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VOL IV.— Na 115.
r
THE SAVANNAH RECORDER
R. M. ORME, Editor. -
PUBLISHED E7EET EVEN1N&, L
(Saturday Excepted,)
tlGl 33. STRBBTi
By J. STUB#.
Tbe Recorder is served to subscribers, In
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ters of interest solicited.
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twelve months a liberal reduction from oui
regular rates will be made.
All correspondence should be addressed Re¬
corder, Savannah, Georgia.
The Sunday Morning Rroordkr will take
tne pxace ol the Saturday evening edition
which will make six fall issues for the week.
*rWe do not hold ourselves responsible for
the opinions expressed by Correspondents.
Ihe Recorder is registered at the
Post Office in Savannah as Second Class
Matter.
Census Oddities.
A Mormon Doctor Makes Several Statements.
Washington. August 10.—Outside
of the regular work of the census bu
reau, such as the actual enumeration of
population, the Mty$*|oahle portion
of.cbe work of the bureau is collection
of information upon all topics of value
to the political ecpnoipfbfc.,This Staff informa
tion is jf*®**> df spa
cia a reputation of
sta%<$atd M authority-op the branches as
signed him. These gentlemen gather
their information thrpugh a well de
vised system of circulars containing a
W
gWnmtqm-rrK-™. . ®1 odt thew
circulars, and although the work is one
that requiresosrej.attention, difficulty and time,
there is no apparent in ob
taming replies from all localities. In
Btances returaeA are xetSTWo Ows-man ^b#re circulao'i the
are sent back
circulars, with a postal card simply
announcing : , “There is no money in
This card barbeen framed, and
is one of the ornaments of the main
office. Some of the replies sent in are
amusing. The agent who has charge of
cdlsotiog statistics of the insane has
sent out mroulars to every physician in
the United States asking them to re
port to the Cfrpeus office all cases of in
sane, persone known to them out of
affylttm, and the causee of the same
where they are obtainable.
A certain English physician, who is
a f _J£omon, practicing circular in Utah, him, has in
sent to
addrested a long letter to the census
office. He has made out a list ot all
1 his acquaintance who are
nd who art., ahtside the
asylums, enumerating President Hayes,
his Cabinet, Congress, General Walker,
and all believing Gentiles who refuse
to accept the doctrines of Mormonism.
He then proceeds to make an elaborate
^rgumept in ffivor of Mormonism, in
whiChikh aaya: “ Now you officials at
Washington have more wives tbaa the
average Mormon. Ihe only diflerence
hetween us is that we support all our
vlifel and children, having no more
wives than we can properly suppoit,
while you officials quarter your brevet
wives upon tbe Government and shirk
a'l responsibility for your misbegotten
offspring. We are to-day a more
really moral people than you, iu every
sense of the word. We, tbe Mormons,
are the only sane people in the world.”
The doctor then consumes numerous
pages in giving his history and English
practice. He gives his full address
aud adds, if anyone should desire his
valuable services, all he needs to do
will be to telegraph.
Be Wise and Happy.
If you will stop all your extravagant
and wrong notions in doctoring, your
and families with expensive doctors
or humbug cure-alls, that do harm a 1 -
ways, and use only nature's simple
iex*«4iev for all your ailments—you
will be wise, well and happy, and save
great expense. The greatest remedy
tor this, the great, wise and good will
tell you, ioHop BiUera—roly on it. See
another column.
The m present . Pooe w iael* , , acutely . ,
j lack of means, and has don* all h* can
to reduoe expenses. Th* Vatican it
*elf J dreadful incubus.
keep o00 staircases and 13,000 rooms
merely from going to pieces requires
large revenue. Imagine what it would
be to have to maiutaiu 000 furnished
city houses of 20 rooms.
SAVANNAH, FRIDAY, AUGUST 13, 1880.
fir..:’ •
Tanner’s Task.
fie Proves the Doctors to be as Ignorant as
Other Men.
ii Hew Ton, August 10,-Dr. T,n
ner’e first intention was to take neither
food nor water for the space of foity
days, but he was persuaded finally to
take water, and drank copiously during
the first two days. When the second
day expired he decided not to take
water for the remainder nf his fast, and
went on without food or water until
the expiration of the tenth day. At
this time his sufferings had become so
terrible to witness that his physicians
were sometimes moved elmost to tears.
