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•W-S! ..
DAILY EVENING
Savannah [□Tin] ra [nJTnl Recorder.
VOL II.—No. 38.
THE SAVANNAH RECORDER,
B.. M. OEME, Editor.
PUBLISHED EVERY EVENING,
i Saturday Excepted,)
At 2 OX BAY STREET.
By J. STERN.
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l isher.
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Correspondence on Local and general mat¬
ters of interest solicited.
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All correspondence should be addressed, Re¬
corder, Savannah, Georgia.
The Sunday Morning Recorder will take
the (.jace ol the Saturday evening edition,
which will make six full issues for the week.
jSQr-We do not hold ourselves responsible for
the opinions expressed oy Correspondents.
From Washington.
Doom of the Army Interference Bill—Another
Veto Impending— Democratic Sentiment on
the Subject—Investigation of the Department
of Agriculture.
[Special Dispatch to the Baltimore Sun.]
the next veto.
Washington, has May settled 11.—To-night down
public opinion that into
the conviction another veto is im
pending. The Republicans almost
without exception are certain of it.
The change which it is alleged has
come over the mind of the President is
said to be due to the fact that he has
arrived at the same conclusion in re
gnrd to the bill now before him as were
expressed by Senators Edmunds and
Conkling on the night of the Republi
can caucus. If it is true, as asserted
by these Senators, that the bill involves
the most extreme doctrine of State
rights, and is so much more sweeping
in its effect than the clauses in the
army bill to which the President made
objections, it would be entirely reason
able to expect his disapproval. But
the Democrats declare that the bill is
properly susceptible of no such con
struction. It simply presents the one
point of military interference with the
elections, and the Democratic Senators
and nembers repeat that if the Presi
dent decides to take the affirmative on
this issue they are perfectly content and
willing to take the whole subject to the
people for ultimate decision. Conse
quently there is no excitement nor un
easiness among Democrats, and many
of them have said to-night that they
are indifferent as can be whether the
President signs the bill or vetoes it.
In either event it is considered that the
Democratic position will be perfectly
satisfactory, and there will be no oc
casion for regret.
resident A Republican member who saw the
1 to-night says the bill will
certainly be vetoed, and that tbe Presi
dent will state his reasons briefly, as
his objections have already been given
in the former message. He says further
that the only measure of a political
character which the President will ap
prove will be the bill to repeal the
jurors test oath.
QUESTION OF (adjournhent.
The legislative, executive and judi
cial bill will occupy the Senate the
whole of this weak, and by the time it
is disposed form ot there may be an oppor
tunity to of some opinion as to the
duration the session. The impres
sion seems to be gaining ground that
the session will not be protiacted very
much longer.
the agricultural department
Mr. Lefevre, of Ohio introduced in
the House, yesterday a resolution for
the appointment of a special committee
to investigate the system and workings
of the department of agriculture aiul
with power to sit during the recess.
The resolution was referred to the com
mittee on agriculture The resolution
on its face apparently looks to an en
largement of the operations of the
department and to a very considerable de
gree, it is doubtful whether it
would be department wise or expedient to do this,
as the is aheady leaning
very much to the paternal idea. It is
said, however, that there are other ob
jects contemplated which will include by the proposed
inquiry alleged irregularities an investi
gation into certain
in the management ot the department.
Numerous rumors on this subject are
floating around, and, as is very often
the ease, is probable some of them are
exaggerated.
The French R over„ m e„t ,UI soon be
the engaged Vatican. in a bitter The controversy with the
sections ot
council ot state have unanimously de
cided that the Archbishop ot Aix, in
issuing a pastoral attacking the ed
ucation bills of Mr Jules Ferry, is
guilty of a violation of the law. •
Beauties Won by Titles.
To the Editor of the New York Times :
I read in your paper of last Mon¬
day, a long and interesting article
copied from the Cincinnati Gazette con
cerning American girls who have wed
ded distinguished foreigners. The
marriage of Miss Fraser to Prince
Lucien Murat is, however, mentioned
much briefer than the subject de
ser X.® s -
1 Miss i raser was a Philadelphia lady
Scotch extraction. She was one of
e many links between the United
^tates , and the Imperial court of
^ rance > where sb ® was allowed to rank
as *[ be w “ e op a * rmce of the blood.
