement in Egypt, the sojourn, and
the Exodus:” For the answer the
Egypt-ologists tioned the long fruitlessly quess
monuments.
We have, indeed, no record of
Joseph’s administration, or of the op¬
pression and the Erodus. What we
have is an accurate general knowledge
of the geography of the part of Egypt
where the Israelites were settled, and
much information as to the political
and social state of the country at the
time of their stay. It is true that we
cannot point with certainty to the
Egyptian name of each Pharaoh men¬
tioned in the Hebrew record, though,
indeed, we can probably do this in the
case of the two most important of them,
but we hold an independent set of
documents, most of them of the period
as to which we are inquiring, which we
can use, not as detailed illustrations,
but as an almost continuous commen¬
tary.
Thus we can read the Bible history
by the clear light afforded by monu
ments contemporary with the events,
with occasional aid from later Egyp¬
tian sources. The first result is a
general agreement as to the date of the
Exodus. This is mainly due to Dr.
Lepsius, the earliest of our inquirers.
If his theory is coirect, we have no
longer to make our choice between the
extremes of B. 0. 1648 (Hales) and B.
C. 1314 (Rabbinical chronology,) and
margin the date of o ? the B. English 0. 1491 Bible (Ussher) in the
nearly the middle in occupying
300 of uncertainty. point more than
theory years would, in the Lepsius’s
Lrm in which it
is now generally accepted, place that
event toward the dose of the fourteenth
century. The essential argument is
very Contemporary simple. — B. Sluari Poole, in
Beview.
Business Training of Children.
Parents are in a large decree re¬
sponsible for the character and succeiffl’
of their children, in a business point of
view. They should, at an early age,
be taught the value of propel ty, and
to respect the rights of others in what
belongs to them. Says a mother, in a
late paper : In one of the best families
I ever knew, each boy and girl had a
little fund of his or her own, acquired
in various ways by the help of their
parents, and if the boys wanted a knife,
letter paper, or stamps, or any such
1 hing, they bought it out of their own
resources, with a pioud sense of re-j
sponaibility. If the girls wished a.
T.bbon, or a magazine, it gave them a
pleasant chase for sense of personality to pur¬
themselves. And if their
mother, in any of their business trans¬
actions, needed .ome extra money they
were always pleased to be able to lend
it to her, and she always repaid it as
carefully as if she had borrowed it
from an outside individual.
It was practice as well as precept
with them to be not only affectionate,
but just to each other. These children
are now nearly all grown, and are do¬
ing business on their own account, and
the young men are proverbial for their
exact business habits, their high sense
o" honor, and general excellence of
character; tbe young women are held
in them. equal The estimation by all who know
happy mother, when ques¬
tioned as to how this result was bj ought
about, says that it is her doing, sue
thinks it was owing to their being
trained in “ little things ” to regard
others’ rights as well as their own.
Fashionable Smuggling.— A rich
ly dressed woman walked to the gang
plank yesterdav of the Hamburg steamer Silesia,
Deputy moining, Kibbe while the staff of
Surveyor were engaged
; the n taking cabin tbe ‘baggage declarations said that of
f pagse nge- s. She
her brotbe Alfred A . Soho, was on
board, and she requested { permission to
into the cabin 0 R , ee t him on his
ie ; urn Her request was granted She
Mme oi f 0 f ihe steamer shortly after
oJJtom war .i an Houw^examLe?s%Sved j xr™ -pin, a H i \fr<? ftpnpf
,
that
she wore a long flowing f ur .i ine d silk
cloak, which they did not remember to
bave se8n on ber wheQ she came 0Q tte
whaif . Twenty-three yards of black
8 ilk, nine yards of light silk, one silk
petticoat, Lr five tablecloths, a la-ge
of napkins, forty-two pairs of kid
6 i OV ec and a lot meerschaum take/from nines of
remarkable patterns were
ber " ‘
-— ^ —-
An Interchange of Compliments,
—On one occasion Johnson said to
Adam Smith : “You lie.’’ Smith not
unnaturally retorted, “You are a son of
a-“On such terms,’’ says Sir
Walter Scott, who has preserved this
story, “did these two great moralists
meet and part, and such was the clas
sical dialogue between these tw*o great
teachers of morality ” If Johnson had
met more men like Smith he would have
learned how to govern his tongue better,
— Thc Westminster Beview.
