Savannah daily evening recorder. (Savannah, GA.) 1878-18??, July 01, 1880, Image 1
ngM't.w ijimmmm mm —iem EVENING 4<M D .A. I L Y # rTN< T sn 2 iapj •'«SS@ "Mi 0 n -k rm ><0 ■ VOL IV.—No. 79. THE SAVANNAH RECORDER R. M. OBME, Editor. PUBLISHED EVERY EVENING, (Saturday Excepted,) At 161 BikY STREET. By J. STERN. The Recorder is Berved to subscribers, In every part ot the city by careful carriers. Communications must be accompanied by the name of the writer, not necessarily for publication, but as a guarantee of good faith. Remittance by Check or Post Office oruers 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 teru of interest solicited. On Advertisements running three, six, and twelve months a liberal reduction from oui regular rates will be made. All correspondence should be addressed Re¬ corder, Savannah, Georgia. The Sunday Morning Recorder will take tne piace oi the Saturday evening edition which will make six lull Issues lor the week. JKi -We do not hold ourselves responsible for the opinions expressed by Correspondents. Ihe P.ECGtiDER is registered at the Post Office in Savannah as Second Class Matter. Masonic Differences Connecticut’s Reply to the Edict of New York’s Grand Master. Hartford, June 27, 1880.—The Grand Master of the Masonic Grand Lodge of Connecticut has taken notice of the recent edict of the Grand Master of the New York Grand Lodge forbid ding all intercourse between New York and Connecticut members of the hater uity. The following will be issued to morrow to all Connecticut lodges fiom the office of the Grand (Secretary in this city : Most Wors inG randLodoe ok Conn.,I I Ancient Free anj> Accepted Masons, Office of the Grand Master, j f Birmingham, Conn., June ib. 188 O. To the W. M. Wardens and Brethren of diction: the >Several Lodges in this Juris B.UETHREN : It is with deep regret tbat 1 call your attention to the late action of the Grand Lodge of New Yoik suspending fraternal intercourse with brethren hailing from lodges un der the jurisdiction of the Grand Lodge of Connecticut. Through tbe kindness of a brother of our jurisdiction I have been furnished with a copy of the edict (nothing having been received from the Grand Lodge of New York). It is as follows : Besolved, That the act ot our Grand Master in suspending official com munication with the Grand Lodge oi Connecticut is hereby approved. Besolved , That the honor aud dig nity oi this Grand Lodge require that all intercourse between the Masons ol Connecticut and Now York should be interdicted and forbidden, aud there fore this Grand Lodge does hereby in terdict aud forbid all Masons hailing under the Grand Lodge of Co^nec ticut. Now, therefore, in accordance with the above actiou you are hereby noti fied and directed to conform iu all re spects to this edict, and allowuo breth ren hailing from the Grand Lodge ol Connecticut to visit the lodges in this jurisdiction and are forbidden all Ma sonic intercourse with the brethren of Connecticut. Given under my hand and seal, this 10th day of June, A D. 1S80, A L. 5890, at Troy, N, Y. Jesse B. Anthony, Grand Master. Brethren ot this jurisdiction will take due notice of the above edict and not subject themselves to tbe mortification of being refused admission as by lodges under the jurisdiction of the Grand Lodge of New York. Should brethren ot New York desire to visit lodges in this jurisdiction, freely ex> tend a cordial and brotherly greeting. F.ver remember that indiscretion aud hasty actiou ou their part should destroy Masonic courtesy on ours Let us patiently submit, conscious of sincerity and honest conviction of the nghtfuiuess of the actiou taken by Grand Lodge in the premises. Let accord the same sincerity and iuteutiou toothers, trusting that the gentle influence of time will heal diilereuces and make every duty plain. With cordial paternal greeting I main your friend and brother, John H. Barlow, Grand Master, Attest: Jcs: K. & Wheeler, Grand Secretary.