Newspaper Page Text
®lw .CiiWiinunh (tribune.
Published by the Tri bus r. Publishing Co. i
J. H. DEVEAUX. Manaokk. (.
R. W. WHILE, SorjotTOß. j
VOL. 11.
McCILLIS&MERCER
199 Broughton St., Cor. Montgomery.
Parlor Goods, Bed Boom Suits.
DINING AND KITCHEN FURNITURE,
CARPETS, MATTING, SHADES, MATS & RUGS
PARLOR STOYES, COOKING STOVES AND RANGES.
STOVEWARE, CLOCKS, PICTURES, Ac.
Be sure to call and Iray goods at lowest prices to be found in the city,
'¥198033 ‘HVNNVAVS
‘siaaais avoua issm onv NoiHDnoaa
•Jioureoijß ajuau £q jCiopej ano iuojj Suiaujr spoof)
'NOOVM TTVOOpt
—asLLVHnaqao anv —
mm ’ ‘snomvhj ‘siimm
ho.-i SMifr.LH
■snos ? holltv v a ox shossh33il9
snos
'23IJ/IV If II 'H3IJ/IV fl AY 'SI3LLTV AY S
JOYCE & HUNT,
.JI W liitakei’ Street, Savannah, Georgia
—Exclusive Dealers in this Territery for the Incomparable—
low H@a® Swing Machine
—Tho only Machine that has a Perfect-
Automatic Bobbin Winder.
Which enables the operator to wind a perfect bobbin without any aid
from the operator
-ALSO AGENT UOII-
Tie Wheelock anil itow Hn,ohiml Pianos,
Clough & Warren Palace Organs.
Ths Place is Buy the Best fais fc the hit Money
—IS AT
TEEPLE & CO.’S,
193 and !!:>•» Broughton sSt,
CALL AT OUR STORE!
if you want Furniture, Mattings, Window Shades, Refrigerator*, Bed-Springs,
Mattresses, Cooking Stoves, or anything in the Housekeeping Line,
it will pay you to call on us before buying elsewhere.
New Goods Constantly Arriving.
TEEPLE * CO.,
193 and 195 Broughton St., Between Jefferson and Montgomery.
PRICES PARALYZED!
Popular Prices Preach Profitably.
CHOICE CLOTHING. OCEANS OF OVERCOATS-
Examine our stock of Clothing in Casaimeres. Worsteds, Cheviots
Corkscrews, Diagonals, etc. Gents’ Suits. Boys’ Suits, You*h->' Suita and
Our Big Specialty, Children’s Suits.
We open the season with Low Prices, and Guarantee our Clothing First-class in
every respect. Neckwear in variety indescribable ; Underwear in plain
and fancy goods ; Hosierv .and Gent’s Furnishings. All
the fashionable shapes in Hats.
iniS BROUGHTON SF.
Abrahams & Birnbaum.
SAVANNAH GA.. SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 27,1886.
The Tumble-weed,
The tumble-weed is a peculiarly western
. institution that grows on the prairie and
looks big ami round and green all sum
i mer. If it is anything of a season for
tumble-weeds it gets as large as a bushel
basket. When fall conus it breaks off
j close to the top of the ground, jumps up
: ami cracks its heels together a few times
, ami then begins turning hand-springs
across the prairie and over barbed wire
s fences.
It is not as fast as the jack rabbit,
: which when there is political or other ex
; citement around only touches along on
the tops of the hills, but it has better
1 staying powers than the jack and will go
live hundred miles an I into the British
, possessions with a southeast wind an 1
■ come back the next day with a north
. west wind. On the trip it will frighten
j fifty horses, help spread twenty prairie
tires, ami tire out several young and in
experienced dogs.
A professor from an eastern college
once came out here ami begun to chase a
tumble weed. He wanted to classify it
i ami put a collar on it. He took the bit.
! in his teeth ami followed that weed for
two days. Then he cun • back ami said
' that while it was doubtless a fine botan
! ical specimen, it did not appear, on the
I other hand, to be fond of the society of
I polished and cultured college professors.
