Newspaper Page Text
DAILY W j£o EVENING 5 r
r
Savannah as
.
* 4 .
! / v’ r > * A H
i?V# W
S*L T .
VOL IV.—No. 95.
THE SAVANNAH RECORDER
R. M. ORME, Editor.
PUBLISHED EVERY EVENING.
(Saturday Excepted,)
A.X 181 JEtATST STREET*
Ity J. STEHN.
The Recorder is served to subscribers, in
every part oi 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 orders
must be made payable to the order of the pub¬
lisher.
We will not undextake to preserve or return
rejected communications.
Correspondence on Local and general mat
ters of interest solicited.
On Advertisements running three, 'Six, and
twelve months a liberal reduction from om
regular rates will be made.
Mlborrespondeuee should be addressed Ke
coKDEK, Savannah, Oeorgia.
The Sunday Morning Recorder will take
tne pxace of the Saturday evening edition
which will make six full issues for the week.
*ES~We do not hold ourselves responsible for
tbe opinions expressed by Correspondents.
1 he Recorder is registered at the
Dost Office in Savannah as Second Class
Matter.
rm Ihe Credit n i-x Mobilier xi u-i- Whilt wi * \mt Has
It?
The Credit Mobilier was simply a
monstrous swindle, by which $.'* 0 , 000 ,
000 were stolen in the construction of
the Union Pacific railroad. The first
bill in regard to building a pacific rail
road was passed in 1802. There were
158 corporators named in the bill, and
were composed of men from all sec
tions of the country. This act was
amended in 1764, which doubled the
land grants and gave the company the
right to issue first mortgage bonds,
This E. B. Washburn, of Illinois, op
posed. Everything was surrendered
to the corporation by this bill.
The history of the Credit Mobilier
corporation is as follows : In 1859 the
Legislature ‘‘Pennsylvania olPennsylvania incorporate
el the Fiscal Agency.”
* Its powers were wonderful. It was
empowered to carry on almost every
sort of financial business, except bank
ing, without individual liability on the
part of the stockholders. Duff Green
was at the head of it, and its object
was to build the Southern Pacific
Railroad. The directors of the Union
Pacific Railroad purchased this act of
incorporation, Mobilier and changed its name to
the Credit of America. The
corporation was transplanted to New
York city, and the stock was taken by
the men who had subscribed for $2,000,
U00 of the stock of the Union Pacific.
This done, these same men, purchased
fiom themselves the stock of the Union
Pacific which they had subscribed for
They then went ahead and completed
the road between Omaha and the 100th
meridian. This cost the Union Pacific
about $13,000,000 and the Credit Mob
ilier about $8,000,000.
Thus the first profits realized wen
about $5,000,000. An arrangement
was then made to build 153 miles of
road, of which 50 miles were built
and accepted by the government, cost
ing the contractor about $27,500 per
mile. ‘ The Credit Mobilier would not
suller.this contract to be carried out.
The majority of the directors ot the
road, who were also a majority of the
directors ot thf Credit Moodier, passed (
a resolution extending the contract
over 669 miles of this completed rail
rota, rft .,i therehv mereoy pioposmg nmwain,. to m n pay , s ti the a
Credit Mobilier the $22,500 per mile
for 58 mi fen amonntiiu*- to Hip « mn
of $1 345 000 without anv coum.Iu, cot sider i
tion whatever million*
Utie million on one a hn.l~l nundreu ami I tour ,
thou^nud dollars was paid to the Cre.lit
Mobilier on urconnt of this 58 miles,
for tb. construction of which it neve.
bad even the semblance ot a cent,set.