He was constantly calling for wet cloths
to be placed upon his forehead and wet
sponges in his hands. But the surface
abBorption was not sufficient for the
puipose. The last day—the eighth in
all of abstinence from drinking—he
was evidently on the verge of delirium,
evinced by inarticulate cries and such
tossing when he tried to sleep as was
heartrendering weight to witness these and hear, eight
Bis loss in during
days was 2 36 pounds pounds per day. daring making 16
out of the lost the
exD eri m ent
’He was fast passing according beyond medical
interfei ence, and had, to the
testimony live, when of Dr. Wark, not of 48 the hours lat
to the persuasion
ter prevailed upon him to abate his
abstinence from water. Having
sented to this, he commenced the elev
enth day by takiDg at interval* copi
Qua that dranghtajaf lime 1391 water. pounds, His weight and dur- at
Was
hg the next 10 days he lost only 4}
pounds, or a little less than 8 ounces
per day, against 82 ounces per day of
the preceding eight. •
The following ra the table of the loss
iu weight from day to day:
Pay. Pounds. Day. . Pounds,
milZZZZ'S.til'.MVX Sk±^OS
'3., 11 .^.,..,.soth
.-,*•»......Sft:........................ Ul- ‘.ZZZZ.Z0 «th'.";;!".".'.‘.'"iiot'caken Tn
.......... 2
'..........^
• <i1 —-—
The fluctuations of pulse, tempera-
tar9 > and respiration have been unim
portant. Dr. Tanner will remain in
New York daring hie convalescence,
aid will then, probably, accept an en
gagement to lecture.
m
Bad for tke Bar.
The New York lawyers are in a fer
ment of apprehension over the tale^
f a i effects of tho new code which goes
int0 operation on the let of September
Qex t ; baleful to the lawyers, but the
source of happiness and aelf-gralula
i at ; on to heirs. One of the provisions
0 f the instrument declares the conn-
8e i 8 * f eee shall not be paid to unsuccess^
f u i contestants out of the contested es
tates, a scandalous provision of law
which has heretofore prevailed in that
State. Surrogate Calvin, with the ma
jority of the profession in the State,
believes that a lawyer’s interest in dis
appointed expectants, cut off without a
shilling, will suddenly cease, thereby
avoiding tpcSe. a great deal ot publio scand
ai and Alter the fst of Sep
tember the great number of insane tea—
tators may be expected behooves to undergo a
radical diminution It the
rapacious sharks of the law to bleed
a ll the willing victims they five possibly
caQ dnriug the next four or weeks
_* a suggestion which it is hardly ne
cessary to make, however,
Every man aud woman is the better
for a little play time. The Bedentary
wotker needs change and exercise both
physically aud mentally. The manual
laborer needs rest and amusement
There should be time given to play by
all American men aud women. The
strain to which men in business, in shop
and office are subjected wears out the
human machiue too fast. It is the same
with the petty, wealing, nagging cares
and labors of the household for women.
Both sexes take too little time for
amusemeut. An actual physical and
mental good is to be found in change,
iu new sights, new faces. People would
be happier if they visited more, were
mere sociable. Au evening’s amuse
ment with cards, games, a dance, an
afternoon at a Cl»o icnic or excursion,
should be indulge in as often as pos
aible. Get out of the groove whenever
occasion offers. When the disposition
and ability for play is utterly gone it
t0 dl f* The P er8 ? n D0
playful moods • unnatural being.
is an
RprWt Spencer defines Tfi „ >r; life * to
“the dehmte combination of heteroge
neous changes, both simultaneous and
successive, in correspondence with ex
co-existences and sequences;” G.
. H. Lewes as “a series of definite and
changes, both of structure
and composition, which take place
1 within an individual without deetroy
i ing its identity.”
