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DAILY, *4* [V EVENING *| 5 I 1 *| ? !* m? a ? 4 -
i •' • Savannah Aj $M^k I s||§ X iV i V ■ r . ECORDER.
"*K y
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* «.. .- V.-> .4 -rfU*.
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VOX. IV.—No. 113.
1 —- -
THE SAV1NNIH RECORDER
R M. ORME, Editor.
1 rmilSRRD 1 ? 'fill EVJLRY 1- EVENING, i
s J S k !
(Saturday Excepted,)
At 194 BAY STREET.
By J. 8TJBB&.
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' rf~.rn f, n
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Post Office in Savannah as Second Class
Matter.
I ------------ -—---------- f ----
rr; n» r V *« ■ ■ ■ ... ..... .... > ------- ■ ' ■ — ■ ■ ■ •
f , Xriuittpli t»f Dr. Tanner.
He Completes the Fortieth Day of His Fast—A
Large Qrowd and Much Excitement—The
Fester • Loudly Cheered —He Eats a Peach
Drinks a Glass of Milk and then Attacks a
i r'?
■ Georgia Watermelon, <$c.
Dr.’ H. S. Tanuer successfully com
pleted his fast of forty days in Claren¬
don Hall, New York, at noon Satar->
day.
whistles sounded the hour of
cheer went up horn a crowd
wRich had gathered before the hall in
rpu- Thirteenth i *U street,, . , Dr. rt Tanner.on m , ILe. .
l»*v4Sg>«d. atife-ro*,. mads an empVaV l-j gesture glad
»V>‘r7fle “It's over n«a m
.Jtidi then reached for jo pesch,
W «1 h > 8 etchers could inter
pose, began to eat it. H. finished the
fruit and then walked to to the large
had, where he was greeted with oud
eheers. At the same same time a live
ly air was played upon the piano. En
tering the mclosnre Dr. Tanner seated
froi^Dr. filled wfth Wark milk. » He lager swallowed heerjUss its
ZhZa with great emphasis, emnhSs "Cfs lhats Tod good 1 “
The crowd again applauded loudly,
•and renewed the applatw.when some
Xckv Docto“rV 66 Che °”
P r? ky m Tanner 1 “Cut „ the
Dr. then , said: •,
Georgia watermelon.” The melon a
hog. one, was then brought to h.s feet
and cut open by Dr. Foil,tzar Dr.
Tanner uttered a grunt of satisfaction
as he saw the ripe .luscious interior ol
thefinit, and immediately attacked it
with gr..Urel.sh, eaung pieces of it as
betook them up in his fingers. He
was who again loudly amuij, vueexcu. cheered. Soon hj«-vxu after- met
w«d it was announced that Dr. Tao
»B«ri‘was about to leave the hall, which
was then slowly cl awed of spectators,
Dr. Tanner eat three pieces of the
melon each about as large as a man’s
fist. He swallowed the juice, but not
the pulp, which he purposely ejected.
; At 12:15 resting upon the arm of
•Dr< Gunn, Dr. lanner eitected his pas
B age through the crowd, descended the
stone steps of Clarendon Hall amid
T*- Outs and enthusiastic demonetru
tints of the spectators, and was
into the carnage. Drs. Gunn,
Ketley and a lady entered quickly and
the party was driven toward Union
square, he people following, waving
their hats and shouting. Alter arriving
at tha r^idence of Dr. Gunn, in East
Dr. Tanner went
directly to bis room and rested a few
minutes before taking anymore food,
At d o clock a beefsteak, nicely broiled,
of the weight of half a pound, wire
eeived at his room, and .he ate the
whole of it, ejecting portions of the
fibre, and drank, besides, a little milk,
ile then passed an hour in conversation
with tbe doctors, and finally lay down
lor an hour or two. At seven o’clock
he masted upon hawng apotber steak
•#n%tr “A of find ^uicy siYloio
weighing halt a pound was accordingly
).oi ed and set- betoi!>e him.
» s» at« to the I n rnoraeh ejecting
t the fibie.
po. tiousot Meanwhile, he
uad aliovdy insisteu upon having some
apples. Dr. Guun objected to this,
Dr. W ark silenced the objection with
the rema k that Dr. Tanner could
’gest- paving stones. This settled
■ oontroversv, and, tbe fruit having been
pared, quartered and cored, the Doctor
^ minute*. ate tour apples Iu in the course of fifteen
order to stimulate digee -
tioh he was given dating the
in teeapoontul .doses, four ounces of
Hungarian wiue of the best quality
SAVANNAH, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 11, 1880.
