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DAILY, ITVM^riNG
Savannah V] -:>• r! i ft TSSlfi ■m Mi y fTJM * 'iffcfj ,.te 7 a -t "71
VOL JI.—No. 99.
THE SAVANNAH RECORDER i
E M. OKME, Editor.
PUBLISHED EVERY EVENING,
(Saturday Excepted,)
At :i isa. xsxk/’sr stheet*
JUj J. STERN.
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islier.
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ters of interest solicited.
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egular rates wiU be made.
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corder, Savannah, Georgia.
The Sunday Morning Recorder will take
the oi the Saturday evening edition,
which vviii make six full issues for the week.
H'a -AVe do not hold ourselves responsible for
the opinions expressed ny Correspondents.
Running for Office.
The Experience tha>‘ Boggs Ilad While a Candi
date.
[From the San Francisco Era.]
The approach of the State and mu¬
nicipal election is bringing to the sur¬
face the usual crew of aspirants for
official honor and many new candidates.
It is useless to warn the old stagers, but
the new ones may flee from the wrath
to come on reading the experience of
one Boggs, who ran for office :
Boggs was as peaceable a man as ever
lived.
He was sober, honest and respected.
He had never beaten, bis wife.
Never taken any interest in a dog
fight. Had been
never known to pawn
somebody else’e watch.
Arid never bad attempted to steal a
saw mm.
Boggs’ character was above reproach.
He was a shining tight in society.
All Boggsville looked up to and hon¬
ored him.
But a change came—a fearful, dire¬
ful change.
In au evil hour Boggs accepted the
nomination for constable of his native
village.
Alas ! Poor Boggs !
Little did he understand the deceit
anil treachery of the wicked world.
His eyes were soon opened, however.
In less than a week after he was
nominated the opposition had fully
established the following damaging
charges against his character :
1. That he was a free lover and an
infidel.
2. That he had fed his neighbors’ i
■
hens on poisoned corn.
3. That he had broken his mother
in-law’s jaw with an iron bootjack.
4. That he on one occasion gave a
whole wagon load of green watermelons
to an orphan asylum.
5. That he had served a term in
State prison for horse stealing.
0. That he had set fire to his neigh¬
bor’s barn merely because he refused to
lend him a hoe.
7. That because he found a button
off his shirt he tied his wife to the
bed post and mashed in three of her
ribs with a stove poker.
8. That his chiei Sunday amusements
were cock-fighting That and play ing cards.
9. he sold his vote every year
regulai ly to the highest bidder.’
.’0. That he wasn’t fit for the place
anyhow.
These charges, although without the
slightest foundation, were religiously
believed by the majority of the vot t is
of Boggsville.
And Boggs' political goo.*w was
cooked.
llis chances for being elected w ere
not worth three cents on the dollar.
When Boggs passed along the street
his neighbors looked at huu with
side. suspicion and crossed over on the other
Bo, was a miserable being.
The day of town meeting came at
l>ut. and Boggs' opponent scooped Lu the
constableship by a two-thirds vote.
The anti-Boggs party swept their
candidate into cilice on the tidal wave
of popularity, and poor Boggs "’as
left perched high on the
picket fence of despair. office again
Boggs will never run for ;
not even tor 1’ivsidont.
He says it is too great a strain upon
the character.
If he can regain the esteem of his
neighbors by grubbing along in the
old way he intends to do it and leave
office-seeking to people of cast iron
reputation.
lhe great cloci^ ot the Lai uituen
tary Palace, ot Westminster, has, by
the Astronomer-Royals report, been
within ono second ot true time on SO
per cent, of days ohsfrvatlop.
Edwin YArden Stuart’s End.
A Once Influential Maryland Merchant Dying
in a Five Cent Lodging House.
In the rear room of a five cent under¬
ground lodging house, at, 107 Green
wieh street, early yesterday morning,
says the New York Sun of Monday,
the dead body of Edwin Varden Stuart
lay on the floor with a cheap, unclean
pillow under the head. He died sud¬
denly at 5 o’clock of a hemorrhage
caused by excessive drinking. Mr.
Stuart was a well-known resident of
Talbot county, Maryland, and for some
years a prosperous merchant in Balti
more. About two years ago he made
his first appearance in the part of the
city in which he died. He dressed
well, and often expensively, and at
times had a great deal of money, which
he quickly squandered officer in drink. the Con¬
Mr. Stuart was an in
federate army. He has a brother-in
law who is a clergyman in Baltimore.
