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VOL IV.—No. 76.
THF SAVANNAH RECORDER
R. M. ORME, Editor.
JrUBLISRED EVERY EVENING,
(Saturday Excepted,)
A.t Ifil BAt* STREJE1*,
Ry J. STERN.
The Recoroer is served to suoscribers, in
every part ot the city by careful carriers.
Communications must be accompanied by
the name of the writer, not necessarily
publication, but as a guarantee of good faith.
Remittance by Check or Post Office
must be made payable to tbe order of the
lisher.
Wo will not undertake to preserve or return
rejected communications.
Correspondence on Local aud general mat
ters ol interest solicited.
On Advertisements running three, 3 ix, and
twelve months a liberal reduction from oui
regular rates will be made.
All correspondence should be addressed
oorijkr, Savannah, Georgia.
The Sunday Morning Recorder will
tbe place ol the Saturday evening edition
Which will make six full issues for the week.
.OtirWe do not hold ourselves responsible
the opinions expressed by Correspondents.
Ike Pecoudbr is registered at
fast Office in Savannah as Second
Matter.
Getting Bid of Him.
ed In by February, the violent 1868, partisans it was
ing President Johnson at
to get rid of Gen Hancock, then
command of the Department of
Gulf His prudent and
adffi-inistration in Louisiana and
was deemed an obstacle in the way
the Congressional plan of
tioo, which contemplated thv ■civil’anthorit'es the
suppression of and substitution
those States, the
military- commissions..- General
field 1 ; the Chairman ol the
Committee in the House of
tatives, introduced a bill to reduce
numbpr oi Major Generals in the
wilh the avowed object of getting
of Hanchck, and thus punish him
his steadfast subordination of the
6 ajry to-fcbe civil jiirloJicufou. This
however, was never pressed to its
age, being deemed by those
to its object as too likely lo excite
popular dembnstrntion in favor of
persecuted individual. A safer
was adopted. General Grant,
been invested by Congress with
ordinary powers, so as to be no
responsible to the President, his
tuuonal Commander-in-Chief, was
duced to interfere in such manner
General Hancocks official action as
humiliate him before the people he
sent to govern, This naturally
led to General Hancock’s
to be relieved of his command.
With the lapse of tyne,
which has demolished the dynasties
force, we see established “the
of nature” and of law. The civil
eminent of Louisiana, defended
Hancock in 1868, was liberated
niue years alter, and tbe military
tain who propped up the bayonets
this last usurpation, has been
to private life by his own party,
considered his election to a third
unwise aud inexpedient. An
instrument of the government of
has been placed over him in the
nation of the Republican paity,
to-day we see Garfield, the blind
tisan, who, iu 1808, attempted, iu
underhanded way, to got rid of
MnoMBder of the Golf,
face to face by that soldier
Winfield 8 . Hancock. How will
lield get rid oi hm now? Without
bkinieh upon b» repiunlion-c.vil
military without a single
resulting from parly zed or
weakness, Hancock does not
one vulnerable weak point to bis P
litical antagonist, lheu Garfield
favored by a vacillating President^
a scheming administration ; uow
cock is sustained by the people
authority is urnuipeachable and
CArZwf aW ° f 1 " a,ld *
L/uontcic.
One of Beaconsfield’s
once introduced his two boys to
Premier, asking him to give them
word or two of advice. “Never tty
ascertain,” said he to'the elder
“who was the man who wore the
mask, or you will be thought a
rible bore. Nor do you,” turning
the second, “ask who was the
ot Junius, or you will be thought
bigger bore than your brother.
A Denver man has offered a
tliat is brimful'of business. See
following from the Denver
“On the same night the stable of
uHOD J:.,. DAKer. ii.Ij Ill , n u- \N t? 8 t ...,,
hn l)Ur>k _* ull Th* ltkt. thiorng t tt'Ou Mil- *1 a
i 8 j \r p k /‘V. v 4 'i
rewards*—$5(H , E .'7 for the thief, ^LOQ nn
the horse a d thief and tor
dead body of the thief. Now,
will ha the luCj^y .man to fire flic f.»
ahot? The horse was branded “R
pn thb Ibit sboulder,
SAVANNAH, MONDAY, JUNE 28, 1880.
