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D A I L Y e vicisriisr o
Savannah EKS%:i M 'W Recorder W
'jl&J
VOL IV.—No. 78.
THE SAVANNAH RECORDER
B, M. ORME, Editor.
PUBLISHED EVERY EVENING
(Saturday Excepted,)
A.t 131 BAY STREET*
By J. STB B If.
The Rkcobueu Is served to subscribers, In
every part ol tue city by careful carriers.
Communications must be accompanied by
tlie name of the writer, not necessarily for
publication, but as a guarantee of good faith.
Remittance by Check or Post Office orders
must be made payable to the order of the pub¬
lisher.
We will not undertake to preserve or return
rejected communications.
Correspondence on Local and general mat
lers of Interest solicited.
On Advertisements running three, six, and
twelve mouths a liberal reduction from oui
regular rates will be made.
All correspondence should be addressed Ra
coKDifiB, Savannah, Georgia.
The Sunday Morning Rkcokukk will take
tne piace, of the Saturday evening edition
which will make six full issues for the week.
49*We do not hold ourselves responsible for
the opinions expressed by Correspondents.
2he Recorder is registered at the
Post Ofjiee in Savannah as Second Class
Matter.
Hancock and the Surratt
Husiness.
It is unfortunate that partisan spirit
should revive an often refuted misrep¬
resentation, the only certain effect of
which can be to wound the most deli¬
cate sensibilities of innocent individu¬
als. It would seem extremely indeli¬
cate, tosay the Fast, to go still furth¬
er and seek to make such persons
speak on a subject which is at best but
a bitter memory, and upon which, it
they had aught to say they would
speak of their own accord. General
Hancock's connection with the execu¬
tion of Mre. Surratt is a circumstance
which has passed into history, and hie
exact position i9 as well understood as
that of any other official who had
routine duties to perform in connection
with thafcmnhappy event. It is well
known that the .Rev. Father Walter,
of the church of St Patrick, in Wash¬
ington city, was the spiritual adviser
of Mrs. Surratt, that he was permitted
to attend her a day or two before her
death and at her execution, and
that some months ago he published a
card denying insinuations The made against
Gen. Hancock. Washington
Capital, the following referring to interesting the subject, sketch gives of
also
the matter referred to from the lips of
the leading counsel of Mie. Surratt.—
N. Y. Sun.
“Judge Clampitt, of leading Chicago, who
was Mrs. Surratt’s counsel,
and who bravely and brainly, tnough of
in vain, dared to attempt the safety
an innocent woman and the respecta
bility ot a nation, is in the city. We
met him at Willard’s Saturday, and he
gave us a graphic account of the as
sociation ot Hancock in the affair.
ii , Hancock was, from the first to the
last,' said Judge Clampitt, 'the ideal ol
an officer and a gentleman. He really
was powerless to do much either in one
way or the other. He was not a mem
ber of the court, he was merely an
offieial, and an official whose final duty
was t.o command and order the execu
tion of the sentence. Mrs Surratt was
treated most carelessly as respects con
venience, and in a most brutal rnauuer
by those in whose charge she was. it
may not have been done purposely, but
certainly they were coarsely indifferent
toward her while she was still an un
convicted woman. I fouud her, when
first admitted to speak to her as ber
counsel, in a wretched room, with an
apology for a bed, in the shape ot some
straw strewn on the tloor, and not a
sign of furniture within the four walls.
She was lying sick on the miserable
pallet, and I had to kneel down to
■peak to her. She was in the charge,
as were the other prisoners, of Col.
Tompkins. On a motion I made before
the court it expressed its ignorance ot
the brutal treatment she lived under,
ard at orce ordered decent accommo-
1 ,• r v
•• 'Hancock,' continued Judge Clam
pitt, bad no more to do with these
details or matters than vou had. \\ hen
Judge T , Wylie, 1 , with -i a Roman r> majesty ,
y J issued, the
of . character, almost, at
,-enl ., of ,. . bi. . life, ,• r .1 .b. wnt •. ol 1 , ,
coipua in tbo caaa of Mrs. o.uira
1 resident Johnson and beeretary
btanton decided _ to suspend the writ
and the execution followed Me h»d
hopes to the last of a reprieve
pardon for Mrs. Surratt, and I waited
at the arsenal, hoping against hope
General Hancock rode down, and
preaching him I as-ked: ‘Aie
any hopes ?’ He shock his head slow
ly and mournfully, and, with a sort of
gasping afra»d catch in his speech, eaid:
am not. No; there ia not.’
then walked off a bit—he had dis
mouuted—atd gave seme orders to
bis ottteiitt and WV.ktd aW/ut (dt
SAVANNAH, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 30, 1880.
moment or two. Returning he said to
me :
ii < I have been in many a battle,
: and have seen death, and mixed with
it in in disaster living and hell in fire victory. I've
been a of and shell
and grape-shot, and, by-! I’d soon¬
er be there ten thousand times over
than to give the order this day for
the execution of that poor woman.