The Public Thieves.
| To be Fu'.ly Uncovered by Gener.il John lit
Donald—General Grant’s Personal Complicity
in the Revenue Thefts Established—Campaign
Funds.
In a room at the Linde!, St LdoU,
with scrap-books piled up all around
him, and a trunk full of letters,
v- h.m, n General itu John Air McDonald, rt ,,
by a couple of eecretar-es, is trying
; h,8ky nng
“I shall put nothing in that won’t
be clinched before and behind with
p " at be di8fUt9d '" ““ ,he
“No, sir; no guilty man escapes in
this book. I have been from the bot
tom to the top. round by round, of the
political ladder of my party and I
found the office-holders purchasable
almost without exception Unfit I admit
that I was corrupt, was for parfv
office-holders, a'l’fS' and I don t propose ‘ han 0lb f to
bang my head whtle they bold u r
'
i,t I never „„ i- bed . to . Grant n , .. continued ,• i
warming him up on the subject. “He
The 80 .dlinUtra“on 7
partment fully was
when cognizant of the frauds. In 1871,
the movement to secure Grant a
second term took form, I was called
east and had a conference with lead
ing men of the party, Grant's friends
in Congress and in the cabinet. I was
ZrLTcomposed Kansas, of Indian Mis^ori: « '
sas, Texas, Territory
and New Mexico. They knew what
had been done through the internal
revenue department to raise money in
former campaigns and they fixed upon
S£™EF’?k: what'w S wantodflud o Sr
deratand as Ibame
back here and made all the arrange
ments. Then I went to Washington
-"*< oiiwtwi $ni' J pvpr***h”>«s.-«aR- 8 bnoooeg fthd?
ub thv i0 s e D .
airtt him with tbe deta ;i 8 , and
Babcock would see that we hud im
munity f rom interference by the and Com- the
miasionor of Inl6rnal Kevenne
Xreaau Departme nt“ Washington
„ I( . wa8 recogniaed at
a8 a Tes part y The mea8U re be raiaed
„ monay wa8 t0
lor 8eoariDg Grant a renomination and
a 9acond term . Thoy a!1 knew it;
of what WftS going 0D , but begged not
t0 kMW dataiu that he might slip out
#f ° ffi ° e aad inl0 WlU ‘ *.P BW
conscie nce, if ., possible. Rogers knew
it aa Well aa Avery Does any sane
man imagine 8Uch a rin g would have
»een m0Dtb organized tbe and run mouth of after the
wlthout connivance
adminislra , 10n at Washington ? Com
)i7e , 8maU , nm9 went here and
there for busb money and bribery, lint
the great bulk was for tbe Republican
csm aig „ fund and did g0 in that di
rocti on iat least until after Grant's re
a ] ec tion. Men who wouldn t have
cketed tbe spoils, perhaps for private
^ ’ ehut their eye8 ^ to it a s a party
m measure. rp *>
_. _ _
The movement in behalf of home rule
• Q ana .] a geem8 to be rapidly gaining
6 poS'takeL tr e ncth It is proposed to organize a
field
ant j wace a' vigorous canvass in the ‘
^sttminld next election The 'upon principle L of the Za- par
tional currency; no importation o!
English workmen at government land ex
pense : no Chinese labor ; no mo
nopolies ; no grants ot land by gov
ernment to companies; a protective
tariff ; raw material to be
f ree ; a graduated income tax and
mortgage to pay taxes on property agitation
the amount of his claim. The
now going on in favor of these princi
p i e8 and of an organized effort to make
them successful is general throughout
th 0 Dominion.
— m m* *
Nothing tries a man’s honesty so
much as the possibility of perquisites, office
When Audley, who held
Charles 1., was asked the estimate
value of a new appointment, his
was: “It may be worth some
ands of pounds to him who, after hie
death, would instantly go to heaven;
twice as much to him who would
to purgatory, and nobody knows how
much to him who would'adventure
goto hell." The change in public
offices has not been very great
that time to this.
---• • •
Philadelphia bas the largest
ber of churches of any of the
of the United States—434; New
Y'ork comes next witL 354, Brooklyn
follows with 240 , and all other cities
bare less than 200 each. Boston
one chmch to 1,450 tfiha&tants; New
Yorlr one to 2,500, Buffalo one to 1,-
675, Cleveland one to 1,450,
one to 1,600 Providence has one
1,300. '
'to .
procurable in this market. At 9 o’clock
Saturday evening he had retired to his
couch, saying that he felt like a bee“
hive all over, and there was not a gia n
of tissue in him that was not at
He*should "be able, he said, to take a
walk about the city or attend to any
business to-day.