V ue 1 resident ol tne io<id ? v iiiiu a r- u hit- ,he 1
jornj a. ot the director?, i ;-.1 otlicoi? ot tlie;
n- A id MaI K^ ;i; « ’D,leant'UnflT n \ . i *
ot the ^r, th *rt U J .‘ I
expose the whole rascality. Ine matter 1 ,
was compromised, and a contract was;
made called the “Oakes Arne's coa-1
. th\ , , ? e r .. , 8h . T5
f 1 x, '[ lt i H ; a J d Ames I
WM lhe medmul the -1
shareholders received the bent tit. 'E'
cruing from it. ,,,, 1Ue ' >r, t W8 . ““<lf , ,‘he
**“*.-nt amounted to
nearly {80,000,000. |
The highetd lank m the class grad'j
mated this year from the Hopkins ,
Grammar School in Xew Haven, Conn.,
was attained by a Chinamau, Yaii Fhou
Lee. The fourth rank in the second
class is Chu Pau Fav. The second
renk in the fourth class is Chau Yot
Chow. Van Phou L ee won the txrst
prize iu English composition, Y.o 1 non
Lee xi prize in Greek composition, and
Chun Yot (Lhow the first prize in ^ en
maiiship.
Negro Elevation—What He Did.
A Correspondent’s View of the Whitaker Affair
;
It sounds philanthropic for
apparent negro worshippers to advo
cate that the colored man should have
Ihe same rights and immunities
corded to white people; that they
should be appointed postmasters, cus
tom house officers, etc., but when such
sauce comes into their own cup these
fellows are not there. It is well enough
for the intelligent white citizens of New
Orleans, Charleston, Nashville and
other southern towns to be insulted
with colored officials, but they are not
suitably adapted to our northern town's
and cities, according to abolition ideas,
We were personally acquainted with
a negro-advocating member of Con
gress who, one day, sat down to a
dining table in one of the fashionable
New England hotels and, as his eye
glanced to the right, it saw the hand
of a sable native of Africa. The negro
lover quickly left the table without
8 ting a mouthful, and remarked to the
waiter as he left the dining hall, that
he would not eat beside a d—d nigger,
This negro was well dressed and an em
inent divine, but his company was not
acceptable to this Congressman. This
is a true type of the whole northern
abolition crew, of whom a more hypo
critical class never existed.
The Whittaker cadet case is another
outgrowth of this great “negro equali
ty” pnnciple While we do not up
hold the conduct of these United States
pauper snobs, in torturing poor Whit
taker in such cruel manner, yet it is
nothing more than might be expected,
When you place the poor negro in the
immediate position of being a peer of
his white associates, you will find kick
ing eveiy time; and, if it did not occur
these while northern agitators would
not have their ends answered. If you
place a lamb in the den of a bear to
be one of the family, it stands a far
better chance to be eaten up than to
become a family member of its carni
vorous lord It, is so with the poor
negro. When these northern hypo
erites place the colored man in juxta
position with the whites as peers or
equals in that political or social circles, they
expect the African will suffer and
in many instances unto death. If it
was not so, no political capital would
be gained. The motto of these north
ern agitators is, “the sacrifice of the
poor negro at the shrine of equal rights,
ensures life to the Republican party.”
— Cor. Troy (iV. Y.) Tress.
-------- m m ----
His God. _Jonathan Edwards is the
pnbiect of an exhaustive e 3 say in the
International Rex icxo by Oliver Wen
j 0 j[ Holmes. Although Joes a New Eng
i rtm ]g r> Dr. Holmes not delem!
the doctrines" of the famous divine.
He says: “There is no sufficient rea-
80n f or attacking the motives of a man
80 saintly in life, so holy in aspira
tions, sopatieut, so meek, so laborious
HO thoioughly in earnest in the woik
* 0 which his life was <*iveu. But after
ffng smothering in the sulphurous at
mosphere of Ins thought one cannot
help asking, was this or anything like
this—is this or anything like this
the accepted belief o! any considera
b j 0 part Lay of Protestant i-m » If so we
mus with x aeon, ‘It were better
we have no opinion of God at all than
8llch an 0p i u i 0 „ as is unworthy ol
Him.’ A ‘natural man’ is better than
aQ unnatural theologian. It is a less
vioieace to our nature to defy proto
plflsm tlmn it ia t0 diabolize the
Deitv.”