A few weeks ago a Wall street lawyer
became interested in his case, and per¬
suaded him to enter the Seventy-eighth
street Christian Home tor Intemperate
Men ; and two weeks ago he came out
of the institution greatly improved, but
he relapsed into his old ways.
In one of the bar-rooms that Mr.
Stuart frequented was found a vest,
which he had pledged for drinks, and
in it were several affectionate letters
from his mother, an aged widow, who
lives in Easton, Md. She is said to
have been wealthy at one time. Her
son’s body was taken to the Morgue.
No Remarks About the Weather.
It was hot yesterday. It was hotter
at noon. It was so hot that passen¬
gers on the street took oft’their hats,
mopped their brows, and fiercely de¬
clared that they knew at the time we’d
catch it about the 1st ot July. The
Rome saloon had just one chair left,
and this was taken by a red-whiskered
man adown whose cheeks the perspi¬
ration fairly ran. His clothes stuck to
the small of his back, his big, red hands
were wet to the finger nails, and it was
evident that the sun had been trying
to corner him; seven or eight men were
making ready to tell him that it was a
warm day, when the stranger drew out
a big revolver, laid it on his knee, and
looking up and down the room, slowly
remarked :
“Gentlemen, I’m a stranger here, but
have bought a house and lot, up the
street, and shall pass here six times a
day. This is my day for opening the
season.’’
Every man looked at him in a won¬
dering way, and gently caressing the
weapon of death, the stranger added :
“It is hot weather. Even a fool
knows that. It’s going to be hotter.
Two weeks hence it will be a regular
old frying-pan weather. Now, then,
while I shall realize it forcibly as any
one, I’ll shoot the first- man that says
weather to me. I won’t have a word
about it or hear to it. I am willing to
be broiled, baked or roasted; but I
don’t want to talk about it. Now, let
some one remark that it's a hot day—
bad for grass—looks like too little rain
—awful begin dusty, or beautiful breeze, and
I'll shooting.”
Not a lisp was heard. If any oue
imagined that, there might be a frost
at night in the lower Picket-wire region,
he kept his thoughts to himself.—
Trinidad ( Colorado ) News.
He Gave it Up. — One ot the poets
ot the First Empire, Nepomucence
Lemercier, wrote a tragedy whose hero
was Christopher Columbus. He had
in it violated the unities, which French¬
men for years considered an inviolable
law of tragedy. When Lemercier’s
piece was p'ayed, the students hissed
it with great vehemence. Napoleon
admired him, and when he heard the
tragedy had been hissed he ordered
played again. It was again
hissed. He became furious. He er
dered it played a third time, and went
to the theatre, accompanied and by a second regi
mefit of soldiers. The first
acts were heard in silence. It wes at;
the third act that the hisses weie more
vigorous When the curtain rose on
the thud act, Napoleon leaped over his
box and looked at the students to see
if they would dare oppose his known
will in his presence. What should he i
sec but the whole audience, from the
pit to the last tier, wearing nightcaps, | '
and pretending to be asleep, The sight
w as . so odd, Napoleon couldn’t help
lauuLi ing, and he gave up attempting
to support the tragedy.— 2 rot/ Tress. ■
Forty ix lett by Shelley, of little
interest to anybody, except ardent
ot the poet, are for sale at
Florence. Edward A. Silsbee, ot Bos
ton, has bid 8800, but is not likely to
get them, his competitor being the j
British Mu m. I
~~ 7 ~ ~
... oiage ot diiiy.iy legal , doou- .
jv ei oi
meats find? F ulul form ot
warranty deed providea by statute in
Indiana, which is as follows: nA B.
cribe conveys the and property) warrants for the to L. D^ of (des
sum -
SAVANNAH, FRIDAY, JULY 25, 1879.
Rioting in Fall River
The Home of a Poor Woman Stoned, and the
Windows Broken by a Crowd.
Fall River, July 21.—A woman
with her son came to this city from
Warren, R. I., this afternoon, and the
latter (a weaver) was given mother work in
Merchant’s Mill, and the was
given a tenement in one of the com¬
pany’s houses in Plain street. At about
7 o’clock this evening the women in
the neighborhood began to make
threats, and stones were thrown at the
house, and the windows were broken.