But I am a soldier sworn to obey, and
obey I must.’
“This is the true and genuine his¬
tory of all that Hancock had in com¬
mon with the affair. He was com¬
manding, and as commander and
conservator of the natioual capital, was
compellantW obedient to the orders of
the court which sentenced the con¬
spirators and the so called conspirator
to death. He had no voice in the mat¬
ter, and could have no action save as
the agent to see that the letter of the
law was carried ont in an order of al¬
phabetic certainty.”
Popular Ideas of the Cross.
In the West of England, there is a
tradition that the cross was formed of
the misletoe, which before that event
used to be a fine forest tree, but has
siuce been doomed to lead a parasitical
existence. The gypsies believe that it
was made of Ibe ash tree. The nails
used at the crucifixion, said to have
been found by Helena, are reported to
have worked many miracles. One of
them was thrown by her into the
Adriatic during a storm, and produced
a perfect calm Another placed in the
crown or helm of Constantine was
found in a mutilated state in the Church
of Santa Croce. The third is said to
be in the possession of the Duorno of
Milan, while that of Treves claims the
iourth. In the time of Cnarlemagne a
new relic was discovered in the shape
ot a sponge soaked in the blood of
Christ. In Cheshire the Arum macu
lalum is called “Gethsemaue,” because
it is said to have been growing at the
foot of the cross, and to have received
8 ome drops of blood on its petals.
Pedigree of the “ Dark Horse.”
To the Editor of the N. Y. Tribune :
Sir : In this morning’s Tribune it is
said “The origin of the term dark horse
is explained in a matter-of-fact way by
the Cincinnati Enquirer.”
I suspect that the origin of the phrase
is earlier than the Tennessee incident
recounted, which, however suggestive,
could hardly have exerted an influence
upon the speech of English sporting
circles fifty years ago. In Disraeli’s
novel, “The Young Duke,” published
in 1831, I find the following sentence
in a description of the St. Leger race :
“The first favorite was never heard of,
the second favorite was never seen after
the distance post, all the ten-to-oners
were in the rear and a dark horse which
had never been thought of, and which
the careless St. J.-mes had never even
observed in the list, rushed by the grand
stand in a sweeping triumph.”
New York, June 1 6, 1880. W.
Friday and bATURDAY. TheAnglo
( name ot Inday was Irigedmg.
The nominative case of Frige would
necessarily be either Frig or Frigu; but
the name of the goddess is not met
with, as such, in any Saxon writing
-^he word frigu, however, occurs in
poetry in the sense ot “love, and it is
therefore probable that this is the cor
rect form °f the n * me of the g od dess.
The Teutonic mythology is best known
ns in its Scandinavian form, and it
j 8 usually stated in books that Iridav
day of Iievja. This,
19 a mistake. and the true Narse equi
valent of Irigu is Irigg, the wife of
bUm, and not the interior gooddess
Freyja.
£he name ot “Saurn s day among
*he Teutonic nations is peculiar to the
English and the Dutch, who have it as
Saturday. This tact may, perhaps,
afford a slight presumption in favor ot
( h e conjecture that the translation of
tbe names of the days originated in the
L° w German branch of the race. The
Teutonic names tor Saturday are Vari
ous.
Mrs. 1’rudeDce Glover, who lives
with her daughter on the Reading
Road, near Cincinnati, being a bun
died years old on Monday last, had a
" hicb ■»*“* frien<ls
showed few sigos
’ J far bevoud the al
lotted age ot n . She perfectly
n man. is
<-rect, a _ . mo\ts VIL , D without • , , - of f
suppi u, rt cane
, •
or 11 lenuiy aim, and , would anywhere ,
w £j taken lor a bright woman and of aev‘Jy-fivo. her
er are voice
j c j ear as a gi r p 3 . 8 mi her laugh as mer
ry ' faculties are entire'v un ; m
aired with the exception * ofa sli-bt
^ ea{n &
ess.