— N. Herald. Sections Fever. of territory where fevers aud have been brought ou by reason a malarial infected atmosphere, are ustug, aud with complete success, in keeping of! such afflictions, Warner's 8ate Warner Kidney aud Liver Cure aud s Sale Bills. Parties down sick with diseases ot such a cbanicter ( aru c^irsti by thtr uss df satafr. SAVANNAH, THURSDAY, JULY 1, 1880. Two Giants and a Dwarf. Three of the most remarkable of thecenture are now on exhibition London at the Royal I giant Chang, a tea merchant ot kin ; Brustad, a ta 1 Norwegian; and Che-mah, described as ‘ the dwarf, the smallest man in the world. Chang is the largest giant in and exis. tence, stands 8 feet 2 inches, is h’ghly educated, speaking five differ-* ent languages, including English, which he speaks very well, but with the well known sing-song of the Chinaman lie is 8 feet high without his boots, he measures 60 iuebes round the chest, weighs 26 stone, has a span of 8 feet with his 8 outstretched arms, aud signs his name without an effort upon a sign¬ post 10 feet 6 inches high. Chang is 33 years old, aDd it is about 15 years since he was in England. After five years residence in the Celestial Empire be returned to Europe for the Paris exhibition, and has since visited Vienna (where the Emperor gave him a ring he proudly exhibits, marked with the imperial eagles and the initials of Francis Joseph), Berlin aud Hamburg. Since his last residence in this country Chang has grown 6 inches. He has a benevolent Mongolian face, a courtly manner and wears a richly embroider¬ ed dress woiked for him by his sister, who is like the rest of his family ol only ordinary stature. and Next to Chang next by no long intervals, stands Brustard, about 7 feet 9 inches high, very muscular, very broad backed, having as great a girth of chest as Chang, and a wider span in proportion to his height He has a low forehead, but speaks English fairly well. Brustad has also a ring which he greatly delights in exhibiting. He pre sented it to himself out of the profits, it is supposed gained by being shown, It is 4£ ounces in weight, and a penny goes easily through it. To grasp his mighty hand in greeting is like 8 h»k ing hands with an oak tree. His weight is 28 stone,greater than Chang’s for his bones are more massive. His nap ” u 1 ° or. “o , . Che-mah, the dwarf, gives bis age as 42, sings a Chinese elegy, describes himself with much fluency and variety, and as his height is only 25 inches, appears to be what he ia described, the smallest man in the world. It is com mon for exhibited dwarfs to be over 3 feet high. Sir Geoffrey Hudson, the dwafwhom readers of Sir Walter Scott will beet remember, measured 3 feet 9 inches when he had attained his full stature. ----—----- A Horse Over Twenty Hands High.—T here arrived in this city last week by way of the Hudson River Railway, from Albany, and was con veyed directly to bis quarters in Hous ton street, what is believed to be th? largest horse that has ever fallen under the eye of anatomist or jockey—a veritable equine monster—beside which animals of the ordinary height are as dwarls. The animal was bred in Ohio; from our^uative draught stock, and certainly no region except one of the limestone bases could have developed such an enormous equine anatomy. His registered height is 20 hands and 1 inch, or 81 inches, being a foot taller than an average man. His weight is stated to be 2,450 pounds; but ell these points will probably be verified by competent verterinary sirgeons. As standing in the stable the color of the animal appears to bo a uniform dark bay without spot or blemish. It should not be judged that this height, although extraordinary, is altogether unprecedented in horses. At the Cen tennial exhibition in Philadelphia, in 1876, a span of horses was placed ou exhibition, each of which was 13 and 1 inch high. The animals were bred in Canada, and became the Uhe erty of a Philadeiphia brewer j exhibition closed. ------♦ -+»■ ----- - j Why Called Commencement Day. | —Some aie puzzled to know why the close of a college season is called com j urencement day. For the very simple reason that it is exactly what it is i named. All the exam,nations have been finished and the classes promoted j The giaduates deliver their speeches and commence the active duties 0 life. If the test has proven correct the senior commences to be a man of the wofld, tbe junior becomes a senior sophomore a juuior, and a fresbmau 1 a sophomore. All commences a high | er grade. True, vacation intervenes between this and the next season, but ; no examinations are required at the j ‘opening only to uew pupils—all the others going iuto the higher