The Speeches that Did It
The following two speeches brought
General Hancock prominently
the Convention, and did more to
his nomination than anything
Words well spoken, spoken at the
per time, in the proper place, and
the right way, will generally do
work well. How important it is
know when to speak, how to speak,
whom you speak, and of whom
speak.
We clip from the New York
as follows:
iiancock’s oratorical advocate.
The call of Pennsylvania was
ded to by Dan Dougherty, a
known lawyer of Philadelphia, on
account. He is of medium
with a prominent forehead, curly
Uwdy-dawdy whiskers and a
chased profile. He is a born
and a finished rhetorician, aud
up the name of Winfield Scott Han
cock with consummate ek. 11 ,
the first genuine Dougherty sensation of the
sion. Mr. said:
“I rise to nominate one whose
would reconcile all factions,
election would crush the last
of sectional strife and be hailed as the
dawning of the day of perpetual
erhood. With him we can fling
our shields and wage an
war. We can appeal to the
tribunal of the American
against the corruption of the Republi
can party and their untold violations
constitutional liberty. With him as
chieftain the bloody banner of the
publicans will fall from their
grasp. Oh, my countrymen, in
supreme moment, when the
ol the Republic are at stake, when
liberties of the people are
[ rise to present to the thoughtful
sideration of this Convention the
of one who, on the field of battle,
styled “the superb,” yet who has won
a nobler renown as the military
eruor, whose first act on
command of Louisiana and Texas
to salute the constitution by
ing, amid the joyous greetings of
oppressed people, that the military,
save ini actual war, shall be
to the civil power. The plighted
of the soldier was proved in
- man’s acts. I name him whose
will suppress every faction, is alike
ceptable to the North aud South,
will thrill the land from end to
The people hang breathless on your
deliberation. Take heed 1 Make
misstep ! I nominate one who can
r y every Souther Slate, and who
carry Pennsylvania, Indiana,
cut, New Jersey and New
noldier-statesmsn with a record
ntaialeSs as his sword—Winfield
Hancock, of Pennsylvania. If
he will take his seat.”
For the next five minutes after
telling sentence it was with'
••Hancock,” “Hancock,’‘ a
bi yelh that nearly raised the roof ' ’
every head in the place.
Mr. J. W. Daniels, of Booth* Virginia to*
enough like Edward bo
twin brother, and great
were had of the speech he was to
j n favor of Hancock. He spoke
great earnestness, face.' and jerked his
rt }[ over his Toward the end
became t rum pet y for Hancock as
"
lows: -
“The uomiuatiou of General
cock means instantaneous and
ous aggression. (Cheers j It will
to America like a general order
ibis council ot war. -\Ve move on
enemy’s wo- ks to-morrow’ Idvince. fObeers
Uggl* The eigne! gun e.unde tbe
rings out 'boot and uaidle.
stapdards go b to the front with
nri fi inat! on d f Hancock, and you
hear the head of the moving legions
(Applause.) 1 noticed yesterday
first man whose presence in
Convention touched its heart
j | brought / the forth oUl instantaneous ofsouth
wa * er state mm
Wiufield .Scott Hampton) Hancock,
; and let
j last cheer ol this Convention go
j tbe b ' ul0D soldier who has shown
.
; \ tba t 30 ** oneicus t0 will , ES , hear (Cheers.) the
canvass you hurrah
ot tbe bo > ?s 10 blll « ringing with the
1sWeet ., music . of the rebel cheer
giand national diapason. yi
---- «. ----
Haunted Me.