Two officers were then put on guard at
the house. The crowd continued to
increase, and the officers deemed it
advisable to take the woman to safer
quarters, and as she went through the
streets the crowd rapidly enlarged
until about one thousand men, women,
and boys had gathered on Bedford
street at the north end of Merchant's
Mill, and opposite the office, where a
number of new spinners, including four
who arrived this afternoon, were quar¬
tered. Another crowd assembled at
the south end of the milk Stones were
thrown, and one of the special watch¬
men at the mill was struck on the arm
ami considerably liurt. Ten policemen
were sent to the mill, and they quelled
the disturbance. No arrests were made.
Large crowds also gathered near
other mills in that part of the city, but
no attempt was madp to create any dis-.
turbance, and at 10£ o’clock the city
was quiet.
Large numbers of spinners have ar¬
rived in this city to-day, and although
the union spinners persuaded several
persons to quit the town yesterday, the
mills have a decided gain.
The Narragansett Mill, which shut
down on the first day after the strike,
and which has been the only mill
stopped for the past three weeks, re¬
sumed work this morning.
The Wabvortlis, Mother and Son
Frank Walworth, the youih who, in
order to protect his mother’s life, slew
his. father, is here at the old Walworth
home in Broadway, says a Saratoga
correspondent. He has not a single
feature or trait of character that would
indicate that he is parricide. His
health is poor, but he is reading law.
He is tall, fair and manly in his bear¬
ing, but he has an inexpressibly sad,
preoccupied expression. He, of course,
is isolated from society. On his exit
from prison his former friends cut him,
and his proud spirit felt it keenly.
His mother has been very busy with
her literary work on art and science.
She has been yery successful on her
lecturing tour. She has the respect and
sympathy of the entire community
here, all of whom are acquainted with
the terrible trials she had to endure at
the hands of an erratic husband, and
her struggles to care for her five child
ren previous to and since his awful
death. She is a beautiful woman, on
the brink ot 50; but, despite her sor
rows, she looks ten years younger. It
is presumed that the old homestead
will be sold, and she will, with this
unhappy son, sail for the Old World
and join her children now there, hoping
to find anchor in some spot where her
surroundings will not stir up the un- ;
pleasant memories of the past as they
do here.— Exchange. j
Con- I
Tiif. Champion Workman of
necticut. —The hardest working man
in the State lives in Norwalk. By
birth iron he. moulder. is a Swede, He and is by occupied occupation iu j
an a
Norwalk foundry, and every day does
what is considered a fair day’s work
for two men. Beginning at 4 o’clock
in the morning, he keeps busy until 7 ;
at meals. night, When not lie even stopping work for his
goes to his in
the morning he carries with him a pail
soup and black bread. This
pail ho places on a shelf over his
bench, and when hungry he grasps the.
pail in his teeth, and throwing his
head back he drinks the soup. While
he is drinking his lingers are
busy packing the sand into the mould,
and when he stops for a bite of black j
bread it is but for an instant. His
work v
days is always two hundred
moulds, while one hundred and twenty i
moulds is considered a good day’s work
,
for a first-class workman. This man
seems to have no interest id anything
but his work, makes no unnecessary ac
quaintances, nnd discourages all of his
companions who show a willingness to
ociato with him .—New Haven IT
c lister.
On the whole, the oid “stand-and-*
deliver method of political assess
meats is better than this sneak thief
process. The Grant people bulldozed
the clerks, but they did not do it in a
mean way. The mask worn by the
Administration had better be thrown
o: R R does not conceal its repulsive
visage.
~ ■* — —
Mr. and Mrs. Fahon, keepers of a
bar room at Liberty, Ind., died of deli
ream tremens within an hour oi each
other.
A Tropical Night.
“Listen ! w bat’s going on in that
tree up there ? It can’t be birds at
this time of night?”
In different intervals of the camp
hubbub we had heard a shrill twitter
from the summit of a large pinabete,
or mountain larch tree, as it a multi¬
tude of swallows were chirping in unis
son. But the invisible vocalists had
either disagreed on some private busi¬
ness, or the glare of the camp fire
began to excite them, for their twitter¬
ing was now intermingled with a vehe¬
ment flutter and piercing squeaks that
sounded through the cackle of our
Mexicans like a boatswain’s whistle.
“Goatsuckers, perhaps, or some other
kind of night-bird.”