! It might be all right from a scientific
i stand-point, but socially it was far from
! a success. While interests of scientific:
j research might demand that it be cap-
■ tured and analyzed, still ho doubted the
propriety of attaching a Latin name to it
I and hav.ing.it jerked around over the
' prairie like a two-year-old steer tie 1 to
! the hind end of a special train, - En'M.
\ inc ( Bel'.
A French Flnwer I’crm-
T'here is on the maritime foot-hills, in
j the department of Var, a flower farm of
about seventeen acres,belonging to Mme.
de Rostamg. It is about 2,000 feet above
the level of the Mediterranean, ami per.
haps twenty miles from the coast. The
calcareous soil was naturally thin ami
poor, and the olive trees which had
occupied tho ground for a century
or more previous to 1881, yielded
but scanty and unsatisfactory re
turns, and the land wus regard
ed a* practically worthless. In 1881 the
’ proprietress caus-d the ground '<> be
I cleared and prepared for flower culture.
; It was <lug to the depth of four f ;et, and
I the larger stones removed. In the.
i autumn of 1881, 45,000 tufts of violets,
and 140,000 ro ts of the white jasmine
I were planted. The following spring the
| remainder of the ground was planted
I with roses, geraniums, tuberoses, and
. jonquils, and a laboratory erected for the
■ manufacture of perfume.,. The location
I proved to have been well chosen, the
! flower plants grew vigorou Jv and strong,
and in 1885 (the fourth year after plant
i ing) Ihe flower farm of S ulians, which
' liu l previously yielded a rental of §lls a
year, produced (according to the state
; merit of the proprietress) perfumes valued
! at §43,154, and giving a net profit of
§7,767.86. Os course the plants and
1 shrubs at Seillans have not yet reached
i their full productive capacity, but the
I results of the fourth year illustrate sufli-
■ ciently how- lucrative flower farming may
| become, in favorable locations, and I
i under good management.— Washingtor
l
A D.ikota Banker.
“Dakota banks have a queer way of
doing business,” said a well-known mem
ber of a wholesale linn the other day.
; “Some time ago I drew upon a man in
that territory for §llO and exchange. A
check was returned to mu, but the ex
change had not been collected, and the
amount was stated to be seventy-five
cents. I paid the exchange, but imme
diately wrote the cashier of the bank
about it. 1 knew the exchange should
not exceed twenty-live cents, and so in
formed the bank official, at the same
time demanding the return of the rc
: mainder. The reply was rather remark
i able. The letter said: ‘Dakota is a de
lightful country, but we’re not here for
■ our health. The fifty cents is to pay for
the trouble of writing this It tter,’ ”—Min
jwpoli» Preu.
SpiXJtacles !n Demand.
“Oh, my friends, there ars some
i spuctacl-s that a person never forgets'.’’
' said an or itur, recently, after giving a
' graphic des ription of a terrible acci
j dent he had witnessed,
‘ I’d like ter know wiiar dey sells cm ”
remarked an o d colored man on the n i
skirts of the crowd -TH Bite.
The Sife Side.
i “No, George," she said. “I cauuot
j marry you I shall always edeem you
as a friend, but 1 cannot be your wife."
George hesitated. ‘Clara,” he said,
brokenly, “will you grant me one favor
before I go away forever?”
i “Yes, George,” she replied, kindly.
‘ What is it
j “Please put your refusal down on
j piper. 11l feel safer.” B.jziar.
Wiiii.E several Kingston men wore
con a rsing the other niuht regarding the
j mteliiijence of animals, one man said he
owned a mule once that when plowing
recognized the soun i of the dinner horn.
It could distinguidi a particular horn
Irom ail the* other horns in the neigh
borhood. Whenever it heard that horn
it. would immediately laisc its voice ami
commence to bray. Another man said
tliat once upon a time he owned a horse
on a farm, and that horse, too, became
well acquainted with the. sound of the
dinner horn, and if plowing <om, ordo
iug any work of that kind, the driver
would lie forced to stop, unhitch, ami
take the horse to dinner, for the animal
would refuse to piow any longer. No
matter how well the horse worked, milk
ing a bee line across the fields in running
the plow, its course would be for the
gate the moment it heard tho horn.