Debt, poverty and suffering
me lor yearscaused by a sick family
|v, and large n bills for ‘ U1 doctoring oocioring, which
,
couraged until \ X
advice of mv rasrir *r R ro ? uied Ho tt
Bitters and commp f ^ ^ ’ ' US f,’ aU
'
ll - one °-‘ e month montti we were all well,
5 n no oti p or of us nc L,». oave i been sick a day 3 eiuce;
dllil u , ■ r 1 iviiuf ^ aut f.*» t0 all ll
pit* to poor — men, yon
CiU1 ^' , ee P your families well a
Mit h Hop Bitters for iees than one
, tor * 8 visjt will cost.—-A
---___
^ is estimated
it that s a ventv
and SI,000,000 will be required
complete the excavation at Fompeii.
i Attempt to Assassinate Louis
1 poleon.
I 'It was in 1852 that this sovereign’s
e was attempted for the first time; at d
another attempt was made upon it by
a radical shoemaker in 1853. This year
—1853—was prolific in regicidal out
rages, tor a traitor called Libenvi tried
m Feb.uary to murder the Emperor
Francis Joseph at Vienna, while'dn
March a soldier sought to dispose of
the reigning Duke of Parma, .Charles
HI. Three years passed now
any more crimes of this sort; but in
1856 Napoleon was twice put in peril
his life, both his aggressors .(Piariori If
and Bel lam are) being Italians.
said that after the attempt cf Bellamare
the Emperor took to wearing a shirt ot
mail under his linen. It was not, how
ever, until alter the fearful enterprise
of Orsini, on January 14, 1858, that
got to be so seriously unnerved as
live in constant dread of assassination
Count Felice Orsini was not a
vulgar tfanatic, but a gentleman
birth, education, and fortune. An
dent patriot, and a partisan ol against
tion of Italy, his grudge hit
Napoleon III. was that the
ter, when a political refugee in
Italy, had joined a Free Masonic
Lodge, and sworn certain oaths vvl icb
by and by, as Emperor, be had ne¬
glected to fulfill, Principally as re¬
gards Rome, Orsini was furious at see¬
ing the temporal power of the Pope
maintained by a French garrison of
18,000 men; and two years before at¬
tempting Napoleon’s liie he wrote an¬
onymously to warn him that the Oar
bonaio lodges bad decreed his death,
and that the sentence would infallibly
be. carried out if the imperial policy
toward Italy were not altered. Had
Count Orsini’s accomplices—Pierri,
Rudio and Gomez—been men of bis
mettle and determination, the attempt
against Napoleon on the night of Jan.
14, 1858, must have been crowned
with success ; but they were poor, ig¬
norant cravens, who did their woik for
pay, not from. conviction, and their
hearts failed them at the critical mo¬
ment. Each of them had been provid¬
ed with two explosive shells, which
were to be thrown under the Empe¬
ror’s carriage as it drove up.to the
opera. Orsini threw his two shells,
and Pierri one, but the other t wo men
ran off in a fright when they heard the
first explosion. The damage clone by
the.shells was ghastly.
Five people were killed outright,
and nine .wounded; all the soldiers oi
the mounted escort were bruised or
A , , Al tbe Emperor a coachman
fel1 off *! 13 box , staanei1 ontitue car
ot 0E0 o* his horses who lay
?f ^ iovva ad; a 20 1 nd yards 0U j °ff °* the with . 1 , his oota skull f en 1 . b ' Vas a t
tered *?'. Meanwblle * hundreds ot
pane ! °t g ? tbe 8 treet had been
smashed, all the gas-lamps , were ex
t,Ei resoua H u:sbe ^ e, ^> I au aru ^ appalling 1,1 the darkness tumult there ol
P lun Mng horses and shrieking women
lanterns and torches had to be
out ot the opera, and then it was se en
the imperial coach was a com
P; 8te wreck. How the Emperor aud
Empress managed to escape, with not
80 mEch as a 8 » n g 8, l hair or a cut fin
” er ’ no bEin^ shoit of marvelous
-^PP are Btly not daunted in the least by
wbat had happened, the Empress said
to the Emperor, “We must go into the
house to show them w^ire not afraid,’
ai, tbe d a Kiinute \smr thoir^cx tbe erft-ry of
imperial couple into be
came Oon. all signal for a magnificent pva
the spectators rising en masse
»»d chee ring to the echo.
