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VOL IV.—No. 84.
THE SAVANNAH RECORDER
R. M. ORME, Editor.
PUBLISHED EVERY EVENING,
''Saturday Excepted,)
At 161 BAY
By J. STERN.
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ters of Interest solicited.
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regular rates will be made.
All correspondence should be addressed
corder, Savannah, Georgia.
1 ho Sunday Morning Recorder will
the pi&ce oi the Saturday evening edition
which wilt make six full issues for the week.
do not hold ourselves responsible
Lite opinions expressed oy Correspondents.
2he PECORDER is registered at
Post Office in Savannah as Second
Matter.
A Til rill in" Storv y '
_
The Unerring Coarse of Justice—A Father
demning Kis Own Son to Death.
-
In the y< ar 1526, James Lincli Filz
Stephen, a merchant, who was at that
time Mayor of Galway, in Ireland,
sent his only son as commander of one
of his ships to Bilboa, in Spain, f ora
cargo of wiue. The credit which he
possessed was taken advantage of by his
son, who secreted tbe money with
which be was intrusted for the
chase of the cargo; and (he Spaniard
who supplied him on Ibis occasion
sent bis nephew with him to Ireland
to receive the debt and establish a lur
ther correspondence. The young men,
who were rieaily of the same age,
sailed together with that apparent con
fideuce and satisfaction which congenial
pursuits generally create amoDg
kind.
The ship proceeded on her voyage,
and as every Jay brought them nearer
to the place of destination aud the dis—
covery of the fraud of young Fitzsteph
en, he conceived the diabolical resolu
tion of muidering his friend; a project
in which, by promises of reward and
fear, he brought the greatest part of the
ship’s crew to join. On the night of
the fifth day the unfortunate Spaniard
was violently seized in his bed and
aud thrown overboard. A few days
more brought the ship to port. The
lather and friends of young
eu received him with joy, and in a
short time bestowed a sufficient capital
to enable him to commence business.
Security had now lulled every
of danger ; he sought the hand of »
beaut,fnl girl, the daughter of one of
hie neighbors. Hie proposals were ac
cepted, and the day appointed which
was to crown his yet suecessfuiv vil
lainv amy, when wuen one one of or the t lie sailors sailors who who had hart
een wi i lm on ie voyage to , pain
was taken ill and finding himsd on
e poin o ea l sent oi the
_
eu communica e a u account
the horrid deed his son had committed
fhe father, hough struck
with astorushmeut and horror, at
length shook ofi the feelings of the pa
rent, aud excdaimed : “Justice shall
take its course.” He
caused his sou to be seized with
rest of the crew, and thrown into
pr 'p They 0D '
all n confessed , , their , . .
criminal prosecution was commenced
and in a few days a small town in the
\Veac ot Ireland beheld a sight ecrarce
ly paralleled in the history ot man
kind; a lather, like another Brutus
sitting hka in judgment on his son, and
him tou condom uiu S him ,o die
consiaX hisToiv
the bonds of paternal atfec,ion,
the laws of nature were violated aud
justice demanded the blow; a
with his own lips pronouncing that
sentence which left him childless, and
at once blasted forever the honor
an ancient and v.«,bcr,batyoJ noble family ’
nV Tr
mffht “hive droppeT'a
ix,°cY rr ?D t a tb
murder, but you must die. These
the last drops which shall quench
spark of naiure ■ and if vou dare hone
Su Wlow ccvX?"
on the countenance of evervoi e Th >
fellow-citizens of the ind-xible ti l m, i
'
trate, who revered
pitied his misfortune* fo .» °- U *
isbmeut the fortitude with W i f‘ l li *J
vinldndto toUiBCiUDUmuy.aud tliBciu»i 4
SAVANNAH, THURSDAY, JULY 8, 1880.
him doom his son to a public and ig
nominous death.
The relatives of the unhappy cul¬
prit surrounded the the father of ; they affection, con
jit red him by all ties
of nature, and of compassion, to spare
his son. His wretched mother flew
iu distraction to the heads of her own
family, and conjured them tor the houcr
of their house to rescue them from tbe
ignomy the death of her son mutt
bring upon their name. The citizens
felt compassion for the father; affec¬
tion for the man ; every nobler feeling
was roused, and they privately deter¬
mined to rescue the young man from
prison that, night, under the conviction
that Fitzstepheo having already paid
the tribute due to justice and his
honor, would rejoice at tbe preserva¬
tion of the life of his eon. But they
little knew the heart of this noble
magistrate. By some accident their
determination reached his ear ; he in¬
stantly removed his son Irom the prison
to his own house, which he surrounded
with the officers of justice.