'________
,, Pnneo . Luciea Bonaparte writes
" ,J \ , .... 1,1 . , L r ". .. up ' , n .„ ^ f
not , Nwonapaite, the , spel
nn « is proper
of my fimily came—First, because
^ m6mb „ s of „ Wlile tbe Mme H
*«■> » »ad oot with uo,- wcond, !
liahu,,, r (be word , buom , , ,
u.se ,n wueu
' ‘? k f" lut 11 ' KC -“‘ ; <• •'•>!(.>•» t.u
,nl ..
°
words, bav.n K each their Ionic
‘“-e
*
the 1 -r Ionic accent . only ^ on the , a ;
.• must t be written Without the ,
paru . !
——- -
1U C Fiore.
“For ten vears mv wife was confined ;
,! Ti •, Ilc: ,. t,on °/ ,
r a eom P ?‘,
l t foV that oo doc ox oouid teh what
thB «»«^*>re»rehsr,»ndInW ,
* 8
“ humbugstall.
months ago I saw a tnind states
with Hop woitid Bitters afoot on „. and I
bought I he once more.
tried it, hut mv lot.) piovtM to he
Two bottles cuied uer, s ie is
tow.,. . a,u as i.. an .
and it cort me oulv two dollars.
folly pavs.
An impatient lawyer of Kingston,
X. Y ., said to a gariulous old kdy
witness, *• We don’t want allthis.it is
’ But she talked right on,
you've get it, whether you want
it or not, and it isn’t irreverent
SAVANNAH, WEDNESDAY, JULY 21, 1880.
Tlie Grist Tax of Italy.
The endurance of the people
Italy and their patience under
burthen of peculiarly oppressive fax a*
tion has been perhaps as severe!,
tested by the “grist tax” as it
be safe to try any civilized population
This exciso duty has latte* ly
yielded lOU.OOO.OOO lire, or, say
000,000 a year It amounts to a tax
of about SO cents a head, and rests cm
phatically upon the poorest classes ,
18 a tax which the millers are comp
ed to collect upon the grain brow:
,
to their mills for grinding, and, as the
poorer classes in Italy characteristic^
ly live upon farinaceous food and very
seldom use meat, the tax rea d s
every one of them In the northern
part of the peninsula the chief diet j.
the people is polenta or corn-m°al
ridge, which, in Connecticut, avoid:! >'
styled “hasty pudding. In N tpi \
and all other parts of the peninw;
south of the ' States of the Ohuicu,’
maccaroni is the chief article of locni.
The grist tax touches both of these
iudispensables of diet, and touch
them so severely that it is said to Lav
promoted a disease which has bee ora
national with the Italians. Tins w
pellagra , a disorder closely related
leprosy, and which is greatly on tin
increase. Its cause is claimed to he
very nearly connected with t!
wretched food of the peasantry, and
in some parts of the country the has
pitals and almshouses are noffable b
accommodate the increasing number et
cases of this specific indigenous mala L .
The Italian Parliament after a gre w
and long-continued pressure, has con
seated to remit onej'ourth of the grist
tax, beginning with the 1st of Sep: -
her next ensuing, and the entire t •;
to be abandoned on January 1 , 188:.
When it is considered that the ItaPa i
army costs every year more than ! ! ■
grist tax yields, and that the r.
kingdom has been spending some 7,
000,000 or $8 000,000 a year in
construction of iron-clad steamers t’.
patience and loyalty of the Italian
people will begin to be appreciated.—
Baltimore San
~ • < ® •-----
A ten-years-old, whose legs were
cei), b r cut off by a train of cars
Dubuque, ^ Iowa, was too pluck-' i
nia e a luss over the incident Win
the Dttle fellow was taken homo hx
hung limp, but he did not cm.
