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D A I L Y aft EVENINa ;V, •> ijR 'in' :> >
..
Recorder i*
.** Savannah ivPl U r i t * W
VOL IV.—No.
THE SAVANNAH RECORDER
B. M. ORME, Editor.
PUBLISHED EVERY EVENING,
i r 1 c '
>
(Saturday Excepted,)
,t 1QI BAT STRBBTi
By J. STBRN.
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gobdxb. Savannah, Georgia.
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whldh will make six full issues for the week.
JWWe do not hold ourselves responsible for
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lhe Recorder is registered at tho
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Matter.
Gen. Hancock’s Record.
A Letter from General David Davis.
Washington, August 8. —The fob*
lowing was made public to-day by Mr.
Harvey :
Bloomington, III , Aug. 5, 1880.
My Dear Sir : The training and
habits Of my life naturally lead me to
prefer civilians to soldiers for great
civil trusts, but as parties are organ¬
ized, v most choose between the
aloof^ilidifferent cam Ihey represent or stand
or neutral,'which no
good citizen ought to do at a Presi**
dentiai election.no ik*~**«t*«r
jiu
the hest of ail reasons to my mind, be
..... .,, , uud , to
caa “
era and factions, for sinister ends, have
sought to prevent.
can hi jbo permanent prosper
ity . without pacification. Great as were
tbe achievements of Gen. Hancock in
waiyhiaoondnct in peace when in com
mand of Louisiana and Texas in 18G7
was still greater, and justly commends
him to the confidence of the country.
That was a time when passion ruled in
public exerted councils silence and civil military power was
to authority The
temptation was strong to sail with the
rushing current, for an inflamed par*
bisan opinion was too ready (ocondone
excesses and to applaud oppression.
Gen. oncock a otfler No. ■40, in as
suming charge of the Filth military
district, announced that the right (n
trNM by jury, the habeas corpus, the
liberty of tbe prees, freedom oi speedi,
natural rights of persons and r,glils ol
principles property must the be. brats respected. of free These
are govern
meat, and the proclamation oi them by
Gen Hancock a.ands out ,u at.iki.-g
contrast with the aot.on ol h.s superior
who aoon alter rebuked and drove him
f.om that command for uttering senl,
r^.^tb extraor
dinary power, voluntarily uncovered
before the civil authority, sheathed his
sword, testified his fidelity to the Con*
atitution, and set an example of obedi
eace to law which will pass into his
tvry as his proudest claim to distiuc.
tion. The man who in the midst of
the excitements of that stormy period
was cool enough to see his duty cleai
ly, aud courageous enough to execute
it firmly, His may be well trusted in any
crisis. letter to General Sberman
recently brought to light lifts in Gen.
Hancock far above the past appreem*
tion of his civil ability. It marks him
u one of the wisest of hie time, with
a etateemau'e grasp of mmil, and with
tbe integrity of a patriot whom no
sanse of expediency could swerve from
his honest convictions.
Long and unchecked possession of
power by any party and Jeids to extrava
gano«, oorruption loose practices,
After twenty years of domination by
tbe Republicans, chronic abuses have
become fastened upon the nublic service
like bar nicies on the bottom of a
stranded ship. There is no hope of re
form by the leadeis, w 0 have created
a system of xnaUuiniuistration, and
who are interested in the perpetuatiou
of its evils. Nothing short of the
sternest remedy gives any promise of
effective refoim, and the first step to
ward it is in a change of rulers. The
government must be got out of the
ruts in which it has too long been
New blood mutt b. into tbe
man»gement of pubho affairs before
relief can be expected. The people
demand a change, and, being in earnest,
they are likelv to be sinceiely, gratified.
Very David
[Signed] Davis.
lo Hon. Jas. E. Harvey.
Th© Sherman Letter.
Perhaps the most striking character
istic of tbe letter is the sentiment that
the civil machinery provided by the
Constitution would be found amply
sufficient for whatever crisis might
arise without calling upon the army as
»a umpire to settle any question of
contested right. This is the dominant
spirit of the letter. It is in symmet
rical consistency with the course of the
model soldier ot the republic. A true
soldier venerates the law as higher
than arms and he will always hold the
military subordinate to the civil pow->
er. In this is found the key-notelof Gen.
