The morning news. (Savannah, Ga.) 1887-1900, July 04, 1887, Page 3, Image 3

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AO R u ri.Tr IIA I. DEPARTMENT. The Field, Farm and Garden. We solicit articles for this department. The name of the writer should accompany the letter or article, not necessarily for pub lication, but as an evidence of good faith. Canning Fruits—Hints About It. Every housekeeper ought to know how to can fruit and vegetables, because the canned article, if die canning is well done, are much better when done at home than at factories, and, besides, ono lias more confidence in the home-prepared article. The Democrat has an article which contains some valuable hints on canning fruits. In tho first place, the fruit to lie canned must lie perfectly sound and hot even a day overripe, espe cially currants and berries; neither should the Small fruit be allowed to stand overnight after picking, if it can be avoided. The fruit should bo picked over very carefully and, if absolutely necessary, may be rinsed quickly through water and thoroughly drained; but the flavor will be much better if it be not. Before beginning operations have everything ready; the firo just, right, your jars perfectly clean and roady at hand, the tops and rubbers where there will not bo a second lost in getting them when needed; for much of the success of tho process de pends on the expedition with which the tops are put on mul screwed down after the jars are filled. The jars and the covers should both be hot. Have a kettle of hot water on the stove and when the fruit is ready to bo put in the jars plunge the jar in it so that tho water will touch the outside and tho in side at the same time, and then stand the jar in a dish-pan about a quarter full of hot water, which should have been already placed on a table convenient to the stove, with tho preserving kettle, a silver or wooden spoon, an earthen cup with a handle, and, if you have it, a can-filler. Set two or three heated jars in the pan at the same time. Tho covers should be in a smaller kettle of hot water on the stove. Fill the jar with the hot fruit, run the spoonhandlo down on all sides to let out the air, and then fill to tho brim with the hot syrup; put on the rubber, take the cover from the hot water and screw on tightly. As the fruit cools screw down again, and when cold try again, as the glass contracts in cooling, and it is necessary that they |houid be air-tight. It is a good plan to set the jars as soon as filled into another pan of water, to prevent staining the table, and also that the juice may not harden on the outside if any has run over. Always be careful to have the right cover and rubber for each jar. A good plan is always to put the rubber inside the jar and screw the top on as soon as it has beon emptied and prop erly washed. There can then lie no mis take when it Is needed the second time. Bottles should always lie thoroughly cleaned when emptied, also the corks belonging to them, and they will then lie ready when they are needed for catchup, etc. Wide mouthed bottles can be used for fruits. These, also, should be hot when filled and the sealing done immediately. When tin cans are used for tomatoes, corn, etc., they should 1* put in cold water as soon as filled and soldered immediately. For canning small fruits a good rule is to allow one-third of sugar to a pound of fruit. Put water to the sugar, in tho proportion of about a tea r cupful of water to each pound of sugar, make into a syrup and skim carefully. Add the fruit, let it boil ten minutes and it will be ready for canning. For pears, peaches, gages, etc., allow about the same quantity of sugar as for raspberries; pie-plant will need a full half-pound of sugar to a pound of stalk. Peaches should be pared and can be canned whole or in halves. Pears should be canned whole, and if dropped immedi ately into cold water when pared will not turn black; gages and plums should have the skin pricked with a needle to prevent burst ing. Weeds and Thistles. Every farmer has more or less trouble with weeds and thistles and comparatively few farmers know how to get rid of them permanently. Tho American Cultivator says that the light plowing given in early spring breaks comparatively few of the roots of tho thistle and does not diminish the vigor even of these. Tho six-rowed barley ripens so quickly after sowing that It may often be harvested before the thistle has fuirly got Into blossom. If ground with thistles must be sown, barley is, per hnps, the best crop to grow for escaping the pest of thistles. All that is necessary to destroy any pe rennial weed is to keep its top suppressed through ono entire season, especially the latter part