DR. TANNER YESTERDAY—HE GAINS
POUR POUNDS IN SIX HOURS.
Dr. Tanner spent a quiet day yester¬
day, and saw very few visitors, His
physicians say he is improving as well
as can be expected after such a long
fast. During the early part of the
morning he chewed half a pound of
beefsteak, retaining only ti e juice, and
partook of some milk toast and red
Hungarian wine. Shortly before noon
he ate half a pound of beefsteak and
some potatoes which had been stewed
in milk. He was then weighed, and
he turned the scales at 126 pounds.
About every hour he partook of some
nourishing food or drink, which in¬
cluded watermelon, milk, potatoes
stewed in milk, Bass’s pale ale, beef
tea, bread and wine. About 6 o’clock
his weight was again taken, and was
found to be 130 pounds. He was quite
lively to-day, and frisked about his
room like a echoolboy. His physicians
say bis rapid recovery is something
remarkable.
They Missed the Boy After All.
Jack was not a bad boy, but he was
a terrible mischievous one, and his
parents really felt relief at the thought
that he was to statt for boarding
school the next day. His father
thought had used so when he found that Jack
his razor to whittle a kite
stick. He thought so again when he
discovered that Jack’s ball had gone
through tbe parlor window. Jack’s
mothsr thought so when she found
muddy footprints all over the parlor
carpet and a great ecar on the piano
leg. They both thought so when their
chat at the supper table was inter¬
rupted by whistling and upsetting of
the milk pitcher, and they fold Jack
ao, when, after having driven almost
wild his father, who was tr 7 ln K to ^ ea 4 ,
iba figlrt ,, vepw'"'’**:r- Between the dog , and cat, T iT he 1 " aat :
down on h.s mother a new bonnet she
had just Early been the fixing, and utterly rum- Jack
ed it. next morning
was packed off Oh! what a rehef
from noise and trouble it was. His
fathers razor remained nnd.sturbed,
no sound of break og glass was heard,
the parlor carpet wasi unstained by
mnd. But senrehow, the bouse d.dn t
along,uay. whistling lea was and servetE lueie
was no upsetting of
but btu t .h etaikdidnt talk dTd7t s^Vto seem to run run so so
smoothly after all. And when it came
to reading the evening paper and fix
Z -t sZt slept ft °sZnsly se enely on on As toe heafth-rug Ueartn rug,
and no disturbance interrupted he
proceedings. That s the difference be
ween having a boy m the house and
having him away, and the gentleman
put down bis paper and remarked as
much to h.s w. te, when lie noticed a
quiverings drops ou her er cheeks on and an, ivo
tog kind on about his tuere
was a of mistiness eyes
that bothered*him about seeing. “Yes,”
she answered; 'it—w mce—and— • „ j
quiet; uh, uh, oo-u-n 1” and he got up
and went to the window and looked
out., and blew his nose for twelve min
utes steadily.__
Hancock OU Ills Letter.
J have, it is true, very definite
views—clear to my own miud, at least
-Itipon both the topics you submit,
(Frej ships and free trade), and I
trust upon others which concern the
country’s welfare. It was not without
deliberation that I concluded
they had no proper place in the letter
j u which I accepted the great honor
conferred on me by a great party. Two
considerations prevailed :
First.-That a letter of acceptance
was not the right medium through
which to announce my final judgment
upon any great quesliou depending and for
its solution upon future legislation
careful executive review.
Second.—That I had no right to mar
the present situation of the party by a
set of expressions superfluous to its
adopted platform of principles, with
which, as I said before, I am in full
accord.— New York Herald Cones -
pondent.
—----
Be Wise and Happy.
If you will stop all your extravagant
a ud wrong notions in doctoring your
self and families with expensive doctors
q j- humbug cure'alls that do harm
ways, and use only nature's
iciuedies for all your happv. ailments—you
w iH be wise, we’l and and
Tor a rea t expense. The greatest remedy
this the great, wise and good will
another'columu. tell you, te Hop Bitters—rely oq it. See
1 _ -m ■ m ^
Tbe completed census of Brooklyn
gives that city a populatic . of
au increase of S4,446 since 1875.
Depraved Woman!