Hancock’s career. It gives assurance
to the American people that if the bal
let boxes of November should call him
safe to the Presidency the country will be
in bis hands and the relative
rights of the individual, the State, and
the union will take no detriment in
their Record respective spheres .—Philadelphia
Politicians may quibble and organs
may defame, but the people of every
faith believe in law and order and pop
uiar supremacy and the subordination
of the military to the civil power; and
hey will rejoice, regardless of their
purpose to favor or oppose Gen. Han*
cock’s election to the Presidency, that
he has thus bravely put our reckless
politicians to shame by his clear and
statesmanlike olucidation of the rights
and duties of pur civil and military
rniers. There win be no more taunt
ing Hancock’s inquhies about tbe latter* authors It will of Gen.
orders or not
be disputed acid be wrote tbe tbe blindest Sherman let'
ter, none but or atu
pideat of Garfield leaders will deny
that Republican folly campaign has brongbt docn- to
light tbe of most snpeib It will be read
meat tbe day. every
where, what is more important, every
Vs body will vital felly both understand Gen. Hancock it, an*. and
most to
8«^e*sSeld,. ever/bodv will .nnrove
downlrees and repairing buildings', to
tbe lucid interpretation of the relative
8 Utm of stateemanabip aLinister- and the
sword in maintaining and
%J!" government.-PA.^Am
. - ^ ^ mm
The Woman Wh© 18 .Not Particular
q 0 w jjere you will, you will seethe
woman who is not particular. It makes
Qot tte j ea8t of difference in the
world to her where she sits or what
ghe hg8 t0 eafc she ia nofc par ti C Qlar y
ifc makea no difference to her,
w B h 0 ; n *he coziest seat ts
0 f the best that
goioR Into a rai i road tra in the other
q entered this woman who is not
part ; cu i ar . S ho bad a child in her
armai j n the centre of the car were
fie veral vacant seats. Most persons £
woali hftve taken one of the . but
wben gentleman g with her, presum- F
ab]y hef uebaQdi inteJ t0 tbese
8eats tfae woma n replied: “Oh,
r> m f narticular | Henrv' 7 I’ll
8lt n „ ht d )wn bere '•• AnJ llown
sho 8at wilh ber ]£;0 ul8avojfdu _
oi not t0 me nlion the infant, into
tho balf 8eat b ,i lbe door . You 8ee
she wa8 „. t l rtioular . shc did „' t
mjnd tbat a , ad WM olread 7 in the
8ea , ebe dida . t mind tbat t 0 . tbirds
of her own body r eeted on that lady; im^
ahe dido -, m „.dtbattbe lady was
1}^^? sin i rffl ,;* £ .o. oh<» filin’ t mind thnt
baby ." a8 muthe * boD ° et
t
^jffjpn^ ® 1 .h^wasn’^nar/icnli^' a a * 8
^ . {) , w^sntpaiticular.
Particular.—“P artnerships dis
solved,” was the appropriate news
paper Harbor heading under which a Sag
Irishman inserted the follow
ing advertisement in the local news-*
paper : “Whereas mv wife, Mrs.
Bridget with McD.dlogb, herselt, is ‘again walked
away aud left me with 5
small children and her poor blind
mother, aud left nobodv else to take
care of tbe house and home, and I
hear has taken up with Tun Gullman
the lame tiddler, the same that was
put in the stocks last Easter for steaL;
mg Barney Doody’s game cock. This !
is to give notice that I will not ray
for bite or sup on her account, to man
or mortal, and that she had
never leave the marks of her ten toes
near my honse again.
1 atri c k McDall ogh.
WnTiTitr PPj •
I can truly say that I owe my pres
ent existence and happy restoration to
the hopes and joys of life, to the use
c f Warner's Sale Kidney and Liver
Cure, and I say to every one suffering
liom urinary any trouble, manner of “Use kidney, liver or
this remedy
aud recover.' W. E. Sanford.
HoUey, A, I Feb, lbSO.
ir x - T' k rr- *•
SAVANNAH, MONDAY, AUGUST 9, 1880.
A Speculative Scion.
Profitable Adventures of Ulysses S Grant, Jr —
The "Old Man’s'' Election to the Presidency of
the San Pedro Compassed by "Buck.”