classes 'which they were promoted at com meneement. While seemingly the close of one college year 'the it is really the commencement of next, is truly diy. * commencement *»- m ^ And now Belgium has fallen out with the Vatican on the school question, Belgium is almost wholly Catuolic in belief, but she proposes to control her own achooia iu her own way. As io i Frani% thu Jesuits are to go. Dangers to Life. It is a disadvantage o f that it shows ua the dangers to is exposed. Every year os with a new peril, and the latest a ways the least expected French men ot science are now preaching a crusade ; against the industrious race of bees. Not only are they destructive to pro petty, but they are actually dangerous to human life. The Prefect of the Pans police has been appealed to M. Del pech has drawn up a formidable and is precise in his statements and clamorous in his demands It seems that bee keeping is lucrative in the □eighborhood of Pans, and that so also is the distillery ol spirits end the re finery ol sugar Moreover, wherever here are sugar works the bees are live and abundant At Say. for in stance the oss attributable to there is estimated at *£1,00 a year. M. Lcl pech grves facts and figures. At another refinery the number of bees lulled daily amounted to 22 gallons full. He h-m self saw a large glass of syrop drunk up in two hours. As to loss ot life no is full equally of circumstantial. people died He giv.s of a list who nee stings in the course ol the year, ijost of the cases occurred in America, but many are furnished by France and some by Germany. The death is very pain¬ ful, and in some cases extremely sud¬ den. At Chemnitz, in Hungary, a peasant stung while cutting a branch of a tree died on the spot. At Chester, in Pennsylvania, a farmer, examimug some hives, was stung, fell at once into a state of syncope, and died within a quarter of an hour. In another case 25 minutes elapsed between the Delpt wound and its fatal consequence. M. ^ accordingly appeals to the Prefect or the protection of the police, aud what he asks is that the keeping of bees may be placed in the category of dangerous and uuhealtby occupations. The fourth Georgic of Virgil may be read with s uew interest. —London Daily New. General Hancock’s Letter of Ac¬ ceptance. The New York correspondent of the Philadelphia Ledger Hancock’s writes : “General letter of ay ceptanoe, I hear, will beta nfbrft‘dii’af 1 rate paper than such utterances usually are, and his friends say it will be of a character to satisfy the country that he is a statesman as well as a soldier, and a man who can talk to the point, as well as fight to a purpose. The GeD eral, it may be remarked here, is one of the most urbane aud accessible ot men, and it will be well for him it he does Dot permit these and other excel lent qualities of head and heart to be taken advantage of by the crowds New\ork politicians of ail sorts that are now anxious to take him in hand Phe unfortunate experiences of General Harrison, and General Taylor and era l Scott, under not dissimilar circum stances,arevaluabieadmonitions, which, if he will heed now, will save him a deal of trouble of one kind and another hereafter. ~ m m m - - ihe Berrien county News thus tel:« of the champion deer slayer of Geor ! g' a : “Mr. G. W. Flowers, liviug the southern part of this eouty, has been from boyhood an ardent lover of 4eer bunting. When he first began bunt ing he was too small to shoot a rifle 'off-hand,’aud would have to'take a rest’ when about to send the leaden messenger into the anatomy of the nimble deer. It seems that from ; beginning he took pride in his achieve j meats with the rifle, and when j 'recorded brought down a deer the fact was ou a piece of wood kept l° r purpose at home. Each notch cut j represented a slain deer, and now bis notches number thirteen hundred i"' j ^The Department, Flag.