Liquors
Truth or Falsity of A.Bwers-m ...... Application—Use T t
of Alcoholic Liquors— Evidence.' :
rc , T Z , , , " T , ,yJ ,
Where the policy eued .
upon was is
su ® d ,n consideration of an application,
referred 1° i Q the policy, and made a
P ar t of the contract, which warranted
that all the statements therein con"
tamed are true, iq determining whether
answers to the questions in the ap
pl lca tion are true .or false it is not un
necessary to inquirb whether the ques
^ ons and answers are material to the
ri0 k or otherwise. L any of the answers
ar ® the insured . or evaax ^ had e » been the policy addicted is
v01 ~; H
‘‘he ln temperate use of alcoholic bev
® ra R es or had any serious illness, and
j* e had. an ® weie any d Serious ao, when illness asked or was if ever ad
dieted to the use of alcoholic bever
a £ e8 < then his answer was untrue and
®T d ness E8IV0 and * f was addicted 1 , E 'f a j e t to hod the a senous use of
alcoholic beverages to such en extent
» a to bring tte on policy mama-apoUor forfeited. delirium Tes
trem<!na - was
timony of wttnesses who never saw mm
under the influence of liquor does not
disprove the testimony of those wit
“ e “ ea wh ° had » good opportunity to
8 f lum suffering from the excessive use
°( h r Wor, and who attended and treated
S&lfes f ° Cmult r *■?#*?* °f I’cnmylvc.wa. Imtcd
. R lir r>a Kallnntrv WUlantry.
Col. „ . Aaron . Burr , wore a loftiness of
mien that could not pass unnoticed by
a stranger. His deportment was polisu
a P® coar ^: v * he api<ropnate ci
vilitiea . , of the drawing room were pei
formed with a grace peculiar to him
»«• H,s whole manner was inconeeiva
bl y fascinating. Me acted upon the
principle that the females were the
sex ; that they were all sus
ceptible consifed of in flattery, adapting and his great art
it to the grade
intellect he addressed.
Such traits of character woull ap"
to be incompatible with an ele
vated and towering mind yet the^Xc^
men olthe ag e- A volume
ttnU
ot Col Burr s quickness of per
ception and tact at reply. After his
from Europe, in 1812, hornet a
friend, a maiden lady, in Broadway.
He had not seen her in many years. As
she passed him she exclaimed, “Col.
Burr, you, do not recollect me?”
“I do not, madam, was the reply.
“It is Miss K., sir.”
“What!’’ said he “Miss K. yet?”
The lady, somewhat piqued, reiterat
ed ’ ,^® 8 ‘
} he deha& °y of his Situation
an d unfortunate error he had com
c ° lt . , ^®d l _he geu ly oo er hand am
f emark ® d :
mada me then I T venture to
.
fc tlwt lt . not 1 Ue fault ot
a88ti f, ls m 7
8ex ’
Campaign Material for the
South.—A Republican of much prom
inence, who wag present New York at the Repub«
lican conference in laat week,
was in the city to-day, and told some
of his political friends that the Na
tional Executive Committee had decid¬
ed to send a liberal sum ot money to
NorthCarolina and Florida. The leaders
have become convinced that both States
can be carried for Garfield with a pro¬
per effort, and to this end money and
speakers will month. be sent Representative to both Slates
early next
Loring and Mr. Cabot Lodge, a young
Republican Massachusetts, of have, much is eloquence said, volun¬ in
it
teered to go into the South and make
speeches for Garfield. The teeling here
among Democrats is that the more
speakers the Republicans send South
the better it will be for the Democrat
ic nominee*, and that nothing will so
quickly Democratic heal ranks up the differences the in of the
as presence a
number of radical speakers, appealing
to the colored voters to come out aud
vote the Republican ticket, and try to
obtain control of the State machinery,
— Balt. Sun.
-^ mm
Col. John Leveling, of Lafayette,
Ind. has theu reptation of a kindly
Christian gentleman; yet he is being
prosecuted for cruelty to a horse. The
beast was unruly. To cure it of bad
temper, he had its head and tail tied
as close together as possible, lines and then
drove it between two of men and
boys, who beat it with cluba and
stones. His theory was that the
novelty and severity of the
“ent would break the horse’s
and he is ready to spend $10,000 his legal in
the question of
n ght * to do as he did.