; -- m —-
' Fever.
Sections ^ of territory where fevers
and have been brought on hy reason
a malarial infected atmosphere, are
i using, and with complete success, in
keeping off such eifltetions, Warner's
Kidney and Liver Cure and
Warner's Safe Pills. Parties down sick
- with diseases of such a character, are
Ftrrttf by’ Ikb usfc rf gfcjafc;
The Mail Who Named Him.
What Dougherty of Philadelphia says About
Nomination of Hancock.
[From the Philadelphia Times.1
Daniel Dougherty, who has the
isfaction of knowing that his
will go down to history as the man
who nominated Gen. Hancock,
in a corner of one of the Pullman
cars, looking weary after his labors.
“I went out to Cincinnati,” said
“without the slightest idea of
nating Hancock. I was invited
the Araericus Club to accompany
as their guest, and after a day's
liberation I decided to do so. On
day evening I was at supper with
Q ueen City Club, when some
men told me they wished me to
nate Hancock the next day. I
thunderstruck, and said that I had
pens, paper, or place to prepare
speech, and had thought nothing
the subject. Then they told me
they bad a house where I could go.
so I went there, and, after dashing
a few lines, went to sleep. The next
day I was afraid they wouldn’t
but I read them to a gentleman
said they were all right. I was full
excitement when I arose to speak,
I had hardly uttered the first line
fore the Convention saw who was in¬
tended and interrupted me with
It was the greatest scene of
ment I ever witnessed. Last
I received a complimentary telegram
from Gen. Hancock thanking me for
my services. I have not seen him
several years ”
Gov. Andrew’s Father and Mo¬
ther.—M r. P. W. Chandler relates a
very amusing anecdote of Governor
Andrew’s father and mother in his
monograph for the Massachusetts His¬
torical Society. TLe father was a very
formal and remarkably reticent man,
and rebuked his son for addressing
him as “dear father” in a letter from
college, directing him to substitute for
it “Honored Sir,” and to sign himselt
“dutiful” instead of “affectionate.”
The mother was much more gifted in
speech, and used her talent far more
freely. The Governor used to tell with
great glee a story that illustrated their
different characteristics. Deacon An¬
drew, like all country traders of that
day, dealt in ardent spirits. When
the Temperance reform was started,
his wife entered into it with great in¬
terest. She was particularly desirous
that he should r give up the sale of
liquor. lor T , weeks the ,. children , , used ,
to . b hear , her, after u retiring, .. . , lecture . their ...
, father ., ou the ., subject; , • . with earnert , vo ,
-
ability. He kept silent, bat at length
one night, after a discourse ot unusal
, length and , vivacity, •, told 4 ij v ber quietly • xi
that he had given up the sale for some
mont h 8
Adam's Monument. —The good peo
pie of Elmira who propose to erect
monument to Adam in that city are in
dead earnest. They prepared and
presented to Congress, recently, a pe
tition, in which after declaring that
“the common father of mankind has
been suffered to be in entire neeFet. t->
although even the father of our
try has now and has had for many
years a monument in course of con
struction,” they thus pray;
your petitioners beg that your honora
b'e body will be pleased to issue a de
decree restricting to Elmira the
to build a monument to Adam and
dieting a heavy penalty upon any
other community within the United
States that shall propose or attempt to
erect a monument or other memorial
to ths said Adam, and to this end we
will ever pray.”
Onions.—F rom our own experience
and observation of others, we can fully
indorse the testimony ot the St.
Millei', on the healthful properties of
the above esculent. Lung and liver
complaints are certainly benefited, !
often cured, by a free consumption of
onions, either cooked or raw. Colds
yield to them like magic. Don't be
afraid ol them. Taken at night all of¬
fensive smell will be wantingbyrnormr O
and the coodeffects will amply compen¬
sate for the triflmg annoyance. Taken
regularly they.greatly and promote health
of the lungs the digestive organs
An extract made by boiling down the
u ' ce ° n i° ns to » syrup and token
as a medicine, answers the pur 7?e
very well, but fried, roasted, or boded
are better. Onions are a very
medicine, wunm everybody’s
reach, and they are not by any meuDS
* ! a8 “bad to take” as the costly nostrums
a neglect of their use may nec le.
1 Sitting Bull’s son was recently in
duced to sit for his photograph at*Fort
Buford. The young buck was very
that the camera was some
kiud of an infernal machine, but final
' iy consented cn condition that he might
sii with bis revolver in his hand, and
at the first sign of danger shoot the
artist. The arust decided to take
1 chances, and a fine cabinet picture
rhwFu
Medical Uses of Carbolic Acid.