In the morning he partook with his
son the office of the holy communion.
After giving and receiving a mutual
forgiveness, the father said: "You
have little time to Jive, ruy son let
the care of your sou employ the few
moments take the last embrace of
your unhappy father.
Ue son was then hung at the door
of his father a dreadful monument of
tbe vengeance of Heaven and an in-
8tance °f the exercise of justice that
eAveH everything of the kind in mod
ern times at an unmeasurable dis
tnnr . p
mi e father . immediately resigned . his
, °d fiber his death, winch
a
Wizens Veeddy followed fixed^ that the of his door son of the his
over
house a death a head and cross bones
carvet ^ ln 6lack marble to perpetuate
|^ e temembrance of this signal act of
1 a8tlce -
... . . V
UIVISIOH ot Glasses Jionpy. r
There is no such thing as social
equality iri this life. It may seemingly
be so, but upon examination it will be
found that some regard themselves as
stooping to meet others, though they
may move in the same set. Though
puisning common avocations in one
establishment the employes divide into
communities, other. each independent of the
So the conditions permeate
life. From low to high, throughout,
'here is demarcation wide as an ocean.
Tbe final analysis shows that this dis
tinction consists in money. It is un
mistakable.
Deny as we please, people at their
best aie judged by the money they
have, or that their capacities can com
mand. Sad as it may be, this state
rnent represents tbe truth. A money
valuation is an easy estimate that can
be appreciated at a glance and the dull
est comprehend. It commences with
childhood and continues to old age. It
gees through every round from the low’
est to the highest. It seems to have been
the opinion for centuries. Ben Jenson
advised :
“hU boJ ’
‘ 1 laiions
ropa, “> ■>“ translations tmn of of Horace Horace,
Sr, > 8 -
“® et P ,ace and wealth; trpossible with grace,
if aot , t, y any means get wealth ana place.”
Shakspeare l makes “Honest Iago” p tell
CaP8io tu , p(ll money Ui thy urse .”
The Scotchman advised : “My son, mak
tbe 81 n er honestly if you can ; but mak
the 81 U er ."-Columbus Euqairer.
There - secret of ths Hancock
is a
“boom m Cincinnati worth letting out
About five days before the nomination
was made a score of Hancock* friends
held a consultation at No. 177 Eim
street, Cincinnati, which was the mn
cock headquarters. At this gathering
it it was was urged urged that that some some money money was was
needed needed for for legitimate legitimate expenses expenses ; ; where where
upon upon Senator Senator Wallace Wallace Blanton,
can, CiriU, .Lr. E. John John Lilts lulls, Ool. Col, Joe Jo© McIvibb^U McICibben
and and others, others, chipped ootpped in m and and raised raised §7o7. 8757
Alter Hancock was was nominated nominated they they
| again met to settle their bills. There There
was ien days' vent ol a room Jo be paid
, “f f
and transparencies This was the stun
total of the expenditures. In settling
rp there was 857 left to be returned
pro rata to subscribers. Col. McKibben
made a motion that in view of the
glorious sequel of the Convention the
857 be binned as a Hancock bonfiii
^.iou dM not prcvs.l,
I TbMTW wlTi'L su'm tot,* of moVey
tv iM “ ! be
friends reached Cincinnati.
-____ m m m
Fever
H ari i lu ^ utmospnere, on hy^B ot
cc
and q Wlth . C0 ®P le te 8l \^ e8<a >, n
f *
affltciione,arner's .
'tr Kidney and Liver Lure and
^ ner 8 ^ lte Bills. larties down sick
wltQ c J» i senses ot such a character, are
by the use of same.
Hancock’s Sayings
Ejtraots from Ilis Orders that Show What Kind
of a M:>n lie Is.
The true and pioper use of the mil¬
itary powers, besides defending the
national honor against foreign nations,
is to uphold the laws aud civil govern¬
ment and to secure to every person
i residing aiuonjk ajf ua the enjoyment of
life, liberty o^rial p opertv.
Tbe right by jury, tbe habeas
corpus, the liberty of the press, the
freedom of speech, the natural rights
of persons and the rights of property
must be preserved.