I * They must be squirrels, ’ said the
Boss, “birds couldn’t squeak like that.”
“But squirrels can’t flutter; they
must be bats or birds,’ insisted the
doctor.
“Let me get ov*r there ; now watch
if you don’t see them fly away.” He
picked up a billet, and, after !i.aging
it branches, repeatedly against the upper
pinabete, inspected the trunk a the
and owned himself puzzled
when he returned.
“There is a twenty-inch stratum of
animal excrements under that tree,”
said he. “You may be right, after all,
or there must be something else up
there besides my birds— may be cats or
monoschicos” (tree raccoons).
“They are murciegalos” (a large kind
of bats,) said the guide, guessing at
the context of the English conversation
by the last word; “that tree is chuckful
of them.’’
“What makes them flutter so ?”
“I don’t know, eir; they keep com-’
ing and going, and some of them are as
large as woodpigeons.”
But the fluttering in the larch tree
was as steady as the flopping of a fan
ventilator; and after r impounding and
rejecting a variety o other theories.
we came to the conclusion that the
upper branches of the pinabete must be
the flying school for the bat colony,
where their youngsters were exercised
in the rhythmic movement of their
membranous wings.
Smaller bats and a swarm of moths
and beetles hovered about the camp,
and in the light of our fire we could
see night rats chasing each other
through the grass and flying squirrels
flitting from tree to tree, and their near
and far voices of the forest made it
rather doubtful which part of the
twenty-four hours could here be called
par excel]* nee, the wide-awake time.
The business of animated nature is
carried on by relays in the tropics.—
Summer land's Sketches m Appleton's
Magazine.
A Mormon Apostle Shot.
Atlanta; July 22.—For some days
P atj L ^ vvo Mormon apostles have been
operating in Catoosa county, in the
upper part of this State. Some year
or so a £° a colony was taken to Utah
- r om a section contiguous to this, and
considerable feeliog was to!t over the
advent ot these priests of polygamy,
They had been carrying on their work
oi boldness, proselytizing with great vigor and
when yesterday, they were
me t bi a country road, near Ringgold,
5y a party of fifteen natives, who
vvere armed.
The mob announced their purpose
of whipping the two Mormons, and
preparations were being made
one of them laid down his pistol,
Standing, one of the Mormons, in
stantly seized it, and, it is said, pre
it and demanded the surrender
of the whole party. As he was getting
into position he was shot through the
head by some one whose name is not
known.
His companion was not harmed, but
was left in charge of the body. He
savs that bo will take it at once to
Salt Lake City for burial. He announ
ces that he will return to prosecute
the slayers of his companion,
It is impossible to get fuller particu
lars at present. It is believed there
is much behind what has been told,
Standing died instantly,
It has been truly said that the first
tiling that _ rushes to the recollection of
a soldier or sailor, in his direst diffi
eulty, memor’> is his and mother. affection She the clings midst to his |
in
a B the forgetfulness and hardihood in-1
duced by a r< ving life. The first mes- i
sage be leaves is for her; his
whisper breathes her name. The
mother, as she instills the lesson of
piety and filial obligation into the j
heart of her infant son, should always
feel that her labor is not in vain. She
may drop into the grave; but she has
left behind her an influence that will
work for her. The bow is broken, but
the arrow is sped, and will do its office, !
—---- — m -
The New \ ork landscape gardener
who draws $10 a day for taking charge
ot the Capitol grounds, should look at
them occasionally. The prospect isn’t
a cheering one just now. The turf ap
pears to have been exposed to a
I
ITEMS OF INTEREST.
Lightning struck a sexton at Tecum
sey, Mich., and knocked him into a
grave that he had dug.
A goat can eat almost anything, but
when it comes to chewing on an old
crinoline for ten or fifteen minutes, he
feels as if he might be making a bird
cage of liis stomach for nothing, and
gives up the job.
A report from Fort Ellice says
there are 400 Indians starving, and
their number is being daily increased.
A band of 300 are reported within a
few day’s march of Fort Ellice, unable
to proceed further on account of weak
ness.
la the London Hospital for Incura¬
bles is a girl who is deaf, dumb, blind,
and hunchback. A system of lan¬
guage by touches has been devised by
which to communicate with her. while
she expresses herself with the ordinary
hand-alphabet of the dumb.