General Grant’s election to the
P res *dency of a mining company is the
ou tcome of a long-planned scheme np
°° , p P ar ^ Ulysses Grant, Jr., or
Grant, as he is generally called,
° ^ uck a pd Grant 0De 18 cow twenty-eight most successful years
financiers of his age in this country,
talent in that direction has been
* u I brought out during the past two
J ear8# During the closing days of his
fathers , presidency he acted his pn
as
va te secretary. Grant doubted every
one about him when Babcock fell, and
would not allow any one but Buck to
bave access to his private papers. Buck
was at this time modest, smooth-faced,
medium-sized, slim in figure and very
b °7» h looking. His modeety and real
ability, however, made him many
Some powerful men in . New York
, up Buck when his father eet out
‘ or Europe. Young Ulysses, who is a
graduate of Harvard, thought that his
feture was tobe developed in the legal
profession. He was, after admission to
the bar assigned to duty in the United
States District Attorney 8 office, in New
There Secretary John Sherman
bas thrown special business in his way
Buck Grant, after accumulating a smal
ca P*^ 1 under influential and powerful
a ^ “ 8 P lces » began making ventures iu
a j t 8 * r .f e *• Ue succeeded so we.I
fbat he , abandoned the law for more
profitable fields of speculation. Be¬
coming interested, final y in mining
8fcocks » be paid a visit to the Pacific
°° ast . l he ®[ e, ‘ b ?“* nza 5 1 ™ °J
ood ^ P ^?| . en *’ 00 ^ ^ im under it
, Mr FI d t0E8ed B ok
» 1D * - ?° “ a
fs w points, . and be L made each good use
? , f them that tbe great speculators
backed the yonng Ulysses in bis cruise
aro ““ d the world of speculation, acting
a8 Tbe J?/ 8 n docile ^ eD ^ or pupil at every so point, made use of hie
8Wlf “' tr "TK ‘ h SL at ll ! e e ? d of t B0
year? he had t3°0,000 placed , to . ms
credit. It was only when this sum
was ?> ached ‘ hatt h ? ^ng man pro
P 08ed a matrimonial . alliance with the
gfe»t firm. Bock has now associated
with him annartner ^ his brother Jesse
B erant.
e c
ators in the country# Besides the for
tune he has made for himself he has
ma de several special speculations for
■bis father. Just before General Grant
went t( > Mexico he intrusted to Buck
|25,000 for the purpose of see
in 8 what courd be done with it. Buck
G«*nt, during the absence of his father
cleared for him from the capital some
$40,000; so General Grant upon his
return found a dispatch placing $65,
000 at his c «posal by his thrifty son.
With this profitable speculation
added to his credit, Gen. Grant’s worth
to-day in the neighborhood of $150,
000. This latest mining scheme of
Buck Grant’s, in placing his father at
the head of tbe San Pedro company,
18 based upon a plan of the youthful
Ulysses, t,o realize the wildest dreams
of a Monte Cristo. The union of tho
6 ra nt and Flood families is to be fol
lowed by an aggregation of wealth that j
will make tbe families among tbo most
formidable in point of influence in this
country. In 1834, il Gen. Grant
should again be a candidate, it is in
tended tbat there shall be no money
^ lacking for the management ^ of a sue
bHE ET lE0N Toav -~9 n n ® of fa Lhe
bes of ^on, . known in Europe,
^.. Qn ? ur P a Jf d * \ B Produced in
® n res ^ a .* S ‘ le8 I a Sheet iron may there
b e ° b tained ° f such a de S r ee of tenui.y
, . f it . be used for
can paper
h lu [ f L nT1ia i ^ J\hnm
h n f tbi A • i , a ,
L nfL'nln Qa rJfl f i wi
w
- n
t u D ° oK8 ma ^ £ ° me ume
[aL ^J 1 f t T . °? l
) oa aeiyin » rne h Q f cruc '
’ 7
Mip er n 01 antB aay coi or ov
* ° . i°.I , ce P s Tt* invention . ol (
f sn tabl a -. would, of course,
>
09 essential. f 01 the hnest sort, tne
machl ^ empl°yed rolls more than.