P^'An. Not a tear stood in tns eyes,
6 ufc the tender look he gave to ti as
who stood by his side told plainly tii
^ ie was auftering great agony. Ait*
the doctor had dressed his wound he
ca ** e .d hi R parents, sifters and brotli---s
^'S bedside, kissed one and ad f ’•
Y el1, an<1 ' e(t a tear upon their che
S( f c,)n< ! ime called his mot be- t
•• placed his utile a!
j 118 anus *u
neck, and said: “Mother, T i
• (ile
f oln ” t0 ^ a ‘ ew minnt ^ s - -';e
m< *. <0 }’. n°t v ' >
U tii59 . t,ie ,;fi
1 " tue e ,' v l
and , ,®f 1 mother said, - ‘A
!! n * el a “ d , t ?°: f auotber lo ^<
'. -
fouad T w dead and be;
ul1 pain and Bllde i in ^__ ;
vvher^takimWiH ,\ TTi 7 m?>rnin.A < n
v" ‘ o uiv L *V‘
en vV'.'.’ B 5, 'N ‘Y’i -V', id • -
'
‘ i nc ‘‘
> , -, 11“ , fTt ,:
k‘iLh"J* v-kh \
‘ ,p".T| tlVhim.Au
Th YU* Ini? Thi mt’v
h, hi . rJ ,11 1
,!‘ Thf ,117, J !"
h{ Y* Zjl .j '
‘ a Y “ V ,1 ‘ V; ‘
i ?! 1 ™
‘
Ihe General handed hip $-o, witl
remark, 'it would help 1 him get ^ a better
U m, lije man cxpie.-ed , hts , gratit 4 .
«*
over and over and said that he was
way to the citv to see Geu. Grant. hii
nd wn ,„ that accom plisheJ
hapoinw ‘ would bo com,:.:,. * *. -
General - «touded . , h.s , . band , w.th , t:, 1
runan., _ \ on noa see Genera Gia
when “? the soldier extended both band
embraced the General 'met,.
An \ x- Inebriate Tv-t. * T . —a Asylum: , foe, A oLi.:x.
t
—A » liberal subacnptiou ^ * has % , been
start-»
and 850.000 raised aireadv
the construction at Wilton, Connect;, ut
L where a good >ix d farm has ah ‘ * 71 v
-
' ^ 1 f I .put ; o.
• . for . M.
asylum women
the fact sterns it never! i. ;...
. t ^ f t i j ahrgely-inaa
. i ^ hf
!v 0 t 0 xi,’Qte tb-mseives portion'of 1 -
,, ,.j h- spbatumaV v A
,: ; ei n 1 nous......
---» f —--—
Aa ex m.a--::o:i 1 •: re the Sexy -
1 ork Hi.nv- - V the —Bitit-f i %
;ka: uatm, :•
is a gigantic f:aud. It: It ‘8
tuc nc i c ,CS " ere nt : •
' ;;
with Irani : i i
Thousan k rec pea uatux.Uizition
Lt-:.: :
} ..a,i Dee a m i.
United Slat Urea Wte&s \repL-« - T i «• ^ -
tn.tt there e.’.e ten witi.es-
attached to -LO coui;
of swearing.
WJ.-y Strawberries Are Red.
Al: ripening fruits and opening flow
have a natural tendency to grow
height, red or purple or blue, though in
man' of them the tendency is repressed
dangers attending brilliantdis
plays of color. This natural habit de
! pends upon the oxidation of their tis
sues, end is exactly analogous to the
assumption of autumn tints by leaves,
• ff a plant, or part of a plant, is injured
by sue!' a change of color, through
i being rendered more conspicuous to its
foes, it soon loses the tendency under
| the influence of natural selection; in
other words, those individuals which
j most display it get killed out, while
those which least display it survive and
; thrive. On the other hand, if conspic
; nou ue s is an advantage to the plant,
the exact opposite happens, and the
| tendency becomes developed into a con
i firmed habit. This is the case with the
| .-•trawfl.-rry, The as with many other fruits,
| j t-he rn better re bright colored the berry is
the chances of getting its
■ fruiilffs dispersed. color, especially Birds for have q'uick
eyes ior red and
white ; and therefore almost all edible
i erries Inve assumed one or other of
* those ; o hues So long as the lruitlets
! injured : unripe, and would therefore be
mains".-;,, y being eaten, the pulp re
ur, green and hard; but as
; soon as they have become fit for dia¬
; persion it grows soft, fills with sugary
juice and acquires its ruddy outer flesh,
Then the birds see and recognize it as
edit. • •. ’ govern themselves accord
iogly.— St. James' Gazette.