thereof. Cultivate often enough to cut off tho young shoot* before they see the light. In com or potatoes, if thistles appear in the hills, either pull them up or bury the shoot* in damp earth to bleach and rot. If a shoot, is cut off there is far less loss of vitality to the root than if It is rott-d off. It is much the same as tho difference between amputating an arm or letting it mortify, only, unfortu nately, tho Canada thistle is a many-headed monster, and killing some root* cannot l>e expected to destroy the entire imtob. There is yet no loss of time in killing Canada this tles, as it is best to have the plants growing vigorously and full of sap before turning under. Some even prefer to let them get in full blossom, believing the vitality of the root Is more exhausted then than it is ear lier. By plowing under in June ami keep ing every slu sit down through the season, every root may be destroyed. But a Held should be free from stones or stumps to allow this to be done. "Bossing” tho Bull. A Country Gentleman correspondent writes: "Having handled Jersey hulls for muny years,' and Just now- having hud m>iiio extra trouble witli an eight-months-old nni illal, I herewith send you description of a device which may prove useful to some of your readers: I took a piece of hard wood, 1 by :{ inches, anil cut off two lengths It inches each, planed them down rmooth, laid them on toff of each other and with n brace and live-eighths inch l>it bored a hole at each end anil one in the centre; then took a strong piece of half inch hemp rope, put a knot in ono end, drew it through ono piece and then the other, up to six inches, knotted it outside, thus forming the nose piece. The middle holes I us'd for the head piece, which must lie adjusted to the size of the animal’s head, and then under the jaw I put another, k aving tho second knot loose enough for the animal to cut, but not so much as to let bnn get it off his houd, and cutting this rope al/out long enough to lead hy. In another piece of wood, six inches lung, I put a liolo at each end, to which I attached the short ro|>e and a longer rojie—uctlng as a swivel— and when we led the bull out in the field and stumped him down with a twenty foot tether, he list like u land/, alter one day, aud it was wonderful how quickly he gave to letting me he ‘boss.’ ” Selection in Breeding. The coupling of two animals cannot, of itself, says the American Agriculturist, produce qualities to a degree greater than the sum of that to which they exist in the animals and their ancestors. The breeding of animals can create excellence only by addition and holding the same. In the true sense of the term, qualities in animals are created only by environment. For breeding to make any improvement, there must first be one superior animal, and its superiority can come only of more favorable conditions surrounding it. Hence improvement is made along two lines: By surrounding animals with favorable conditions and by selection in breeding. Tho first produces in individ uals greater merit than is possessed by those animals not so happily situated; the second combines and holds this merit. The animal of superior merit not only has more good points than the average animal, but it has fewer bad points; and when two superior animnls are selected and bred their merits are doubled and their defects are divided as compared with the merits and faults of ani mals reproduced in their offspring. It is plain that selection in breeding can accom plish nothing unless the animals are first surrounded by unusually favorable condi tions. On the other hand, favorable envi ronment is of little value without selection in breeding, for the good results produced by it may be lost with each animal. There will be no aggregation and retention of merit. Hence the two must go hand iu hand. Lemon Culture in Florida Tho lemon grove, says the American Ag riculturist for July, Ik started much the same ns the orange grovd’, but buddod trees should always be used, as the fruit of seed lings is generally worthless. High pine land is best adapted to the growth of lemon trees, and the higher and dryer the better; low lands and hummocks will never give satisfactory results. The lemon is not ns hardy as the orange, and consequently can not lie grown with profit as far north, un less well protected by bodies of water, or surrounding forests, and on high land. The trees may be planted somewhat closer together than tho orange, as the fruit is mostly borne on the inside branches, while orange trees bear more heavily on the outer limbs. From twenty to twenty-five feet apart is the usual distance. Clean culture and the best commercial fertilizers apply equally as well to the lemon as to the