Don’t Want Them.
The New York Tribune, the chronic
hater and misrepresenter of the South,
has no use for a negro outside of the
cotton States. If the negro looks or
goes beyond his old home he is told to
go back.
The following is a fair illustration
of how the “Yankee” feel toward the
negro:
“It is a pity the discontented
negroes there is flockiDg demand to Kansas, where
no for their labor, do
not rather seek the sugar parishes of
Louisiana, where they could get steady
work the year round and good wages,
and where they would have nothing to
fear from bulldozers. Thousands of
fertile acres in these parishes are grow¬
ing nothing but weeds because there is
not labor enough to cultivate them.
The sugar districts aie exceptionally
orderly and peaceable, and the politi¬
cal rights of the blacks are freely ac¬
corded them by the white minority. A
correspondent of the Tribune , who ! st
winter visited the parishes of St
James, St. John Baptist, Plaquemine
and ed Terrebonne, found them all govern¬
by Republican local officers, and re¬
presented in the Legislature by intelli¬
gent colored men. Good feeling ex¬
isted between the two races, and
colored labor was everywhere in
demand, and well paid.
“Three reasons weie assigned by
our condition correspondent of for the fortunate
the negroes in the sugar
country. First, the good character of
the sugar-planters, who are, as a rule,
gentlemen of liberal education who
have seen something of tbe world;
secondly, element the fact that the poor white
is composed of French creoles,
who are a mild, inoffensive peoDle, and
the not negro-haters like the “cracxers” of
acting cotton-belt; and, thirdly, the ex
nature of the cane crop, which
requires planter unremitting attention from the
and constant labor from his
hands, and thus allows no time for idle¬
ness and political agitation.
“Ten thousand additional laborers
could find employment in the sugar re¬
gion. If the planters are wise they
will send agents to the localities where
the blacks are discontented and make
an effort to secure the labor which they
so greatly need to develop the full re¬
sources of their estates.
A Story.
The following is the tail end of a
new story :
Belle and Lucy returned home with
that conscious air of triumph and im«
portance peculiar to ‘ ‘engaged young
ladies.” Having attained the end and
a ir n of their existence there was no
thing further for them to hope or ex
pect. From henceforth th ey were to
repose upon their laurels, floating down
the stream of life with no thought or
care for anything but the present en
joyment.
Belle’s captive was a Wall street
broker, owning a fabulous amount—on
paper. Lucy s was a son of a million¬
aire whose sole ambition seemed to be
to spend as quickly as possible the
money that his father bad labored so
hard to acquire. They made no at¬
disdain tempt to when disguise their surprise and
modest they heard of Josie’s
“Only request.
a farmer I” sniffed Mrs. Wil¬
son. “Never did I di earn that any of
my daughters would stoop to that !
But I suppose if yeu have your father’s
approval you don’t care for mine."
‘ Of course, yon can't expect us to
v * 8 * t you ’ “^ e
c ° Due ct 10 Q* of Charles character, Augustus and are
a it
couidu t be thought of.
wife .Certainly has to take not, the position echoed Lucy. of her hus- “A
band - wblC:k 18 something you had bet
think . of
Jo8ie had thought of ir, and very
, ha tbou u ht8 they
PPy 8 were, too.
finan cial disaster of the three
7®»ra that followed made quit# a change
in tke surrounding of all the above,
option of Josie and her
b T 9band ' 0ut of tbe wr8ck of Mr -
^ the llp L honor on 8 busi and ° es8 integrity, nothing which was , left shone but
ali the more brightly from the tempo
rar / £ lo , ° m f hat shrouded him. His
took tbeir altered fortunes very
hard, tairly , fretting and worrying her-
8elt into 11x6 grave, where she was laid
» few months after Penniless and un
fitted lor anything higher, the husbands
of Belle and Lucy were glad to accept
position*, one as a conductor on a city
car, the other a third-rate clerkship.