She made a love match. The year
she exchanged the name of Fraser for
that of Murat, the fortunes of the
Bonaparte family were at low ebb;
Caroline, the widow of King Joachim,
the youngest sister of Napoleon, and
the mother-in-law of Miss Fraser, was
dying in poverty in Trieste; Louis
Napoleon was a mooning adventurer, in
debt and difficulties, and dependent
lor nerve and sustenance on the beau
tiful Mrs. Gordon, whom at Ham be
charged Louis. Blanc to kiss for him ;
Charlotte, the widow of Louis Charles,
eldest son of the King of Holland and
Queen Hortense, and the daughter of
Joseph Bonaparte, was following her
scandalous downhill career in the
Lternal City. She had been the Deli
Qh °f Leopold Robert, the painter, who
died in a paroxysm ol jealously which
she excited.
The Pope contemplated banishing
her from the States of the Church.
Mme. Bonaparte Wyse was the para
mour of an Irish officer, Capt. John
stone, in a garret in the Rue de Rivoli,
along with her two daughters.
Lucien’s sons, Pierre and Antoine,
were filibusters with no fixed home.and
beb ^ opprobrium wherever they went
The one bright spot in the darkened
s ^y was the marriage, at Florence, of
Jerome Napoleon’s daughter, Mathilde,
to Prince Demidoff. Mathilde, then a
young woman of superb beauty and
brilliant accomplishments, came with
ber wealthy Russian husband to Paris
to agitate for her family, and to open
a Bonapartist salon, to which M.
Thiers promised to bring his friends.
While she was shining in Parisian
society, and as a subject of Czar Nich
olas, and a cousin of his son-in-law,
defying the Police of Louis Phillippe,
Lucien Murat was trying to eke out a
subsistence for himself and his young
wife b 7 teaching French to American
Quakers. Mrs. Murat was an estima
ble . but not loveable woman. The
Scot is tbe most respectable but the
least amiable member of the Celtic fam
i[ Y> aQ d there was much of Scotland in
tbe mental complexion and the in
stincts of this princess of the blood that
was to be - She was imbued with the
P rose of the Quakers among whom she
lived. The Caledonian redness had
faded into drab in “the City of Broth
erly Love.” She was very prim and
reserved, and a sharper woman about
money never lived. The rapacity of
^ b e Murat family, ot which, after
Aehille s death, (he also mar
r8e ^ American girl), she was the
head, pressed severely on the lazy
Princess. Lucien and his wife profited
b Y tbe fav °r which their daughter
Anna enjoyed at the Tuileries to make
hauls and enri ch themselves and their
children, one ot wliom had married a
Mr. Garden.
It is to the honor of the
that she never abandoned the religious
principles of her youth when stupid
Spanish superstition, which was incar
nate in the Empress reigned at the
Tuileries. The American Prince*,
brought her children up to believe in
a rational from of Christianity, but
was not able to induce her sons to
practice it. They are sad scamps,
with the vices of the different countries
by which they are connected by blood
and education, and few of the virtues.
One of them having outrun the Sheriff
in France, has gone to live on his
wife’s relatives in Mingrelia. Another
serves as a soldier in Algeria. Their
mother lived in communion with the
Reform Church of France up to the
eve of her decease. It was then de
cided that it would be of political
utility to transfer her to the Romish
fold, in order to take her remains to St.
Augustin’s and have a mass, attended
by Bonapartists, celebrated for
soul’s da ugbter, repose. and, Anna, the her youngest |
at present time■
j Duchess de Mouchy, to disarm the
of the Empress Eugenie em
braced the Catholic religion Asi a •
h? V 7 A instructed b 7 be
r ial and prepared him for the
° Th"'
Princess and her si,
ter, Miss Fraser, resided together
the breakdown of the Empire.
j Their of lodgings the Duchess were near de Mouchy, the
house
whom the old ladies overhauled the
[butler’s Ufter and cook's accounts, looked
the nurses and the governess, and
Political Outlook.
A TALK WITH GENERAL GORDON,
[From the Atlanta Constitution.]
Reporter—General, is it true, as
charged by the Republican speakers in
Congress, that the policy adopted by
the Democrats was at the dictation of
the southern men at Washington ?
