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VOL IV.—No. 139.
THE SAVAtHMH 1 RECORDER
PUBLISHED EVERY EVENING,
(Saturday Excepted,)
1161 B >TRBZ1Ti
By J. STERN.
The Recordkk is served to subscribe™, la
every part ot the oity by careful carriers.
Communications must be eompanled igfljftWUy by
the tame for
publloatioi wa fi Df gOOd frith.'
Remit* feb *. . err
must be lie to tbe ord pub
lisher.
We will sot undertake to preserve or return
rejected communications.
- VY**,
Correspondence on local and general mat
ten of inter 3 &t. nolioited.
On AuvcrUbunientB running three, six, and
twelve months a liberal reduction from our
regular rates will be made.
All correspondence should be addressed As
oobdbb, Savannah, Oeorgla.
The Sunday Morning Bboobdxb will take
the piace of the Saturday evening edition
* which will make six full issues for the week.
SOS'We do not hold ourselves responsible for
the opinions expressed by Correspondents.
2he * Recorder is registered at: the -
Post Offiee in Savannah as Second Class
Matter.
. LETTERS FROM THE PEOPLE.
^A VUlCE FROM SCREVEN COUN¬
TY.
Svlvania, Ga., Sept. 8th, 1880.
Mr. Editor: Our attention has
been directed to a couple of articles in
the issues of the Morning News of Fri¬
day, September 3d, and Wednesday,
September of “80th’’ 8th, over the respective K,” which sig
natures and 1 in
the political status of Screven county
has been misrepresented.
Believing tbe Recorder to be a fair
journal, we write you this in the cause
of “truth a d soberness.”
Our people have not “endorsed al¬
most unanimously” tbe candidacy of
Governor Colquitt ae intimated by
"80th.”
The which he re-1
fers purpoaea. and
npvss after motioff called fort
made, a to adjonrn had bejen
an enthusiastic supporter of Gov¬
judgment, ernor Colquitt, with more zeal than
introduced a -resolution en¬
dorsing the action of the “majority of
the late Gubernatorial Convention.
A motion was made to lay on the
table this resolution, because the meet¬
ing had been called for purposes not
invo^viog. that issue. Not. anticipati rag
a resolution,of that ctatoqtajp, a&uoat bar
of^citizempi h&d rfltired from the hail,
including,pa*ny >of those favoring, the
tion of the minonty of the late
Gubernatorial Convention, hence there
was no of full the citizens and fair of expression Screven of the
voice county
upon this question. Permit us here
to 9sy that the "feeble spark” of
Norwoodism, attributable to the "two
(2) impulsive youths” brilliant of Sylvania, flame, has il¬
developed into a
luminating the utmost verge of Screven
county, much to the chagrin of that
irrepressible knight of the quill, 1 “80th.”
The statement of “K’ 1 as to the at¬
tendance on Saturday the last, there is much-at
Variance with facts, being,
by actual count, not less than one
hundred and fifty (150) persons
J iresent, exclusive of a number of
adies of the town.
"K” shows his ignorance, or makes
an intentional misrepresentation, when
he says no arrangements were kadis
to hear the Colquitt side of the ques¬
tion. The truth is a conference was
held with one of the leaders of thatj
faction, proposing a division of time,,
which wasdeolined by him. Had “K"!
“made arrangements" to divide time
vrith his article, and mingled vrith the
audience, after the addresses were con¬
cluded, we feel assured that he would
.pot have handled the troth so reck¬
lessly in ssseiting that no Norwood
Converts were made.
Knowing tbe past record of “K” so
well itVaffords us some amazement tq
ded here h^njs|y tljat he is ^not "That wed¬
to the word nominee." worej
having Charybdis more bis than once been the
t Tbe of political of speakers wreck. in
arguments were,
our opinion, unanswerable—tbe logic
1
“re-echo” all over this broad land, from
the mountains to the seaboard, until the
6th day Of October next, when the
Governor of the grand old Oommour
Wealth, wityh&eed no vindication in the
trerson of tbe Honorable TtftmisM.