orange grove, and the trees will thrive with a less amount of fertilizer. Lemon trees should never be pruned, except to remove dead branches, and possibly a few of the lower limbs that interfere with cultivation. Lemons should never be picked for ship ment when fully ripe, but should be gath ered just as they are turning yellow and placed on drying shelves in the same man ner as .oranges, and left for several weeks until thoroughly cured. They aro then as sorted and graded, wrapped in manila paper, firmly packed in boxes and are ready for shipment. A Poor Man, And Why. A writer in the Planters' Advocate, who signs himself “Wool Hat,” tells his brother farmers why he is poor. He says: “I am poor because I buy more#han I sell. In the first place, I buy a part of my meat from the Northwest; my fish comes from Port land in the tailing of which the Mainlanders receive a bounty from the government. My onion sets and all my gard en seeds come from Michigan; I sold the wool from eight een sheep at cents per pound to an agent of the manufacturing company at Reading, Pa.; four months thereafter I bought a hat from the same company pay ing at the rate of 86 a pound for the wool. The hide of a buck I sold for sc. per pound. It went to Elmira, N. Y., was tanned, sent back and I bought it at 35 cents a pound, and it weighed more than it did when I sold it. My axe handles come from Connecticut, my matches from Delaware, my pen, ink and paper from New York. Am I the only fool in Georgia'” Manure in Heaps. The Southern Developer says thatmanure whenever possible should be spread from the wagons. The common notion that manure wastes when spread over tho ground and that it is more secure when left in heaps is erroneous. The waste is much greater in heaps, as tho slight fermentation dissipates ammonia and makes the plant food more easily soluble. The labor is much greater aside from tho imj/ossibiiity of spreading as evenly from heaps ns from a wagon. After a manure heap has lain several weeks every particle of the manure may be removed from the surface, and yet spots all over the field will show by overrank grain and weeds where the soluble fertility has leached into the soil. It Is far better to have this fer tility evenly distributed and benefit the crop uniformly than to have land too rich per haps in spots aud too poor elsewhere. Household. Tomato Balad. —Peel ripe tomatoes with a sharp knife, slice crosswise, lay in a salad bowl and season on the table with salt, a little sugar, pepper, oil and vinegar. Keep the tomatoes on ice until actually served. They cannot be too cold. Baked Cucumbers.—Pare the cucumbers; chop them fine with a Hjnall onion; put them on, with very little water and stew for ton minutes. Prepare u rich dressing as for poultry of bread crumbs with herbs and yelk of egg; pour off all the water from the cueumljers: add the dressing aud ono ta blespoonful of butter and bake in a deep disli. Rick Cream.—One teucupful of boiled rice. Mush tho rice very smooth and add to it the stiffly beaten whites of six eggs and two heaping tablespoonfuls of white sugar; lastly, odd three tab]u>.|>ooufnla of sweet mum and a delicate flavoring of vanilla or rose. Fill a blano mange mold with the cream and leave it some hours to harden. Serve with custard or whipped syllabub. Hashed Hutton.—Minco an onion and fry it iti butter to a brown color, add a ta blespoouful of flour, stir well, pour in enough stis’li or broth to make thesauce, with a dash of vinegar, pepper, salt and spices to taste. Let tho sauce give a boil, then strain it, and when cold put in the slices of meat, well trimmed of uny outside parts, ami a good allowance of pickled gherkins cut in slices. Lot the w hole get warm by a gentle sim mering, and keep it hot till wanted for tablo. CofcoANUT Biscuits. —Taken large freah eoeoaimt and grate it. very fine. For every quarter of a pound of cocoa nut allow half a pound of finely-sifted white sugar and the white* of four eggs beaten to n firm froth. Mix the ingredient* thoroughly and di-op little liulls of the paste Upon n well-buttered linking tin, atsiut two inches distant from each other. Bake in a gentle oven until the biscuit* are lightly browned all over. They will require from fifteen to twenty minutes. Oodskbkhry FOOL. — One quart of gooso lierries, ripe, one tablespoonnil flutter, ono nip sugar, yelks of four eggs, meringue of wbites ami eight tulilcspooniuls sugar. St"W the gooseberries in just, water enough to i cover them. When soft, and broken rub them through a sieve to remove the skins. Wiule still hot bent in the butter, sugar and the whipped yelks of the eggs. Pile in a glaso ilibU or hi small classes, aud heap upon THE MORNING NEWS: MONDAY, JULY 4, 1887. ti e top a meringue of the whipped whites and sugar. W h ite Summer Squash. —Cut three sum mer squashes in quarters and put them in boiling water slightly salted, enough to cover them; boil gently for forty-five min utes. After putting the squashes in the water add one sprig of parsley, four pepper corns, two doves and a minced onion. When the squashes aro cooked pass them through a sieve and put them on the Kick of the range to keep warm. Mix one teas;oonfUl of flour in a little cold milk, add twooupa of boiling milk, mix with the squash, Broilkd Chicken.