The strange sight to Virginians of a
negro lawyer defending a white man
was witnessed in the Police Court of
Richmond. Robert Peel Brooks, a
negro lawyer, appeared as the coun¬
sel of a white shoemaker named John
Dunnvant, who was charged with as¬
sault. It was the first case of the kind
ever known in the South.
A woman at Greenburg, Inti, was
not sure that she wished to die, but
thought she did ; so she put her neck
into a noose, stepped off a chair, taking
the precaution to hold a sharp knife in
her hand, The choking left her no
longer in doubt that she still desired to
live, and she hastily cut the rope above
her head.
The new shaft (No. 4), sunk in the
New Discovery Mine, on the Little
Pittsburg Consolidated property at
Leadville, has struck a new body of
ore, assaying 494 ounces to the ton in
some cases, or $500 net. The fourth
dividend of $100,000 a month was
earned in 17 days, merely in develop¬
ment, and without a particle of stopping.
The Signal Corps station at Smith
ville, N. C., reported at G o’clock ori
the evening of the 22d inst. as follows:
“The steamer Regulator, Capt. Doane,
New York for Wilmington, went ashoro
on Main Bar, at Smithville to-day. She
was hauled off by the United States
dredge boat Woodbury, is leaking bad¬
ly; has her rudder post damaged, and
will be towed to Wilmington.
Official stealing has hardly anywhere
been more openly practiced than in
several of the northern countie* of
Michigan. The offices were held year
after year by the same men, and the
charging of two thousand dollars a mile
for a road across a smooth plain, where
two men could build a quarter of a
mile a day, is a fair sample of their
rascality, A score or more of the
thieves are likely to go to prison.
Bombay, with a population ofG50,
000 and an average to the square
mile exceeding London, is the second
city in the British Empire in point of
number. The average death rate for
the past five years has been about the
same as London. The people are tall,
thin and stately in appearance, with
fine, intelligent eyes. The city stands
on an island, joined by an embankment,
to the mainland.
A physician to an inveterate smoker:
“You smoke a great deal, sir! i ’ 1 A
great deal.” “To excess I” “To ex^
cess.” “And don’t you feel the bad
effects of it?” “Why, my hearing is
getting a little hard, my sight a little
defective, my memory a little treacher¬
ous; then, too, in the morning when I
wake, my hands are a little paralyzed,
but in the afternoon I use them easily
enough.”
he frail, delicate girl, wi th
the soft, gazelle-like eye, that the di-
vine alilatus of spring poetry rests
upon. Not at all. The genius of!
rhym* and rhythm is more often found '
in the robust and somewhat wrinkled
maiden of forty summers, with a good
appetite and superb digestion. Young
man, beware of the rhyming female. ;
She is the most expensive kind to feed.i
The Poor lloy.
Don't be ashamed my lad, if you {
have a patch on your elbow. It is no¬
mark of disgrace. It speaks well for]
industrious mother. I*or ourj
part we would rather see a dozen'
patches on your jacket than to hear
profane or vulgar word escape
your lips. No good boy will shun you
because you cannot dress as well as
your companions, and if a bad boy
sometimes laughs at your appearance,
say nothing, We my good lad, but walk
on. know many a rich, and good
man who was once as poor as you.
There is your next door neighbor, for
instance—'now one of the wealthiest
men—who told us a abort time since,
that when a child he wa,s glad to re
ceive the cold potatoes from his neigh*
bor'stable. Be good, my boy, and if
you are deal Door you will be respected a
great more than if you were the
of a rich man and were addicted
to bad habits.
PRICE THREE CENTS,
For Sals
’STICK 1 SALE.—A fine 4 year old COLT ; gen
. . tie, and well broken to harnesi). A I'ply
sit this office. J yai
jQYPRKS.S top, Posts,8x10 will arrive POSTH,—Black, feet in Ions, lew 5 to days, II hard inches Orders Cypress at the
a tor
same will be received at John Hartman’s,
No. 28 Margaret street, for
jy 22-1 w JOHN F. HGHRKNK.
Fo Rent
riNO JL RENT.—Nicely without Board, Furnished reasonable Rooms, with
or at terms.
Privilege Jyzft-eod-tf of Bath Room. No. 76 BRYAN ST.