, Norwood. i Paul,
Ham to Got Sick.
£ v 4I*peee yonrself day and night, •at
^tttfOQueh without without exercise doctor all ; work the time; too
tlfckeiall . ham rest;
the file nostrum* advertised,
mo •# g«K then well, yon which will is want answered to kniaw tn three bow
*%or®J—Take Hdp Bitters I See other
0 1 urn n
Andrew Talcott, of Baltimore, Md.,
is the oldest belonged living graduate of clase West
Point. He to the of
1818.
SAVANNAH, F&DAY, SEPTEMBi . 10, 1880.
: u ;■ .
Chinese Finances.
1 At the p^eeeat tin^s China raises a
t
riV^liiB yhiohf. at
tad
ajbly reaches £60,000,000; and. al
caoitala the Government een ^enenrl
In adtbtion, Woto £4,000,000 ar.
^cajri^d ttSltSSS annually from ( the ^ustoins at
SludI ennilJ ft ww* J;- fltolt
In U tldf dire as^n can/ a b v
StTanJ^ means reached WforLu the limit of her
feheltWis available o?the Z lament ofini
emr
tal and labor to
people and the excheauer \re at the same
time. The Chinese '
amons the
lightest taxed people in the world and
fcnle the burden of confuting
k el«pL“Ji&.r™
uST.^tS£wS obLation TcTtkeoehiD
repudiate U?til the ?eomma3n
havebeenimTroved the z&rZnexZ
-not^ jTS^^tteX to bJ
ih»^Mnstmtion I of^Suways state
Dlace^wnnldbe which
excepMn avery u„Yto few af
attended with much dan nor
as advanUgs to China—the progress
thenavSnof must necesaarilv be therivershaa^een slow but whan
turned to better account an expansion
ft ol the internal o^Te commerce laree 8 as
bo^ at present is an^ extensive Yangtse 8c“le mav
expected P aL.minesV n
The 30# co Kianai and
t . hoW' beiDg worked ‘WSF atel^fiiHv
and l , successfully, while other provinces
are not backward d in .* d«vflloninc» err^el ve^s Hieir
latent lhe «sul~ reeourcee exVaordLJrJtiyi- lo
18
tv in a direction where beco^ so apnireuth little had
been baT<Hro“tly dpne must ''’VS’fadfflJ
and ^» ? ;I«iS
Stata will h e n«fit hv WhUeTost n
wealth 1 o th p ople I
persons
backwardness in the scale of civiliza¬
tion. I contend that there are many
sonnd arguments to justify tha hesita¬
tion shown by the Pekin Ministers in
sanctioning such enterprises. It may
be admitted that railways would give a
great impulse to foreign trade, and
that consequently the Chinese would
derive as much advantage aa apy one
else from their construction; but the
Government is guided in its policy by
other considerations as well as those
of pecuniary advantage. Even with¬
reached out railways* Chinese commerce has
a So urishing point, and it Will
be be long induoed before disturb the Pekin Ministy will
to the status quo t
and incur possible dangers for the
sake ol benefiting the foreign trade.
If things go on at their present rate
the Chinese can oount on certain and
in very their satisfactory returns as a balance
favor on tbe foreign trade of
the country. They have little to gain,
and, perhaps, much to lose by attempt¬
ing to disturb the arrangements on
which this trade exists.— The Nine,
tecnth- Century .
A Railroad Under Broadway.