-~ -
There was a carrier pigeon race in
Europe on July 25. Forty-eight birds
started from London at 6 o’clock for
Cologne. The winning bird reached
tbe Rhenish city at one second before
12 o’clock, or in 5 hours, 50 minutes
and 59 seconds after leaving the Brit
capital.
Facts and Opinions. 1 j
A Talk With Treasurer Renfroe—He Will Go
Before the People—What He Says About It.
"
r i
dropped into ^ the
A Constitution man
race, and whafc was meant by the state-,
ment made by Coloeel Keaoon regard
ring him. desk, busy
We found him at his ar
langing some drafts and checks, as
cooliv as if there was not a Convention
in a thousand miles. He said: '‘You
may say that I will be a candidate for
Treasurer before the arbitration people of Georgia of the
and will accept the
ballot' box. ‘
“Did you not intend to go before the
® the Oonveotion had nom
mated a full ticket, headed by a candi¬
date for Governor, I should have abid¬
ed its decision even if it had been
against me. But when they sent the
Governor to the people, I left that I
had the Tight to go there too. I am
willing to abide their verdict.”
‘When did you determine not to sub¬
mit to a Convention?”
“I felt very much like announcing
my when determination to go failed to the people, nomi¬
the Convention to
nate a Governor. But when I saw the
. ace lor Attorney General, I felt satis¬
fied that no man before the Convention
had any hope to get a two-thirds vote.
The Convention was so worn out and
tired that I fe’.t it was not in the
humor 1o give a patient hearing to any
man, but that when Mr. Speer and my¬
self had a dead-lock on the first ballot,
some new man would have been put
up and nominated. I am sure that I
would have had a majority o' the
delegates, but I do not think I could
have gotten two-thirds except after re¬
peated ballots. I had too much at
stake to take this rsk, and I felt justi*.
tied aiter the Convention had set the
precedent by remanding the Guberna¬
torial question to the people, in appeal
ing to a higher Convention and piore sacred tribu¬
nal than any can be. My
cause is just—my and recgu-difj^^^^,
Lonest man an
I am determined to $o before the peo¬
ple for a verdict on my course.”
“You may say in conclusion,” Mr.
Renfroe said, “that I will get the
hearty support of a great many mem¬
bers of the Convention. They came
to me afterward and assured me of
this. You remember that I was put
before the people by a gentleman who
is a Democratic elector for the State
at large for Hancock and English. I
am not prepared to believe that the
people wi'l fail to do me justice, and
that is all I ask or have ever asked.”—
Atlanta Constitution.
Intelligent Ponies.— Mr. R. H.
Becker, the restaurateur, of New
Brunswick, N. J., has a pair of beauti¬
ful white ponies that prefer lager
beer to water. Alter having returned
from a drive behind his pets, Mr.
Becker always goes info his saloon and
brings out a glass of beer for each.
When it is placed before them they
snifF if, and then throw their heads
back and allow it to be poured into
iheir mouths. Mr. Becker has several
times oxtered them water o,a returning,
but they have always turned their
heads away and looked toward the
door of tho saloon, as if expecting to
see the beer coming.
Three little girls bait great fun in a
neighbor’s house at South Bend, Ind.,
during the absence of the family. They
first broke all the window panes. Then
tUey poured several gallons of milk on
tne parlor carpet. Finally, they
emptied six dozens cans of raspberries
and huckleberries into a tub, and dyed
all the fine dresses they could find in
the juice.
There aid five thoroughbred studs in
England, belonging respectively to the
Duke of Westminster, Lords Falmouth
and Rosebery, Mr. F. Gretton and
Sterling safely Crawford, each of which may
be put down as being worth, in¬
cluding stallions, brood mares, young
stock, and horses in training, from fiity
to one hundred thousand pouuda.
Count d’Orsay, who possessed a
charming speck wit, in cheek remarking Lady on a South¬ beau¬
ty on the of
ampton, compared it to a gem on a
rase leaf. “The compliment is far
fetched,” observed her ladyship. “How
can that be,” remarked the Coant,
“wh°h it is made on the spot?”
A Happy Restoration.