The I inocratic Candidate for the
j Presidency.
:
The Democratic party have nomina
| ted th^ir candidate for the Presidency
j ui tilt United States It is General
1 Dane-ok. The result was in America
:lt ' l*- a st, less of a surprise than the Re>
j publican's selection of Garfield, for
Hancock, who as far back as
1868, had a considerable following,
vas aft;r T.dden, the strongest Democ-.
raticca didat-e, and for some time past
wb u wii ii alleged complicity in electo
x-d cm motion and embittered quarrels
with the-New York Tammany Associa
tion, i: . been felt that Tilden’s nom
v % r .!d be simply disastrous.
; When therefore, the whilom favorite
;on'. v withdrew, it waa but natural
Hancock should obtain a
icjo, iy of his party’s votes. The
Democratic nominee belongs to the
regu.- r army, being one of that some
what i .uted class of American officers
hos - t .es will pass muster in Euro
yy.m ary circles, and although
h.- r associated with Mrs. Sur
its uhon, he has earned a fair
"T'P- •• * in the South, where the
« ■ c strength now mainly lies,
lung proof of the practical
>o : ■ that mak *s the American
‘>i- ‘ a pos-.elo machine, that j
--oil ' v ^the rn States, negro and or the those carpet not con-j
.
' 1 -d-Ct as their candidate a i
Non ’ :• ofli ier whose best title to
is his share in driving their j
m ' 1 8 t..e Potomac.— Guernsey'
.
jV lVS ‘ I
r "—" ^ ^ “ :
‘ v Dish ps.—T he refusal of i
^ ■ uodist Conference which re.,
^ io Cincinnati t0 eie ^ a col
“ called out many ex
us of regret and even indigna-j
;Q f ‘ om members of the colored,
At P “6adclphia, a Dr.
a , l “ : 8 lve the « ma,ter -statement day of last his |
'*‘V ■ n declared that - the one color-line
;
^ »Pon his race at the
iference. “When I arrived i
. L , 1 tie sail, there was a
, *
• -:.ia- i m u to meet mo. When I was “
.? > r ongst
;.,°J fvL .'“AG t 4 * Wf?' Pf-]
a tuomber k of toe Commit
te0# ; Kpi^a-.r, whenhe
, ve nt ia su inlo Ibe big end of that the
. m> ' n n hu emergence” ; from
:J Lo fr „ m
a - i e.. -. lie re.alee a “little history
. Uv wool w^s pu led over our our
-it!. , ,, Xlie cornuiitteG •
" ,1. re- Ie 1
, " , ^ ,
ho P"
lat re vote m the Conference
" v ‘ Men who hid speeches
J-*- , 1 not get the floor, and
. a
•; , j •• q indefinite postponement } unein nt
" ' * ..‘ ied , 5br fg b - He ^Ided,
' A ' ** Mt tue ff uest,0a is 0De
bmustboUkon up and voted on,
'-'negro -wnl never remain
' - v P 08t P° ced -
--
Poison. j
It is ” understood fact that Yellow
' v-r i its companions, Intermittent
i . t Levers, are the results
j . i bloxl, made impure by
I,d. r .a infected atmosphere. No'
‘ tdlc - : ez ; ftcU A e will s° quickly
\V - f Safe Kid
arner S
i •• a; I ^Iv r Cure, used ia connection
u a acts Safe Pills.
_ _
----
^ gut million lead pencils
-•
ocfeu.:~.x up in tnis couuiry List
year.
ITEMS OF INTEREST.
Sallie Martha Brown Washington
King Green Violet Ada Moore Thomp¬
son, the only daughter ot an aged coU
ored man in the Natural Bridge dis¬
trict. Virginia, is included in the pres¬
ent United States census.
Plucky Chili has completely whip¬
ped both her antagonists and assumed
a position as the foremost power in
South America. Ir may be that in
time Chili will absorb the other States
of that portion of the world.
A number of newspaper reporters
have endeavored to interview Gen,
Hancock since his nomination, but to
all he has returned a courteous hut
firm answer declining to give his views
at present. One of these answers will
do for all: “The fact is, however, I
do not care to make miscellaneous
statements for publication thus early
in the canvass; but when the proper
time comes all the attacks made upon
me by the opposition will be fully an¬
swered.”
