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ID A. I L Y I TTYKlSTHsTG
Savannah U TA Recorder.
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Ml
VOL II.— No. 102.
THE SAVANNAH RECORDER,
K M. ORME, Editor.
PUBLISHED EVERY E VENING.
(Saturday Excepted,)
t :i GX BAY JS»TXX:E2:E:' r E\
Jiy ,T. STERN.
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corder, Savannah, Georgia.
The Sunday Morning Recorder will take
the toace oj the Saturday evening edition,
which will make six full issues for the v/eek.
«-\Ve do not hold ourselves responsible for
the opinions expressed hy Correspondents.
The French Prince.
A Sensational Story —Did lie Have a Wife
and Child?
[From the New York World.]
Is it not enough that the Prince Im¬
perial should have been killed ? Why
must he be married too ? Are there
no limits to political hatred? When
the Prince set out for Zululand there
was some talk about a betrothal to the
Princess Beatrice, and now Le Petit
Lyonnias publishes an extremely cir¬
cumstantial and ingenious story to this
effect: Act I. Last year about the
close of the bathing season a couple
took lodging at Bath (where nobody
ever goes to bathe, be it observed; in
England. Tlie gentleman was young
and looked “like a Frenchman whose
vivacity had been extinguished by an
enfeebled constitution the lady was
tall, of light complexion and spoke
English with a slight German accent.
They had a nurse and a child three or
tour months old. After a week the
husband left Bath. He returned seve¬
ral times to see his wife, on some occa¬
sions wearing the uniform of an officer
of artillery. They lived in strict se¬
clusion, having but one visitor, the
priest of a neighboring church. Act
II. When the Zulu war broke out the
husband went to this priest and said he
was ordered to Africa ; family reasons
did not permit him to reveal his name
or avow his marriage ; would the priest
during his absence act as protector of
his wife aud child? The good Father
consented, imd when the news of the
Prince Imperial’s death was received
sent the paper to the lady to cheer
her up, as it were. She read a few
lines and promptly swooned. Act
111 . That same afternoon a blonde
Cliiselhurst woman in deep mourning arrived at
(of course by special train
from the far west of England) and
begged with tears an audience of the
Empress. It was refused, but she had
a long interview with Father Goddard.
Next day she came back, but was still
not admitted.
Act IV. Her disappearance being
noticed at Bath, the priest of that place
was surprised and, with the well
known discretion ot his order, immedi¬
ately went into the public place and
told all that ho knew about this wo¬
man. “But,” said a bystander, who
must Lave come up by express from
Kent, “that’s precisely the description
of the mysterious woman at. Chisel
hurst.'’ So both of them ran and bought
a The photograph of the Prince Imperial,
piiest, “This immediately on seeing it,
cried : is the husband of this
young woman.”
Could anything be more interesting?
It is a reproach to the Paris papers and
to the London correspondent of our
Pvcniruj Post that it should first have
seen the light in a penny journal at
Lyons. There are some facts, it will
have been observed, however, which it
is not easy to reconcile with its strict
accuracy. Thus, people do not go to
Bath to take sea baths as we have
hinted, among other reasons,
the city of King Bladud and Beau Nash
is not on the sea. Again, the Prince
Imperial at that particular season was
making a very extended tour on the
continent. Thirdly, nobody ever saw
artillery an Englishman in the uniform of an
officer five minutes after
was released from duty. Fourthly,
wlmt earthly blonde woman, not
American, could recover from a swoon.
get. a suit of mourning and travel from
Wiltshire into Kent by the same after
noon ? Fifth • y, how did the mixed
company at Bath hear all about her
visit which wasu’t in the papers?
the whole, the author of this tale de
serves to be recognized as the Lyin’
King of Gallic journalism. *
Willow are growing on the bar in
the Mississippi at Vicksburg, and it
will soon be dry land where the river
once flowed. •
How Memphis Appears.
The Streets Destitute of Pedestrians, and the
Corners of Loafers.
[From the Memphis (Tenn.) Avalanch.j
The streets yesterday were almost
deserted, except by certain old stagers
from whose hides Yellow Jack would
recoil in dismay. Several noted places
of resort were lonely and desolate.
The pavement in front of the Peabody
no longer was crowded with “bloods,”
who were wont to stand there in atti¬
tudes of graceful repose, and by their
killing “get up” slay the peace of un¬
sophisticated feminines who might
chance to pass that way.