There it goes again. A nephew of
ex-Governor Hunt, of Colorado, kills a
j gambler from New York in a dance
hall at Albuquerque. Charles Hunt,
a gambler, shot and killed another
gambler. The papers say that there
| Si thes f two B™
, woman.
g ' be is ona b • ° , 00 ixe ' U P. ° Y
noble ui animal - , man, ™ when , , he lower
is ££ in
h<) scale ofIife ^ h
h<5r , victi A h , had
i b : cZinir^^ by a mau ' f T hei ho
e S 0Sal P o
“ . , . b!oo , dIea ‘. Lere
6 8 are ‘
»rr eSre 0 r a:r h , nlon: , lD g 8 o“:
b g a nd g
" °L j 51 ?* " ,’ 8 , a ™ ? tim th r'," wbo fr b ? ?“ the u
be fc , ^ tb ,“A , f/ for ,toh ? ’, ' 3 et ” ”'T, n ' 1 " d bo i bel “«
L, i,“'“ ' hTJ r „ G v.L , De ?7 " r o de S P rav r T” <A ! ? They U “ are k
’
, n
'ove to unfortunates whose nature” to
t0 sorceboJ wlj0 are tbrown
in m hell by the religious element; who
have no society to enter Srtve th*t of
the wild and fearful ; who do openly
sTX VT as
a pro ;“ boD i wh » Iive ”P®» “«». » b «
SUto ,. e a'k d«S5ST ^ ’
vu The world is full of
'
"llu" „ 7 - ir i * . 5,® , 8 a PP? r t ed
-
Rl ® ?Lei ^ S . P '’‘‘V, . . 08
' !
&?'; M „ 1 d'^ravef ,t S
t. ^and « »P“'r « "°»»7
supported by that noble am
n fl1 .
TulmnJ ‘ Um' me nn • ^ , m . ®
n .
by gent | emen> therefore” doubt"the
ly ^ 1° Uhl' e H ® "°‘! ]rth ra of , Fpme 0116 bas useless , in '
-"A -
Henry J Ben brook, 1 ^ a dealer in J game, ,’ re*-
3i(li ■;? at Rarita N- j h mc eed .
ed raising young qua Is, an opera
lion that has been tried in the United
Sllltea repeatedly, but which hitherto
has /ured proved futile Four years ago he
ca[ two Morris county quails, the
female being \ lowland and the male
bi Z, hl>nd . T e female laid twenty-four
e lba first year , but could not be
rndacea to sot The second year Mr.
wa8 done with the birds. The third
year female made its nest, laid
«««•«•«». »!*« ten days,
died. The male bird then sat on the
e r an( t , ix qna il, were hatched. They
wc re a 1 raised Thei by Benbrook and are
8[llI i.vi,^. young quails began
l ay / j, lg oa May 21 last, and up to July
3 have laid 103 eggs, “A hut they show
no sigrj3 ° of 8 cU i DR b yot 7 . Sime of
tbe were si.'of p , a ed „ der a bantam
chicken, and them hatched, and
the quails i are alive to-day. This ex
peri e nt of raising young quails ha
been undertaken by ? game societies all
over , bo world y ar8 , but this is
the first! ime anv ^ one his succeeded Z so
iar the record shows .—New York ,
as
7 -
^ . ‘-----——
-----
A Novel Proposition.—A fashion
able Boston tailor has hit upon a novel
plan of gratifying his customers with
as many suits of clothes as they may
feel inclined to wear at a very large
reduction from fashionable prices. He
offers to supp.y three suits a year for
SHT, four suits foi 8142, five suits for
$162, while for $200 per annum he
will agree to let them have as many
suits of clothes as they may choose to
wear, the old suits to be returned, and
customer to have tne privilege of
suits at a time. Under the hrst
three propositions^ cost of eachsu.t
would be $o9, $odjO and $G.:oOie
.the customer, retaining the
clothes, under the last proposition
^ customer may have ten or morel
suits a year at a cost of $20 or less for
each suit, ou the simple condition °f
exchanging tbe suits that have been
worn for new ones.
T • ~~
. expedition ... . a to
1 9 e antiquarian Se ^’ L ;
^- Loril.ard.of ex ‘ co ^der New the York, joint auspicies and the French of Jir. ,
j government, to exp.ore tne rums of j
i
temp.es and other imposing structures
that were bui.t by races wnose very
are now passed away, basal
teadv gone to wor^, by permission of
fbe Mexican leader of govermnen. expedition, .M. Coarney, has been
: t:;e tue
i causing exv.ava,.jn= to l.- ma_.e D.ear
the volcano of Popocatapeti, and has;
already unearthed from an Indian
cemetery on that mountain copper idols
copper trinkets, vases of graceful forms
beautifully painted, toys .One-third for children, of
and many jars and pots.
the articles found are, by agreement,
to be turned over to the Mexican gov
ernment. Photographs of these relics:
have been taken, and are already on;
f their way to New Y”ork and Paris.