••Now didn’t that horse think? And
didn’t he reason with himself ‘that
I means dinner” ”
Where He Stood.
New York Mamma —“O. yes, indeed.
Algernon is getting on splendidly on the
stage.”
i'liend “What did he say when he
I wrote last?”
New Yoik Mamma—“You will excuse
i the pardonable pride of the dear boy
I when I tell yoi he state ! he wu on hi»
! uppers.”
; Friend “On his uppers?”
i New York Mamma—“Yes er—that
j is—l suppose on the upper rounds oi v ho
| ladder of fame.”— 7 'ld-Bit*
Their Special Use.
“Ye , Bobby." said th : minister, who
: was dining '. ith the family, “everything
i in this world has its use, altho igh we
j may nut know what it is. Now, there
I is the fly, for instance. You wouldn't
I think that him were g.iod for auvthi.n*’’,
| yet - -
“Oh, yes, I would,” interrupted Bobby.
“1 know what th s are goed for.”
“What, B >bby.”
“P i says that they are the only thing
i what keeps him. awake when you are
■ preaching.”— Life.
Not Worth Much.
' During the recint election iu Puluki
I Cju’ ty, Arkan-aw, one of th; township
b illot box< 3, r. iiun b.- j i ;ht to the County
Clerk’s o lice wa found to bo empty.
“How is tnisf asked tin Clerk.
“How’s what.” the man who had
brought th? box r-pli d.
“Wiiy, there are no ballots iu the
box.”
• They t rd met > bring the box,” they
“Didn’t say nutuin'about the tick-ts.”
—ArLiihtaw I’raoeler.
A LsstDEN'i of Winn Parish, La., is
noted there lor hi i rernirktib'e sense of
smell. It is said that, on a calm day,
or when the win! is blowing toward
him, he can smell a deer from thirty to
sixty yards, lie is a popular hunting
lompanioH with the neighbors who
know of his power. While riding or
walking through the wood she will stop,
throw up iiis head very much as a dm’’
does when he strikes a scent, and in
this way he randy fails to locate the
'leer if it is within gunshot distance of
him.
\ Horrible Form
•if malarial disease is dumb axue. Constant
drowsiness, sleep interrupted by achill, sue-
I reeded by a consuming heat, and that by an
exhausting v.i at. A sensation as of numbness
1 nun Um no shaking attends it. Hostet
ter’s btomach Bitters invariably eradicates It,
’iiouah t is the most obstinate form of mipsma.
born disease. To conquer it with quinine is ai
• •’ l>o-si i>’.- art to batter down Gibraltar with a
i.o • Malarial disorders of every kind
I ire attended with derangement of the liver, a
fact evinced by the sail-on tint Which the skin
a-.e.irnes in such diseases. For this symtom, as
for its eau.se. the bitters is a certain reme
dy. ' 'o.istination, dyspepsia, rheumatism
aii'l inact.vily of the kidneysand bladder,*
are also relieved by this tine alterative,
TUo devil oun never be entirely crush*!
while the mum lives.
Bnckiact.arn's Dye for the Whiskers » eas
ily applied, and cuts brown or black.
The prompt use of Ayer's Cherry FacMraJ i
will often pioreut serious lung trouble*.
7 1
■—
(41.25 Per Annum; 75 cents for Six Months;
* 50 cents Tn nr Months; Single Copies
I 5 oeut«- in Advance.
The Survival of the Fit-Test.
They were talking between inta
n the theatre and on • lady said ,
“My sister went there and ha
! tit-”
The music here drowned the spea'
voice, when it stop red the oth r
was saying:
“If 1 thought I would have a 1
when the music interrupted agaiq
man behind them leaned forward. I
•A ou ought to have seen they
had,” said th? first speaker try’,
drown the trombone. ‘lt was peri
j dreadful. 1 ’
Then the man behind them sixifi
1 loud whisper:
‘Excuse ine ladies, but I am ado
and it is my specialty to cure fits.'’