— , At the few Liag days room of since, _ the ar a says tiie Washington Dost, three ca ^ e ^» allt | 0De °) them.asked to see corps flag or Gen Stonewall Jack- 80D * It was handed to him Iu silence ^ l0r sotne time, theu, 0:1 hie ; ^ nee! *> be caretully spread it on the 00r ’ w ^ en 0Ee biis friends asked , Him what . he was doing. He answer ; tears the streaming trom his eyes: the t ,ather »ook at the son or 80 n b’ 3 lat ber ? This flag nry ( Ht ber he»d when befell on the battie this flag my brother be.a-— too, died; I also carried it. w bereupon he raised his hands ;o beaven and poured out a most, fervent P ra 7 er - His friends had hard woik to 8^ bun to give up the flag; but when r< Pj ^ n S fell it up, it the was so officer worn, in a small e ce out, P‘ c 'ked . up the piece and gave it to the maQ > a nd be departed. ------- Mrs. Wodebouse, formerly Miss Miunie King, MarchioiTess cf Augusta, Ga , will be come the of Ai gi> s.-ey, this week. The Marquis belongs to the Briuce of Wales's s«t, and has a nominal income of £40,000, though the 'mortgages ou his prropVrty are Our Vice-President. r ie Llfe * :iml Servic ^ . 7 William H. English. es 01 0 ur nominee for Vice-President chospn 5y acc]araation oa the fi rs ballot, is a native and resident of dlana> the only Democratic state of Northwest His father and mother 'descended respectively from jand Virginia ancestrv, were kians, ' tuc and !0Dee r emigrant8 Indiana in 1818 William H. English was born Lexington, Scott countv, * August 22 pgoo 5„ fioMee he tbas „ pre8MS ‘ hi , opinion8 . ..j want tbe ]aborill ?„ „ wheo d ^ , t0 be uald , Ioil „ s tbat nl pur( . ha3e j U8t as 0 , me necessaries of life as the paid t0 bondholders or office aD j witb a3 t pilrcbas , ug power bes , , Done y ; D bbe bef;b markets tJle w0l)i Honesty, in my ia the be3t , in finance and ti „ W3ll a3 morala ak? gw , ei a[ld i( p o)iticiana woula t half rtnch lr0 „ blo to in8ttu( , t a[ld ,.„ ;j ,3 bte0 m>8888 lbat thev ' do to take ?an t of th „, r su , prejudices wou!d b , far better." Cincinnati Counting the Profits. It would be interesting, if it possible to obtain an accurate state ment of the amount of money expended by all the visitors, including to the Convention, and of all the people who were interested in the vention, but who, alter coming distances, got no nearer to it than esplanade in front of Music Had. a,-> been whispered that there ; large items in the expenses of viators which they could not be persuaded to give an account One enthusiastic hotel man last said be believed the “dropped about half a million ever that may mean—without any of it away. Of course, the proprietors preferred not to give statements of their receipts during week foi publication, but one can an estimate of the cost of board, ing, and the use of parlors. was an average of 900 guests at Grand Hotel, aud about the sam e num ber at the Gibson House 'during week. At the latter hotel, ou Wednesday, the number of was 1,175. The average number the Burnet nouse was 700. At 84 '" a dav their room aud board W0u | d c08 t these 2 5t)0 people a cool * * 5 ^ qqq ' ^dd to that the cost of the (| p ) . lo rs th occupied at an aver ° 00 ct , f $:;n a clav ’ and vouliave at , tj in T d e Walnut-street jq ou;;!p Ic c e ived about $4 (JUO from j ()t , ve l0ri visitors and the other do , ;i} j 8 td it received Convention visitors ; iv >n <r.-d S 3 000 for the week. There wej e ^ e8e PO t ) ia t the mm a ^ ove m PII tj 0Ded would be increased to - () q rp 0 t j J j s mua t added (. eceud8 *■ 0 [ 8 t. Nicholas Hotel For . j , 1 nrecedinr? and durinu ^ Convention the-'e were S18472. Fifteen thousand neorde fed dini- •' rooms were kept open daily* This rai.-ed the total to.?102 96*> But ;i ds eutn do , 8 no r include extras which | coaDt(ld would probably nearly G 0Li ble the sum. j The consumption j ; j g ndlPa t t . d by the fact that ori( , td big beer saloons in rhe city j , 11 i00 crUsses of hr,-.- in me j besides'the sales of wines and whisky' j ^he brewers’ returns for the week low a sa i e Q t 7G uOO ke"s of beer. ,„rhly" ’that ‘ jg p k0 estimated amounts t0 ! c,l as =es. When everything ooir” ls 1 bi u ” -ht of ’convention the hotel-keeper's {)n t } ia left at least -;,tjn(jQ0 ^ in the city does not 0llt 0 f t ^ e wav _ " Q, iz ,n e ------—— There is a valuable detective ! ed to a police station at Providenee, ! p He is a cat. if he is out in when a drunken man staggers by, ca t will run in and attract the tion of the officer in charge, and then upon the windowsill and toward tbe drunken man. The other da% one of the* policemen brought in female prisoner, who was temporarily i u the main room while the tenant went into the cell rooms, he bad been there about a minute, cat came running after him, and very strangely. Tbe lieutenant ed f 0 bis room and found his bad escaped through the window, had not gone too fir to he pc overtaken. ' __ Haunted Me. Debt, poverty and suffering me for years, caused by a sick and large bills for doctoring, d ; d no good. I was completely couraged, until one year ago, by advice of my pastor, I procured Bitters and commenced their use, in one month we were all well, none-of us have been sick a day and I want to say to all poor men, c<>n keep Bitters your f^miaca well a faith Hop for less than one visil will Cost .