------
Tbe local option liquor law, which
, 1 '“ 3 '•>»* i» agitation in England,
, j length received tavorable vote
,a8 a
England. It is a reflection
! theex P enence of the temperance
ia the United State8 ’ aod al :
though its success here was admitted .
to be unquestionable, yet the
fnends of temperance are willing to
| tr -T a11 our American expedients,
U 0 P e8 of improving the condition
their own working classes thereby
we bave undoubtedly improved the
c °uditio n of our ow n.
° * ^ ^
E- i Boynton, of Haraoid, . , has .
bls possession the fl-»g of
j d ( rate | rivateer xvlabama. jC j-'
H frames, ot that \et-.-e., L ‘
|sinking under the terrible fire of ,
ivearsage he rammed it into his P oc « et '
thUfl^g * God‘s° wo?ld''’’ U 5ab1a
in He
iquendygrveit X / n to HR. Beaver,
English merchant » in . Singapore, ,
brotber - E. Atwood Beaver, of
pool, gave it to Mr. Boynton,
j Tue baa Aut T •
tue population of ° m Lt.iIvcsiod ? which
Li
\ i been estimated at 40 0W _.,i wm not
i baps exceed ] % 22,000 % a ■ \ \ i bv ilie i census now n .
being taken. *
'
-------
Quincy, Illinois, is short S 000 in
its census, Springfield 5,000,
S 000 Evansville 25', 5 000 OOc! Akron,
)40,CX?0 4 000, Louisville and St.
below its expectation.
Wasn’t A Peddler.
As out census enumerators are look
i in £f f° r lbe P e ople they occasionally
; !H ve to *-° t-heir^ fields, where “all
,
b&ugs 3 atlL * “ ,e c °ok and the children
cau oe lound. One day one of them
*^ Ifc bis horse and started on foot to find
^ Sound ne 0VV . Dei °* lemales a, iarm in house. He soon
some a field using the
bo e " like women generally do every
. ejteetually
q nD 8 aud in quick time,
Across .mis shoulders the enumerator
carried ms large book, which gave him
a conspicuous appearance. After lie
directed . liis steps in the direction of
A 18 'Aomen they quickly discovered
mm, am, oy their startled appearance,
caused mm some embarrassment, but
ou^rm went until one of them exclaimed:
aes » ^ or i ' er be comes here with his
budg.t on ms , back ; a lazy sneaking
rascal i He had better be at work
instead ot prowling over the country
trying to cheat folus.
On he went, however, as the women
grew louder ami madder,
L ba,s £ ot f° a pretty pass that a
woman can t leave home to make her
living in t.ie field but what <hem lazy
rascals has to be hunti og in -m up m
t- be field •
About that time he was getting near
enough-to. be addressed in person, and
she began the benedic'ion on him :
* 1 es, you lazy thing, you had better
get you a hoe and go to work ! You’d
better come and git to chopping out
this cotton aud^ grass than to devil the
women and children. I aint got no
use for sich fellows myself! P ’
After.tile woman had “ blessed him
good'’ she quieted down, answered his
questions, held the umbrella and ink
for the enumerator to write and, before
getting through, spilled his ink od the
book. She apologized when she found
he wasn’t a peddler, but a gentleman
and Lid - him a pleasant good by.—
Baena Vista Argus.
The Hark Horse.
A eubscriber wants to know the
oiigin of the term “a dark horse,”
when applied to a certain person who
is Comparatively unknown, but subse¬
quently wins in a contest.