Josie does not see much of her sis
ters, but many a barrel of apples and
crock of butter find their way to them
from the Manning farm. Almost every
pleasant afternoon a gray haired, placid
rooking old man can be seen on the
piazza of tbe farm house, frequently
with a grandchild on either knee. It
is Mr. Wilson, who often thanks God
.that ODe of his daughters married
a farmer."— San Francisco
Unexpected Shot.
It may fairly be said—although the
assertion savors of a bull—that the
most memorable in the long list of
Burmese massacres is one which was
sqadron not perpetrated. When the British
appeared off Rangoon at the
opening of the last war with Burmah,
the native Governor of the city sent a
messenger to announce that every Eu¬
ropean within the walls should be put
to death the moment the first shot was
fired. This menace having no effect, a
score or so of foreign residents, includ¬
ing two American missionaries, were
ordered out for immediate execution.
The word was given, and the heads¬
man had just stepped forward with his
huge knife, when the first English
broadside was discharged, shattering to
pieces, by a singular chance, the very
house in front of which the Governor
and his suite were standing. Never
was a panic more instantaneous. Away
ran Governor, officers, headsman, and
all, while the victims, bound and un¬
able to stir, remained kneeling in read¬
iness for the fatal stroke, with no one
left to attend to them. They were
speedily blue-jackets released by a party of British
; and to complete this sud¬
den tuining ef the tables, the inhuman
Governor was brought in by a sailor
that very evening, with his hands tied
behind him, and a gag in his mouth.
Threatened Schism.
The Greek Orthodox Church is at
present threatened with a great schism,
or, aa it perhaps would be better to
represent the case, its somewhat stags
nating waters have suddenly come into
violent motion. Some years ago one
Markakis, a man of eloquence, intelli¬
gence and wealth, used to hold large
religious meetings in his house in
Athens. In 1872 he founded two
schools, one in Athens and one in
Piraeus, in which children received free
instruction, and in the following year
he began to issue a religious periodi¬
cal, The Word , and erected a church
in Athens. His ideas of reform he had
gathered from the very earliest period
of the Christian Church. He rejected
the authority of bishops and synods, all
fasts, the worship of saints and the
whole liturgy of the Greek Orthodox
Church. As far as possible, he sought
to reduce religion to a pure relation
between God and individual man, and
the ideas of church and congregation
were held in a very vague and floating
form.
There was a kind of administration,
but no kind of government. His fol¬
lowers confessed to each other and par¬
took of the Lord’s Supper at every
divine service. In spite of his Radical¬
ism, he found great sympathy, even
among Church. the Several clergy of the Established
teaching school priests joined him,
in his and officiating in
his church, and everything went on
calmly and peacefully. But last year
the Greek Government, which hitherto
had taken no notice of the movement,
suddenly determined to interfere, and
it did so in a most clumsy, unpractical
and violent manner. It closed the
schools, confiscated the church build¬
ing, banished the priests to some distant
monasteries to do penance, and under¬
took, with one single blow, to sweep
out of existence the whole affair. It
has been mistaken, however. Markakis
has issued one protest after the other ;
a great literary controversy has arisen ;
the monks have grown lrauatic; the
whole population has come into com¬
motion, and a general uproar has been
raised, which the government is utterly
unable to still.
Calmucks, according to Mr. Schuy¬
ler, will travel a hundred miles
to stuff themselves with horse flesh at
somebody else’s expense; and Gordon
Cumming mentions a family of Zulus
Caffres—a man with two wives and
four children—who, between noon and
sunset, disposed of all the meat, mar¬
row and intestines of a large zebra,
and during the following night picked
the bones iu a way which only an
army of ants could emulate. Vambery
speaks of a Tartar courier, named
Thuy-Kasr, who boasted of having eat¬
en, “unassisted and without employ¬
ment of witchcraft,” a large skinful of
raisins and a middle-sized pig, leaving
nothing laiger but bristles and a few of the
bones; and once, within fifty
hours, even a goat with two kids, to¬
gether with a bag of dried figs and
deep potions of koumiss or fomented
mare’s miik.