3e T, en t b °? 8aDd S ' daRre J ee ^, 0 j 9
C , 1 e af ir ° n , r0m a tundred P ouuJs
01 f metai ,
-
An Idea.-A _ new York doctor sai!e' d
for Europe the othar day, and wishing t°
mail several letters that he hadn’t had 1
t j me t0 writa before goiag 0Q board) j
wrote them hurriedly as the vessel went 1
down the bay, intending to give thenD
to the pilot when they got to Sandy
Hook. When he finished the letters
the pilot was gone, so he got a large
bottle from the steward stuffed the
letters into it, wrote a note asking the
finder to mail them, and threw th.
bottle overboard. The bottle was
washed ashore at Long Beach several.
mailed days afterward and the letters were
in Brooklyn.
A Princely Scandal,
A new scandal has arisen in Eng
land It is of old date, but of new
discovery, and is exciting much atten¬
tion. An English translation of a Ger
man book has just been published in
London, which purports to disclose the
secret marriage of the Duke of Clarence,
afterwards William IV., with Caroline
Von Linsingen, the daughter of Gen.
Von the book Linsingen, a German officer. In
is published the love letters
that, passed between them. These let¬
ters are said to have been discovered
among the literary remains of Baron
Reichenbach, who died in I860 He
was a man of great scientific attain**
ments, and pushed his investigations,
into the mystery of animal maguetism
further than any of his contemporaries.
How the letters came into his posses¬
sion we have not learned, but they are
said, to bear internal evidence of being
genuine. This secret marriage is said
to liave been divulged to George III.
and Queen Caroline, and raised a
storm. solved, it Although it was never dis¬
resulted in a separation under
influences similar to those that separat¬
ed Jerome Bonaparte from Elizabeth
Patterson some ten years later. Both
the Duke of Clarence and Jerome Bona¬
parte appeared to have acted through¬
out with equal meannesi. In this se¬
cret marriage with a German lady the
Duke of Clarence simply followed the
example of his elder brother George,
the Prince Regent, who was also se
cretly married to Mrs Fitzherbert, but
when confronted with the fact was base
enough to deny it. It is quite proba¬
ble that a third brother, tne Duke of
York, would have contracted a secret
marriage with Mrs. Clarke, with whom
be was for a Jong time infatuated, but
for the fact that he already had a wi f e
and she a husband. The loose moials
of the English Princes of that day were
notorious; but it is only now that it
has become know that he who was
called “the bluff sailor King,” and who
swore like a boatswain, was mairied to
Caroline A/on Linsinger, as his brother
George was to Mrs. hitzherbert, at the
very time when the one married Caro
lme of Brun^Yr! c k and the other anoth
er I Q these
should . call such marriages bigamous,
but with royal people '‘reasons of state”
are alleged, and such acta are discreet
ly covered up. Baltimore Bun.
What is a Liberal Education.
In an address recently delivered by
President Eliot, of Harvard, befoie
Smith College, at Noithampton. he
said :
“I 11117 ns well abruptly avow as the
usult of mv reading and observation
in the matter ot education, that I re¬
cognize hut the mental acquisition as
an essential part of the education of a
mdy or a gentleman, namely, an accu¬
rate and refined use of the mother
tongue. Greek, Latin, French, German,
mathematics, natural and physical sci¬
ence, metaphysics, history and aesthetics
are all profitable and delightful, both
as training and acquisitions, to him who
studies them witn intelligence and love;
hut be cot called one of them acquisition has the essential least claim j
to an to
a liberal education, or an essential part
Jasound training. .. A thorough know
‘^e 'ollege of one added or two to a ol very them obtained elementary in
Knowledge school, makee of several ot them obtained
>» a richer, stronger and
mor. Inartful mind han a enperuca
acquaintance with each and all of
hnoV
desire to learn—not knowledge, but
power.”
------
Tbe Pregb terian elder who whi q
his adopte d girl, while the eon Gom
th r i ck a b 0V e held the rope that bounds
her> 8aid in explanation that bis
meQt dictated what he did, and that
ho avowed no one to sauce him. “No
one is a pretty broad iffirase, anil if
the cold, calm judgment of tfiia rigor
ous man j 3 d i C f a ( e ^’ aat be
shall whale eveiybody who sauces him
those who are smaller than he is and
who have no whips should remain aloof
from his neighborhood J or sell out
fitock of sau e
________
George W. Williams, the colored
tne Ohio ll Legislature, ' a .from Hamilton at work county
m is on
a mstory of the colored race in Amer^
i ” t libraries^ 1 afd d 'himtell^nYhl hial3ei ‘ la the
Be Wise and Happy.