The diseases in which carbolic acid
IS class especially useful are: 1. All that
ol local festering, pustulating dis¬
eases of the skin which are at once so
common and so difficult to cure. They
include all kinds of pustules, boils and
carbuncles ; sycosis, pustular acne and
festering ringworm. 2. Such strumous
sores under especially of the neck, as come
the care of the physician. 3. Ex¬
coriations of the os and canal of the
cervix uteri. 4. Phthisis in its second
and third stages, and cases of chronic
bronchitis, accompanied with more or
less purulent expectoration In order to
be effective, the carbolic acid must be
brought in contact with the part to be
acted on, and in many cases where it
has been found ineffective the failure
has been due to neglect to insure this
contact. In the pustulating and sup¬
sufficient purating diseases of the skin it is never
acid, to apply the solution of the
of whatever strength, upon or to
the outside of the skin, it must always
be introduced into the interior of the
sore or pusture itself, and so as to come
sufficiently of the in contact with every part
diseased surface. All cases of
boils and carbuncles in Lbe earlier
stages can be absolutely aborted and
cured, while even in later stages their
further increase can be almost surely
prevented. For this purpose a very
string glycerine solution should be
employed, and it is best conveyed into
the pustule, boil or suppurating spot
by a new quill pen dipped into the so¬
lution, and introduce.! by a rotary mo¬
tion through its apiex, where a sufficient
aperture will generally be found.
ITEMS OF INTEREST.
At the end of 1879 France had 14,-
120 miles of railroad.
Nothing hurts a man, nothing hurts
a party so terrible as fool friends.
A fool friend is the sower of bad
news, of slander and all base and UUs
pleasant things.
Brooklyn appears to be satisfied with
her 577,000 which keeps her in the
rank heretofore maintained.
Geoigia has collected in all $211,
Sll back taxes from railroad corpora¬
tions. Better late than never.
Two fashionable and wealthy women
of Dubuque, Iowa, were fined $5 each
for taking floweis from a cemetery.
It seems to be the opinion of the
War Department that Cadet Whitta¬
ker will have to stand a court martial.
n, ijtn. r , i.raiiieiu was ,„ oa in • tne depot -
lr
pi_.,„ Cleveland l, j when the iammany u braves
,i J
nact0 passed through on their return e from
Ciocio Ou one of .be cars was
p| at . au i. iu ll0ge ., N
v iork, m i. rjjtjiju > /inn majority fur r Hancock, n i >.
* I
T 1M saI< ., !. ™»t German workmen
'
«ive a very fine temper to their edge
tools by simply heatin : f them to a
'y heat and plunging o
; vv te them
et ^7 into sealing wax, so that finally
! l00 ^ i 8 *°° co °f to penetrate the
j j General brother, Hancock is a twin. His;
twin Hilary Hancock, is a
lawyer in Minneapolis, Minn, When
young the brothers looked so much
alike that they could scarcely be
j tinguished. Another brother ia Colonel
j John Hancock, ttie agent of the Penn
railroad in Washington,
The nurne of the Democratic caud l
date for President recalls the memory
oi two men who will live long in the
history of this country—John Hancock
who culled John Bull's attention to the
boldness of bis signature to the Declar
j at tion of Indepence, and Winfield Scott,
; dm ftiirdy soldier who the last
j was
WLi o candidate lor the Presidency.
A woman, whose name was lightly
fused in the columns oi a newspaper in
15 urt ‘^‘ ’ e ‘ asked a lawver to sue
, ru , , -
l P e 10r a llb Y’ but was . ,
* that , she u nad no redress under the
j She determined to take matters into
ner own hands. She went to the news
paper office collared the editor aud
belabored him in the uce and over the
bead with the handle of ; heavv
1 . She stru him three or tour times
bore he could recover from his sur
pr.se. Liien jumpio to his feet he
caucl a stone paper-weight and threw
it her Fee with lull force. It
, irom her lip and nose and did
no S lLi beyond a slight
woun irom wh i the u0 °d L°wed
freely TT > pen t he fled - and
ceede d ( •ectlv to t po e ct r itioti
where sue ei red a cc laint against
the editor for an assaui
Haunted Me.
