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TOL IV.—No. 68.
THE SAVANNAH JECORDEfi
B M. OEMS, Editor.
PUBLISHED EVERY EVENING,
(Saturday Excepted,)
t xex BAY BTBBBTi
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Matter.
Oar Position*
It is a fact well known to the read¬
ers of the Banner that we have been,
up to the appointment of Governor
Brown as United States Senator, both
personally and politically, the true
and earnest friend and supporter of
Governor Colquitt. While we trust
our personal relations will last suffer no
interruption, yet since this act oi
his administration we have been com¬
pelled following, to split which with him politically, for
the we consider, good
and valid reasons:
First., the political record of Gover¬
nor Brown during the black days of
Georgia is such, that we cannot con¬
ceive fcow Governor Colquitt could
have possibly appointed him General
Gordon’s successor, without doing the
greatest and grossest injustice to
Georgia and the Democracy which
honored him with tbe position he now
holds.
Secondly, there are a number of good,
true, tried, capable and faithful Demo¬
crats and patriots in Georgia who have
never been found wanting when our
State or the Democratic party have
needed their services, who have ever
been true and faithful to Governor
Colquitt as a friend and Governor, and
some one of whom the whole people of
Georgia expected him to appoint as
General Gordon's successor.
Thirdly, we can see no justification
or even good sound reason why Gov¬
ernor Colquitt should have kept the
resignation or the contemplated resig¬
nation of General Gordon so profound
a secret, and thereby refusing to con¬
sult with the prominent party lead¬
ers of the Georgia Democracy as to
who should be General Gordon’s suc
cessolr.
Fourthly, we fail to comprehend any
satisfactory ot just reason why Gov¬
ernor Colquitt should have virtually
forced the appointment of Gov. Brown
upon him, and that too when he must
have known that it would prove ob¬
noxious to a large majority of our
people. The foregoing reasons we
deemed sufficient to justify our oppo¬
sition to Governor Colquitt, after so
long a personal and political friend¬
ship. We have no sympathy with the
charge of "bargain and sale” between
G|n, Gordon, Gov. Brown and Gover¬
nor Colquitt. This does not enter into
our opposition assigned, to Governor being Colquitt,
the reasons to our
sufficient justification shall for his our
tion. We oppose re-election
because we consider that his re-election
would be to endorse bis appointment of
Gov. Brown, which we could not do
without going back on all the political
record we have ever made, and fur¬
thermore his re-election would iu no
small degree contribute to the eleetioa
of Gov. Brown as Senator by the neat
Legislature, which God foibid %e
should ever aid in tbe smallest imagi¬
nable degree. Gordon's
As to General
we have only to say, that
ably he had a legal right to do so,
that the time aud manner in which be
did so, was certainly unjnst both
himself aud the people of Georgia
had honored him with so high a
We can’t see how General Gordon
hid consent to resign his position
United States Senator just at a
when this country is just upon
eve of the most important political
tie ever before fought in tbe history
our government. ^ One which ' '*
the very existence a nd perpetuity
our tree, republican institutions.
occurs to us that any one of his
trioua their predecessors would have
pied Senatorial thread seau with
trousers and bare coats,
the/would have reeled at such
7 • j* Tmir
SAVANNAH, FRIDAY, JUNE 18, 1880.
juncture. Again, we do not think
General Gordon did right in keeping
the purpose of his resigning a secret
from the people of Georgia, and then
shocking the whole country with its
suddenness. Tbe General ought cer¬
tainly making to have put the people on uotice,
by his resignation to have
taken effect at some future time. We
have thus made known our views that
our position in this matter may not be
misuoderstood .—Athens Banner.
Garfield’s Game of Poker.