The absence of our two crack mil¬
itary companies has told fearfully up¬
on the beer saloons, and the corners
are no longer festooned with amateur
warriors, in deep discussion over some
knotty point in tactics, or the latest
style of undress uniforms. It is to be
hoped that when health and prosperity
return once more to gladden our city
with their presence in time for the
society season, the gang are reduced to
such an extent that it is almost im¬
possible to get up any sport.
One veteran soldier in the army of
chance complained yesterday that he
was reduced to the humiliation of
doing nothing or engaging in a game
of poker. There were tears in his
eyes as he spoke. Court square, once
the resort of hundreds of our people
was deserted, with the exception ot
two or three listless can’t get aways,
and the festive squirrels, who hopped
around in a very poseless kind of way,
as if they missed the merry children
who used to feed them with peanuts
and other delicacies dear to the squir¬
rel's heart. But saddest of all was the
determination expressed by several
saloon keepers to close their places
of resort during the present unpleas¬
antness, and the sight of drays loaded
with barrels of whisky being shipped
off to the West. One bombproof citi¬
zen, as he beheld the latter sight, re¬
marked sadly to a 'friend that Mem¬
phis was “deader’n the Ten Com¬
mandments’’ The rotunda of the
Peabody w r as tenantless, save by a few
men with satchels, ready to light out
to healthier climes, or an occasional re¬
porter lying in wait for some doctor
attending a “bad case.” The whole
town looked as if people had made
money enough to retire from business,
and had shut up shop for .good.
A Curious Old CoiN.mCaptain Ed¬
ward 0. Nicholas, of the"ark Nori :iena,
of Portland, while stopping at Port
Mahon, in the Mediterranean, making
repairs, made the acquaintance of a
wo, -know citizen ol that port, An omo
Barteon,, who presented h.m with a
silver com which ts supposed to bo
: very va cable, and one of the most re.
mart-able cariosities ever brought to
this country. Mr. Barteom says this
corn is one of the original silvershekles
ofthe kind used, rn the purchase of
Joseph at the time he war sold by his
brethren into Egypt and that it was
made with some kind of flint stone by
the ancients He says it came into
possession ot his family from the Moors,
and has been handed down from gen
eration to generation until now.
nle people aie at liberty to take
their , own view ot this estimate ot its
antiquity, it seems to be better
lushed that the com is one which was
eageily sought alter titty years ago b\
the officers of one of our United btates
man-o i-w av \ esse is, \'ho applied to the
owner for it. and which bignor Barteom
then carefully kept from them. It is
almost square in shape, and has some
peculiar hieroglyphics worked on both
sides. J.cwtsion (Mr) Journal.
An Attractive Spectacle.— Fret
ty little girls wading and paddling in
the surf make an attractive spectacle,
^ ut when a pretty young lady ot twen
J7 summers or thereabouts, and wear
U! £ a Gainsborough hat, undertakes
the same pastime, the scene is a novel
°? e * S “ c k a J ouu p Ldy, on a part
of Manhattan Beach which was se
eluded tor the moment, thought it
would be nice to join the little
and, pulling off her shoes and stockings
^ oatu red in. It was evidently a more
j |rising difficult task to adjust her dress to the
and lowering of the tide, for
:she gave her whole mind to it and
1 succeeded very poomy. Everybody
P^S that way paused, and tbe
I men to °^ seats, determined to fight it
out it it took all summer. In fifteen
minutes a crowd ot nearly 300 persons,
mostly men, had gathered. The smile
011 0\e young lady 's face changed to a
frown, and a mother's sharp
cr y hastened her withdrawal to the
background, where, screened by a
phalanx of female friends, she restored
s koes and stockings to their proper
place in the economy of civilization.
--------♦ ♦ ♦--
We are now sorry for the Zulus. If
they had only allowed themselves to be
killed off quietly and peaceably seme
time ago they would not now be labor
ing under the disgrace of defeat,
■ Savages never will listen to reason.
Infidelity and Crime.
We believe it to be susceptible of
demonstration that the late extraordi¬
nary and deplorable increase of crime,
an crowding increase with more its palpable record the every day’
columns
of the public prints and sickening the
soul with its endless detail aud'novelty
of horror, is largely due to the growth
of materialism, or what is termed in¬
fidelity, and that mainly in reaction
from the sceptical drift of the time lies
the path of wholesome reform. The
fruit of unbelief among the upper or
wealthy classes is sensuality. ; Those
classes get to worship instead bf their
Maker the pleasures of the moment.