Power may destroy ths forms but
not the principles of justice. These
will live in spite even of the sword.
The great principles of American
liberty still are the lawful inheritance
ot this people, aud ever should be.
Armed insurrections or forc ; bie re¬
sistance to the law, will be instantly
repressed by arms.
Nothing can intimidate me from
doing what I believe to be honest and
right.
here. Arbitrary power has no existence
Very Plain Talk.—A ll who have
8een a French we dding know of the
homely and frequently affectionate m m
ner which the officiating priest
de i iver8 a i iltle homily to the intend
, n g husband and wife, in which, celi
ba(e as be ia bespeaks with the au
thority of deep experience on the duties
ot bearing and for bearing, on the hap
D piness ;„ esq aud ana privileges T >rivibm>q of ot the the married married
state. But all who heard id were as
founded at the surpassing plaiune-s o!
speech of the following priestly address:
j 8 f r0 m the bottom of my heart,
Joseph, that I congratulate you upon
taking the indeed great step you are taking.
jq was sad to see you wasting
y 0llr youth in a life of disgustiug
drunkenness. However, all is well that
ends well; and it pleases me to think
that you have said good bye forever to
the wine shop. As to you, my poor
Catharine, thank heaven that you have
been able, ugly as you are, to find a
husband. Never forget that you ought,
by an unchangeable sweetnebs and de
votion without bounds, to try to obtain
pardon for your physical imperfection;
for, I repeat, yo : are a real blunder of
nature. And now, my dear children,
I join you in matrimony.”
*-----
re P° r t now comes from Wash
. that blierman will do al in his
i
P°^er to secure the election of ‘‘Gener
Arthur, and will even taken tbe
8fum P 10 his behalf. And yet this is
the same Arthur to whom this same
Sherman once wrote: ‘Persons Inve
6een regularly paid by you who have
retl detod little or no service; the ex
P et,8es °f your office have increased
while its receipts have diminished.
Bribes, or gratuities in the shape of
bribes, have been received by your
8U 6ordinates in several branches of the
clls tohi house, and you have iu no case
supported the effort to correct these
“buses.”___ _
The little hatchet has begun its work
° f chopping ‘J, olf the heads of govern- ?
‘tv who are dis /. |
n 6eld . Tue n Republican ... officials ... in
Washington seem to have lost tbeir
wisdom and are snowing signs of anger
at the increasing popularity of the
Democratic ticket. Secretary Bamsay
is first to lose bis head. Last week be
disclnrged two clerks from the War
; Department because they are too enthu-
8ia8tlc for Hancock One of them had
^ i n i wavfl rmTconsdsLim hp „ n Ronuhlman h, a
l3 : L°“ d tfvs Dr ove IV s LmciMe wir in neTe P .a
| he alwa ys had in in war .
i Justice Justice to to Hebrews Hebrews in in Morocco.— Morocco.—
The The Envoy Envoy of of Morocco Morocco has has annexed annexed to
! i the the protocol protocol of of the the Morocco Morocco conference
a a letter letter from from the the Sultan Sultan command!og commanding
him him Irt to ^nnnnna denounce an/I and nnniah punish all all nnfiVac natives
j-officers, wbo }j judges have aud other refused justice
_ _ w 0 may
SaliaT and protection seve^y^bljl^d to the Hebrews ZeJ,* The
«d
Cb, ' 6t ‘ se 8,1 " ho “• W, ol
l. £eq^l-£to th. t "boll.
, _ .
Haunted Me
D 1 e fpover.y bt Doverv and and snfferinir suffering haunted haunted
7 ' ear ^ taused b v a sicb family
rf ¥ -
^ ! l8 f ° r doclon, , , ?S
T .
g 1 " 0 * 01 “7 pas:3r ' l T r ° cared Ho
. h
- H r
none ot us have been sick a day since;
and I want to eay to all poor men, you
can keep your families well a year
------——-'
Power may destroy the forms, but
not { he principles ; these will live in
spite even of the sword.” This sphor
iem of Hancock would have done honor
to the immortal Washington, and will
find an echo iu the hearts of patriotic
every where,
llow They Live.