The London Times, having read the
editorials in the New York World and
the New York Tribune, says: u The
two great parties of America have
made very poor nominations this year.
Mi. Hanfield, the reprocrat nominee,
served ten years in the penitentiary
for attempting to kidnap Mr. Cakes
Ames’ daughter, Miss Credit Mobilier
Ames; while Mr. Garcock, the demublN
can nominee, was sentenced to be
hanged for murdering a woman, and
was reprieved while on the way to the
gallows. He has been oat of prison
ouly four days.”— Oil City Derrick.
The Prince of Wales and the Duke
of Edinburgh voted in the House ol
Lords in favor of the bill to permit a
man to marry his dead wife’s sister
Eighty-eight other peers voted with
them ; but one hundred and one were
opposed ; their stock argument being
that, if such a privilege were granted,
“you could no longer have your wife’s
sister living with you like your own
sister.” to that Lord the Coleridge^jyent bill “would point so far out as
say
to the sister of tho dead wife that she
was her dead sister’s proper parliamen¬
tary successor.” To which Lord
Granville replied: “I am very fond
of my wite’s relations, but I do not
feel that they are my relations. * *
* As for myself, I have not tho
slightest wish to marry any one of my
wife’s sisters, though I dote upon them
all.”
A correspondent of the Richmond
(Va ) State believes he has discovered a
way to prevent the disagreeable odor
of the ailantus tree, which begins to
bloom in the early part of June, filling
the air and doubtless poisoning it,
with its sickening pollen. A year or
so ago this correspondent says he was
troubled very much by the ailantus
and determined to try an experiment,
His idea was to subject the trees to
analogous to bleeding, there.
by weakening them and arresting the
bloom that caused the offensive odor.
With a drawing-knife he cut large
strips of bark from various points about
the trunks and branches, extending the
barking in proportion to tho rankness
and apparent vitality of the tree. The
idea was that the sap would runout
development freely and that this would check the
of the pc.:-, without
making the leaves fall off as it was
not desired to destroy the value
the trees for shade purpose a. Though
the sap did the not flow as‘freely as was
experiment, ihe corres
pondent says, proved a comrfle te Hie*
tie bloom withering uml falling
within twelve V hours ’ while the dis- ai
agreeable odor was almost complete , tb£ , v
abated. 7 The \ ] trees subjected Jec to “°
teatment . , did not , .‘loom , again . .or two
?7; ,n ° the f r fP. Mts lh " ir
did Dot arpesr t° bo interrupt*
ed in the least, akin ine thir*i wlA vear tlipv
bngan to bloom barkin'” I.
tion “.A.fve of the comTisb process ,'”h was 1 1
L l V in a ™' e pur
e „ 4 'who Some of our peninsular
readers are troubled with the
rtn .u.us mav may find udu i* iu worih wortn whilri wune f^ to frxr try
tiiis b e fc-periment. v r)ennjent
A Father Made Happy.—J ohn E. I
left Norwich, Conn., twenty
vears NeU’v a»o and went 7, to sea L ‘ He I
in in New York Ar i- !_„* last wpek a anaa i f .
Connecticut, directed his from steps which to the he old Lad home |
no new! since b. left it. In the
where his paren's bad once lived
found an oyster eouiner, and near
his father's eig ..hoard "W. 1>
Shoemaker.” Ho entered
the shop, found his father, bargained
a pair of boots and talked about
old mail s sod, wL m he pretended
have known iu Auau.dia. Tb-* old
w-,s delighted to m.-c fc n
wbohaei -en « s boy, and talkn,•
ol n io: ft! i wren tbj cniu
-aged man declared hi^olf to bo
son the father was not at first'
■, to . < believe r it, •. , but . the .
The had proot was j
eon prospered ir.
and Lad returned a 1
* —- •
PRICE THREE CENTS.
Business Cards*
JAS. MctJINLEY,
YORK STREET, second door east of Bull.