De’ , poverty and u ring haunted
years, caused by a sick family
and bills Jor doctoring, which
did ood. I was completely
cor until one year ago, bv tu e
Bitters auvice my pastor/ I procured Hop
and commenced their use, and
in one month we were all well, and
none 01 u; been sick ^ a day
and I want to say to & poor nun, you
keep ”
can your Umnies well a year
I tor’s Hop Bitters for less tcan one
visit will cost. —A
PRICE THREE CENTS.
MISTAKES AND PREJUDICE
Of Beligion and. Temperance
Journals
Some good religious and temperance
journals are making the mistake of
declining to advertise a most valuable
anti-iuloxicating medicine, simply be”
cause it is called “Bitters,” while the
same journals are making a great mis¬
take by advertising some drunken
whisky stuff, or nostrum, because it has
some nice, fancy deceptive name, end¬
ing with “eine,” “tine,” printed on its
label, when the bottle is tilled with de¬
struction, drunkenness and death. If
these guod journals would take the
trouble to ascertain bow many over¬
worked clergymen have lad their lost
nerve force, brain waste and flagging
energies restored by the use of Hop
Bitters, and of good Christian tempe*
ranee women who rely on them for
their family medicine, and how many
invalid homes they could make happy
and what glad tidings they would send
to every neighborhood by publishing
the merits of Hop Bitters, they would
advertise them without money and
without price.
A few of the many witnesses from
religious and temperance sources are
given below, who use, recommend and
advertise Hop Bitters.
Temperance clergymen, lawyers la¬
dies and doctors use Kop Bitters, as
they do not intoxicate, but restore
brain and nerve waste .—lempcrance
limes, Brockport, N. Y.
NOT A BEVERAGE.
“They are not a bevarage, but a
medicine, with ourative properties of
the highest degree, containing no poi¬
sonous drugs, They do not tear down
an already debilitated system, but
build it up. One bottle contains more
hops, that is, more real hop strength,
than a barrel of ordinary beer. Every
druggist in Rochester sells them, and
the physicians prescribe them.”—Roch->
ester Evening Express on Hop Bitters.
We are not in the habit of making
editorial mention of patent medicines,
but in case of Hop Bitters, feel free to
do so, because their merits deserve to
be made known .—New York Indepen -
dent.
Pittsford, Mass , Sept. 28, 1878.
Sirs: I have taken IIop Bitters
and recommend them to others, as I I
them very beneficial,
Mrs. J. W. Tuller,
Sec.y Women’s Christian Temperance
t- mon •
'
A me DICINE, NOT a drink— mail AU-'
THORITY.
IIop Bitters is not, iu any sense,
an alcoholic beverage of liquor, and
could not be sold, for use, except to
persons desirous of obtaining rnedici- | ,
nal bitters. l
Green B. Raum,
U. S. Com'r Internal Rev • !
|
PREJUDICE KILLS. !
“Eleven years our daughter suffered
on a bed of misery under the care of
ol the best physicians, who gave
ber disease various names but no relief.
now she , restored , to . good ,,
is us in
hv Hop Bitters, that we had
poohfd at two years before using it.
We ea st’y hope and pray that no
eFe will let their sick suffer as we
,•, on account ./••!• of prejudice against • , SO |
good a medicine its xiop Lltt.rs. " |
I
The Parents — Good Templars
Milton, Del., Feb. It), lboO.
Having used Hop Bitters, the noted
remedy for debility, nervousness, indi- ’
3 ‘ion, etc., I have no hesitation ini
8a 7 10 . 3 ^ ]t IS indeed 1 an excellentl ,,
medicine, and recommend it to any,
one as a truly tonic bitters.
Respectfully,
Rev. Mrs. J. H. Ellgood. i
I declined to insert your advertise-'
ment of Hop Bitters iatt year, because
I then thought they might not be pro-!
motive cf the cause of Temperance, but,
find th 7 are, and a very valuable
medicine, myself and wife having been
g rea nly benefited by them, at. 1 I take!
great pleasure in making them known.
Rev. John . e. All AN.
Editor Ebrrte Cfarf.irS, Afto&j Jf, Y<
Business Cards*
The following Papers for this week at the
Florida News Depot,
New Now York York Ledger, Weekly, No No. ‘JO 3,'{
Fireside Companion, No. UIJ1
Saturday Night. Journal, No. No. 42 587
New Saturday York Paper, 861
ISoysrf New Family York, Story No. 254
Frank Leslie’s Hoys and Girl* Weekly, WATER¬ 714.
