Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: April 8, 1861., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Savannah (Georgia, United States) or search for Savannah (Georgia, United States) in all documents.

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n years ice has not exceeded one cent a pound. We have a profusion of the finest fresh fish throughout the year, with sea turtle, sea crabs, shrimps, and every luxury that the ocean affords. Labor is cheap. House female servants can be hired at $6 to $8 per month, exclusive of clothes, and German or Irish help at the same, each always to be had. Rents are cheap. A dwelling with six square rooms, with gas, grates, and every convenience, at $500. We have a double daily line of railroad to Savannah, Augusta, Columbia, and Wilmington, diverging throughout the country. Religiously, no place is more blessed. We have over forty places of worship in the city, all highly respectable, and most of them elegant. There are Episcopal, Catholic, Presbyterian, Methodist Episcopal and Protestant, Baptist, Lutheran, Dutch Reform, Unitarian and Jews places of worship scattered all over the city. The Mayor sends a guardsman to each place of worship every Sunday, to see that vehicles pass slowl
im, with the understanding that no officer was to be permitted to join the garrison of Fort Sumter to supply his place; and, accompanied to the depot by Col. Moses, aid to the Governor, he left Charleston by the two o'clock train of the N. E. Railroad. Meantime, Lieut. Snyder had mentioned the facts of the firing into the unknown schooner (as described in our issue of yesterday,) and informed the Governor that the vessel in question was a Boston schooner, loaded with ice, and bound for Savannah, and that she had put into this harbor on account of stress of weather. He further said that one of the shots had passed through the schooner's sail. Lieut. Snyder then returned to the wharf in company with an aid, and went back to the fort.--During his interview with the Governor, the soldiers who manned the boat had seized the opportunity to lay in some coveted individual supplies of whiskey, tobacco, eatables, and a host of other provisions, making in all no less than thirty-five packa