Mr. Garfield is. not a bad maD, and
he is not a very good man. What he
does would not injure him, as the
world goes, but he thicks it would,
and he conceals it. He would have
the world look upon him as one whose
life is pure from the little vices that
mark other men. I imagine he smokes
a cigar with a feeling that he aacri
fieeavoteaby it. He hiB devotion -to thi$ hab¬
would not have his Western
Reserve constituency know that he had
ever tasted whisky, and yet he has,
and a good deal of it. He loves the
drinking, pleasfires of the table, good eating and
as do most men of healthy
bodies and minds; hut he hides his
healthy appetities from the world
as he would hide excesses,
His appetities and desires . are
coarse. What he is can be
read in his heavy sensuous face * but
worse than his natural tendencies is
his deceptiveneBS. During the filibus¬
tering against the Force bill, when
Randall, aided by Blaine, was leading
the minority and Butler the majority,
Garfield, Foster, Frye, and one other,
whom 1 do not recall, where in the
Speaker’s During room, down stairs, playiog
poker. their bBenee they
were voting they with the Demo¬
crats) were regularly voted
by the tally clerk. .Finnally Butler
discovered the trick and protested that
the four had not been present during
the roll call, although their names were
recorded as voting. Blaine rushed down
stairs to inform the poker players of
Butler's discovery. One by one they
entered the chamber through different
doors and appealed Butler. to the record as
answer to It was a little
but Garfield will say, and tries
say in all that side of his life that
turned to poker the public gaze, that he
Dot nor any other game
cards; that betting is abhorrent to
and that he is an enemy to cheat¬
and immorality of every sort. He
wants the world to believe that he is a
elevated and man; that his thoughts
his language pure
this,’ too, he plays the hypocrite
He has a strong mind, of coarse ‘fibre
It is vigoroue.'Jtmt lacks refinement.
When he uubends he loves common
and gross things. His wit is very
coarse, and the stories he will tell ia
the company of gentlemen at a dinner
table are some of them revolting in
their vulgarity. As a distinguished
Senator said of him yesterday: “He
paints his iniquities on a Sunday school
banner.— Councr Journal.
Weasel and Devil.
A curious story, which will be new
to many, is told at Tyringham, Mass.
Several years ago there lived in Tyj
ingham Hollow a prosperous family of
Shakers. At one time several of their
porkers could were for taken sick, and they
account, the complaint io no
way except on the supposition that ibe
devil had entered into the twine. They
tore down tbe pens to find him, and in
the midst of the work a weasel ran out
from the rubbish. It was perfectly
avident that the devil had passed out
into the weasel, so they gave chase.
The creature ran to the top of the hill
and follo.wei. the people, breathless and excited,
At length-He was captured,
killed and buried, After that time the
ace where the weasel was killed was
called ca by them “holy ground.” An
scribed monument was erected, and it
became a favorite place with Shakers for
assembling for solemn dancea and
ship. Tbe place monument is broken now
and the is polluted by stranger
teet. The inscription is forgotten aud
cannot be deciphered, but the story
remains and the place is kuowu in
vicinity as Shakers holy ground.
People who visit always carry away
with them a piece of the devil’s
stone as a memento,
Haunted Me.
Debt, poveriv and suffering haunted
for years, caused by a a _________ sick family
and large bills for doctoring, which
did no good. I was completely dis
couraged, until one year ago, by the
advice of my pastor, I procured Hop
and commenced their use, i
in one month we were all well, and
none of us have been sick a day
a nd I want to say to all poor men, you
can keep your families well a year
with Hop Bitters for le«w than one
tor’s visit will|coet.— A Workingman.
—- ♦ — -
! George William Curtis, of
owns the finest house in Aahfield,
Tuere is where OlQStof biS
work Mod* " ’
American Law in Turkey.