They bow doiVD to rich food and fine
clothes and enervating amusements.
They make goddesses of women Their who
possess mere physical beauty. and
hearts are set cn vachts race
courses anti theatres and operas. What
is given, in a word, to gild or soften
life, to lend grace and sparkle and color
to the plod and monotone of existence,
such persons make it sole object and
aim. Thus they become of tlie earth,
earthly, and all that is spiritual and
exalted dries out of their soul. One
after another the commandments are
broken as they stand in the way of de¬
sire, and a shameful ruin is left at last
in place of what might have been a per¬
fect temple; a shattered and sated
voluptuary in place of a nobly perfect
human being.
Among the poorer and less educated
ranks of' society the cant and poison
of living only for the day is even
more directly disastrous. The rich can
gratify their passions without, as
a rule and in the legal sense, coming
in conflict wfith the rights of others.
But the needy, unrestrained by any
only fear of future and account, drink and thinking
to eat since to-morrow
they die, drive straight on to crime. That
this is no idle assertion can be abun¬
dantly proved. A careful survey of
the murders, suicides and other great
felonies committed in the great cities
of the United States during the last
ten years show’s that a heavy fraction
of the perpetrators were atheists or
free thinkers. These unhappy person#,
persuaded that life is the be-all and
the end-all here, imagine that in their
calculations they can jump the life to
come. A collection of the letters or
other papers left by criminals when
anticipating death show’s a fearful num¬
ber of instances, some of which many
readers will recall, of absolute disbelief
in the existence of a God or in a
reckoning for wrong done in this life
to be exacted in a futue one.— New
York Post.
Singular Instincts of Scorpions.
_ There ■„ a ie3 of sti ; ac01 ._
Western ; 0 n found in the river bottoms of
Texas. Immediately after the
bhth of ber the female places
theLQ a basket shaped receptacle ‘ on
her back where th begin L afc h
themse lves and sucking her
bloo(1 Of course the mother soon sue
cum bs to this unfilial treatment one’s and
begins to droop. The young are
t t h; s t i me sufficiently nourished to
demanJ more substantial food and
thev kill their mother and devour her.
Should one of the younw ones become
Cached from the living nest, it is at
once killed and feasted upon by its
mo ther. Thus it seems that while the
f pma } e willingly sacrifices her life to
her offspringf yet she does not hesitate
f 0 kill them, should they be so devoid
of m , t inct as to refuse to remain where
s be places them after birth. While
thig is go ing on the male parent stands
aroun d .—Hannibal (J[o XCourier
______ - m m*' —
The Florida Indians.—L ieuten
ants Pratt and Browne, who wen
to see and report upon the condition of
the Indians in South Florida, ha3 ro
turned. They found the Indians
friendly, very well off and contented.
They do not like “white man’s ways,”
however, and declare that they will
] lve and die following the Indian ens
p irns of their fathers, and the
; chiefs even oppose the younger
learning English. It is probable that the
no new policy will be adopted by
government until the old chiefs
j warriors who were in the Indian wars
are gone, when it is thought, the
er men will be more manageable and
more willing to advance. It is eati
mated that the Indians in that se.etbn
number but three hundred meg
to! a.
----—> ^ —-
A duel took place on the 24th inst,
at a point 14 miles east of Columbia,
Miss., in the State of Alabama,
tween Capt. Humphreys and Major
Moore. Five hundred people witnessed fired
the affair. The combatants
upon each other at a distance'of ten
paces with Smith •& Wesson revolvers
without effect. Major Moore fired im
mediately on turning. Capt.
revs took cool, calm and deliberate aim.
After the first fire friends pressed the
seconds to take advantage of the regu
lations of tne code, which was done,
and the affair ended, both their honors
having been satisfied. The duel grew
out ot a difference of politics. •
SAVANNAH, TUESDAY, JULY 29, 1879.
Our Dead Presidents
A review’ of the lives of the different
Presidents of the United States is pro¬
ductive of some interesting results.
For instance, three of them died on tlie
4th of July. John Adams and Jeffer¬
son botti died on the country’s fiftieth
died birthday—July 4th, 1825 ; and Monroe
on the 4tli of July, 1831. Madi¬
son died on the 28tli of June, 1836,
and his friends were confident that he,
too, would live until July 4th. If he
had, then the second, third, fourth and
fifth Presidents would have died on
Independence Day. Taylor and John¬
son both died in July. Every fourth
President until Mr. Hayes was an old
bachelor. Van Buren did not draw any
of his salary until his term expired,
when he drew it out in gold, “all in a
lump.” Tyler died poor, having gone
into the rebellion, and was one of the
Confederate Commissioners at Mont¬
gomery. John Adams lived the long¬
est—he was 91 years old when he died.