The proposed underground-railroad
in New York, from the Battery to
Central .Park, is attracting attention
in that city, and it is said that the
Jtiudsou River Tunnel Company and
the Erie Railway are taking an interest
in the project The plans for tbe new
road include tunnels and double tracks
low directly under Broadway and just be¬
the water pipes, and reaching
nearly liad to the curb on each side. The
main will be ran straight
Broadway to Madison Square to thei
Grped,Central depot. Branch roads 1
are Eighth to be run to Fifty-ninth street and j
avenue, and to other
The air in the tuonele, much of which
is to be introduced bv shafts and other
artificial means, is to be kept sweet
afitt clean, tbe engineer says The
cars are to move very smoothly, and
be drawn by huge 60-ton locomotives,
which will burn coke and consume
their ovra smoke, like those on the
Loudon underground lines. It is
hinted, however, that the enterprise is
nothing more nor less than a shrewd
attempt to forestall Mr Vanderbilt
securing this route, and thus either in
duoiug priw him to come into the
or buy k ont at a torsa * ad
vaace.
^ . t, R ad 7 i”\^ . b0 ld -— K ,St
a,n T* ? P
psd in r Lehigh county . the otner
by. signal from a email boy.
wanted to eoli ths conductor a tnr ‘'t
he had caugh^ ind told him he would
m e h“° ne 7 takl 5 8 1
withtom. >k Tk The conductor f d.dnt t n
Mit»s Flora Sharon, daughter of
Senator Sharon, is betrothed to Sir
Thomas Hesketh, a wealthy English
mau, who, in the course of a
round the world in his steam
has beeu making a stop at San Fran¬
cisco.
A Saxon’s Idea of It
- The late Earl of Carlisle, when
of Ireland, used to
the importune. of tie Irtah
x^juTSrsjSTaJJs people cultivation a spirit of
^ y ‘V 8 wpon B0 :“ . er . cU ,
f«LIJb'SJZ..
Englishman ? or Scotchman would put Ls
the wheel It
J ,andl 66 * .? 101 rd8 ?* the ftnd fashion t0 represent to abuse them Irish as
"
^ v? C1 v*? !^ 6 ^ ka ra0 ° wl . ts ® j d 8 but e ° f having the dealings a tolera- of
f* 1,8h ^
!P 9 latterwlU nq ^ Sltat,0n c ° m P ar ° “ favorably ■“Jgg with that
. Britain. ^\ d
peers ?
toden y that there are bad
* nd ? r( ^ 8 am ° D 8 them, bat we do as
It .CtS.
OUl ll t0 f" T h6 / M \ ,or ‘ h9 m0Bt
part, lend speculators, , who have pur
f“ t'”",? ed Irlab 1 e 1 aUte 0 “ “ » lavement f 0t only
’
ohar 8 e the 1 .- !, «nte that can be
fT W * , ?c,?[ pe0pIe but le
e ' “ ,°
*ts care that those rents are never al
lowed 40 f “ U 1,1,0 ."rears. Strange to
““?• *?« . " ecrews , »™ f ftiefly the to ll8d be
Liberal q? party ° 8c " 0 “
4 twi Sf tt9d a y w \ r , 111 . SlD 0 . « lair , . ® ourse recent1 , °f ^
■ *
* W1 •/}?^ f, h . faCt w? n* ^ ^ 0U8e ° °f n Commons, tU9
“! est &t V n ^unty Armagh u are 40
P . abov ® ^he rents on neighh or -
uell in ^. e8tate8 » and tb at, although the Par
tenants w*re promised a reduction
V * J, u , ' ° v non " nb i t they \, axr only
" -»
.. W /*'
l P " K "° * ei <w 18
n .
t£l0 pres eat d« clay « aa they they were 4(J
.
d “ 0 ‘ wl ‘ t,8 f to ,,d,,, ,r * f ,l hef °,
'Ubwuse wbich has taken place
the , t T ^° f -luring
jftftftl -
Wffi oift|Bts have in also been recently by
made
they majority of landlords, varying
from 20 to 50 per cent., the excep¬
tions being the land jobbers, who are
patiently biding their time, when they
will enforce payment of arrears with¬
out abatement. The great drawback
to the prosperity which it of Ireland been is the
manner in has made a
theatre for the operations of heartless,
interested agitators. It is lamentable
to think that snch a huge imposition
should have been successfully practiced
upon lous agitators. the English The people Scotch by aod unscrupu¬ English
farmers suffered, we believe, more se¬
verely than the Irish ; bat, from the
pretentions and unreal agitation raised
on behalf of the latter, we are reap¬
ing already bitter fruit. Not only has
half a million of money, which might
have been usefully employed at home,
gone to demoralize and pauperize the
Irish peasant, but a measure, whose
communistic tendencies it is difficult to
exaggerate, aud which will ruin the
Irish landlord in tbe disaffected dis¬
tricts, has received the sanction of the
House of Commons.— Blackwood's J/a
gazme.