The man Mirzan, who, after billing
a citizen of Alexandria, Egypt, in the
streets of that city, claimed, under the
treaty between tbe United States and
Turkey, to be tried by tbe American
minister at Constantinople, on the
ground that he was a naturalized citi¬
zen of the United States, has had his
wish. The homicide occurred more
than a year ago, and ; Minister Maynard
on Monday last, found Mima guilty
of murder, and sentenced him to be
hanged at Alexandria on the 1st of
next October. No sooner was sentence
pronounced than Mirzan’s council gave
notice of an appeal to the United
States Circuit Court for the District of
California; At first blush it would
seem to be strange that an appeal could
be taken from an Egyptian city, under
the suzerainty of Turkey to the circuit
court of au American city on the Paci¬
fic slope. Nevertheless such an appeal
is provided for in the Revised Statutes,
section 409» of which provides that an
appeal from any final judgment of the
Minister to China or Japan may be
taken to the Circuit Court for the Dis¬
trict of California, and, by the next the
section, a similar ri^ht of appeal citizens to of
same tribunal is extended to
the United States convicted of crimes
and offenses in Turkey; but in neither
case will an appeal operate as a stay
of proceedings unless the Minister cer¬
tifies there is probable cause to grant
the same; so tbe fate of Mirzan is yet
undecided. The legal question would
seem to arise, however, whether Mirzan
is not entitled, being a citizen of tbe
United States accused of a capital
crime, to a trial by jury, and, under all
the circumstances, it seems judgment probable
that Minister Maynard’s
will be revised by the State Depart¬
ment and the President.— Balt . Bun.
Justice Field on the Chinese
Question.
A late letter from Justice Field,
giving his views upon the Chinese
question, It has been published in Cali¬
fornia. has been urged as one of
the reasons why Justice Field should
not be nominated for President by
the Democrats that he could not carry
the Pacific States because uf many of
his judicial decisions, and particularly
that one of declaring the San Francis¬
co ordinances in regard to the Chinese
unconstitutional. One of these ordi¬
nances provided for cutting off the
queues of Chinamen who were ar¬
rested for petty offeuses, and another
prohibited them from sending their
dead back to China for burial. The
object of these municipal Chinese laws was to
so harass and annoy the as to
drive them from the city, and when
Juatice Field rendered his decision
there was a bowl against him all along
the Pacific coast.
Iu the letter recently published he
declares that he has "always regarded
the immigration of tbe Chinese in
large numbers into our State as a
serious evil, and likely to cause great
injury to the morals of our people, as
well as to their industrial interests,”
but farther on the Justice says : A
modification of the treaty is, in my
opinion, the only way to deal with
the problem of their exclusion. They
cannot be forced out of the country by
raids of mobs maltreating their persons
and burning their houses. Tbe pub¬
lic opinion of the country will not
tolerate any such violence.”
More Law About Cats.
On a charge of having cruelly mal
treated a poor cat, Mrs. Eliza Doebele,
of No. 320 Sixth street, was brought
to the New York Essex Market Police
Court. Mrs. Christina Gross, who lives
at 318, swore that the defendant "did
wilfully, unlawfully and wickedly tor
j ture and torment and need.’esly mutilate
and kill a certain wild creature, to-wit,
| a cat, by then and there striking said and
j cat divers blows upon its body
with a stick of wood called a
: broom handle, thereby breaking the
; back and divers bones in the body of
said cat and depriving said cat of life;
I au d did cause thereby to said live
creature, to-wit, said cat, unjustifiable
! physical Violation‘of pain, suffering and death, in
the statute." -
Mrs. Doebele .dmitted tbe elaogh
j ter and pleaded that the cat spoiled
flower garden.
“Cats," said Justice Wandell, “are
God s creatures aud must be
Jd. but I used I have to _ be __________ bothered dog who wiA.bem, ___________ bills
now a ^
buries them. Everybody can't have
so good a cat-dog, but I think Mrs.
Doebele was needlessly cruel.
hundred dollars for trial.”
According to a French writer the
profession of arms is held in very low
esteem in China, and as a
the officers are ignorant of the military
, art and the soldiers uninstructed,
though brave. A Chinese sayi: g runs:
"You would not take good iron to
make into nails, and you wou ld not
4ta.ke & man worth aaything at all to
'make iafoa wldier.” '
Some lucky Escapes of Duelists.