If you will stop all your extravagant
and wrong notions'in doctorin^
self and families with
or humbug cure-alls, that do harm simple
wav? and n=e onlv nutnre's
remedies for all your ailments— you.
will be wise, well and happy, and
great expense. The greatest remedy
tor this, the great, wise and good will
tell yb'ii, is Hop Bitters-rely oa u.
column.
Babbling Blaine.
Senator Blaine was the favorite can*i
didate of the anti-Grant Republicans
at Chicago. He sits in the Senate and
he has aspired to the Presidency of the
United States. Yet Senator Blaine
was not ashamed yesterday (Tharsday) :
to say this of the illustrious General
of the Union whom the Democratic
party has nominated to fill the office
which the Republican party at Chicago
pronounced Senator Blaine unfit to fill:
“General Hancock is the first man
that shed blood in the great war, but
he is rather ashamed of it—would
rather not have it mentioned. I
haye never heard that Washing¬
ton was ashamed of what he had done
for his country, or Jackson, or Grant,
but General Hancock in his letter of
acceptance says, if he says anything,
‘Don’t mention this, if you please; it
occurred over fifteen years ago and
should be forgotten.’ For myself, he
says, distinction, ‘although it is my only claim to
yet chance and accident
have thrown me into company where it
is disagreeable to have it mentioned.’ ”
Senator Blaine made this statement *
about a letter of acceptance in which
General Hancock distinctly says:
“The thirteenth fourteenth and
fifteenth amendments to the Constitu¬
tion of the United States, embodying
the resnits of the war for the Union,
are inviolable. If called to tho Presi¬
dency I should deem it my duty to
resist with all of my power any at¬
tempt to impair or evade the full
force and effect of the Constitution,
which in every article, section and
amendment is the supreme law of the
land.”
Is not the moral difference between
this sort of thing and the consent giv¬
en by General Grant, as McDonald al¬
leges, to raising a “campaign fund”
through favor a Whisky Ring decidedly in
of General Grant ?
The Coalition in Alabama,
The Republicans united with the
Greenbackers in Alabama at the eleo
tion of last Monday, and the coalition
wa8 badly beaten, as it deserved to be.
I n the North, the Garfield managers
seek vo t ea f or their candidate upon the
pretence that he is sound on the accept money
question ; while his letter of
ance ddlar p U t a a gold dollar and a silver
of 412 grains on the same level.
At the South, the Republicans are or¬
dered from headquarters to make com¬
mon cause with fhe Greenbackers, or
with any other faction, without regard
to profession or to principle. In Vir¬
ginia they are ready to go over to the
repudiators, and only wait for the op¬
portunity. made
This defeat in Alabama is more
significant by the fact that Mr. Wea¬
ver, the traveling candidate of the
Greenbackers, had gone there to ad¬
dress pub'ic meetings. He was under
the delusion that his followers had a
pioipect of carrying the Slate, because
one corner of it had hitherto been in
fe ted with his financial ideas.
The first experiment in combining
Ga*field men and Weaver men i3 not
encouraging for like enterprises in the
future, and Mr. Chairman Jewell, who
8 oe f aboat scattering the election lurid,
arbitrarily assessed at two per cent, and
upward on the salaries of a hundred
thousand office-holders, will hardly be
a P‘“ «P aa ‘ ‘>• UBle “ he m0riey
a
... diaaoDear ”ieei
‘
aa a ^> a ' d “> *me ele 7 t i„ A he “, e ‘ raa
‘ o?heir^ori.iSal ( nar'tv nreTer ,
t ck t
will perhaps st.ive hope to maintain an or
ganization, in tbe of getting stray
seats in Congress or in State Legisla
tures.-iY Y Sun.
-' -
The Highest Jump on Record.—
Ireland w, hear the startling
news that P. Davm, at the Carrick-on
Suir sports on Monday, July 5, suc
ceeded in clearing the unprecedented
height of 6 feet 21 inches and there
393 ms no reason to doubt the authen*
ticity of the feat. It was done openly,
and appears to have been correctly
measured, The ground, too,was teeted
a spirit F level, so that he evidently
had D0 u nd ue advantage in tbe taking
off from a height. The crose-bar was
an inch square and perfectly V straight,
He the b r once only, and
tbat at q f ee t 21 inches.— Bell’s Life
- n Xondon.