The first day’s record of the 6^ days
or 166 hours’ match of men against
horses at Chicago does not give a very
clear indication which side will win.
The horse Speculation led at noon
with 130 miles, but next to him was
the man Dobler with 117—and this,
by the way, was twelve miles below
Dobler’s first day’s record in bis race
in this city for the O’Leary belt.
Third and fourth after Dobler come
more horses, with 109 miles. If
Dobler reasonably keeps up his speed,
b«"wili bav# a |oed *5 chance % ofwinnrag.
A . girl . ,— wks ' y found nailed j to . P^nk, , ,
a
80 that she could move neither hands
nor fee N a “ d fioat ‘ n g on Yangtse
f 1 ™’ l D Ch i na ;j. B t Ber W / 8 the
aaad Buddhist priest, • and
° a some
c °tos- An inscription said :
T De7 har wbe ,“
18 18 d , She belonged to a weal
f amd , y». and her two brothers pet
^ “ aada riQ 8 , ^ed this crnel
m ® nt because she married the priest
wbose he ad was j>n J.hg plank with
a Wnrd tn Onr R A a<ler«
tirkan When you vr. read i of n f a rtmedy that
*'! U cme aU d,sea ? e * b * wareof,t ;^
11 ?<>“ r « d of • P ure Te 8 etab le
I which daun. , (o cur. only 1
n hiK^rtlf.,itdf' P ^ A a ? d f “ ° r '
»*My Gyit and.with tbe aseur
™ *^ "nwi r,a ra aLtoTiridnev ° afe Kidney an- an
of'the frwer^nortion^^**A^bo $ 1 aad
tooth-ache, ear-ache nor consumption
but it will put your body in a vigor
0U s and healthy state where you cad
enjey life Trv und appreciate its good
it.
-
A full vote, a free ballot and a fair count.—
ittttrcf #ecg»f<ric*
War mei “Wr Play In War
their own musfc
bonne* d kind. * p^attf War is a cutthroat
*°, w wUh a
aie«« l lew JJ able an antagonist by kill
u„„;TS*con « ot war - The Peruvians,
it US
tospsdo Ha^ war v< «fcl ^JfnircoSoeaufnndsr and was detained The
fruit and T w. joultry, and when the load
was taken f ,ff as one of the spoils of
° a P ta * e th€ torpedo exploded, sending
cif ^ l r ian vessel and a hundred and
fifty men tc the bottom of the
and.the Vynereupor P< ia cry 0 f horror, goes up
barbarians ruvians are denounced ah
?. of the worst description. n
0me p< °pl° ma y remember how
indignant • , i ;h© public was because of
e ambusi i Dg 0 f our troops by the
war. The!
detacbmeul «ked b.ttery opened upon a
puabe „f U nion troops as they
were d along a railroad on plat
f«m care. There was the Big Bethel
'«ur aleo where masked batteries
Were U “ ma tft : ted much to the detriment
oar onr oop8 Our people knew
toothing a* out , war and it9 met h 0 ds,
f°?. but they gn* a pretty , air idea o( it be .
8 .!!l rrelld8d It '”» B °°ti°aablo
Dac ma — f Ke ld batteries '. had terrors
f , boL, no
°r our i at er on, and officers in
command qw detachments had learned
ft ,? spy ^ »be land before advancing
8 m&m Ifc ia enough
known noiT to everybody, as it was
then to mfthtary men, that masked
» s ^we legitimate means of re
sietance ra» .
first knownBiu war 3 ut - lt waa * not at
■ Bthat the , business . of , a mill- ...