Many duelists have owed their lives
to the brass buttons so much worn by
our that Capt. grandfathers, and it was to this
Cuthbert ot the guards owed
his lucky escape when he fought his
duel with Lord Lonsdale in 1792. The
Captain Mount it seems, was on duty near to
street, in London, in order to
that prevent any increasing disturbance in
quarter; and one of his orders
was to allow no carriage to pass that
way. Lord Lonsdale, who came in his
carriage quentty to Mount street, was conse.
be stopped and finding he would
not allowed to pass, his temper
was somewhat ruffled. Addressing
himself, said therefore to Capt. Cuthbert, he
to that officer : "You rascal, do
you know that I am a peer of the
realm?” The Captain promptly re¬
plied : “I don’t know whether you
are a peer of the realm or not; but I
know you are a scoundrel to apply such
a term to an officer on duty, and I
will make you answer for it.’ A
meeting of course took place as soon
as the Capt*in got oil duty and the
preliminaries could be arranged, but
alter the discharge a brace of pistols on
each side, it terminated without injury
to either party. Lord Lonsdale’s last
shot, however, would probably have
been fatal if the ball had not luckily
struck a button of Capt. Cuthbert’s
coat, which repelled it. The seconds
then interfered, and matters were
amicably adjusted.
An even more wonderiul affair hap¬
pened in 1787, when a French officer,
having said in an unguarded moment
that “the English army had more
phlegm than spirit,” he was soon after¬
ward challenged by an English officer,
Capt. S-, of the 11th Regiment of
foot, for having made use of these words.
As the Chevalier La R refused
either to apologize for or to withdraw
the expression, a duel took place, and
the offience was considered by the Bri«
ton to be of so deadly a kind, or rather
one which nothing but the death of
tbe utterer could extenuate, that hein
sisted upon fighting at five paces. If
the two arms and the two pistols are
taken into account this short distance
was of course., muph reduced, so tfcftt
.ppAroniiy u*d a oiittuve
escaping. Seemingly they had tossed,
or done something else, ior "first fire,”
which the Englishman won, and Capt.
S-s ball "took place,” as might
have been expected, on the chevalier’s
breast, but by a marvel of luck it was
stopped by a metal button. The che¬
valier, touched magnanimously by so,providential
escape, fired in the air,
and did not stop at that, but made a
full apo’ogy by stating that the English
have We both read spirit elsewhere and phlegm.
of another duel
lest pi cking up on his way to the place
of meeting a horse shoe, which, for
"luck," he placed inside of his coat,
over his heart, and the bullet hap¬
pening to strike there the horseshoe
saved hia life. Gen. Bonnet, in his
duel with Gen. Ornani, in Paris, in
1814, owed hia life to having a hun¬
dred-franc piece in his waistcoat
Apropos Edwards of the nomination of
field, Pierrepont tells
Brooklynites that there is “no man on
the earth who has not some spot on
bis character.'' It would be well for r
Garfield, and well for the Republican £j
party, if he had only one spot on a
character. As a matter of fact, setting
leaser spots aside, he has several big
spots, black spots, spots that will not
out—among them the Credit Mobilier
spot and the DeGolyer paving contract
spot, "I observe,’’
said Edwards Pierre¬
pont diately to the Brooklynites, his "that imme¬
upon nomination,
he is a man who, my friends here
you, ia a Christian gentleman, it was
discovered and widely circulated
he is a perjurer, a thief, and a traitor
to all that is right.’’ Edwards Pierre
pont is in error. The discovery in
question was made years ago, as he
well knows.— New York &m.
The Rev. N. M. Mann, of Rochester,
is not a D. D., and is rather glad
otherwise that he is not. One of the
papers in Floehester having gotten
.
jthe way of giving him this degree, he
"rues to say it doss not belong to bim,
and whether for the sake of bis own
name or for the sake of tbe ti'Je, he
begs that when in tutu re he ia honored
a m *ntioa of hia Dame in ita
| columns “Dr .,
B. he left off ----------
these days is so promiscuously applied
1° au ministers of religion, he he adds adds
“perhaps the better di.Miaction is
. to be without it.
Fever.
j Sections of territory where fevers are
have been brought on hy reason
a malarial infected atmosphere f
____
| usiDg, and with complete success,
keeping off such afflictions,
Safe Kidney and Liver Cure
Warner’s Safe Pills. Parties down sick
[cured with dieeesef.oi ty such
to wfe trtwo*.
PRICE THREE CENTS.
Wonderful Popularity of the Be*
uowned Medicine.
The Greatest Curative Success of the Age—A*
Voice from the People.