The Fox Costs a Million of
Pounds in England. —There are no
less than 168 separate packs of fox
hounds maintained at present in the
United Kingdom, numbering between
them an aggregate difficult of 6,600 couples of
hounds. It is to assess the cost I
of Baily keeping these packs. A writer iu
s Magazine, so far back as 1866
puts the total expense for the season of
hunting a country three days a week
at £1,348 14s. The Earl of Wilton
nearer the present time, increases the
estimate to £1,625, with an additional
if a huntsman be kept
PRICE THREE CENTS.
Wanted*
c ARPENTERS WANTED—Apply to A. G.
Ybanes, No. 99 Ray street. tf
W ANTED—Everybody to know that I am
now Schlltz’ prepared to serve Beer, my customers, also with
with Jos. Milwaukee
tbe finest Tobacco of choice Smokers’ WINES and Articles, LIQUORS, at
Segars, and 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—
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.)
Innl3t.f SAVANNAH. GA*
C. A. CORTJ.NO,
Bur Gutting, Hau Dressing, Curling and
SHAVING SALOON.
HOT AND COLD BATHS.
166’ Y* Bryan street, opposite the Market, un
der Flanters’ Hotel. Spanish, Italian, Ger¬
man. and English spokon. selS-tf
JOS. H. BAKER,
BUTCHER,
STALL No. 66, Savannah Market.
Dealer la Decf, Mutton, Pork ad
All other Meats in their Seasons.
Particular attention paid to supplying Ship
and Boardin g Houses. augl2
H a i r~s tore:
JOS. E. L01SEAU 4 CO.,
118 BROUGHTON ST., Bet. Bull <fc Drayton
K EEP on hand a large assortment of Hair
Hair Switches,Curls, combings Pulls, and Fancy Goods'
worked in the latest style.
Fancy Costumes, W igs and Beards for Rent
GEORGE FEY,
WTNES, LIQUORS, SEGARS. TOBACCO, &o.
The celebrated Joseph Sclilitz’ MILWAU¬
KEE LAGER BEER, a speciality. No. 22
Whitaker Street, Lyons’ Block, Savannah,
Ga. FREE LUNCH every day flrom H to 1.
r-z31-]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.
Bu i d ggles r ailing Spring Top and Farm Wagons, iagos, also Canopy
an line ol Carriage and Baby Wagon Cari Material. a full
engaged In factory I have
my the most skillful me¬
chanics. Any orders for naw work, and re¬
and pairing, will be executed tc give satisfaction
at short notice. mayl2-ly
EAST END
Carriage Manufactory.
P. O’CONNOR,
Corner East Broad, President and York sts.
Savannah, Ga.
I piiblic beg leave m genera! to inform that my 1 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 In all Its branches. Painting, Var¬
done polishing, workmanlike lettering and trimming
in a manner.
Horse-shoeing a specialty. rach2tf
Ice*
Knickerbocksr Ice Con
Wholesale and {Shipper* Retail Dealers' in and
of
EASTERN ICE.
— DEPOT; —
UA BAY STREET.
.SAVANNAH, GEORGIA,
J. F. CAVANAUGH, Manager,
mchl-6m
Candies*
ESTABLISHED 1850.
M. FITZGERALD
•Manufacturer of—
PUKE, PLAIN AND FINE
CANDIES.
Factory ami Store, 176 BRYAN STREE
Branch Btore, No. 122 BROUGHTON ST..
One door east of Bull street. 1
_ savannaH. qa
CONCORDIA PARK.
T H E ^h»rt I FU i " AND POPULAR RE
SonT SORT, the finest n . and only park for pleas¬
ure be opened and enjoyment on the 1st in of the April, city for or the Htat£ will
modation of visitors at time accom
Great Improvements have any been of the and^m day
pains or expense have been spared made, Tnornu
mentingand beautifying this urna
PLEASURE SPOT.
been sephHehlitz planted. sMilwaukee The only uud am be?t of sold! 1,1
LAGER will be
i N di pffi Ubie charact€r wlJ l be admitted
to the will
V isRor® please take notice not to brimr
ed their on dm;s the grounds to the park hereafter. as no dog B will be Ue allow? aUow
dl yA to b and Whitaker street cars run
j There 1* . t e Pa ulcer fl f for only & cents.
no place for Pic Nlcs or Ft
S^Abi^tiS. ■mar 18 parJt * wblou Ctt “ be baU
G. Seiler, Proprietor,