Just received a laree lot of very fine
MELONS, which 1 will sell very cheap, at
No. 120 Broughton st..
jol3-lm A. L. CRANFORD. Agt.
JAS. HcGUNLEY,
CARPENTER
YORK STREET, second door cast of Bull.
fu irnUhea Jobbing promptly attended to. E* tins ten
when desired. Jel >llm
BEEF, VEAL AND LAMB.
JOS. H. BAKER.
LuTO -E± ±£ -Eo,
STALL No. 66, Savannah Market.
A LL other meats in their season at lowest
market rates. Orders promptly tilled
and delivered. Will victual ships throughout.
Give him a trial, oe;il-tf
ISAAC BOOS,
BUTCHER.
STALLS 9 AND 10 CITY MARKET,
K OSHER Tennessee Beef and Mutton,
Customers served at their residences.
Orders ered Sunday promptly executed, also meats hlltf uellv
mornings. n
ANDERSON STREET MARKET
AND ICE HOUSE,
J F. kinds PHILLIPS, of Meats, Butcher, Fish, Poultry and dealer and in Mar¬ al
•
ket Produce. Families .supplied at their
residences, and and all orders Satisfaction executed with
anteed. promptness dispatch. ap6 guar¬ 6m
C. A. CORTJ.NO,
Hu Cattins, Hair Sax, War ad
SHAVING SALOON.
HOT AND COLD BATHS.
166V£ Eryan street, coposite the Market, un
der Planters’ ami K.mrlish Hotel. upnkon. Spanish, Italian, solH-tf Uer
man.
HAIR store:
JOS. E. L0ISEAU & C0.,
118 BROUGHTON ST., Bet. Bull & Dray ton
K EEP on hand a large assortment ol Hair
Switches, combings Curls, Putts, the and latest Fancy Good a
Hair worked in style.
Fancy Costumes, Wigs and Beards for Rent
L. FER mm, M. 0 °9
Office: No. 9 Whitaker Sired,
[UP STAIRS.]
P. OFFica M. Hocus8—9 A. M., a—4 and my2(i-lm 7 }-£- 8 Jt
W. B. FERRELL’S Agt.
RESTAURANT,
No. 11 New Market Basement,
(Opposite Llppman’s Drug Store,)
inniat.t SAVANNAH. GA
Plumbing and Ga3 Fitting*
CUAS. E. WAKEFIELD,
Plumbing, Gas Cl Steam Fittin <r
No. 48 BARNARD STREET, one door no> tU
oi South Broad treet.
bulk Tubs. Jobolng Water Olonets, Boilers, Ranges,
Promptly attendee to.
Also, Agent of "BACKUS WATER MOTOi*
ebll
McELLINN & McFALL.
PLUMBING AND GAS FITTING.
Na. lft Whitaker street, corner York st. Lano
N.B. Houses fll ted with gas and water ul
short, notice. Jobbing promptly attended to
a id all work guaranteed, at low price*:.
Mi'Pi tl
W. II. COSGROVE,
Fast side of Bull utreet, one door from York,
Practical Plumber and Caa Fitter,
JOBBING PROMPTLY ATTENDED TO.
All work guaranteed to glvo satisfaction.
*iir Prices to suit the times. rn b7tf
Paints, 0113 and Ola n r<
JOHN O. BUTLEB,
Wholesale a ad Retail Dealer In
WHITE LEADS COLORS, OILS, GLASS.
VARNISH, ETC.
Ready Mixed Paint.4, Railroad, Steamer and
Mill supplies. Sole A-ent for Georgia Lime
Calcined Planter, Cemeuts, Hair uud Land
p, aster. No. 22 Drayton Ktreet,
janUStf savannah. GA.
kmmm hanlev,
—Dealer In
Hoofs, Sajhes, Blink, Mouldings
Lime, Plaster, Hair and Cement,
STEAMBOAT,
Railroad and Mill Supplies,
paints, oilh, varnishes, glass, &o.
No. 6 Whitaker & 171 Bay St.,
HA VANN AH. QEORGly
T/ wXjLJM y TT%T w£ vy*---. iEiL*
4
— Dealer In —
Sleatabaat, Rail Road and Mill Suppllet,
PAI.N'TS, OILS, GLASS, ice •»
DOORS, SASHES, BLINDS, MOULDING
Balusters, Blind Trimminqs, ic.
No. 6. WULiAKEK HT.,
SA dWIScr VANNARs QEQ1W T A