A Cliauge Needed.
The jury system is evidently out of
aw; is tr When
not the institution for to-day.
first instituted, the solemn verdict of
twelve “good men and true” was con¬
sidered, and very naturally so, as the
fair exponent of public sentiment, and
that to prevent verdict any possible partisan be unani¬ bias,
The was intent required to of the
mous. was, in view
condition of eoc ety then obi? ; ning, aa
perfect as ^uman reason could make it;
but the times have changed, and the
people Unanimity have changed with them.
is now at a discount, and
peraaps very properly so, for unanimir
therefore, ty now generally means unconcern;
abolish the without jury any attempt wise to
system, it seems
that it should be reformed, remodeled
and practically adjusted to the ueeds
of the period. There is no magic in
the number “twelve,” and it has the
disadvantf ge of being susceptible of an
equal division; yet it would not be
expedient, in our judgment, to change
the number of tbe panel. There is,
however, an easy solution of the diffi-,
culty in the change of function or
privilege; by allowing a fixed rate of
majority to rule. To allow a mere
majority this power would be to place
in the power of a seventh man just
the same corrupt advantage which is
now possessed by the average “sticker,”
the one man who defeats the whole
intent of a jury trial. Judge Briggs
has suggested of that would a majority of nine
out the twelve meet the case.
It seems probable that it would. ,At
any rate it is worth the experiment,
for as at present coestituted a trial by
is in many cases merely a matter
of bargain and sale, and as such in*
to public morality.— Philadel¬
North American.
F ® u " dDe ^ w »do* f* of Water ‘
’ M
D el., A communication j from Wilmington,
signed by a %i VSstirTftP
member of the clnb, had
?f u ppn < oim refine d dead wa“ in a field As Po“ soon
t h e B „” fioiahed Col
and began unbidden Misssr
° ba ‘ r ““j De - tear leaps Information to a'
“ 7 y *j da aad CmUrom dat “rth
0 der B ™ a „ ha3
R r ndderBvWester was a
a “ widoutt "B a »iude Tones Mt He was
P rudde T r will plswetot !
„ b on’SSibiA I furnish a eetle more
de soffitTcoloreTmL deceased for many lone “Sme v’are.
H “Zf e f‘“ P 7 HewSn’t m“ as
0 3 any trn
‘^^^ iv _ 00(1 dan anv ^ odder ^ uusson Fact
tin^s 0 1
S “wVs foA' au’ none In too g lie'i m
dead a Keep
on dat He wa3 fouu’ dead
field ! i au’iest T J andies” hellin' h„u was a bag
waTa aZnuZn rI e u 8 Dafl i li™ font o'him
wSHsTmi D*r, ^de he wa3
,°“ TfX “ V Zd,t trooly
Xlnehontd d a „ be , a Iae
speak ill el de dead but
“* d ; s club v'T am Te.T no Duffin' Abbes cuchioe to kiver
U P m f n f V bVh kin
work , looked r tor • n Congress, an r .
° is in
am . ri t taken „u r , tor f nr wlmt v nat ids n swum, wntb uei Let it 11
oe understood, i‘(.*v an foreber dat
a#y member of this club w 10 gi s m
fron ^ °^ a 8 P nn 8 R au a me ou P a r: >
house doah, am not not gw.ne g e t o heTulo! - u t0
g'^ed heah a= a hero who, lost his , o e
^menTptuk - • p
01 aekja - , f djeirou n . j. p ,te x/es*.
^ Happy Restoration.
j can truly say that I owe my pres
existenct ; an d h^ppy restoration to
h h l cd V joy. of life, to the use
f Wa rner - j- S Sa Kidney and Liver
Cur0 and to eve on0 fluff6riog
trom acy maaner of kidney, liver or
urinary J trouble, “Use this remedy
ftnd re oyer •• W . E. Sanford.
Jfolfo, v ’ y Y. ’’ Feb °5 1880
The population of down our whole 49,000,0l)0. coun
may now beset as
The church edifices are estimated tobe
sufficient to seat 2-5,000,000; buf on an
average Snnday probably less than 15,
ooo.OUO are found in these places of
worg j- ^Lowing 12,000,000 to be
detained at their homes, we yet have
JS 000 000 ’ or more than one-third of
the na ; ioD an d these of sufficient age
aR( ^ abiiitv who do not habitually meet
f or worship hut devote themselves to
some thing quite alien from worship.