General Gordon—No sir; it was not
at the dictation of southern men. We
had suffered from all the laws it is
proposed to repeal; and especially
were the statutes which made it possi
ble for southern citizens to be tried for
political offenses by a partisan political
court and packed political juries, a
constant menace to our liberties, as well
as hostile to every sentiment of ourpeo
pie. But we had under these laws re
covered every Southern State and
nearly every southern district. We
had recovered not because of these
laws, but because our wrongs under
carpet-bag rule were so gross and op
pressive that neither the presence of
the army at the polls, nor of federal
supervisors and deputy marshals, could
prevent the peaceful overthrow of those
governments by the joint vote of whites
and blacks. But while southern men
felt the oppressions most keenly inei
dent to the use of the army in South
Carolina, Louisiana and Florida, ee
pecially they would not, I ihink, if
left to themselves, have proposed the
amendments either to the army bill
or to the legislative and judicial bill
now before the Senate.
Reporter—Well, General, if these
amendments were right, why might
they not have been proposed or dicta
ted, if you please, by Southern repre
sentatives as well as Northern?
General Gordon—Certainly there is
no good reason, except that Republican
leaders have so long misled the North
ern mind as to our purposes that it
would be impossible to have the
Northern Republican masses dispas3
ionately if consider any such measures,
dictated by the South. The truth
is, that our Northern Democratic
friends thought these amendments ne
eessary to secuie fair elections at the
North as well as at the South, and of
course we stood by them.
Reporter—Am I to inter, then, that
you think the Democrats have made a
mistake in attaching the amendments
to the appropriation bill ?
General G.—No, sir; no such thing,
I Q no other wav could the attention of
the country have been so effectually
called to the necessity for legislation on
these grave subjects. I only mean to
say that the South did not dictate,
and to show why the South ought not
to dictate in such important legislation
why, sir, you will remember that a few
years ago I proposed a plan for reform
mg the civil service in the revenue de
partment. That plan contemplated
that the appointments should all be
made by a Republican administration
and was approved by every inde
pendent Republican paper in the United
States, and yet my effort provoked the
most bitter criticisms from Republican
leaders in the Senate, and the fact that
it was presented by a rebel brigadier
was evidently a ‘ nrominent reason for
opposition to it.
tion Reporter—The what most important ques
is is to be done by the Dem
ocrats ?
General G— I don’t know what the
party may decide upon. I think there
is wisdom enough in the party to pre
vent any disaster to the public
One thing is certain there is conserva
tism enough among Southern repre
sentatives to relieve the government in
someway when the time comes. The
action of Southern men when the
electoral count was in progress, and
again, when it was proposed by the
stalwart leaders in the Republican
Senate to join the Democrats in strik
ing down the President after his in
augural was delivered and his Cabinet
chosen, was the most crushing reply
possible to the unwarranted charges
°l Republican leaders against the
South. The conduct of her Repre
sentatives was then, and will be now,
the overwhelming refutation of Repub
Jlcan slanders and aspersions. Speak
ln g does no good when passion pos
sesses the public mind, but action will
Jo good and will bring to those who
baV e so wantonly and persistently mis
represented us the retribution of a
powerful re action in public sentiment
at the North.
^ T THE ~ ^ ee Aired. - T It is . a
d t0 “akejP the beds
d - itel y atter breakfast. The sleeping
h l A l 1 u S!
not bi in to °
h
spread over separate chairs, the mat
tresses lilted vpart, and the pure
ing air be allowed to get into every
nook aud cranny of the room before the
beds are made. Better to endure a
little delay in getting the house in order
uhan loss of health.
SAVANNAH, WEDNESDAY, MAY 14, 1879.
saw that the chef applied his skill in
the interests of economy.
New York, Tuesday, Mav j. 6, 1879.
H. H.
Great Advance,
Seventy-one years ago, 1808, the St.