Tenants of any bouse in Paris will
comprise a most varied assortment of
types and characters. The fii at person
whose acquaintance you make are the
concierge and his wife. The concierge
is a despot thumb. who has all the tenants
under bis He is the guardian
of the house, Cerberus whose good
graces have to be bought by bribes
anti tips. He dwells in a den called
a lodge, just inside the entry. His
duties are to null the cordon, or to
touch the pneumatic button by which
the street door is opened; for eich ten¬
ant, though he has a key to hh own
dwelling, has no key to the common
entrance of the house. The large
street doors are closed about 9 or 10
o’clock. After that time you have to
ring the bell, and the concierge, with¬
out distuibing himself, p nils a cord or
touches a pneumatic spring by which
the door is opened, lu most houses
the gas on the staircase and in the en¬
trance way is put out at ll o’clock,
and tenants who enter after that hour
are required to call out tbeir names as
they they have pass the find concierge’s their lodge, and
to way up stairs
in the dark as best they can. Beside
opening the street door and ws itching
the house, it is the duty of the con
cierge to keep the stairway clean, to
receive letters and messages, and to
deliver the letters in the various apart¬
ments at least once a day. As for the
tenants, you may have the proprietor
himself on the first floor, a countess
and a ejeotte on the secoud, a dress¬
maker and a financier on the third I
bourgeois family or two on the fourth,
a literaly man on the fifth and an
artist or a photograher on the sixth
floor. You may, however, live for
twenty years in a house and never see
your opposite neighbor, or know who
he or she is, and what he or sne does.
How ■t-E Did It.—A n elegantly
dressed young man, with something
very aristocratic in his manner, was
engaged in posing on the corner of the
slreet for the benefit of tbe Jadies who
might pass along. He was standing
within a few feet of a lemonade stand,
the proprietor of which in his shirt¬
sleeves and a straw hat as big as a
cart-wheel, was busy trying with a
towel to break up several delegations
of dies that were trying to get posses¬
sion of the sugar bowl to hold a con-,
yention in it Finally the lemonade
man punched the exquisite in the ribs
and said: “Now, you want to exodus
away from here. If you stand around
here much longer you will make the
people believe you are the boss of this
ere temperance saloon and I am only
the busio -ss manager. That’s what you
aie standing there putting on style
icr.” Tae young man’s father is worth
a million and when he heard o1 the
outrage lie said: “That's what comes
from not nominating Grant. A strong
government is what the couutry is suf
fering for.”
------------
To tiif. Point.—T he ‘‘Sherman
amendment” was passed by Congress in
P,^". liat l*«al 180 ^, Stale The/'wh-reas" Governments stated exist
«•» in ten Southern fatat-s, one of which
was creorgia, aud enacted that
States shall be e divided 1 mto mil mil
1 , 1 , 1 c s A "‘ “p e ^. c 7 .°
”'*
^ ,. thort ^; G *°*\*' .4 , ablDtt
1
0 *! l 19 ' r
', X .p ^-? V !°w n u r ^ e ‘ , , e:
'
° f . L19 Georgia m.ght^be Legis,attire . hat a con
vent on called and the
“p Gen. 1 ^ Hancock ted - s views . upon the 4 . sub- ,
W9re tbat tbe law « '° f ‘he State all
were in foTce regulating
sUvery, ar,d that the military
was subordinate to the civil. How then
j tu we 8a y f DC ! Hancock
^ be! i , e !, e n . S now ht ‘ thafc ^ Hancock el,eve d then, was right and
>
and „ Br0 Lr0 And
an ! ^ ^ n n wron wro ^- ^ while we
WlI1,D ^ . ^ lf “ /°u YOU *V 1 - for you to take up
rowu an d him Lmted Stales
i S Q enator ‘P Iea8edo , not ask us to help in
tbe , raHtf until that
er you convince us
Hancoc ks position was wro ng.
The to her
praiseu cer you nave gone to toTJte the tlie- t^
atre and the church becanse she was
lbere * >’ nU baV9 jv rit t en to her, and,
black-hearted, false and
0US villain, you have kissed her.
she comes here I shall brand her with
c otl}
„y« “Msdsme, ths
child,” said the cheery, smiling
"you are mistaken. I sent the tan.
My darling husband never does
a;»*
A Presided that stand, .,x ix
three in his boots and weighs
pounds should satisfy the demand in
some quarters for a strong government,
--—- ---—
Gen. Garfield's letter of acceptance
has ^ been written, and will be made
the 12th of July.
PRICE THREE CENTS.
The Economy of Thought.