Pieasance Louisa inglo, a nurse in
Qj-gy’o Hospital, London, has been con
victe j 0 f m^Uofthtei Mrs. Meyer
a patient, g-tve Nurse Inglo some
trou ble, and was dragged ouvof bed to
a co ^ bath, from the effects ot which,
sfae
Father O tel, ^ a Cithohc priest . at St.^
Louis, offici ates with the badge of a'
police.s-rg-aut on bis hr »st, ao asto
be quiiiiicu lo when tbe ?
niaae arrests,
roughs interrupt the services, *
PRICE THREE CENTS.
Business Cards*
1 JAS mcginley,
-
A T 3 pTr'INTr JojJJN J— i llirp l. C
—Laj-L J lu
YOItK STREET, second door east of Bull.
! Jobbing promptly attended to. Est j imate*
furnished wbeli desired. fell,-{tip
BEEF, VEAL AND LAMB.
JOS. H. BAKER,
BUTCHlEi,
STALL No. 66, Savannah Market.
A LL other meats in their season at lowest
*cjl market rates. Orders promptly filled
knd delivered^ Will victual ships throughout.
4NDERS0N STREET MARKET
AND ICE HOUSE,
fLl ,T F .PHILLIPS, kinds of Butcher Fist, .and dealer in al
ket -- Produce. Meats, Families Poultry and Mar¬
residences, and all orders supplied at their
promptness and dispatch. executed with
Satisfaction jtjjhar
C. A. CORTINO,
lair Cutting, Bair Dming, Curling ul
SHAVING SALOON.
HOT AND COLD BATHS.
i der 166% Planters’ Bryan street, opposite the Market, uu
Hotel. Spanish, Italian, Ger
man. and English spokon. nelS-tf
W. B. FERRELL’S Agt.
RESTAURANT,
No. II New Market Basement,
(Opposite Lippman's Drug Store,)
lanlStf SAVANNAH. GA
S5S!“
Plumbing and Gas Fitting*
~
CHAS. E. WAKEFIELD,
Gas & Steaiji Fitting,
48 BARNARD STREET, oue door north
ot South Brood treet.
Beth Tube, Water Clokets, Boilers,Range*,
Jobbing Promptly attended to.
Agent of “ BA ckUB WATER MOTOR.
LII I N III * «■'»■
Whitaker street, corner York st. Lan»
N.B. House* fitted with gas and water at
all uotico, work guaranteed, Jobbing promptly prices. attended to
at low
gep'7tl
W. H. COSGItOVE,
side of Bull street, one door from York,
Practical Plumber and Cas Fitter
J0BBINB PROMPTLY ATTENDED TO.
AH work guaranteed to give satisfaction.
kSf Prices to suit the times. mh7tf
Paints, Oils andQlass
ToirNGTHUTLEuT
Wholesale and Retail Dealer in
LEADS COLORS, OILS, GLASS,
VARNISH, ETC.
Mixed Paints, Railroad, .Steamer and
.Supplies. .Sole Agent for Georgia Lime
Plaster, No. 22 Drayton Cements, Hair and Land
janietf havannah. street, ha.
.
ANDREW HANLEY,
—Dealer in—
Sulies, Blinds, Mouldings
Lime, Plaster, Hair and Cement,
STEAMBOAT,
and Mill Supplies,
paints, oils, varnish es, glass, &o.
No. 6 Whitaker & 171 Bay St.,
GEOltGlr
OLIVER.
— Dealer in —
Rail Road and Mill Supplies,
PAINTS, OILS, GLASS, &c.,
SASHES, ISLIND8, MOULDING
Balusters, Blind Trimminqs, &o.
No. 5. WlitiAKER ST.,
VANNAB, GEORGIA
HOSTETTERs
*
9 -
k
fj
*JCV,
Biff Iff 5
Defensive Medication
Ik * pseeautlon which should never be neg¬
lected when danger is present,and therefor*
» course of the fet'l' cs at this season is par¬
ticularly desirable, e-specially for the feeble
a imI sidkiyi XA* n eo^rty J ir^lliouKDesK. dys
pepKia, iut'-oU' -p'sc an I bowel complaint*,
ttvere 1* nog comparable to this whole
some restore live
For .-ale b> all druggUta and dealers eene
rftliy. aul-tf