“A dark horse” is an expression bor¬
rowed from-ike turf. ' It is applied to
horse! which have been trained so
privately that their capacity was un
knowe to .the public, and tbe secrets
of the stable confuted to the owner aud
trainer until the day ot the race. Tire
fast runs, and trials would be given in
the night, and the greatest precautions
taken that no one had au inkling oi
his real powers. In England time is
not rerui;nized as giving an actual
raea-ui- ment, and the “dark horse” is
tried w.th some well known public
performer, and the adjustment of the
weights only known r.o those in the
secr — This gives them the cue without
the jockey being of . the , relative
aware
powers ot the contestants. The
is to to keen the animal down in the
betting, so that a email investment may
win a ’.orge amount. In America the
time in which a certain distance is run
in with specific weights is held to
a more reliable test, and extraordinary
pains are taken by the acute ones
hide the powers of the animal should
they be such as to give a fair
of success, and midnight trials, though
more frequently just before daybreak,
would be the time selected. Hence
the horse’s powers were kept iu the
dark and the knowledge guarded until
the actual i ace disclosed it. — Oulum*
1 bus limes.
„ ev‘J»n.tion o‘f 'the -5 wUo
ast 3 m an t.\{ .anai.oa oi ijb J \ .
' ..
A '^“.'^“ve^ansjer 10 ”-"'' " e 7h'■ t "-Actions V,.: A
.
^ ^erai ....
j v members To
” c'-t
our^ vo4- fvelve delegates to
| her Ler ) oJI ’ cc-n-equentlv 7 '7 j; M if any
1 , “ ; '7‘divu^uaT . r ca^t
A ^ ’ t T e ‘ votes
d ^use th^eTer' , tbrel n.?
l “* ’ * tiie
. t . cou-tv wa-
1 J Y __ n; .
| Fever.
j Sections of territory where fevers
^ ^ ave b een brought on by rea-on
'
mft , arial infectei aU)J 0 ,p h er?,
using, and with complete success j n
: keepiii" t otr such au ctions, Warner
Kidoev Rnd Liver Cure
Earners Safe Pills. Parties down i v n. .
Wlth disea f s o; sach a character,
fQied the use 01 same,
Poughkeepsie’s censu uished,
j the, population of that town is
do be 20,009. There is probably no
in the count! v that has shown so
’> tiou in its population in tbe
en years as Poughkeep-ie. It
20,024 in 1875, and 20,080 in
! J A. Cameron, who, , some two
ago, burglarized Judge Lrwsons
and iron safe, has been arrested
Deaver. t L/ty. uoiorado, and parties
Etonton, where the burg Ary was
imitted, have gone after him.
PRICE TH REE CENTS
ITEMS OF INTEREST.
Colonel Jerome Napoleon Bonaparte
and family arrived from Europe in the
Gallia, aud are at the New York Hotel.
Corrected returns show the popula¬
tion of the District, of Columbia to be
175,000, a gain of 43,300 over the cen^
sus of 1870.
The census enumerator’s completeie
turns show the population of 'D
is 555,000 against 482,000 five years
ago.
Chicago swore she bad over half a
million people bat will now be content
if the enumerators reach four hundred
and fifty thousand.
About. 40,000 railway cars were built
in the Uunited States last year, aud
there will be about 50,000 built this
year.
At the beginning of the present
century there were 8 , 000,000 copies ol
the Bible in existence; since theu 116,
000,000 more have been printed.
Mrs. James Bone, of 01.ike county,
who died last, year, capped children the climax
by giving birth to 25 by a
single marriage.
Relics of the Narrangansett disaster
continue to float ashore, and at Green
port, L. I., a lad recently picked up a
roll of bank notes amounting to $300.
Texas is getting to be a lively State,
as weli as a large one. Adjutant
General Jones reports 6,000 criminals
at large there, 1,000 of them being
murderers,
i An Englishman was bound over in
$ 1,000 hail for hugging and kissing iiis
wife. They had separated by mutual
consent three weeks after marriage, and
when he saw her on the "beach at Folk¬
estone his old affection returned, but
her’s didn’t. He won’t hug her again,
we will bet the amount of his bail
bond. ■
Spain threatens active hostilities if
China refuses an apology and compen¬
sation for alleged interference with the
declared legitimate. Coolie emigration
to Peru. She declares her determina¬
tion to occupy the forts in Formosa
with troops from Peru, and establish a
blockade on the Chinese coast.