—A PRICE THREE CENTS. A Home for Aged Clergymen. Very few Trojans are awure of what has been done during the last four years at East Line. Six acres of wide wood-, land have been purchased, a neat little church erected, and a spacious and beautiful house completed garden as a home well for aged ministers. A stocked with vegetables has been start¬ ed, shade trees planted, and the whole face ‘of the scene metamorphosed. Features of the exercises yesterday were not only the fourth anniversary of this work, but especially the recog¬ nition of the completion of the Home tor Aged Clergymen. It is intended as a quiet country residence for a few aged ministers who have passed the limit of active work by reason of years and infirmities. The spacious rooms are neatly finished, showing the natur¬ al grain of the wood. On large one side of the central had is a room foi social purposes that may be called a reading room. On the other side are a parlor and diniDg^room, and back of these a large kitchen and inclosed wood-shed. Ou the second floor six sleeping apartments and a spacious central hall. The building is the design of Gol. Gregg, of Granville. One pretty feature of the parlor and reading room is the Queen Anne fire¬ places. One of these is the gift of Mrs. Erastus Corning and Mrs. J. V. L. Pruyn, of Albany, and the other of Miss Tweddle, of the same city. The stair¬ case was given by Miss Electa Mann, of Eallston. building Other prominent the parts ot the were gifts of non. -Tames M. Maim, of Saratoga, and oth ers. On Thursday two ladies ugreed to furnish each a room in Eastlake fur¬ niture to be made on the premises. And the Rev. Walter Thompson, of Waterford, suggested the endowment of the building, and gave ^QOOO as the inception of the endowment fund. By the side if the house is a well of clear cold water. This well and pump are the gift of the Jonesville mission, a few miles from East Line. The first use the water was put to was to bap¬ tize the child of the man who dug the well. Building materials at low figures (at the time of its erection) and econ¬ omy in management have brought the cost of the house within $3,000. There $1,500, and it Will not be formally opened till every dollar be paid,— Iroy limes, June 26. I A Remarkable Story. T 1’rom , _. Birkenhead , remarkable ... story a comeB ' ^ cer ^ a i n widow lady living nea ? that place lately fiave lu ! r 8e rvant ^ ol . '' ot ' ce to ea ^ e on account, miscon- 1 uc ^’ before the notice expired l ^ ere waa an a l arm burglars iu the b° UBe * faithful domestic roused U P “ er mistress shortly aiter midnight ' vlta ) ne ws that two men had bro . but that she had driven them in > ! ?rn minU8 e booty t hey expected, ier0 '^ aa abundant ^ evidence to show ' Q v ,^ 1 uleans had attempted a i e ? P alie ^ 8 w rf \ t ' U \ r a nCe 1 ^ > ] 1 been obtained, , , distmucd ,. , plaster a< a i° otrriar * <9 » an lr< ? a bar, masks , brown away, aud eloibing packed up * Q rea( ^ in ® 88 * or “'gut. iu-devoted • |b° uae maid had been tim-atened w.tu fb® lr0Q bar, and baiil actuauy received i &Q msta ‘ Im ® nt of the burglars veri¬ *P* at | ce in the form of a severo blow 00 • ' ,lje e f s t*. it >)o aduct, tnat her !K rateia . ^l unstress withdrew tne notice I t0 ^ eave a !? 1 rew ,f^ rt l t j ^ ’‘‘ r W / 11 a £ rat,u lty of oUs., besides giv .ug nei a . llt b°jm Iter friends , i lorlriI ^ 8 a y to visl 1 irl Ireland ? She went ou this leave of ! al:,8e 9 ce ! out 8 “ e was «way those ' Ui< I ulslt ' ve police found oiu oomething, w .* ltJn '^ e heroit.e reaurred sue ua.s H1 £ ervlewe “ by the local constabulary, W ^° f 0un )r y ‘-barged her with 2?. vln " | got tr.e 30s. on ia'ee pretenses. Worse 1-tiu, the girl, after a little teiicitig, ad that she had‘got tip the bur iglar episode herself, and had arranged Tbe im^ilements and other proofs for ■ greater effect, having been prompted partly by wish to make her mistres.