Louis Republican made its first ap
pearance in the little French village of
St. Louis, printed on the first press
built west of the Mississippi river. A
little wooden frame it was, sustaining
a screw which brought down a plate
on the type^ beneath, strongly resembl
j n g , a farmer's cider press, the ink
being balls, applied by means of buckskin
stuffed with wool; and it was
hard work for two men to print fifty
to seventy in copies, hour. on one side of the
paper, an This press run the
paper for fourteen years, and in 1822
it was succeeded by a press with a
decided improvement in the leverage
arrangement, by which two able-bodied
men could print 246 papers on one side
in an hour, or in four hours by good
work could run off the 500 co , plete
copies then needed for the subsc; ibers.
In 1827, the Washington press, was
used when composition rollers took the
place of the buckskin balls, for apply
ing the ink to the type, and a good
pressman could work of three hundred
sheets an hour on this press.
In 1872 a Walter press was sent for
This press derives its name from the
Hon. John Walter, M. P., proprietor of
the London Times. When it was set
up in the Republican office, in 1872,
there were but two other newspapers
in the world using this press. The
London Times had five and the Edin
burgh Scotsman had two at that time,
But afterwards the New York Times
imported three of them, and they are
at The present doing the work of that paper,
capacity of the Walter press is
17,000 to 20,000 papers, on both sides,
per hour, with three men to work it.—
Mobile News.
The Republican is one of the ablest
par)erg : n tbp conntrv 1 7 Tfc
>sp av oug an s 1 atesmanship . , tar
.
above the average dailies. Sound and
conservative, independent and able, it
L a power in the great and growing
'
° ’
* m m ____
Four Races Accoidiug to the
EirvutiailS '•
r T he Egyptians divided mankind in
to four race - 4 . wbo are portrayed in the
“Ural paintings ot the Tombs of the
Kl "p
these the . red Egyptians, the
ire
yellow Asrnu, (Shemites,) (he black
Negroes, and the white Tamehu, the
Libyans arid other races ol the Medi
terranean, or at least of its eastern por
tl0 IT
It is to the iamehu that all the mar
. Ume , of the Egyptians be
] enemies
lon £- . ihe y are represented as lair,
with aquiline nose blue eyes, short
11 J beard, and hair formally curied.
This type is maintained, with some
variations,in the greater or less aquiline
profile, the longer beard of some, and
l * p partly or wholly shaven laces of
otheis, indicating, peiliaps, a scantier
> thioughout the representations
o{ the individual nations of this race,
tlie type sometimes approaching the
characteristics of the higher Aryan
races, sometimes, in the prominence of
nose and tbe largeness of the lips, re
m 1 n 1 uig us of the Shemite. The nose,
t however, in these instances, is marked
n the bru 3®* a bas not tbe bhemite
at . 'l tbe l°
m°P tae t; P> an rm s gene
ra , are much harsher. -l be f® com "
r
par iso ns are ot course made between!
Egyptian representations. One of the
naUon8 pictures .‘be stock of the of the.Tamehu Old Monarchy, a P
peais in
re s / e bl - ebu - vLebu,) or
T r lb , p^tormmg . ieats ol strength.
>' ans >
1 ls rem arkable that at this
lod - , the represented brown
P e ^ ? a ™ as a
a n ' no f a& a u blte f ace wber ® as in
, > >
1 6 sculptures of the lwentieth Dynas*
7 ,lfy aave a D'P e which is that of
l Ulb , e pic Q^chu, tine s ot who thej-ombs are painted o l the light Kings. in
Anfudotf nv Tw atvv r7v _TWu t
prav 7 U nno
Q Q'
C0Q j e vi<sjtor t th u f r d A
burn w h 0 wa^ somewhat free with her
tongue and ooinions K of others Some
that onest” bo-tess « a id
offended hpr Fnviratinns and Lp not onW
declined hpr "V hnr d cn nke nf
if e : tb di t S« hS dS
ter ^l fee 1 ° 6 l h Tu?
h pn
a card of invitation to dinner. Here
turned it with a ei pen-and-ink drawing
on the bact - |re p r e n t i ng himseif k neel
with his hair all aflame
L™;.
T The satirist and
hp e rie u -,
*
b .
1
—--» m m
Nearly 11,000 immigrants arrived at
Castle Garden during April—increase
compared with same month 7
A Blunder and its Reward,
[Forney’s Progress, Translation.]
During his first visit to Paris M.