“dy *2 *' he to '° re PU8hi " batteries, Ws in if
J? to W, o Jie B ““
enemy • s country.
ntrot iW^ Torpedoee 10 be a floatiD baeineB 8 ’’
fixed, rift*, '
^ ’»e cannon an d ihe^poetry long-range
coff to elimmate
SS t to®* ,°i
to it. Officers are no longer
abl under the trees and view
thi lectacle of a battle within
hah Except at a certain risk.
The Ooter is on the watch for
such bevies of shoulder-strapped gen¬
tlemen, and i very often brings down
his man at a thousand yards. War is
getting to be serious business. Ships
anchor fonr or five miles away from a
city, and send word to the authorities
that only eapitulalion can savfe the
town from ihot aud shell. Guns^bave
been made, and are in use to-day/ from
which a shill can be projected over a
spaoe of eight miles.
Of course, this is taking advantage
of the cities defended by the old style
fortifications. Ships need not come
within range of some forts on our coast
at all, yet be able to worry dreadfully
the city beyond. But this is all legiti¬
mate. By and by the Chilians will
destroy Callao at long taw, and what
better pray, will that be than a mask¬
ed battery ? Because a beleaguered
city conceived the bright thought of
tempting the Chilians to take up a
concealed torpedo, barbarians? are they to be an
nouced a3 It is their duty
to blow the entire Chilian fleet into
smithereens if they can by any known
means; and so long as they do not do
it by treachery daring a trace, they
are War making war destruction, in a legitimate way.
means wounds and
death. People who resort to it invite
those terrible concomitants, and must
not grumble when tbe invitation is ac¬
cepted .—Philadelphia North Ameri -
can .
lOlltical Quotations.
^A correspondent to the Atlanta
Post-Appeal gives the latest quotations thus:
0 f the “coalition” speech market,
Joseph E. Brown—2 speeches—A
Senator’s*place Gordon—30 at $6,000 speeches—At- per annum,
John B
t or n e y f or a Kentucky corporation at
?14 ,000 per annnm. 2
Willis A. Hawtins-3 speeohos-A !
seat on the supreme bench of Georgia
at ^QOO per annum.
r. j. Moses-4 Executive speeches—Member
0 f the State Committee
}-i S3 anc j a promise,as paying
| offices are In not which given for vrill this be class found of
orators. case
L! vingst<ra, Stewart and “coalition”
cross roads promise" orstors only. gen«rrily-"kiss
sod a J
Join w Na | m8 _ 8peechM before the
coovention—Keeper diem of small, the hot Poniton
tiary—"per is per.
qni .itc is h—11."
For further information apply to
Gtoyernor Colquitt, or Victor New
proprietor of “them same three
toilers,""Coslition," Lon,snlle, Ky.
Mary Welker ^ ^ ^__* male
ie disporting her
attire in the fields and pastures
noithem New Hampshfre, and it is
terribly confusing to the gentle old
cow* of that region to observe this
person in masculine dress yell and
(when they appear.— Boston Post.
rn General Longstreet.