Madison was 85 ; Jefferson, 8? ; John
Quincy Adams, 81 ; Van B'i -n, 80;
Jackson, 78 ; Buchanan, 77 ; 1’ ilmore,
74; Monroe, 72; Tyler, 72; Harri¬
son, 68; Washington, 67; Johnson,
67; Pierce, 65; Taylor, 60; Lincoln,
56; Polk, 54. General Grant is tbe
only living ex-President. Tyler and
Van Buren both died in 1862; Lincoln
in 1865; Buchanan in 1868 ; Fillmore
in 1874; and Johnson in 1875.
The Ceremony of Identification.
—Before the removal of the Prince
Imoerial’s hody to Cliiselhurst the cere¬
mony of formally identifying it took
place, in accordance with French cus¬
tom, and lasted about two hours. The
temporary coffin was opened in the
presence of the two Princes Bonaparte,
M. Rouher, Gen. Fleury, several medL
cal men and others. The lad’s mother
was absent. It was found that the
operation of embalming had not been
successful. So decomposed were the
features of the dead young soldier that
the work of recognition is des¬
cribed as having been almost as dif¬
ficult as it was painful. The peculiar
configuration of one of his teeth, aud
the gold filling in several others, were
the principal means of identification;
and these were discovered by Dr.
Evans, who bad accompanied tbe late
Emperor and Empress on their last
departure from France, and was extre¬
mely well informed concerning their
unfortunate soil. Another physician,
Dr. Larry, probed and measured every
wound on the body. In a voice chok¬
ing with emotion, M. Rouher exclaim¬
ed, “I am satisfied.” Uhlman, the
faithful servant, who had been with
his master in Zululand, fainted away
at the sig n ! 1 t of the .spoliation wrought
by death.
_. Toe marsh# intends to arresttha
tot violator of quarantine he catches
■» the city Ve lively drummer and
gay gamboher from Memphis will do
well to give this burg a wide berth. A
f 50 a nd la > Tin § lfl the old Y. F
hos P ltal m . quarantine . would not be
pleasant episodes. We tried the hospi
table style last year, and found it cost
one hundred and eighty-one live and
lully a iniHioq dollars direct loss, to
sa y not L n g ot indirect losses,which no
°? e can estimate. We are not so hos
I )lta i ,‘ e as we were, but rather more
uos.tile, so to speak. This is not a
£? od ? r 8al ' 3 “ resor t for persons run
mu 3 the , pestilence which walketh
a £°uud Memphis regardless of the hour
ot da y °r night. Don t come here
8%ve<Jt Memphians. We cant appre
ciate >’ our S0clet 7 J^t now. After
irost come over and we 11 have suthin
together and will talk over the matter
our leisure. But just now we d
Chattel
noo 9 a ( & nn -) Jg/ua
“There ninT in ilpmand for fmrv
T10 ” \a t u u |.p
“ rnm , p - a ar P , lpr
-v V, - 1 - fa chin mW
‘ " f - 7 ^ I ' i there 'vnn’t hr
n i heDmi Vf thirT hars hot lU.,. .Drk ...
aS iXp\r „ win- T
made
{ unch to . d £,. and onlvthree or four
!;ll . et inmo l Even lemonades ain’t
tQuc j i of a ‘ aQ> Everybodv ..-roes f or
Per i, i p: 1- V ears nan f a heer kp^ J? hadn’t
!
qjJ , p i l } j
1 ‘V tk \ ; g l t here’d be" ;L. four or five of us U
Tn7' n , n ir ..; va ,i ,i v c ^Now ce t r, an
tW v -fi ve cents a ^lass its Pi
beer, and thev’d mob us if we charged
mn ., p t j mn c* P0nf “for , »TkiUed a.... „; n - r
mnch more ca ‘ b«
*____________ -mm*- ___
At the Wabash Narrows, a few miles
a b 0 ve Merom, Ind., the Wabash rose to
suc b a height as to overflow and com
p i ete ] y carr7 aw ay shock.° an eighty acre farm
0 f wheat just in seeing The farmer,
naraec [ t Phillips, all his labor*
an ‘ q swept away from before
ev es plunged in the Wabash " and ' in
despair ‘ " * drowned himself.