Man being an imitative animal, fash¬
ion is potent in all phases of his exist¬
ence. The race is gregarious ; it moves
in flocks, and following a leader is still
its favorite pastime. Few care to break
away from the crowd, either to linger
behin 1 or to strike out in an independ¬
ent path, and rather than be suspected
of ignorance, thousands of people are
willing to convict themselves of folly.
Faithful as sheep to the bell-wether are
men and women to the leadership of
those who undertake to relieve them
from the trouble and responsibility of
self guidance. The number of those
who think out their own opinions, and
direct their conduct in accordance w>th
deliberate and intelligent conviction, is
small indeed. People for the most part
take their beliefs at second-hand, and
are very well content to do so. So to
argue matters out as to reach an iidi
vidual conclusion involves more labor
than is convenient or agreeable. The
printing presses, morning, night and
day, lurni&h the public with ready¬
made opinions on every conceivable
subject of contemporary interest, and
to these the public is well satisfied to
turn a willing ear .—Philadelphia North
American.
ITEMS OF INTEREST.
It is stated that Mrs. Mary E Bry*
an has been offered §510,000 a year to
write exclusively for the New York
Weekly.
Charleston, S. C., shows only a gain
of 71 in her population since the cen¬
sus of 1870. She now has 49,000.
The reports of the post office depart¬
ment show that there are now 43,000
post offices, and not less than 110,000
persons of all grades in the employ oi
this department alone.
General Walker, Superintendent of
tbe Census, thinks from the character
of the returns now in, that the popu¬
lation ot the country will prove to be
about forty-eight millions.
An aged colored man, hasteumg
home from church, was asked why he
was in such a hurry. “Oh, nothin’
perticklar, boss,” was his his answer,
“only I jess heerd at Gonf’rence dat
Sam Johnson’s fell from grace, au’ I
thought I’d get right home ’s soon’s I
could an’lock my chickens up, Dat’s
all.”
A drag, driven by an elegantly at¬
tired. Jady, with a trim and neatly
dressed colored boy perchecT"bn ’*the
footman’s seat behind, was passing
through the street, when it was espied
by an old negro woman. “Bress de
Lord !” she exclaimed, raising her hands
as she spoke, “Bress de Lord ! I never
’spected to see dat Wonder what dat
young cullud gemman p>»ys dat young
white ’oman for driving dat kerridge ?
I know’d it’d come but never
I ’spected to lib to see it. Dis nigga’s
ready to go ’way now.”
Tuev have found out, whv the hair
n elceSve r _ „ rn _ ■„ „ n .i i,:-].- Tho
drvneM j/ of the air of Afric.
gUrted it the „ arUe9t d »„ of the
J race, and it became hereditary,
| A E lishma0 who ,. ravrfw
t 6 strifes that u: his beard, i which . • at ,
,bome was straight, soft and silky,
i began immediately on arriving at
I Alexandria to curl, and to grow crisp,
: strong and coarse. Before he reached
b j g destination it resembled horse hair
t0 the touch and wa8 disposed in ring
let8<
j Triflers with feminine aff'ecGons do 1
1 wun iemtmne auec^ions ao |
1 ^^ cWgyman . , wtse enough to choose well, I
but e !‘ ou f b fo allow h.mself to
, be rul< ‘ d h ? b w fr ‘ ei Y is a / ter
,
Voraise a aement ’was and hdno sued for breach
r , f cast in damages—five
, *? >a au “ , { Seekinc\he , This brought him to
o^ned ntotiff all’the he
tbafiheha l ioved wr
ai j l ovedhpr &td | Huduraved P
' ifa Der f for 2 ,ve - and format “Afy ”
ton' , ,, y°oa A'r.
without a penny, since you hive five
me “7li iauy jtd'm^rw™ anu m ey were soon hY ni
again. Marriage made amends for al
Triplets iaiPLETS. —Hlncock Hancock, Fnciishand ENGLISH AND
America.— Mrs. Widow
a poor German woman,
nomiustsd at the Cincionati Convco
oi r
competed her to seek medical aid.
The three babies, two boys and a
girl, are strong and hearty and
Pike, Treater of the Hospital, in
view c? the great event characterizing
the day upon which these
were born, tbe doctors named the
with the consent of the mother.H^n
cock and English, and Pitiyunl the giri Atneri*
1'ca ,-New OrtearX
Business Cards
The following Papers for this week at the
Florida News Depot,
New York Weekly, No. fill
New York Ledger, No. 90
Fireside Companion, No Util
. Saturday Saturday Night. Journal, No. No. 1C A17
New York Family Story Paper, .TR
Frank Boys <1 Leslie's New York, Boys No. and 254 Girls Weekly,
714.