No medieine introduced to the pub¬
lic has ever met with the success ac¬
corded to Hop Bitters. It stands to¬
day the best known curative article iD
the world. Its marvellous renown is
not due to the advertising it has re¬
ceived. It is famous by reason of its
inherent virtues. It does all that is
claimed for it. It is the most power¬
ful, speedy and effective agent known
for the building up of debilitated sys¬
tems. The following witnesses are of¬
fered to prove this:
My mother says that Hop B'tters is
the only thing that will keep her from
her old and severe attacks of paraly¬
sis and headache.— Ed. Oswego /Sun .
A husband’s testimony.
My wife was troubled for years with
blotches, moth patches and pimples od
her face, which nearly annoyed the
life out of her. She spent many dol¬
lars on the thousand infallible (?) cures,
with nothing but injurious effects. A
lady friend of Syracuse, N. Y., who
had had similar experience had been
cured with Hop Bitters, induced her
to try it. One bottle has made her face
as smooth, fair and soft as a child's and
gives her such health that it seems al¬
most a mirade.
A Member of Canadian Parliament.
A RICH LADY’S EXPERIENCE.
I traveled all over Europe and other
foreign countries at a cost of thousands
of dollars in search of health arid
found it not. I returned discouraged
and disheartened, and was restored to
youthful .... ,iiaiUh- ... . ._____
than two bottles of Hop Bittere.
I hope others may profit by my ex*
perience and stay at home .—A Ladyt
Augusta, Me.
DONT USE STIMULANTS.
Use nature’s real brain and nerve
food and nourishing tonic, Hop Bitters,
that quiets the nerves, invigorates tbe
body, cures disease and restores the
vital energies without intoxicating.
Delevan, Wis , Sept. 24, 1878.
Gents : I have taken not quite one
bottle of the Hop Bitters. I was a
feeble old man of 78 when I got it.
To-day I am as active and feel as well
as I did at 30. I see a great many
that need such a medicine. 1
D. Boyce.
Monroe, Mich., Sept. 25, 1878-'
Sirs : I have been taking Hop
Bitters for inflammation of kidneys
and bladder; it has done for me what
four doctors failed to do. The effect of
the bitters seemed like magic to me.
W. L. Carter.
If you have a sick friend whose life
ie a burden, one bottle of Hop Bitters
may restore that friend to perfect
health and happiness. Will you see
that friend has a bottle at once.
Bradford, Pa., May 8, 1878.
R , , k cured , me of , several , diseases,
48
sueh as nervousness, sickness at the
stomach, monthly troubles, etc. I have
not fieen a s i c k day in a year since I
took Hop Bitters, Several of my
k
'neighbors use them.
Mrs. Fannie Green.
| moral turpitude.
B’ tam e attaches to a jury of intelli
, f ot wbc , “ the .. 7 COD dem “ a a
*®r whose moral , nature has
been perverted by indigestion, diseased
liver and kidneys. A thoughtful judge
m we q consider whether society
^ b> ^ s „, ed by order _
. __ p . .
ffffg a bottle of nop fitter- ior tne un
fortunate in the dock, instead of years
( of penal siwvitude.
Cleveland, 0., Oct. 28, 1879.
-vru* better klf'fil' bal is 7 impresse A
the idea that your Hop Bitters
1 the ” eesentLJ -----*--- thing to make life v happy. ---
She has ustd several bottles,' and
^ ™ * VQU
*
<io ** n at . , F* 6
-- ..
Sectary PlugPAlSf U>.
Business Cards.
TENNESSEE BEEF & MUTTON
JOS. H. BAKER.
BUTOilEE/,
STALL, No. 66, Savannah Market.
A LL other meats in their season at lowest filled
____market rates. Orders promptly
and Give delivered. him trial. Will victual shipBthroughout. oc31-tf
a „
ISAAC w *
BUTCEEB.
STALLS 9 AND 10 CITY MARKET,
E OSHER Customers Tennessee executed, served at Beef their an,d residences. Mutton,
Orders promptly also meats deity
ered Sunday mornings. ,_ .__, nrhUtf
ANDERSON STREET MARKET
AND ICE HOUSE.