Lassalle, a distinguished German, pre¬
sented himself at the house of a well
known lady, to whom he had sent let¬
ters of introduction in advance. When
the servant opened the door and re¬
ceived his card she conducted him to
the boudoir and told him to be seated,
saying: “Madame will come immediate¬
ly.”
Presently the lady entered. She
was in dishabille and her feet were bare,
covered only with loose slippers. She
bowed to him carelessly and said ;
“Ah, there you are ; good morning.”
She threw herself on a sofa, let fall
a slipper and reached out to Lasalle
her very pretty foot.
Lasalle was naturally completely as¬
tonished, but he remembered that at
his home in Germany it was tbe custom
sometimes to kiss a lady’s hand and he
supposed it was the Paris mode to kiss
her foot. Therefore he did not hesitate
to imprint a kiss upon the fascinating
foot so near him, but he could not
avoid saying, “I thank you, madame,
for this new method of making a lady's
acquaintance. It is much better an.
certainly more generous than kissing
the hand.”
The lady jumped up, highly indig
nant. Who are you, sir, and what do
you mean ?”
He gave his name.
“You are not, then, a corn doctor ?”
“I am charmed to say, madame, that
I am not.”
“But you sent me the corn doctor’s
card.”
It was true. Lasalle, in going out
that morning, had picked up the card
of a corn doctor from his bureau and
put it in his pocket’ This, without
glancing at, he had given to the ser¬
vant, who had taken it to her mistress.
There was nothing to do but laugh
over the joke.
German Education VS. American,
A New York clernvman seekiun a
Q erma „ 8C ^ 00 ] f or daughter des
cr j beS( in a private letter from Berlin
written early in April some of his ex¬
periences, and pricks several bubbles
Here are some o: his points • On a
prospecting tour for a German school
surface croppings poor—fear there is
no P ure metal below. Continental
female education couldn’t enter Fresh
man c i as8 at y asaar> Have visited
Munich, Berlin, Dresden, Leipsic, Wei
ma r, etc. Found small encouragement
thus far. An English finishing school
at Dresden had the most to offer. Saw
a num b er of friends Dr. J. P Thomp
son, Professor Whitney, Wm. Farnam
anc i families were in Berlin I notice
that American residents of long stand
ing are not conspicuous for enthusiasm
respecting Germans or their institu
tions. Glass distinctions are sharp
Universal flunkeyism prevails Military
pride sticks out at every corner. Con
ceit of learning and assumption of supe
r ior culture are flaunted on all occa-
8 i on s. The wash tub is fearfully ne*
gleuted; the “Pfennigs” policy marks
a H transactions, pecuniary or other
wise—smallness in everything. The
industries of the country are looking
around for some one to pick them up.
Ditto the finances. Discontent on aU
sides. In politics, extra steam in the
boiler and the heavy man sitting on
the safety valve. When the grand old
Kaiser, now eightv-three, is gathered
to his fathers, John Brown’s soul will
No be marching on again in this vicinity,
one need envy President White his
mission, with its large social duties,
C0U rt discussions and diplomatic, and no end of
petty over the interpreta
tion of a vague international treaty ;
tbe chief disturbers of the legation’s
peace bo being our Hebrew fellow citizens,
w try to hide their doubtful claims
behind the folds of the stars and stripes.
------- -
The rumor that a religious . maniac
would go over Niagara in a rowboat,
expecting death, to be miraculously saved
lrom drew a multitude to Goat
Island and the Canada shore. A boat
was seen coming down stream, with a
maa ed sitting placidly in it. The sight
® intense excitement, and, as the
" eared thfi fall > se e *j ai wome n
^ ainted ’. but voyager did j not stir .
dec ?°? a f ed ^ tb fl' tb ®7 n ® ard of tbe bim e P ectat scream ors
S t \ beIore tbe dreadful plunge, but
tbat C ° U U not have been true, for he
W&S ° nly a manof 8traw ’ P ut afloat b 7
° me ^
, . L
Americans in Europe—A mongst
the Americans registered in Paris
France. April 4, were John Merry man
and wife and the Misses Merryman
^ ^1 ashington ? . and , O Mr. F. Conant and Miss and McCor- fa^
lrgima. Also, at Geneva, T.
e .? l ert ^? n > M rs -Pecab er ton and H.
p lU==e T) em erton,J>.;chmond, Va.