The Washington correspondent cf the
Baltimore Bun, writing; , under date of
the 6th instant, says: '
ft ia WMh '
ragton to-day to make the necessary
&&&£«£V2£*M tinople He had ah interview with
from the East. It did not take very
long with fco make the General acquainted
the duties of his new position,
and he was soon satisfied that he would
abundantly able to manage ^re likely ahy di
plomatio questions which to
arise between our government and that
of Turkey. The Secretary commum- fact
cated to him, however, the that
the United States only'allows the sal
ary attached for the position, and that
^a^t. allowS To?mSlyth,g™emmeut outfit; this has been
au done
away with. Afterwards General Long
street saw Postmaster General May
nard. Mr. Maynard, who held the
position would five years, told him it; that he
be certain to like that the
climate ol that of it Constantinople veryinteresting was delight
, . wa8 a city;
thdtall the foreign minietore, except tbe
and one sent by the United States, were rrcb
big got good pay; that they all gave
entertainments, at which the repre
sentative of the United States was ra¬
vitfed, and knowing the meagre salary
wln^i he received be wae not expected
conversation to return any of the hospitalities. In
J with your correspondent
t “P 0 b'SP^ n ;„ht General ^enerai Lnnostrefit Liongstreet Hair saic 1 that tnax
he bad tamed over the post office
Gainem-ille, Ga„ to trTiO hie successor ton
h ° WM t0 «° b * ck to ^
tie up bis accounts. Hisrdate Q of. t
P Mtare lm Turkey hae not yet
fixed, thirty bat days. it Ho will said be within the next
bln that attentil he had Hot
of late giving much lo
b “‘ ba to thiak there
would be no lack of persons willing to
q ffat. fKo. 0 f March.
matter was ex
pressed looking no opinion as to national poli¬ his
tics, in fine health,; and
frame eeems capable of as much
endurance aa ever. Like most all brave
he is modest in demeanor 4hd
conversation.
A South American Pree!deirtl n
< The official life of the President of*a
S4 nth American republic i»—to perpetk parody
Dr. Johnson—-so much! like a
ual revolution with a chanc* of. being
that we can hardly blame him for
gathering while he may the few roses
that bloom along its arid wastes;
hardly payB to rob the exchequer, be disposed
cause the currency oannot
of outside of the country except at its
the value rate as waste of discount paper, and is So oven high at home, to
as
the operation unremunerative.
But the President or Dictator can live
a whole coop of fighting cocks;
during his brief rendered incumbency, Montevb- as wit¬
nessed the bill at
doe by the restaurateur who fed Dic¬
tator Latorre in December, 1878. There
were charged to the Dictator for
that month sixty meals at $6 each and
thirty at $3, which D. Latorre, appa¬
rently a man of unbounded stomach,
washed down with - 36 bottles of $3
Sautorne, as many of $5 Chateau La
fitts, as many of $2 St. Emilion and as
many of La Rose at nearly $3, besides
two dozen of tawny port at $24, a like
quantity of dry sherry at the same
cost, four dozen of Veuve Cliquot
champagne at $4 a bottle and $46
worth of brandy. Tbe Dictator’s bill
for cigars was $275, for ice $20 and for
table ornaments $35. The hotel-keeper
further intimates that the Dictator
smashed one hundred and eighty dol¬
lars worth of glass, and that his losses
of tableware, plate and spoons amount¬
ed to two hundred and fifty
If this is a fair specimen ol the daily
life of a Dictator in South America, we
take it that when the republic do ib in
danger the conscript fathers hob
have to go out into the highways and
byways and with teams of oxen and
log-cnains to drag Cincinnatuses from
their cabbage planting Dictator to the Latorre Capitol
Possibly, however, was
of the opinion that the geese who saved
the Capitol were taken internally in
the shape of pates of foie grass. — N. Y.
World.
Miss Lizzie Ch.pmao, the sffiancod
w if e of General Graot’e eon Jesse, is
the denghter of W. S. Chapman, a
wealthy San Francisco capitalist, in whose real
bold. %od gigantio operations
agtate-fiave attracted attention. The
>*dy is . petite demi-blonde,
W!th a wea lth of the lig test light brown
pair and soft light brown eyes; Jesse
18 2 2 years of age.
TT Henry Hurst, rr a a 1 lad J 13 10 years old, 1J
saved fifteen persons from drowning,
Jersey near the City, foot last of Monday. Washington street,
.
- r
PRICE THREE CENTS.
ess Cards*
t NOTICE.
30 p. FERGUSON,
No. 132 State street, near Bull, is prepared to
repair
XOCKS. TBUNKS AND GUNS.