- __ a smart for the notice to leave, and P J *-r t iy for a craving tor a holiday. This j ingenious young woman is reminded, uU ^ l be narrative so far merel v the ^vidence adduced; but it is to be leared j tbe confession is truthfJ, an th'--r i Ihe thought of the ^ervant gin battling for dear Ire with burglars 13 one o, the 1 a > - lingerin jiousions wnich col 1, dry fact lias h>tu ( er ,’ 1 ^ bndispeucd. Lon on 1 'u lelegraph Gen. Hancock to be Notified. Ex-Senator StocktOD, o New chairman of the de’eg on appointed to notify Gen. Hancock of his nation, sent him a dispatch asking) when he would meet the committee to him of his nomination, ne J replied atany July time and on a dry's New notice. 12th tne | Hotel have* been fixed the time and J place. Gen. Hancock usually spends his summers in Newport, but this year wiil remain at bis p, - oa truor's Island, which will - untie him 1 to get more rv?t than n.hr* iWe Business CaTds. The following Tapers for this week ut the Florida News Depot, New York Weekly, No. 33 New York Ledger, No. 90 Fireside Companion, No. 061 Saturday Night. No. 42 Saturday Journal. No. 537 New York Family Story 254 Paper, 851 Hoys i f New York, No. Frank Leslie's Boys and Girls Weekly, WATER¬ VII. Just received a large lot of very lino No. MELONS, 120 Broughton which 1 will sell very cheap, at st. Jel3-lm A. L. CRANFORD. Agt. JAS. McGINLEY, G ARPENTER, YORK STREET, second door east of Bull. furnished Jobbing promptly attended to. Estimates when beslred jo i i-em BEEF, VEAL AND LAMB. JOS. H. BAKER, B ITTOHEB, STALL No. 66, Savannah Market. 1 A LI. other meats in their season at lowest market rates. Orders promptly tilled and delivered. Will victual ships throughout. Give him a trial. oc.il-tf IS-A.JLO BOOS. BUTCHER STALLS 9 AND 10 CITY MARKET, K OSHER Customers Tennessee served at Beef their and residences. Mutton, Orders promptly executed, also meai s deliv¬ ered Sunday mornings. n hl ltf ANDERSON STREET MARKET AND ICE HOUSE, J • F. kinds PHILLIPS, of Meats, Butcher, Fish, Poultry and dealer ami Inal their .Mar¬ ket Produce. Families supplied at residences, aud and dispatch. all orders Satisfaction executed wirh anteed. promptness uar apO tim C. A. CORTJNO, Eaj Cutting, Sair Dressing Curliae aad SHAVING SALOON. HOT AND COLD BATHH. 166! 1< Bryan street, c npositc the Market, uu der Planters’ Hotel. Spanish, Itulin i, Oer man. and EpkIIhIi spoknn m« 1»M f HA 111 8 tome: JOS. E. L01SEAU & CO., 118 BROUGHTON B T., B et, Bull & Drayton 17'EEP V. Switches, on hand Cur at irl at oi Hair .x L. FERNAND, M. 0 ■» Office: No. 9 Whitaker Street , l UP BTAIR8.] P. Office M Hours:— 8—9 A. M., 2—landTii!—8J* ti-lm iuy 2 VV. B. FERRELL’S Agt. RESTAURANT, No. II New Market Basement, (Opposite Lippman’H Drug .store,) Ian Ittt.r SAVANNA II. UA Plumbing and Gas Fitting* CHA8. E. WAKEFIELD, Plumbing, Gas u Steam Fitting, No. 48 BARNARD STREET, one door nuUlt ot South Broad Lreet. hath Tubs. Jobulug Water Clofirtu, Boilers, attended Kangem Promptly to. loti Also, Again of “ BACKUH WATEK MOTOR McELLINN & McFALL. PLUMBING AND GAS FITTING. Ua. 40 Whitaker street, corner York st. Lane n.b. j louses fitted with gas and water at i-nXiiTworfe Ku°aLnieedrat n |ow y prEr" u l ° acp.ii W. H. COSOROVL, East side of Bull street, one door from Xork, practical Pluiabor and Cas Fitter JOBBING PROMPTLY ATTENDED TO. All work guaranteed to give satisfaction. *4>- Prices to suit the times. IiiliTU Faints, Oils and Glass, JOHN O. BUTLER, Wholesale aud Retail Dealer in WHITE LEADS COLORS, OILS. GLASS, VARNISH, ETC. Ready Mixed Palnta, Railroad, Steamer and Mill .-supplies. Sole Agent for Georgia Lime Cm lei ued Plaster, Cements, Hair and Land Plaster. No. 22 Drayton street, Jan ltit f savannah GA. mu EWf HANLEY, —Dealer In— Ooofs, Sashes, Blinds! Mouldings Lime, Plaster, Hair and Cement, STEAMBOAT, Railroad and Mill Supplies, paints, oils, varnishes, glass, &e. No. 6 Whitaker ft 171 Bay St., GEORGlr — JOHN OLIVER. — Dealer in — Steamboat, Bail Road and Mill Sufe, PAINTS, OILS, GLASS, Ac •» DOORS, bashes, blinds, moulding Balusters, No's. Blind Trimminas ' Ao WttL^AKER ax tfcclSW VANNAR, O E0 iiOJA