-—-—----
The Minnesota wheat crop promises
well, and the probable yield will be
from fifteen to twenty bushels to the
acre, which will make the wheat pro
duct of the State (over 400,000 acres)
nearly 50.000,000 bushels.
ITEMS OF INTEREST.
Georgia coal is largely J sold in South j
Carolina n
A million dollars worth of chickens
are shipped out of East Tennessee ans
nually.
Galveston, Texas, has a crabbing
club. The person catching the most
takes the hamper.
Sleepy Tom, a blind horse, in a
pacing race at Columbus, Ohio, made
the best time on record.
Ex-Senator Chaffee, of Colorado, is
in luck. His share of the profits in a
Colorado silver mine for the month was
$40,000.
A party of Irish farmers having gone
to London to see the Royal Agricul¬
tural Show, the Prince of Wales invit¬
ed them to visit him at Marlborough
House.
George the obituary W. Childs (a steamer, and
not barges Philadelphia. poet) ignobly tows
at A vessel by
that name ought not to be less than a
gondola laden with sweet singers.
The heaviest taxpayers of Wilming¬
ton, Del., have determined that the
city shall live within its income. They
give notice to the officials that any in¬
crease of the debt will be resisted at
law.
James Gordon Bennett means to have
good, fresh milk while at Newport. He
has hired pasturage near his cottage,
and placed there six cows which will
yield nearly thirty quarts of milk per
day.
Town Treasury Wilson, of Monti
cello, Ind., brought a libel suit against
the local newspaper that said he was
dishonest, but before the case came to
trial he fled with $21,000 of public
money.
Two aged colored women fought in
the Newport almshouse, and it trans¬
pired that sixty years before they had
quarrelled about a lover so bitterly
that, on meeting, their animosity was
as strong as ever.
Dr. Le Moyne, the crematiohist, is
said to have altered his will so as to
deprive his.,son of $40,000 that had
been intended for him. The son had
given offence by refusing to burn the
remains of his child.
A busy man at Columbus, Ohio,
his keeps office, a phonograph ready for use in
and, when anybody begins to
tell him a long story, he says, “Just
talk it into the instrument, and I’ll
listen to it by and by.”
Pittsburg is ready to gnash its teeth
and grief, weep the in disappointment, anger and
at prospect of being compell¬
ed to pay the riot losses. Well, she
had her lun, half sympathizing with
the moh when it burned the property of
“the grinding monopoly,” and now
having done the dancing the fiddler’s
bill is in order.
There has been discovered near
Rowlesburg, West Virginia, belonging
to Senator H. G. Davis, on Cheat
river, a large body of pure and solid
i ce , formed last winter. Hundreds of
people are daily visiting the spot to
view the curiosity. The same thing is
remembered to have occurred in I860,
when it was regarded as very curious,
Prince Jerome Bonaparte, the suc
cessor of the Prince Imperial as head of
the house, is known by appearance to
many New Yorkers, having visited the
city in 1861, in his yacht, and stayed
fora considerable time in the New
York Hotel. When his features are
in repose he is the image of the first
Napoleon; but the great Napoleon’s
smile was full of sweetness, while Plon
Plon’s is full of bitterness. He is said
by those who know him best indolence.! to possess
ability, but he has an air of he*
By refusing to go to the Crimea 1
ac Q u i re d a reputation in France for
cowardice. He lives separate from his'
wife, the Princess Clothilde, who re-
6 * des ‘ n Laly. She is gentle and pious,
She was with her husband here, and
evei 7 morning t^e at 7 o’clock went
^ar mass at Jesuit Chapel in
teen t'n street. a
A f ° urfo l d murder
, horror has l been committed . Prague 1
m
Iveport, two discharged workmen Johan-j of one]
an upholsterer in the j
nis P latz - The motive was revenge for
having had to undergo three days’ j
imprisonment in consequence of
8 They ^mly were conduct no toward sooner Keport’s free of prison sister.
tk “ miscreants went to their
late door employer’s workshop, and, locking
th® behind them, drew revolvers
a ? d knives and began the butchery,
daughter Report, his wife, killed sister and infant their
were on the spot,
bodies being dreadfully mangled. An
assistant, who sprang out of the win
dow twenty-one wounds, lies
d ^ n o^ n hospital. Twelve shots
were fired and six people wounded be
sides the four slain. The people had
the greatest trouble in preventing the
crowd of some thousands of people
from lynching the ruffians. One of
them, indeed, was so knocked about by
the exasperated people before be could
be got away that he is now unrecogni*i
^able.