A tit of silence succeeded, and in:
of talking dress making, the Indies
ther uml vidcd attention to the pl:
Detroit ft'r. e Brren.
City Slang in tho Suburbs, j
z MI K1 » c < r . FT
KiM i< “Well, afore you leaves B*l<
wins you orter try the flshin’ by th;
great tree down thar by Millburn Hal
It’s— 1 ’
Mr. Smap.ti.ino—“l.o k here; ynu’ip
i just the tenth person who has told m %
about that tree. It's a chestnut.”
it: stk “Yes that's ho. it’s a < best, a
I nut.”
Mn. Sm m'.ti.i'.g— “vVell. then. doa*s I
1 try to grt it oil <>u tm-, because I ain't! |1
one of that kind.’’ <Twangs hit chest-; B
nut bell, and walks oil, leaving ttio old! I
I man bewildered at the strange ways or |
city folks.) Harper n Yaan-j f'v'kt. ;
An Accident. J.W
*’ What s the matter, Johnnie!” usiEMti®
: a small boy, as Johnnie emerged fn»ml»
| th; hous.’!crying.
I’lightlul accident!” replied Johnaieuiß
briefly.
“No! What was it?”
“Wei!, you see, 1 was
’ mother, and I got mad and sussed h 4 11
I “Yes.” i
I “And then she started me” t|
“Ye.” !
“And I ran all over tuu nouse, and fl
down into the yard*uft 1 round that; ami r
tli n int<? tli ■ wood shed, you know —'*
"Yes, go on ! ’
“Well I was mnnin’ under full steaaa, .H
you >ee.” ! i
“Ye-, yes; of course.”
, “And , ran into an open switch, la®-II
i old gentlhuKin wm in the wood-sh« 4 )
with one. Terrible accident on that, fl
road, 1 can tell you. Tracks *iu*« I
! cleared yet.”— lliibiler.
“I don't take any stock in thess
! trtnie doctors.”
"Why not;” > fl
“i <*a!ie.l in Mrs. Doctor KJ lain at I
my wif- y .; erdiy. and what do yfee ■<
th.ik »he prescribed?”
“live it. up.”
j “ \ new winter silt. ” — Rambler.
At the masquerade ball in Adin lust
, Kt. Jacobs Oil took the first prize Noti.in,
I strange in this, tft it is highly prized in evers
I family where used—i-speciiilly inours.l
i ( al., Slountain Tribune.
" Aunty.” eaid a beautiful gir l , ns übe Het.
ened to her lover’s retreating footsteps. ’“J. J
i sometimes have a tckliei sensation slxnit »»>
lips ami far-. What, can I <lo for it ?” ** 1 d<»a*J
know, inv dear, uii.e-syo" have George shj»v»
off his mustache I
Mr. Geo. Deuterman. Now York ettr, suf
fered nearly a month with asevere eough, *a*t
having tried several remedies without reisat,’ t
! rtnulij used Bed Star Cough Cure, whisk.. W
says, proved • speedy and effectual. ’*
| _
( A clergyman in Illinois, who Ind b*e« j
! mirying several parties of voting so bs, wss®
asked by a brother who called on him !«>w 1
. was getting along. "O. finely.” he rrisist;
I ’• I’m sailing right along at the rate of tiortas.*
knots an hour.” « ..
’Tam a merchant and planter," writes SJ A
i T. N. Humphrey, of Tenn , "and it gives scß
great pleasure to say. that tor severe couselta
I and colds Allen’s Lung Balsam is th'- UeM
remedy now offered for sale. I have piducww-.
many to try it with the best of results." I’ti-cw
.. We. and Ji per bottle at Druggists.
j If yon have tuiuor. tor tumor eymptmMP
Cancer (or eancer syuipton.s/.Scrofuia.Krysi®*-
| las. ■~alt-Kheum.Chronic wnakn»;sMts,Nerv«J®»t. j
ueas or other complaints—Vr. Kilmer's Jfsa-
MAtJt Kkmkxiv will oorruct and cure.
i Itv lief i» immediate and a vure earu. i'vwtis. Y!
•K-uicdy for Catarrh. SO’. t
‘
NO.