Jobbing promptly attended to. Estimates
f u rnlsiiod when dead red. j e U-(im
BEEF, VEA L A MD LAMB.
JOS. H. BAKER,
BUTCHER,
STALL No. 66 , Savannah Market.
A LL market other meats rates. in Orders their season promptly at loavest filled
and del ivered. Will victual ships throughout.
Give him a trial. ocJl-tf
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 dispatch. all orders executed with
prompt ness Satisfaction guar
an t eed,. apb 6 m
C. A. CORTJ.NO,
Saif Cutting, Hair Dressing, Curling au!
SHAVING SALOON.
HOT AND COLD BATHS.
Io 6 f£ Bryan street, opposite the Market, un
der Flantei’s’ Hotel. Spanish, Italian, Ger
man. anil English spokon. nelii-xf
W. B. TERRELL’S Agt.
RESTAUEAHT,
No. 11 New Market Basement,
(Opposite JLippman’s Drug Store,)
lauiatr HA VANN AH. GA
Plumbing and Gas Fitting*
CHAS. E. WAKEFIELD,
Plumbing, Gas & Steam Fitting,
No. 18 BARNARD STREET, one door no*th
ot SouLh Broad treet.
Bath Tubs, Water Closets, Boilers, Ranges)
Joboing Promptly attended to.
ebil Also, Age'llt of “BACKUS WATER MOTOR
x
McEILIMN & McFALL,
1 ’l.UMlHNa AND GAS FITTING.
Na. U Whitaker street, corner York st. Lane
N.B. flousos fitted with gas and water at
short uoUpe, Jobbing promptly at leaded to
and ail work guaranteed, at low prlceu.
aepTti
_
W. 1L COSGROVE,
Fast side of Bull streot, oxie door from York,
Practical Plumber and Gas Fitter?
JOBBING PBOMPTLY ATTENDED TO.
All work guaranteed to give satisfaction.
Prices to suit tho times. mlx7tf
Paints, Oils and Class,
J oil N (j}7 RUT LER,
Wholesale and Retail Dealer in
WHITE LEADS COLORS, OILS, GLASS,
VARNISH, ETC.
Mill Ready Mixed Paints, Railroad. Steamer and
Calcined Supplies. Sole Agent for Georgia Lime
Plaster. Plaster, No. 22 Cements, Hair and Laud
jaul 6 tf Drayton SAVANNAH, sti’Oet,
GA.
ANDREW HANLEY,
—Dealer in—
Ihsn;, lilies, Blinds, Mouldings
Lime, Plaster, Hair and Comont,
STEAMBOAT,
tlailroad and Mill Supplies,
paints, oils, varnishes, glass, &c.
Ko. (S Whitaker St 171 Bay St.,
■SA VA NNAll, (JEORGly
my2rt-td
JOHN OLIVER.
— Dealer in —
Steemticaf, Rail Read and ii! Supply,
PAIN 'pit * iJ, OILS, CLASH, &c •»
DOORS, HASHES, BLINDS, MOULDING
Balusters, Blind Trimmings,
No. 5 . whl taker ht..
HA V.AMNAB, GEORGIA
JC2«
ICS5 £
Haywood, Gage & Co •9
holesale and uetail. dkalkiw
i; ' ' Ull r '' a ,'
^ n- .<< e.fecu.s , ail M'linr* LoV tvaii im.i.irai
ati
Moats, Fruits etc., placed inrcfrigeratora,
»amo.
Offlte XO. 1S>8 bttv Street,
HWassAU. oa.
ICR!
coubSSsm Claire to can attention of
Lari'e aTkJy'ZoW"
h c -nsurners *re advised
o^ mf
short crop, w*d v l, •>. ubie t<# all
promptly, or,tain our on .'hHouh \,e
r* i*>-.n - .• ,atr.u-.. coi,i> .sto.c *.<jk »
re it, 'yy^ *y h r>! '’ xjjiuge -'i on
:h ■ sotieitM.
KN i< KEUH< >< 'K n,K ICE COXii-A N Y,
iei-w* 144 Hay Ktre^t, SavHamUi, 0ia,