I C an truly say that I owe my pres
ent existence and happy restoration to
the hopes and ioys ot life to the use
of Warner's 3*!e Kidoev and Liver
£ ure 2 an( j man^ x say to every one C suffering
J'inarv"trouble o. Uuey or
“Use this remedv
1 It •• W V
y V Fel ™
-' ~—— - o
Ihr iug first six months of this
year,ap active c ..oi in when the bui diug'ie 1,100 always
‘buildings most begun city, over ^ew York. new
were ia
Their Ideas.
* The idea that everybody in Galvetf
ton doDO is „ nees the jurors'in the Currie
case erroneous. A prisoner in the
county jail, who is to be tried for as
saolt with intent to kill and murder,
remarked to one of his fellow ’prison
e rs in the next cell, who is under in>>
dictment for a similar offense: “I'm
gV4 Carrie is acquitted. I read all
the testimony, and every witness testi
fled agin him. Thar wasn’t even any
‘testimony as to bis being a quiet,
peaceful main,- wkipfi shows f what a
prejudice "Yes,” Uere was agm ljim.” \
said the other, flattening his
nose against, the bars, “the evidence
was all agin Inn, but the jury couldn’t
have found him guilty of murder,
nohow, bee wise- there was no malice
aforethought; Currie didn’t have noth
j n g agin Porter—didn’t know him—
jnat shot him for the fun of it. so it
couldn’t be murder in the eye of the
law.” . -
There was a pause for severa'
minutes, ai d then tho first criminal
stuck his nose through the gmtingand
i..;id to the 1 ;:st speaker : ‘T s*y, B’ll,
even if Currie had a spite at Porter it
wouldn’t be murder, that is if the evi"
dence showed clear that Currie killed
Porter to revenge himself, That’s
what I am in here for.”
Northern papers commenting on
the above will please remember all the
paitiesto the conversation are in jail.
No*Ha Railroad Man.
D.;na Krnm, one of the conductors
on the Erie Railroad, was approached
before train time by an unkown man,
who spoke '.o him as if he had known
him lor years. ■
“I say, Dana,” “I have forgotten
my pass, and I want to go to Susque¬
hanna. I am a fireman on the road,
know. ’
you the
But conductor told him he ought
to have a pass with him; it was the
s.ife.3t way. Pretty soou Dana came
klong to collect tickets. Seeing his
man, he spoke wheu he reached him.
I “See, my friend, have you the time
witK you ?”
! said h«, »s he pulled out tf
watch; “it is twenty minutes past
$ine.” fi T
sihow • "Oh, it is, is it ? Now. jf you don’t
nde your pass, or fare, I will
slop the tiain There is no railroad
man that I ever saw who would say
‘twenty minutes past nine.’ He woald
say ‘nine twenty.’ ”
lie settled.
Wr-doin lor Boys.
Do you wish to make your mark in
the won! ? Do you wish to be men?
Then observe tttafdUowiug rules:
Hold iutog.'ity sacred.
Ob^^rve good manners.
Endure tnrL patientlv.
Le prompt in all things.
Make lew acquaintances,
3 leld not to disoouragements.
Dire lo do right; fear to do wrong.
Watch carefully over your passions.
Fight life’s battle bravely, mauful
ly. Consider
well, then decide positive
‘y. Sacrifice
money rather than princi
p!e
Use all your leisure time for im¬
provement.
Attend carefully to the details ol
your business.
The Experiment,— Dr. Tanner’s
self-imposed good results. last will not be without
its The doctors claim
that it has taught them nothing they
did not know before, but it has taught
the people, first, that doctors in general
do not know everything, and, second,
that the less they know, the moie jeal
ous they Hammond, are of their ignorance, Even
Dr. a most distinguished
physician, toward Tanner hns maintained an attitude
which is consistent
only with the grossest ignorance, or
with the bigotry almost criminal. The
people have learned that an ordinary
individual can go without food for a
much longer period than the doctors
have supposed; that a simple exercise
of the will is worth as much as a sup
ply of provisions; and that a starved
man need not be recuperated by hy
perdemic injections of beef tea.* The
doctois have not learned even this,
for they will maintain that Tanner is
an managed extraordinary man, or that he
to eat while fasting. A few,
however, will open their eyes, and the
rest will follow along in the course of
time .—Atlanta Constitvtibn.