—l)o not attempt to broil an old or full-grown fowl; take a young chicken, split it down the back always, wipe the inside dry after removing tho giblets, and place It on the gridiron with the inside down; keep it so until it begins to grow very brown, then turn it, but the moment the skin threatens to burn reverse it again. To find how it is cooking insert a sharp knife into the thickest breast, if the floeh Is pink at all return it to the fire; when well done and browned lay it on a platter, inside down; butter, salt and serve. Buttered Oranges. —Take eight eggs and the whites of four more, with four tea spoonfuls of rose water; strain through a bit of muslin ora hair si eye; add three fourths of a pound of sifted sugar, mixing well. But with the strained juice of a dozen oranges, and as many lumps of sugar rubbed ou the orange skins as will absorb the zest. Ret it over a gentle fire in an enameled saucepau, and when it begins to thicken stir in a tablespoonful of butter. When it reaches the consistency of honey pour into a flat china dish. It is good to serve with sponge biscuits. Farm Notes. Market men say that tho demand for cur rnnts is increasing yearly. The old way of shipping in bulk is giving place to berry crates and baskets. The warm days will cause the corn to grow very rapidly, while tomatoes, Lima beans, squashes and melons delight in the warmest weather in order to yield well. The net profits from the sale of small fruit by two young ladies hi California last year, one of whom was a consumptive when she began, amounted to tho handsome sum of 815,000. Wells on the farm should be thoroughly cleaned out in the spring und fall. At this season there will be few wells that will not contain toads, both alive and in a state of decomposition. A great many weeds can be used, when just coming up, as greens, such as poke, lamb’s quarter and dandelion; but it is let ter to grow mustard and kale instead, and plow under all weeds. Work the strawberry plant* well now and remove all the grass and weeds between them. If a plentiful supply of manure lie used the plants may be allowed to throw out a large number of runners, but between tho rows should be kept clean. In twenty days tho eggs of ono hen would exceed the weight of her body. So of any bird. Yet the whole of that mass of albu men is drawn directly from her blood. If stinted in food, of course, it would limit the number as well as the size of the eggs. Pick out your breeders, says the Farm Journal, the pigs with long bodies, broad backs and deep, round hams. Relect a breed which has hair on it. A good coat of hair counts on a hog as well as any animal. It is a protection in summer and in winter. In pruning trees of any kind it is better to have one strong branch or limb than two or three weak ones, says Popular Garden ing. It is better to keep limbs thinned out than to cut back and make too close heads. Let the sun’s rays in all through the tree. A heavy mulch between the rows of rasp berries and blackberries will double the crop of fruit and save time in cultivating; but just liefore applying it go through them with a cultivator and hoo, treating the suckers that have sprung up as noxious weeds. The quince is a great feeder and needs good cultivation. No other fruit requires so much manure and such thorough cultiva tion. If the trees be neglected it is likely that there will be no fruit, hut If thero shall It will be of small growth and unsightly ap pearance. The spring litter of pigs should be re moved from the sow and turned on tho clover. A warm moss in the morning and at night of scaldod ground oats and mid dlings will causa them to grow very rapidly, as they will also secure a large share of their food in the field. Good butter cows will make a pound of butter to every 14 to 18 pounds of milk. “General purpose cows” want from 22 to 81 pounds, and some cows would require 50 pounds of milk to make a pound of butter. Average dairies require somewhere about 35 pounds of milk to make a pound of but ter. If the field bo heavily covered with tall weeds, and there lie no other crop growing thereon, broadcast ten bushels of lime over the