J. F. PHILLIPS, Meats. Butoher, and dealer in all
kinds of Fish, Poultry and Mar¬
ket Produce. Families supplied at their
residences, and dispatch. all orders executed with
promptness and Satisfaction guar¬
anteed. ap6 6m
C. A. CORTINO, :
B>i( Csltiwr, Bait Mu, Gulin ui
SHAVING SALOON.
HOT AND COLD BATHS.
der 106Vi Planters’ Bryan street, Hotel. opposite Spanish, the Italia-., Market, Ger un
naan, and Rngltwh «pokon. aoitt-tr
HAIR STORE .
JOS. E. L01SEAU & CO.,
118 BROUGHTON Sf;, Bet. Bull & Drayton
TT'EEP on hand a large assortment of llair
Switches, Curls, Pufft, and Fancy Goods
Hair combings worked in J.he latest style,
F»uoy Costumes, Wigs and Beards for Rent
L FERNAND, HI. D.,
Office ; No. 9 Whitaker St.reei,
[UP STAIRS.]
P. Orrio* _I. Hours 8—9 A. M., 2—4 and7>£~8)*
. M xny2S-lm
W. B. FERRELL’S Agt.
RESTAURANT f
No. II New Market Basement,
(Opposite Lippman’s Drug (Store,)
lanlSt.t SAVANNAH. GA
... ... — aSsT t iytlHIJ*_ _ ■■ -
****«!
—
^ WAKEFIELD
Plumbing, Gas & Steam Fitting,
No. «8 BARNARD STREET, one xloor north
or South BToad treat.
Beth Tubs, Jobbing Water Promptly Closets, Boilers, attended Ranges to.
Also, Agent of “ BACKUS WATER MOTOR
obll .
McELXJNN & HcFAIX,
PLUMBING AND GAS FITTING.
Na. 46 Whitaker street, corner York at. Lane
N.B. Houses fitted with gas and water at
short notice, Jobbing promptly attended to
and all work guaranteed, at low pricer. aepTti
W. H. COSGRO VE,
East side of Bull street, one door from York,
Practical Plumber and Caa Fitter
JOBBING PROMPTLY ATTENDED TO.
All work guaranteed to give satisfaction.
49 * Prices to suit the times. mh7tf
Cakes,
East End Bakery,
No. S3 BRYAN STREET,
Y'lAKES au<i fresh Coufectlonery h Part.le of all kinds and al
ways on ind. < wed
dings Rolls and supplied'at hot Pies, Hliort daily notice. 1 o'clock Fresh Bread Cus¬
at p. m.
tomers served at tlieHtoreor MarketBtali, No.
38, also from my respectfully wujfons. solicited, A share of publla
patronage is
deal2 0m PETER SCHAFER
Faints, Oils and (Hass*
J OHN 6 BUT LEE,
Wholesale and Retail Dealer in
WHITE LEADS COLORS, &T0. OILS, GLAfSB.
VARNISH,
Ready Mixed Paint*, Railroad. Stoamor and
Mill SupplleH. Role A^ent for Georgia Lime
Caloiuea Plaster, No. Cement*, Hair and Land
PI a* tier. 22 Drayton Htreet,
Janlfitf HAVA NN AH. «A,
ANDREW HANLEY,
—Dealer in—
Doors, Suites, Blinds, Mouldings ■
Lime, Plaster, Hair and Cement,
STEAMBOAT,
Railroad and Mill Supplies,
Paints, oii-h, varnishes, glass, &c.
No. 6 Whitaker & 171 Bay St.,
8A VANN AN. QKOItGly
my'Jfi -%f
JOHN OLIVER.
— Dealer in —
Steambost, flail Road and Mill Supplier,
PAINTS, OILS, GLASS, &c.,
DOORS, SASHES, BLINDS, MOULDING
Balusters, Blind Trunminas,
1 No. 5. WHIJ’AKER BT„
j SA VANNAS, GEORGIA
-iealRtf
4*i
YP] A A S*T ’ “ 1 u n
.tjatapsc d. Gram - *, Dooioy’* H<>m<>f*rd’e
roa ° x * nd Lioa ’*
.‘ttftv, -^^TLii'.bfrt a co. J i
* } *n