Business Cards
L. FERNAND, i. 0 ■J
Ojjice: No. 9 Whitaker Street ,
[UP STAIRS;]
Office Hours:—8—9 A. M, 2—land 7)4 SR
F. M. mygtf-lm
W. B. FERRELL’S Agt.
RESTAURANT,
No. II New Market Basement,
(Opposite Lippman’s Drug Store,)
Ian IJf.f SAVANNAH. GA
C. A. CORTINO,
Biir Cutting, Hiii Dressing, Curling and
SHAVING SALOON.
HOT AND COLD BATHS.
1W'A Bryan street, opposite the Market, un
tier Planters’ Hotel. Spanish, Italian, Ger
man. and English spokou. sehi-tl
JOS. H. BAKER,
butcher,
STALL No. 6C, Savannah Market.
Dealer in Reef, Mutton, Pork and
All other Meats iu tholr Seasons.
Particular attention paid to supplying Ship
*o4 Bo arding Houses. ' augBi
11 AIR store;
JOS E. L01SEAU & CO.,
118 BROUGHTON ST., Bet. Bull <fc Drayton
K EEP on hand a large assortment of Hair
Hair Switches, combings Curls, Pull's, and Fancy Goods
worked iu the latest style.
Fancy Costumes, Wigs ami Boards for Rent
■r. J. MeELLINN,
PLUMBING AND GAS FITTING.
Whitaker street, Southwest corner State *t
N.B. Houses titled with gas and water at
short notice, Jobbing promptly attended to
and all work guaranteed, at low prices.
GEORGE FEY,
WINES, LIQUORS, SUGARS, TOBACCO, Ac
The celebrated Joseph Schlit/fl MILWAU¬
KEE Whitaker LAGER street, BEER, Lyons’ a Block, speciality. Savannah, No. 22
Ga. FREE LUNCH every day Horn II to 1.
r-zJl-lv
raoMumraoMi
Hotels.
■
SAVANNAH.
JOSEPH iflEltSCIIBACII, IWr.
r pti 1$ well known and popular hotel, long
-I- and favorably so
among om-ol he old established, landmarks as to he ranked
I ol'Savannah
is now thrown open to the public nndera new
management, and I respectfully s ►licit the
table patronage doors. of the public to its old and made hospi¬
put it Every fooling exertion will he to
throughout upon a with the best* hostolrics
the State. Its tallies will be sup
plieu with the best the markets afford,
J08EEII HER3CHBACI1.
te26-tf
OCEAN HOUSE, T7EEE ISLAND, (A
r X |1HLS FIRST, n*;w iuul 1879, (Ju^iuit lia.s, .‘•.luce lioldl, Um opfiioU ju-l, MAY
niiiijf many mLlitions, .which • <\isori.
turns Dial;** it .nucli
morn cumin,i ami plo isant. Till! Ic.smm!
guarantees its uccDiuuiodiitioiis and cuisine
lo l>e tirst-class in every respect. With broad
piazzas those seeking facing the ocean, 1 iglit a n d a i ry rooms,
business, will lind pleasure or relaxation from
the "Ocean House” all that
can he desired.
Board per day $2 09, per v/eek 10 Of), Special
arrangements Lunch made with excursionists.
K >m at the Pavilion. Meals at all
hours. > w Bathing houses, with all conven¬
ances. I or further pari ieulars address
A. G. YiiANKZ,
„ l n. address, . Savannah, Proprietor Ocean House,
. Ga. mylMrn
CENTRAL EUROPEAN HOUSE
BAB!
1G0 BR1 AN STREET, [near the market,]
I * and now domestic stocked Liquors, with the Wines host, of ami.-sugars Imported
ice Cool Lager always on draught. Free
Lunch every day. Open day and night.
I ii.h Chowder every .Saturday, from 0—1 2 i\u.
Jy2i-lw FRED. WEBER.
Peter Liiuleustrnth,
PRACTICAL WATCHMAKER & JEWELER
AND DEA I,Kit IS
Watches, Clocks, Jewelry,
Toys, &c., &e.,
No. 22 JEFFERSON STREET,
Repairing specialty. of Watches, Clocks and Jewelry,
a
Orders promptly execute I, md all work
warra nted. ;>||
THE HANK.
No. 22 : I BARNARD HT,
-
C tHOICK Wines, Liquors and Sugars, Jo
) s'eph Schlitz’s Lager Beer. Free Lunch
every day. CUAKLES 8EILEK
t\S. Mr. Win. McNeill, late Barkeeper jor
Mr, Blngrt, his Meads. is in chains, aud will hC pleased,
to see