One LnnrWt* ^epedemic
during 6 the Mississippi MlS31831 P pl epederaic
1878
PRICE THREE CENTS.
FOR SALE.
A N old established LIQUOR BUSINESS,
good stand, near the market, and enjoy¬ KOH
LE ing excellent patronage Apply ray4-eod to A. -2w
R.
Wanted*
W ANTED-Everybody to know that I am
with Jos. now Schlitz’ prepared Milwaukee to serve Beer, my customers, also with
the Segars, tiuest ol - choice WINES and Articles, LIQUORS, at
Tobacco and Smokers’ 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, Sola, Porter anil Ale,
15 Houston St., Savannah, Ga.
feb23-3m
W. B. FERRELL’S Agt.
RESTAURANT,
No. 11 New Market Basement,
(Opposite Lippman’s Drug Store.)
1 Ian ISO WANNA
C. A, COR TING
Bait Cutting, Bair Dressias, Carluuc ana
SHAVING SALOON.
HOT AND COLD BATHS.
KUili Bryan street, opposite the Market, uu
der Planters’ Hotel. Spanish, Italian, Ger.
man, and English spokon. sel0-4f
JOS. H. BAKER,
BUTCHER,
STALL No. 06, Savannah Market
Dealer in Beef, Mutton, Pork aud
All other Meats in their Seasons.
Particular attention paid to supplying Ship
and Boarding Houses. aug!2 *
HAIR store:
JOS. E. L0ISEAU & CO.,
118 BROUGHTON ST., Bet. Bull & Drayton
K EEP Switches, Oil hand Curls, a large Pull's, assortment and Fancy of Goods Hair
Hair combings worked in the latest style.
F aucy Costumes, Wig s and Beards for Rant
GEORGE FEY,
WINES, LIQUORS, SEGARS, TOBACCO, Ac.
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-Jv
Carriages*
A. K. WILSON’S
CARRIAGE MANUFACTORY,
Corner Ray 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
and Buggies Spring and Farm wagons, Canopy
F alling Top Baby Cari lages, also a full
line of Carriage and Wagon Material. I have
chanics. engaged in my factory the taost skillful me
pairing, will Any orders for new work, and re»
be executed to give satisfaction
and at short notice. mayl2-ly
EAST END
Carriage Manufactory.
P. O’CONNOR,
Corner East Broad, President und York sts.
Savannah, Ga.
I public beg leave in general to inform that my I always friends keep aud the on
hand a lull 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 1 to
be as represented
nishing. Repairing in all its branches. Painting. Var¬
done in polishing, lettering and trimming
Horse-shoeing a workmanlike manner.
a special ty. mch2tf
Hotels.
OCBAB BOUSE, TYEEE ISLAND, GA
rilHlS X new and elegant hotel, opened MAY
made FIRST, additions, 1879, has, since the last season,
many which make it much
more commodious and pleasant. The lessee
guarantees its accommodations and cuisine
to be lirst-class in every respect. With broad
piazzas facing the ocean, lightand airy rooms,
those seeking pleasure or relaxation from
b 6s 1’ W i‘ 1 "Ocean House” ail that
can an be k desired.
Board per day 82 00, per v/eek 10 00. Special
arrangements Lunch made with excursionists.
Ro»m at the Pavilion. Meals at ail
New Bathing houses, with all conven¬
iences. F or further particulars address
A. G. YBANEZ,
1. p O. address, Savannah, 0 Proprietor Ocean House.
Ga. my0-lm
Seeds, Plants and Birds,
H AY selected E constantly assortment on hand of a large and well
Garden, Field & Flower Seeds.
Handsome GERANIUMS of Apple, Ror.es,
Sploe, Fish, Etc.
Choice Roses, Camellas aud Azaleas—very
low. Hyacinths andother Bulbs. Jars, Cages
and German Canaries
Bouquets, Al. Wreatils, etc., tuaue to order.
orders receive my persoual attention.
GEO. WAGNER,
Seedsman and ITloriBt,
oclStf Savannah.Ga
Drawing and Painting School.
P ROF, his J. EDWIN CHURCHILL will open
exaases for Painting and Drawing on
Saturday, Clash fur Children, April 20th. Afternoon Drawing
at Mozart Hall. apjy