Courtesy for Courtesy.— It is
stated in the London Echo that the
writing table which the Queen com¬
manded to be made out of the timbers
of the Resolute has been finished, and
will short.y be presented to the Tresi
of the Umied States as a memo
rial of the courtesy and loving kmd
ness which dictated the offer of the
Resolute.” Tne tnbD, it i3 said; will
firm a part of the p-rmauent furniture
the White Honse. The Resolute was!
an Arctic expiGi iuj. -hip abandoned in
the Polarbut siibs q 1. ntly found
end rertored to the Britiab Gov
by the United States.
PRICE THREE
ro Business Cards*
JAS. McGINLEY,
CARPENTER,
YOftK STREET, second door oast of Bull.
Jobbing promptly attended to. Estimates
furnjataed when iieslred. Jel l-Orn
BEjr, VEAL AMD LAMB.
JOS. H. BAKER,
BIiTOHEB,
STALL No. 6(1, Savannah Market.
A -Wj other meats in their season at lowest
.XX. market rates. Orders promptly tilled
and delivered. him Will victual ships throughout.
Give a trial. OC 81-tf
___
ANDERSON NTBEET MARKET
And >ic E H ouse,
~T F. PHILLIPS, Butcher, and dealer In al
tl • Produce. kinds of Meats, Kish, Poultry and Mar¬
ket 8®- .Families supplied at their
residences, and dispatch. all orders Satisfaction executed with
promptness and guar¬
anteed. ap(> fine
j C. A. COBT1NO,
Stir CutUne, Bair Mu, Cirliu ud
SHAVING SALOON.
HOT AND COLD BATHS.
166t A l Bryan street, cpposlt# tho Market, un
der Flallter8 , Hotel. Spanish, Italian, Ger
man .•and English spokon. selH-tf
- T- *m - — — !- ... ....... - - — —
i W. B. FERRELL’S Agt.
RESTAURANT,
1 No. 11 New Market Basement,
(Opposite Llppman’s Drug Store,)
I an Util SAVANNAH. GA
Plu mbing and Qas Pitting.
CHAS. E. WAKEFIELD,
Plumbing, Gas & Steam Fitting,
No. 48 BARNARD STREET, one door north
ol South Broad treet.
Bath Tube. Water Closets, Boilers, Ranges,
Jobbing Promptly attended to.
ebll Also, Agent of “ BACKUS WATER MOTOR;
*->
McELUNN & McFALL,
PLUMBING AND GAS FITTING.
Na.46 Whitaker street, corner York st.. Lane
N.B. Houses fitted with gaB and water at
short notice. Jobbing promptly attended to
and all work guaranteed, at low prices.
nepTtl
W. H. C 0 SGK 0 YE,
East side of Bull street, one door from York,
Practical Plumber and Gas Fitter
JOBBING PROMPTLY ATTENDED TO.
AU work guaranteed to give satisfaction.
AS- Prices to suit the times. mli7tf
Paints, Oils and Glass.
J»HN Oil TL ER,
Wholesale and Retail Dealer in
WHITE LEADS COLORS, OILS, GLABIS,
VARNISH, ETC.
Ready Mlxod Paints, Railroad. Steamer and
MU LMnpplies. Bole Agent for Georgia Lime
Plaster. i 'ni oinea Planter, No. 22 Drayton Cements, Htreet, Hair aud Land
janldtf HA VANN AH. GA.
ANDREW HANLEY,
—Dealer In—
Ooois, Suites, Blinds, Mouldings
Lime, Plaster, Hair and Coment,
STEAMBOAT,
Railroad and Mill Supplies,
paints, oil*, varnishes, glass, ac.
No. 6 Whitaker & 171 Bay St.,
SAVANNAH. QKORGIy]
rav2ft-t.f
JOHN OLIVER.
— Dealer in —
Steamboat, Rail Hoad and Mill Supplies,
PAINTS, OILS, GLASS, &c.,
ooobb, sashes, Blind*, moulding
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No. 5. whuaker st.,
SAVANNAS, GEORGIA
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