weeds and plow them Under, liefore they seed, asa green manurial crop. Allow thorn to remain a month, then harrow in two bushels of rye per acre, and plow the rye under when it is three feet high, turning it down with a chain and next spring tho land will be excellent for corn. Lice is the summer drawback to poultry. Old nests, filthy doors and fowls crowded on the roosts cause lice to breed very rapidly, and as the vermin begin to attack the heiis the production of eggs diminishes until very few eggs are obtained. The final result is that the fowls are debilitated from the at tacks of the pests, and quickly succumb to roup and cholera. Tho poultry house must be kept, clean and well whitewashed, while kerosene and carbolic acid may be used freely on every part. A writer in the American Rural Home thus describes how he avoided jxitato bugs: “In planting potatoes I dropped a handful of unleacheil ashes upon each hill after spatting the ground with the hoe, lwlieving it would be disagreeable to the bugs when they made their first appearance, which is the best time to fight them, as the first ones that come do not feed upon tho vines, the slugs from the eggs being the real depre dators. Asa result I have found and killed five lieetles, when tieforo I numbered thou sands upon the same ground.” Popular Science. Fluted handles for saucepan*, so that they will not slip in the greasy hands of the cook, are anew idea, An Improved lid that al lows the steam to escape is also provided. Coke is the result of tho distillation of the coal; it contains from four to fifteen per cent, of ashes, or more, according as it is made from largo or line pi*s-es, and accord ing to the amount which is contained in tho coal from which it isproduced. It contains also from 2 to 10 per cent, of water. Prof. Hughes lias shown that n stranded iron wire cable has less irlf-tndurtlon than one of the same mass of metal formed into a solid wire. The explanation of tills is that tlie circular field of magnetic force around the axi-. which exists inside the wire as well as outside, is not as strong in tho interior of the strand'd iron cable as in the interior of the solid iron wire. The stranding reduces the magnetic |s nuenbility along Him-s which are circles descriliod around the axis, and hence reduces the self-conduction. The Lewis tlre-extlnetor, which has been adopted by the Marauis of (Salisbury at Hatfield, and is also to be used by the Bir mingham Fire Brigade, is about the size of a policeman’* truncheon. At the upper end is a wire loop by which it is hung from a nail or staple. A sudden pull (of ntxmt ten pounds) detaches the ext Inetor from the cap, opens tnc tube and scatters the contents on the blazing tire. It contains n liquid which lm* the properly of stifling a fire. Recent experiments with the device at the Crystal Palace on burning timbers soaked with po trolcum were entirely successful. Phillips' Digestible Cocoa Produces a feeling of lightness and buoyancy, as against that of weight, headache and depres sion. so common with the ordinary cocoa, Uis nourishing to a higu degree, easily digested and delicious to the taste. Your druggist aud grocer have U. CHEAP ADVERTISING. ONE CEUTA WORD. ADVERTISEMENTS, 15 Words or more, *' this column inserted for ONE CENT .4 WORD, Cash in Advance, each insertion. Everybody who has any want to supply, anything to buy or sell, any business or accommodations to secure.’ indeed,any wish to gratify, should adrert/se in this column. lILT WANTED. WANTED, n good woman as cook and light M housework; no washing; highest wages paid to the right woman; references required. Fall at 8. KKOURKOFh "K, 1M Broughton street. \VTANTED, youth inoffice of wholesale house; I t must be good penman and quick nt figures. Address, stating compensation required, X., office Morning News. 'XX/'ANTED. wet nurse. Apply ITS Liberty tt street. Pood references required. YITANTEIi, two fishermen for Tybee. Apply tt at MARSHALL HOUSE to day. WANTED, ft Colored man cook. Apply at TYNAN'S at II a. H. to-day. VI/ ANTED, solicitors; salary and commission TT paid to the right kind of gentlemen and ladies. Apply at IRI Broughton street Tuesday, in the morning. 