Randall’s promise that the Pennsyl¬
vania wings would unite with enthusi¬
asm and carry the State by 10,000 ma¬
jority, and the ' assertion of Wallace,
Hancock’s.manager, that the campaign
would be one of “aggression I aggres¬
sion I aggression !” from the world go,
gave great hopes of Pennsylvania,
A West Jersey railroad section boss
was badly sold down at Bridgeton the
oilier day. He went to a church fes¬
tival and bought a fifty-cent cake at
auction. It was beautifully and ar¬
tistically decorted with flowers, but
tlie alleged candy ornaments were
white clay, and the cake was full of
sand. '
It will he freely stated tnat General
Hancock is a Catholic. Now, while it
would be no discredit to him to belong
t0 tbe venerable church whose
ber3 are found in every part of
vvoild, yet the fact is, lie does not.
> s a communicant, ii ,t simply^ an
teD d*nt, ot the • Protestant Episcopal j
church.
The New Yotlc Innes is delighted at
; what it styles “the first outrage of the
year,” aud attempt- lo enthuse the! !
Republican party and collect, the
tered Republican forces under the ban
ner of tbe bloody shirt again, because
j : .somebody threw a spoiled ratification egg at
*pe Aer .it the Garfield
Monteomety, «f Tot-am kae» Ale. poj.nl.,.
1 VI
t;on . cf i00, and is a place of twenty
I ?'^ four bn '“' 8 ’ an ' 1 r 9 ivH 4 - m
lw ‘ es 01 <?>•"•“ »«»?». .r r “ nirr0 "'
an ” e ral ! 1 ^ 1 j: ^ l uex lj0 ^ Dects
here with , the Air Lum . and
J"‘ e 'J 1 1 lal *
111110 Ul j and ta P 8
a good country for trade,
Tb ® ?res5,iential candidates are now
m the held. Toe Democrats x 1
Eiouibitiooists ^eai Dow. me men
manui&cture . by
j .viio wait to money
the cord have Weaver, an*l the
jpublicHus the honorab!^ member wH
h olds a place in Oakes Amts' laUCV
book. Garfield is his name.
Citcinn ui has been plunged in con
sideraoie griel ... because the
supervisor
that district has coni eased that he
cannot get h : s figureo to oUd-jOOO by
a good many, while Louisville, which
hM reaoive<i “*
anything short Ot »6t
01 consternation ovei il .-I mo¬ on by
its supervisor that t. figu: will fall
short of 120 , 000 .
A hog killed and at.e some of
1 Rev. Bryant Ransom s tine chickens,
at Mount Vernon, Ohio. The annoyed
clergyman caught the brute and
o-a ‘ : v®-. H? had intended
-stiov . IS Hgh e-Hi; ?. so that it
: cr 1.1 i eft no more chic a s ‘o catch,
but through p:y no ,o., t.- j--o n t ..
completed. do IDs -ie.i congregV..m, Low
ever, no. . much
meicy;*and have reso: fed to put him
ion trial for tire act.
Business Cards
The following Tapers for this week at the
Florida News Depot,
New York Weekly, No. Sj
New York Ledger, No 90
Fireside Companion, No 001
Saturday Katurday Night. Journal. No. 12
No. ;>17
New York Family Story I’a pel >1
Boys Frank of New York. No. 23-J
(jeslie's Hoys and Girl’* Weekly,714.
Ju«t r< ce’ved a large lot of very lino W J WISH¬
No. MELONS, 120 Broughton which I will sell very cheap, at
st.
jelS-lm A. L. CRANFORD. Agt.
JAS. McGINLEY,
C ABPENTER
YORK STREET, second door east of Bull.
furnished Jobbing when promptly desired. attended to. Estimate# ji-fl-ijm
TENNESSEE BEEF & MUTTON
JOS. H. BAKES,
ZBTjTaiEaZiElR.,
STALL No. 68, Savannah Market.