Just received a large lot of very fine WATER¬
No. MELONS, 120 Broughtou which I will sell very cheap, at
st..
jel.'5-lm A. L. CRANFORD. Agt.
JAS. McUINLEY,
OAEPENTER
YORK STREET, second door east of Bull.
furnished Jobbing promptly attended to. Estimates
when desired JeU-Gm
BEEF, VEAL AND LAMB.
JOS. H. BAKER,
BUTCHEB,
STALL No. 66, Savannah Market.
A LL other meats iu their season at lowest
market rates. Orders promptly tilled
and delivered. Will victual ships throughout.
(Jive him a trial ocJl-tf
ISAAC ROOS.
BUTCHER.
STALLS 9 AND 10 CITY MARKET.
K OSHER Tennessee Beef aud Mutton,
Customers served at their residences.
Orders promptly executed, also meats deliv¬
ered Sunday mornings._ rrhlltf
ANDERSON STREET MARKET
AND ICE HOUSE,
J • Produce. F. kinds PHILLIPS, of Meats, Butcher, Fish, Poultry and de
ket Families supplied at their
residences, and and dispatch. all orders Satisfaction executed with
promptness Ieed. giuir- 6m
an ap6
C. A. CORTI.NO,
Siif Cstto, Bair Srmssr, CuHur and
r
SHAVING SALOON.
HOT AND COLD BATHS.
1661 U Bryan street, c oposlte the Market, uu
ler Planters’ and F.neltsh Hotel. spoken. Spanish, Italiaa, selH-tf Ger
'nan,
HAIR store:
JOS. E. LOISEAU & CO.,
118 BROUGHTON ST., Bet. Eull & Draytou
K EEP on hand a large assortment of Hair
Switches, Curls, Pulls, and Fancy Goods
Hair combings worked in the latest slyio.
F ancy Costumes, Wigs and Beards for Rent
■f
Office: No. 9 Whitaker Street,
LUP STAIRS.]
P. Office M. Hours 8—9 A. M., »—4 and7^-8)* my26-1
m
_
W. B. FERRELL’S Agt.
RESTAURANT,
No. 11 New Market Basement,
(Opposite Llppman’s Drug Store,)
ianmt SAVANNAH. GA
Plumbing and Gas Fitting*_
CHAS. E. WAKEFIELD,
Plumbing, Gas & Steam Fitting,
No. 48 BARNARD STREET, one door no»th
ol South Broad treet.
Bath Tubs, Joboing W tv ter Closets, Boilers, Ranges,
Promptly attended to.
Also, Ageut of “ BACKUS WATER MOTOR
ebll
McELLINN & McFALL,
PLUMBING AND GAS KITTING.
Na. 46 Whitaker street, corner York st. Lane
N.B. Houses fitted with gas and water at
short notice, Jobbing promptly attended to
aud all work guaranteed, at low prices. sepTtl
W. H. COSGROVE,
East side of Bull street, one door from York,
Practical 1 Plumber Plumhor aud and G« Cd8 Fitter Titter
JOBBING PROMPTLY ATTENDED TO.
All work guaranteed to give satisfaction.
4ar* Prices to suit the times. mb7tr
Paints, Oils and Glass*
JOHN G. RUT L E R,
Wholesale and Retail Dealer lu
WHITE LEAD3 VARNISH, OOLOR8, ETC. OILS, GL.ARB,
SKT L ‘“ d
ANDREW HANLEY,
—Dealer ln—
Doors. Sties, Blinds, Mouldings
Lime, Plaster, Hair and Cement,
STEAMBOAT,
Railroad and Mill Supplies,
paints, oidr, varnishes, glass, Ac.
No. 6 Whitaker A 171 Bay St.,
SAVANNAH, my2#-t.f QKORQlr
t/ntjij ULA /\t TT7|?P 1C ISiAi
— Dealer lu —
R’il Road and Mill Supplies,
p AINTS> 0TJLS> GLASS, &C.,
DOOM, sashes, blinds, MOULDING
Balusters, Blind TrimminaS, ttOi
Nou 5. W UL I AKER BT. t
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