'll PANTED, a young man to make himself tt generally useful in an office. State salary expected; references required. Address A., this office. _____ _____ A XL ANTED, a lad who understands telegraphy. Tt Address J. K M., Rocky E..rd. oa, WT"ANTED, a man oT temperate and moral TT habits, seeking employment, to represent an old established house In his own section; salary 870 to SIOO per month; references ex acted. AM. MANUFACTURING HOUSE, 10 Barclay street. New York. _______ _____ / t OOD RAILROAD FOREMEN can get w*>rk I T on Savannah, Dublin uml Western Short Line Ra ilroad by applying to GRANT & MU NDY, Pulaski House, Savannah, Ga. MISCELLANEOUS tv ants. TIP ANTED, Ist of October, by n, lady aud son, tt a fiat of three or four rooms. Address, stating terms and situation, 188 Abercorn street; references exchanged. ROOMS TO KENT. Ivq I; RENT, suite of four nicely furnished rooms in a desirable locality: rent, sn> a month: rented singly if desired. Address P. O. Box 85, Savannah. _______ tAOR RENT, eight rooms, with hath. Apply 1 HIRSCH BROS.. 81 Barnard street. IIOUS!-> AND STOKES I'Oli RENT. I [NOR KENT, a very desirable brick dwelling; ' location first-class and within live minutes' walk of the Bay. Apply to DANIEL H. KEN NEDY. 174 Bay street. },X)R RENT, Cottage House, corner Drayton ’ und Wall I burg streets. For port tculars ap ply to TJh >8 BOWDEN, 814 Broughton street. I NOR RENT, tbree-gtory hrlek house ou Macon, bet ween iiabertbani and Price streets. Ap ply to E. J KENNEDY, corner Bull and York. IXIR RENT OR SALE, the large and commo- T dlous dwelling No. 182 Oaston street, three stories on a basement and three rooms deep, fronting the Park. For terms addressP. O. Box No. 108. Fy >R KENT, 148 Hull, on northwest corner of Whitaker. Apply to Da. PURSE, 140 Liberty street. FOR SALK. I NOR RALE, cheap, (Mil feet 5-inch Cement 1 Sewer Pipe, at 48 Barnard street. INOR SALE, SO head Calves; also. Beef Cattle. * Write or apply personally to WAITE BROS., Dorchester, Oa. TAOR SALE— ROREDKW Lots, 00 feet on I Front street along the river and 500 feet deep, at $lB5. payable SBS cash and sl2 50 every six mouths,with Interest. FIVE-ACRE Isita In the TOWN OF ROSEDEW, with river privilege*, at SIOO. payable S2O Cash and $5 every throe months, with inlerest, Apply to I)a. FaLLIGANT, 151 South Brood street. 0 to 10 a. ii. daily. I NOR SALE, Laths, Shingles, Flooring, Celling, Weatberhoarding and Framing Lumber. Office and yard Taylor aud East liroad streets. Telephone No. 811. REPPARD A' 00. _ '.■"■■g- —. h l ,'. LOST. IORT. a Brown Spaniel Pup: badly trimmed; j answers to the name of ‘Gyp '* A suitable reward will be paid by returning to 40 Charlton street, RF-WAKD.— I-ost. a Mocking Bird yesterday afternoon from 58V4 Broughton street. Finder will be rewarded for return of same. TOST, list of subscribers to Young Men’* j Christian Association. Anyone returning same to the Secretary at the rooms of the asso elation will be rewarded. PHOTOGRAPHY. C PECIALNOTtCEPHOTOG RAPHY Prices reduced Petite* ?l 50, Cards $3, Cabinet $3 i*?r dozen, and larger work In tho sane pro portion. J. N. WILSON, £1 Bull street. IIFE-BIZE CRAYONS in handsome frames J sls. All styles and sizes of Photograph* at as low prices. LAL’NEY & GOEBEL, Kavuu. ash, Ga. 1 11 1 - SUMMER RESORTS. I ''OK HEALTH .end 66m fort go to Oelnef Springs. Gainesville, Gt. The best of fare, delightful shades and splendid mineral waters; terms reasonable. Admens I*. it. HULZEN DOKFF, Owner. ■ Mountain top hotel and springs, over RookflshGap. Blue Hidce Mountains, of Virginia; Urtsi feet above sea level. HKNHY L. MAHSIE, Afton. V - " ,MI l l M jtilHf ELLANKOUf}. OpilE published report that navigation is closed 1 on the Altanmha on account of 1.. w river is not trite. The steamer ‘‘Win. M. VVndley" anil the barge 'River Bride” have been making rsguliir trips without interruption, and there is no Intention of tying up. B L. HICKS, Mana ger. rADTES, remember the SAVANNAH TRUNK J FACTORY is the place to btiv Trunks. Bags. Valises and Straps. 38 Whitaker street, corner State. 4 LWAYR something new With HUIDT R cede V Y brated drinks. K >t Beer Milk Shakes this week. Try it; you will liko It. \\f ANTED, old Trunk*, etc., for repairs made VI mer equal to ilev,. at TRUNK FA<rrt >HY, corner State and Whitaker. ft BEAT BARGAINS In Odd* and Ends at Me.-. "• Knurs on Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday, previous to taking stock ILK. ICE ! Now is the time when overy-* body wants ICE, and we want to sell it. PRICES REASONABLE! 20 Tickets, good for 100 Pound*, 75c. 140 Tickets, good for 700 Pound*, $5. 200 Tickets, good for 1,000 Pounds, $7. 50 Pounds at one delivery 30c. Lower prices to Urge buyeis. I O IS Pack*! for rhjpmont at reduced raton. Caroful nnd polit* wrvlrw Full and litoral weight. KNICKERBOCKER ICE CO. 144 BAY ©T* LUOUEai Ar BATES S. M. H. L.