BEfciL HANGING AND KEY FITTING
A SPECIALTY.
in Careful attention given to ail kinds of work
that line.. Outside work ” promptly and
propteriy executed! -...... ' ■ lw
« .
GiARPTilIsrTER. ^AS. McGINLEY,
YQRK (Sth ?'ET, second door east of Bull.
1 Jobbing pr »niptly attended to. Estimate*
is oed v / lieu de si red. Jel4»6m
_
VttAJC, AND LAMB.
JOS. H. BAiER,
I STALm No.-Se. SavAuuah Market.
A t>L other meats in their season at lowest
Hvf him a trial. >v.- oc31-tf
ANjDERSON STREET MARKET
AND |CE HOUSE,
J * Produce., i*\ kinds cm Meats, Butcher, Fito, Ppdltry and dealer and ar- al
ket anjf sse*. I'amilijes supplied Executed at their
pu.iiptntiss residences, ed ail orders With
..... dispatch- ^attefabtlOn ( a •' apti-tim guar
'
, 9 i C. A. C(>] 0,
• Slip
S j H AV 1 NG '6®50N.
s ‘ mot and ool!> BATHS.
z s w. B. FERRELL’S Agt.
I .tTiiWTr t
j ! No. 11 New Market Basemen
jir j (Opposite r r Iilpprmmj8 Drug St re,)
^
ra -3TT5
Paints, Oils ihu~ 2 .!%*?w M
—
JOHN G. BUTLER,
Wholesale and Retail Dealer In
WHITE GLASS.
i r”\
Ined Plaster, Cements..Hair and Land
'jfoisi No. 22 Drayton «AY«.NriAH.,8A._ street,
f
--
ANDREWHANLEY,
: i .—Dealer 1«— - *
Lb, , Blinds, Mouldings
? Lime, Plaster, Hair and Cement,
STEAMBOAT,
Railroad and, Mill Supplies,
Faints, j oils, varnishes, glass, ao.
No. 6 Whitaker A 171 Bay St.,
«4f VANNAH, 26-tf 7 - , GEORG IT
7 yy
s
PInmMng an i gas Fit fag.
CUAS. E. WAKUm'U),
Plumbing, Gas Si Steam Fitting,
NO. 48 BARNARD STREET, one door north
ot South Broad treet.
-f , Bath Tabs. Wider Closet*, Boiler*, Rang**,
: Joboing Promptly attended to.
1 | 0 , Agent Of “ BACKUS WATER MOTOR}!
McELLINN & MoFALL,
PLUMBING AND GAS PITTING.
Na. 46 Whitaker street, eorner York *t. Lane
N.B. House* fitted with gas and water at
aed short all notloe, work guaranteed, Jobbing promptly at price*. attended to
low
s«p7tl
Prices to suit the time*. mh7tf
•aonoe;*n «8 gaj* 07 pee^nvjvnx ^10 aa nv
JOBBING PROMPTLY ATTENDED TO.
■3WI& VB 0 pere J»qnrqj
East aide of Boll street, one door from York*
A.lFClf^K>Uk/ . aiwAAba JoL m M kk
■
*
4 *!* SS Imd 111 '■>$ll fiflAI - **
*,
T) HOLIDAY n
fRESENTO
Just received a flue selection of
j cd FAMILY BIBLES,
Translated by the late Rev. Isaac Lseheb.
FOR JEWISH FAMILIES.
should Suitable be for without Holiday presents. handsomely No frraily
one. Are
bound. beautiful Are parlor a valuable library addition; a
ornament.
Also:—Orders received and promptly filled
for other Hebrew publications.
aa 2 tf J. STERN. Savannah. Oa.
ATTENTION !
*TTHE A BEST and Cheapest made place to get yonr
BOOTS and SHOE-* and repaired, lo
ghton “ph&up^zch^ek?^ 4
N. B .— corna. wart* and Bunion* cured in *
. P dw.R^