For Sale,
IT 101 *: walk.— A fine 4 year pm colt ; tjen
Jj tie, and well broken to harness. A nply
y-‘ii
$O 0 M 0 $ent.
T O RENT.—Nicely Furnished Rooms, nitli
or without Hoard, at reasonable t rins.
Privilege of Bath Room. No. 70 BRYAN ST.
jy25-eod-tf
Business Cards,
L. FERNAN 0 , I. I M
Office : No. 9 Whitaker /Street ,
[UP STAIRS.]
Office Hours:—8—9 A. M. !—4and7J4 -S %
P. M. my2ti-lm
W. B. FERRELL’S Agt.
RESTAURANT,
No. II New Market Basement,
(Opposite Lippman’s Drug Store,)
Innl.'iM SAVANNAH. GA
C. A. CORTXNO,
Hair Cutting, Hair Dressing, Carlins and
SHAVING SALOON.
HOT AND COLD BATHS.
1 C 034 Bryan street, opposite the Market, uu ■
uer UlanterB’ Hotel. Spanish, Italian, Ger
man, and English spokon. sclG- X
JOS. H. BAKER,
butoheb,
•STALL No. 60, Savannah Market.
Dealer ia Deef) Mutton, Dork aud
All other Moats iu their Seasons.
Particular attention paid to supplying Shin
anil Boarding Hous es. augli
MAIli store:
JOS. E. L0ISEAU & CO.,
118 BROUGHTON ST., Bet. Bull & Dray tail
EEP on hand a largo assortment of Hair
Hair Switches, combings Curls, worked PuiTs, and Fancy Go jd*
iu tlie latest style.
Fancy Costumes, W igs and Boards for Rent
T. J. McELLINN,
PLUMBING AND GAS FITTING.
Whitaker street, Southwest corner Statu st
f
N.B. Houses fitted with gas and water at
short notice, Jobbing promptly attendee t»
and all work guaranteed, at fow pricon.
S*K:7.| y
GEORGE FEY,
WINES, LIQUORS, SEGAllS, TOBACCO, Ac
The celebratod Joseph Sclilitz’ MILWj U
KEE LAGER BEER, a speciality. No. 22
Whitaker Street, Lyons’ Block, Savannah.
Ga. FREE LUNCH every day from 11 to J.
r-zJl-1v
Hotels*
r e
SAVANNAH.
JOSEPH HERSCIIBAC1I, ProjCr.
T HIS and well favorably known established, and popular as hotel, to he ranked so long
among one of the old landmarks of,Savannah
Is now thrown open to the public uudera n
management, patronage and I respectfully solicit i ia
oi l he public to its old and ho; >i
table doors. livery exertion will be made to
put It upon a footing with the best hostelrlea
throughout plied with the.Stale. Its tables will he .-ap¬
the best the markets afford,
JOSEPH 1IERSCIIBACH.
Ie20-tf
SI PELlOli MANAUEMENT.
With its spacious
VESTIBULE !
Extensive aud Elegant
Affording PIAZZA !
Ladies a fine view of the Promenade.
Airy and well ventilated
ROOjMS,
And Unrivalled
Is Par Excellence TABLE !
the
HOTEL of SAVANNAH.
our Mottostui win be, a mu house atm i ir
rates. w»,
jym john hhes xan, Managy.
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Rst, audit is 79 , ions’ tias, «i muko^ .ni a
many which it h
seeking pleasure or relaxation rr
11 “ ,0 ° c< “‘“ ,,ou “"‘■ UiM
at^Y/u per PaviVion. yeekio C MeL7s°ut' oo. Spu< Ji ai
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.
P. O. address, .Sava mlub, ( Ja. “ 1 ^myi, "m
EUROPEAN HO LYE
33 .A. K I
16f BRYAN .STREET, [near the market,]
S now stocked with the best of Imported
and domestic Liquors, Wines and sc gars.
Cool Lager ulway, on draught. Free
Lunch every day. Open day and night.
I ish Chowder every Saturday, fromO—I2i» jr.
FREb. WEBER.
Drawing and Painting School.
his classes for Painting CHURCIULL will open
Saturday. April 26th, and Drawing on
Class for Cluldivu, at Mozart Afternoon fiaii. Drawing
PRICE THREE CENTS.