&B.S.M.H. THE HOUSE THAT zsdasfsd Big House, Ain’t It? YICS ! AND within Its walls you will find an army of Works, who, notwithstanding the hot weather, are pushed to their utmost to keep up with the orders flowing in upon us from Maine to Mexico. Yea! It seems that the hotter the went iter the greater the utruniu of order*. Hence we are BIZZY AZ BEZE! Still we. like the much abused conductor, can make room for one more, and If you want a PIANO or ORGAN we'll crowd your order in rather than disappoint Now is your time to make a purchase and have BIG MUZ IC K ail summer long. Oive us a call and we'll astonish you. bargains heretofore unheard of, almost endless time and minute Installments to help you out in mnklnga purchase, while our lino embraces the CHICKKUING. MASON N HAMLIN, MATHUBHEK, KENT and AKIQN pianos, Mahon a Hamlin, PACKARD OR CHESTRAL and lIAY STATE ORGANS. DROP AROUND AND SEE US. Lurtilfii & Bales Music House, Savannah, (ia. ORA IN ANIt lIAY. Cargo Eastern Hay! WESTEBN HAY. 80.000 bushels CHOICE MILLING WHITE COHN. 6,000 bushels MIXED CORN. 30,000 bushels HEAVY MIXED OATS. 100,000 pounds WHEAT BRAN. 100,000 FRESH CORN EYES. I.OtM bushels COW PEAS. CLAY, speckled, white and mixed. Grits, Meal, Lemons, Oranges and Vegetables. STOCK FEED, ETC, ETC. Call for prices on carloads. T. P. BOND & CO., 100 B iy HAY. CHOICE EASTERN HAY FANCY WESTERN HAY. Cow Peas. SPECKLED, BLACK EYE, CLAY and MIXED. LEMONS. FRESH BTOCK MESSINA LEMONS. CORN, OATS, BRAN, CORN EYES. PEANUTS, ONIONS, ETC. Close Prices on Car Lota of Huy and Grain. 109 HAY. W.D. SIMKINS&CO Cow Peas. ALL KIND OF SEED AND FEED PEAS VERY CHEAP. —ALSO— Hay and Grain. —BY— G.S.McALPIN 172 BAY STREET HASH, BOOKS, BLINDS, BTC. Halifax River Imber Milk JOHN MANLEY, Proprietor, DAYTONA, KIuCmiDA.. EVERY VARIETY OF Rough & Dressed Lumber, SASHES, SHINGLES, MOLDINGS and SCROLL WORK FURNISHED. In connection with the Mill is alzo a MA CHINK AND REPAIR SHOP. Address JOHN MANLEY DAYTON A. FLORIDA. (;mmisios mkr* ha vi t. 13. HULL, Wholesale Grocer, Flour, Hay, Grain and PruviMua Dealer. yßEflll MEAL and (JRITK In white wmk*. I Mill stuffs of nil kinds always un hand. fleer,U'l raised SPANISH I’EANUTh, also PEAS; -very variety H|*elal price* ear load lots HAY and OKA IK. Prompt attention given nil order* and satis faction guaranteed. OmCK, S8 BAY. WAREHOUSE. No 1 WADf.EY STREET, on lino Central Railnad. ( OVIK AC TORS. Pf J. FALLON,"" BOLDER AND CONTRACTOR, 23 DRAYTON STREET, SAVANNAH. ESTIMATES promptly furnished for building I j of any class MEDIC Atw TO !^MEN£H~ Us a nil nod. etc. I Will won;! ft VfttUftbi* trßfttiKßln^&ltwdV eon tain in* full partieul..r* for hni* cum. fnm of that**. AU4tM I'rvUMl.tU ft UUt. Mvmua C v un. AUCTION BALES FUTURE DAYS. House and Lot at Auction. By ROBT. H. TATEM, Auctioneer. Will be sold before Court House on TUESDAY, July .1, 1887, at 11 O'clock, The House and Lit next to southeast corner New Houston and East Broad street last fronts 3a feet, more or less, on East Broad street and under good rent. Terms cash, purchaser laying for titles. Building Lot at Auction. By ROBT. H. TATEM, Auctioneer. Mill lie sold before Court House, at 11 o'clock, on TUESDAY, July sth, Lot No. 148 Derby ward, IfoxlOO, and fronting north on St. John street. Terms cash, pur chaser paying for titles. LEG ALBA LEM. UNITED STATES MARSHAL'* SALE. tTVDKH and hy virtue of a writ of fieri fareas J issuisl out of the Circuit Court of the United States for the Eastern Division of the Southern District of Georgia, in favor Of ITEL -I.ER, HIRSH A CO. vs. PERKY M. DeLKON, I have this day levied upon the billowing de scribed property, to wit: All that miet or par cel of land lying, lining and situated hi the enmity of t hallium. State of Georgia, and con taining ton (10) acres, more or less, lying a little west of the clly of Savannah, and bounded north by the Savannah river, east by lands of 1). C Bacon and by lands known as lands of said Perry M. DeUiOti, and south and west by lands known as lands of Francis A. Kxley. as the property of defendant, I’EKKY M. IieI.EON, and w ill sell the same at, public outcry before the Court House door, in Savannah, (la!, on the FIRST TUESDAY IN AUGUST NEXT during Die legal hour* of sale. Property pointed out by plaint iff s attorney, and duo notice given to tlie tenants in possession. Dated at Savannah, Oa., June 10th, 1887 LUCIUS M. LAMAR, U. H. Marshal. CITY MARSHAL'S KALE. City Marshal's Omr*. t Savannah, June 7, 1887 f ITNDF.R AND RY VIRTUE of a special tax J execution placed in my bands by C. s. HARDEE, City Treasurer, I have levin.i oil, and will sell in accordance with law, on the FIRST TUESDAY IN JULY, 1887, between the legal hours of sale, before the Court House door, In the city of Savannah, Chathnm county, Geor gia. the following property, to-wit: One Pool Table, cues and Malls, levied on as the property of J I, MURPHY, Purchasers paying for titles. ROBERT J. WADE. MILLINER y. Platshek’s, 138 Broughton St. Positive Clearance Sale OF OUR ENTIRE REMAINING STOCK OF SUMMER GOODS IN— Millinery, Parasols, Gloves, Hosiery, Embroideries, Laces, Collars, Infants’ Lace Caps, Ladies’Muslin Underwear, Canton Mattings, Linen Ulsters, Knit Underwear, Jerseys, and Oar Great Line of Novelties L. &B.S.M.H. BUILT. Those winning to buy real, live bargain* can never avail themselves of a lietter chance tliari we are now offering, for what we state Is posi tively bona fide. N. II - Country orders will receivet.be aame beueflt of reduction given to our home trade Your orders we respectfully solicit. ■■■■■■■ ' wmtriiHura ooon. Look! Look! JUST WHAT YOU NEED. Gentlemen’s Fine Night Shirts For $1 Fine Jeans Drawers at, Vie. per pair. ("Inure tthdershlrts, long or short sleeves, 50c. White latwn Ilows, $ 1 per dozen. White Tie* at I So. per dozen; fl BO per gross. Fancy Percale Scarfs, BOe. per doaen. 4-in hand ’l it*., wash goods, fl per dozen. White Duck Vests, from ft to $2 60. British Half Hose, seamless. 25c. Whip' thick Helmets. Hammocks, White Flannel Shirts and Hats for Yachting FINE HUMMER CLOTHING AND DRESS SHIRTS MADE TO ORDER. We guarantee a fit in every case. Sole agent* for Dunlap's Fine Hat* and Kascl mento'* Comfortable Self Conforming Hats, wo comfortable to tlie head in hot weather. Beau tiful Pearl Hate, and the new STIFF-BRIM MACKINAW HAT. Sun Umbrella*, tllorla Cloth Umbrellas, never cut like tlx; silk will. Buck Horn Handle Walking Canes. Fancy Un derwear, and anything needed by men for Sum mer w ear at LaFar’s New Store, 20 Bull street, Hamilton's Old Stand. TOOTH I*As i k. FOX i Tll K T E ETII. / VRIENTAL TOOTH PASTE, Cherry Tooth " ' Paste, Charcoal Tooth Paste sTilffhda'a Organ, Imiftlfrloe, Lyons' ToothTabiet's, Arnica Tooth Soap, Thomiw.ii'* Tooth Soap, Carbolic Tooth Soap, Tooth Powers and Washes all kin,la at STRONG'S DRUU STORE, corner liuU and Perry street lane. 11 ’."! t PLUMUJSR. l. a. McCarthy,' Successor to Chas. E. Wakefield, PLUMBER, GAS and STEAM FITTER, * tlaniard street, SAVANNAH. 04 Telephone 37& C A KIUEND in need Is a friend Indeed If you nave a friend oend him or hwr the saVaNv'AH weekly NKWh; it ouiy . , fi IQJ it bHt. _ _ _j C. H. DORSETT’S COLUMN. Commi&sioners’ Sale for Partition C. 11. DORSETT, Auctioneer. Under and hy virtue of an order granted by the Honorable Superior tY/urt of Chatham county. In the Case of SARAH A. WALTON veiling III.TTY K WHALEY and the MERCHANTS AND MECHANICS’ LOAN ASSOCIATION, petit ition for partition, we will sell, before the Court Motion door in Savannah, during tha legal hours of sale, on TUESDAY, JULY 5, 1887, All of t hat certain portion of land and tha tenements thereon, known os *uh-iiivl*iona Nob. 1 amt Bof lot Number 18 Truetee* Garden, hav ing a front on Reynolds street of seventy-seven ! feet and six inches, with a depth of eighty-two feet for sub-division No, 1, and sixty-flve feat fur No. 8. Terms cash. C. H. DORSETT, J. L WHATLEY, U. H. McLAWS, Commissioners. h hi Residenca FOR SALE, Containing threo bed cham bers and bath room on third tloor; a parlor, back parlor and piazza on second floor; dining room, store room and kitchen on first floor. The two story outbuilding contains four rooms. This house is in a good locality, convenient to two lines of cars, churches and schools. As the owner ia moving from the city a good bargain can be had. OTHER HIS. A handsome, well-appointed dwelling near the Park. In point of location, surround ings and general “ mako up ” l the most critical should bo suited with this piece of realty. Near S., F. & W. Ry. Depot I have a fine property, well adapted to business purposes, private dwelling or a board ing house. No City Tax. Beyond Anderson street, I can sell one corner lot Second Avenue and Whitaker, and one inside lot between Whitaker and Barnard on Second Ave nue. —also — One lot on Montgomery, facing east, between First and Second Avenues. For $1,500 I will sell in the New Addi tion (beyond Anderson) a two-story residence containing three bedrooms, parlor, dining room and kitchen. Lot 30X 145. This is a bargain. For SlO per month and SoO Cash I will sell a beautiful lot ia Southvillo. Southern front, magnificent oaks and thickly settled neighborhood. For #2OO, To bo paid in reasonable timo after purchase is made—- $1 tO one year thereafter, $ 1 oO two years thereafter and $165 three years thereafter, and no interest—l will Bell a lot 50x100 on Lorch street, between Jefferson and Mont gomery streets. A WEST BROARSTREET CORNER, In a good locality, good for business or residence, size 75 feet on West Broad by 49 feet deep. One Other Chance. For SIOO Cash And time payments as tollows: One year after purchase, S9O; Two years after purchase, $95; Three years after purchase, SIOO, without interest, I will sell a lot on New Houston street, near Burroughs. C. H. Dorset!, ML ESTATE UKAIiJi 3