John P. Erpenbeck carried flowers
to his wife s grave, in a Baltimore
cemetery, every morning for months
after her death. One day the gite
keeper notice 1 that he came without
the usual floral tribute. A pistol
shot wassooa heard, and the widower’s
dead bodv w>s found on the grave.
The following was scrawled on a card:
‘ Dear Katie, I love you so, and I will
be with voubefore night Q my Goi!
if I have offended I b Z vour
pardon, and I hope you w.ii forgive **
‘me,”
PRICE THREE CENTS.
Business Cards* *
JAS. McGINLEY,
PARPENTER,
u t feBSsS jJbbbfttipromjrtiy »■»» attended to. Estimates
BEEF, VEAL AND LAMB.
JOS. H. baker,
n'tfTOHBB,
STALL No. 66, Savannah Market.
A ll other meats in their season at lowest
Glv* him a trial. “ * oc3l-tf ‘
ANDERSON STREET MARKET
AND ICE HOUSE,
T "produce? **•, fBiLtilPS, ^vPam^es Butcher, and dealer in a 1
Re residences, and all orders supplied'at their
promptness and dispatch. executed with
anteed. Satisfaction guar¬
ap6 6m
C. A COBTINO, •J
Stir Gittiu, Stir Mur, Ctrliu ud
SHAVING SALOON. f
HOT AND COLD BATHS.
1661 M Bryan street, rpposlta the Market, un
der Planters’ Hotel. Spanish, Italian, Ger
naan, and English spokon. selfi-t.f
W. B. TERKELL’S Agt.
RESTAURANT,
No. 11 New Market Basemen
(Opposite Llppman’s Drug HI re,)
lanlStf SAVANT VH. GA
PlumMng and Qas Fit ing*
t CHAS. E. WAKEFIFiD,
Plumbing, Gas (i Steam Fitting,
No. 46 BARNARD STREET, one door noitb
Of South Broad treet.
Batb Tabs. Joboing Water Closets, Boilers, Range*, i
Promptly attended to.
Agent of " BACKUS WATER MOTOR
f \ McELLINN A McFALL,
I PLUMBING AND GAS FITTING.
N^. 46 W^i ltakerBtreet^orner Yo rk mi., t,
N.B. Houses fitted with gas and water at
short notioe, Jobbing promptly attended to -
•up all work guaranteed, at low prices.
sep7tl
W. H. COSOBOYfi,
East side of Bull street, one door flrom York,
^Practical Plumber and Gas Fitter,
1 j JOBBING PROMPTLY ATTENDED TO.
411 work guaranteed to give satisfaction.
Prices to suit the times. mh7tf
Paints, Oils and Glass*
JOHN G. BUTLER,
Wholesale anil Retail Dealer In
WHITE LEADS COLORS, OILS, GLASS,
VARNISH, ETC.
Reftdy Mixed Faint*, Railroad. Steamer and
Calcined MlllHapplies. Blaster, Sole Ageut for Hair Georgia Lime
Plaster. No. 22 Drayton Cements, and Land
J»nl6tf SAVANNAH. street, GA.
_
ANDREW HANLEY,
—Dealer in—
Boors, Suhes, Blinds, Mouldings
Lime, Plaster, Hair and Cement,
STEAMBOAT,
Railroad and Mill Supplies,
paints, oils, varnishes, glass, &o.
No. 6 Whitaker St 171 Bay St.,
8 A VA NtfA H, QEORQlr
myad-tf
JOHN OLIVER.
— Dealer in —
SteamDOat, Bjil Roatl Wi Mill Slipplltf, '* r
PAINTS, t OILS, GLASS, &0,
f
DOORS, SASHES. BLINDS. MOULDING
Balusters, Blind Trimminas, &o.
No. 5. WHLJ’AKER ST.,
SA VANN AH. GEORGIA
dAftlfitf
ho$hfeh$ 1
hr f J -
rZzW ■■ ■ l
%
a* « J*
Pk w r ‘ STOMACH - - j , ^ ^
^ ^
ye I
*1 | E»
Defensive Medication
jand-lcuiy. uc.uaH^uUirawVe. ^h.n^'r^he%fu* ’v r-.rbiiion*n®a*,<iy*.
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