A LL market other meats rates. in Orders their season promptly at lowest lilied
and delivered. Will victual ships throughout.
Give him a trial oc;ii-tf
-t—;—- r- 1 '
ISAAC BOOS.
BUTCHER
STALLS 9 AND 10 CITY MARKET,
K OSHER Tennessee Beef and Mutton,
Customers served at their residences.
Orders promptly executed, also xueais deliv
er ed Sunday mornings. n hl4tf
ANDERSON STREET MARKET
AND ICE HOUSE,
J o Produce. F. kinds PHILLIPS, of Meats, Butcher Fish, Poultry supplied ami dealer and iu Mar¬ a 1
ket Families at their
residences, and dispatch. all orders Satisfaction executed with
auteed. piomptuessaud apb guur
tim
Cf. A. CORTXMO,
Ssii Mite, E» Mat, folk ad
SHAVING SALCO N.
HOT AND COLD BATHS.
I156K Bryan street, copof "Spanish, it*? the Italian, Market, Uer un
der Planters’ Hotel.
man. and Kncllnh spokon. NfOii-tr
u a in store:
JOS. E. L0ISEA.U & CO.,
118 BROUGHTON ST., Bet. Bull & Drayton
sriiKP on band a largo sortment of Halt
JClk. Switches, Curls, worked Puli's, the and Fancy style. Good*
Hair combings In latest
Fancy Costumes, Wigs and Beards for Kent
■J
Office : Ho. 9 Whitaker Sired,
[UP STAIRS.]
P. Office Hours 8—9 A. M., 2—4ftnd7]/£—8}* 26 -lw
M. my
W. B. FERRELL’S Agt.
RESTAURANT,
No. 11 New Market Basement,,
(Opposite Lippman’s Drug Htore,)
SAVANNAH, GA
Plumbing and Gas Fitting.
CHAS. E. WAKEFIELD,
riUmDirig, UaS U. olCaPii Fitfimr rlUingy
NOt & Barnard »outu street, Jiroaa one door nor tb
m treet.
Hath Tabs. Jobbing Water Closets, Boilers, Ranges.
Promptly attended to.
A Iso, A gent of “ BACKUS WATER MOTOR
etui
McELLINN & McFALI.
PLUMBING AND GAS FITTING.
Na.46 Whitaker street, corner York Bt. Lana
N.B Houses tilted with gas aud water at
short notice, Jobbing promptly attended t«
* n(i ii work guaranteed, ut low priced. Sep.* tl
,wr V , J 1 ►r . COSGROVE,
Ka-'d. side of Bull street, one door from York,
Practical Plumbor and Cas Fitter,
JOBBING PROMPTLY ATTENDED TO.
All work guaranteed to give satisfact ion.
Prices to suit tlie times. Mh7tf
^ . 7 L .-341 iS« -rf-mrrurv
Faints, Oils and Gia r*r< Wm*
JOHN O. HUT LEU,
Wholesale and Retail Dealer lu
WHITE LEADS COLORS, OILS, GLASS.
VARNISH, ETC.
Mill Rea-ly Mixed Paint t, Railroad, Steamer and
.Supplies. Hole Agent for Georgia J.lme
piaster Cement#, Hair and Land
22 Dray tun savannah, street. ga.
AHOREW HANLEY,
—Dealer in—
yOflfSi 0 Ci j <: 6 81
PifliStsr, ;-2.*r Chd CsHCLt,
STEAMBOAT,
Railroart and mil Supplies,
paints, oils, varnishes, glass, &o.
No. 6 Whitaker £c 171 Bay Bt.,
SA VA xxA IT, GEORG Jr
rn v'iM-i f
Oiul *
— Dealer in —
Stcamfcsst, M Beau aci Mill Supplies,
FAINL\ O/Jla, GLASS, See •>
DOORS. SASHES. “LINDS. MOULDING
BaluStOTS, Blind Trimminqs. hQ..
ivu. 5. WiJf J a kkr st
y A /7HAH GsXj&vJA
dectitr