The morning news. (Savannah, Ga.) 1887-1900, November 19, 1887, Page 5, Image 5

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OLD JANUARY’S LAST DAYS. Jra Janree, After Many Vicissitudes of Fortune, Dying at Last with Not Enough Money to Bury Him. From the New York Times. A T rin with a soubriquet, unless it be of the ominous “Dick Deadeye” order, is gen erally popular with his associates, and Ira Janree, the veteran gambler, familiarly known in the sporting world as “Old Janu dry,” who died Monday in his apartments in the Gedney House, was no exception to the rule. It takes something very much out of the ordinary run to disturb the equipoise of the professional gambler, but the news that “Old January” had passed away, and, still worse, the report that he had died in poverty, produced a shock in second-story establishments in Barclay street and Park Place. The wasted, yet still commanding, figure of the old man was seen on the Clifton race track as late as two weeks ago, and the familiar pleasantry that “no race could start until Old January reached the track” was quoted then as often before. It was the last time, however. Next day and thenceforward the races were started with out him. The disease which had been sap ping his life for six years liad taken the form of galloping consumption, and he was seen on tne race track no more. Ira Janree was born sixty-eight years ago ,in an inland town of this State. He began business life as a driver on the Erie Canal, and was then promoted to be helmsman of a l >oat. Later on he came to New York, and was for some years card writer at the St. Nicholas Hotel. About 1853 he entered upon his career as a gambler, and even tually, in partnership with Elwood, more commonly known as Eddy Cline, opened a gambling house on the southeast corner of Fulton street and Broadway. Business was good in those days, and when the firm ■was dissolved by Cline’s death, he left a snug fortune of $200,000, and Janree was believed to be the owner of a “pile” of about the same size. He after ward opened a place at 573 Broadway, which was the resort of Southerners, who were then flush of money and helped to swell the pile. Later on Janree ran a large establishment at 5 Barclay street. His last Slace was on Twenty-eighth street, near ixth avenue, which he ran up to about six years ago. This was one of the most hand somely furnished gambling houses ever seen in this city, and the suppers supplied nightly to patrons were of the finest. There were ups and downs in Jauree’s career, and while it is a fact that at one time he was worth nearly $500,000, there were many other times when force of cir cumstances placed him on the opposite side of the gaming table to the profitable one which he usually graced as proprietor. There were also many times when he retired from a siege with ‘“the tiger” with only an unlit cigar, held very tightly between firmly closed teeth, as the proceeds of a “session” which had been begun with capital vary ing from a borrowed trifle to several thousand dollars. He was a hot and fierce player, pressing his luck with determina tion, tempered by coolness, and whenever he faced the dealer, the latter kne t that dis aster to the house was by no means a dis tant possibility. He fought until the last chip was gone, and on one memorable occa sion he took a desperate chance subsequent to that climax of misfortune. The story is a classic in New York gambling circles, and this is how the old man used to tell it among old friends when the conversation turned upon the vicissitudes of their peculiar pro fession: “I had been,” he would say, “in bad luck for some time, but had managed to raise a stake one day and visited old Dancer’s place on Broadway, near Bond street. It took me but a short time to lose my pile, and I left and went into the street. On the corner of Broadway I met a little girl selling rolls of lozenges. I had only a few cents in my pocket, and I invested them in lozenges and began eating them. I can’t tell how it hap pened. but the first thing I knew I was standing alongside of the bank. Next thing I knew I had for fun placed one of the lozenges, cop pered, on the nine. The nine lost, and the dealer, thinking the lozenge was a split dol lar chip, and paid it with a real split. I ate up the lozenge, and, playing the chip open, won again. Luck came my way, and in half an hour I was several hundred dollars to the good. Then I cashed my chips and went out into the cool air to rest a while. I went back, and before I left the table that night I had about $3,500. The next day I went back, and the next, and before a week was over I had quite a nice sum of money.” Just how much the ultimate winnings which resulted from the coppered lozenge amounted to the old man never told, but it is believed that $30,000 was not far off, certain it is that, when the story got abroad among the fraternity and Dancer heard of it, he became furiously angry, and to the last he never forgave Janree. Janree was a level-headed man, but he made the great mistake of his life when he allowed himself to become infatuated with betting against the books Confining him self to the phases of gambling with which he was by education familiar, and at which he was a natural adept, he was almost uni formly successful. With a love for horse racing he very easily became a devotee to gambling on the races, and that proved his ruin. His losses on the turf cost him his handsome Twenty-eighth street establishment, and thenceforward lie cut a figure quite at variance with that he displayed in his palmy days. He stuck, however, with characteristic pertinacity to the unfamiliar form of gambling, which hail fascinated him and was in constant at tendance at all the meetings of the East. The result was as might have been ex pected. Occasionally he made a handsome winning. On one occasion he cleared SB,OOO on a horse called Jake White at Mon mouth, but this was only a delusive eddy in the course of his luck. The current was all the other way, and the result was impover ishment. Another story told of him, which illus trates the vicissitudes of gambling life, is to the effect that on one occasion he won $lB,- 000 at a sitting, drew the money, and con verted it into government bonds, with the intention of taking it home and instructing his wife to apply them to “taking a plaster” (lifting a mortgage) off his house. He was delayed on the way home, and conceived the idea of improving upon his good luck. He played again, the result being that those bonds never reached the wife’s hands, and the “plaster” was not removed from the house. Two years ago Janree married a young Wife, who cared for him tenderly and was with him when he died. “I am afraid she is left destitute,” said a well-known gambler yesterday, “but if this is so, the gamblers will not let her remain so. the was a good wife to‘Old January,’ and though people who don't know us may not think so, we don't allow such people to suffer. No; and I wish you would say that if it is true that the old man was in destitute circumstances, which Ido not believe, he would not have been thus if we had known of it. We would have been glad to have given him a good funeral, but ne had expressed a desire to lie buried by his Masonic brethren, who havo already taken his body in charge and had it removed to Senior’s undertaking establishment.” FACING A MOUNTAIN LION. Thrilling Experience of a Hunter In the Rockies. From the American Agriculturist. With well-bitted horses, a complete outfit and “Uncle” Pierson as guide, wo left Lara mie City, W. TANARUS., on a bright afternoon for the game parks of Colorado and Utah. “Tim” Foley, one of the original proprietors of the California Gulch (Leadville), and consequently possessing untold wealth, had come from his remote Green river cattle ranch to join us on this hunt. Auditor Weston, or Nebraska, brought with him his son Ralph, to indulge in some general “fron tierism” before entering college life. The writer was full of the zest and buoyancy which these far Wastern trips invariably impart. Through the peculiar hazy at mosphere of the plains. Sheep Mountain looked distant only a half hour’s drive. But it was twilight before we camped on the base, and we had traveled between twenty and thirty miles. The hindquarters of two jock rabbits graced our spit that night, and what with good appetites and a free use of salt and pepper our hungry stomachs were readily able to overcome the characteristic toughness and tension of these jacks. We were glad enough to get them before our ex pedition ended. Before sunrise the next morning we had “struck” camp and were on the move, and all day long we broke the stillness with frequent discharges of our Winchesters and Sharp’s rifles at the dis tant antelope. Just at dusk we drew up at Pinkham’s ranch, in North Park, and were glad enough to avail ourselves of the hospitalities there extended us. Every one slept soundly that night; the couches, rude as they were, being a decided improvement over the bare ground of the night Before. At daybreak we were again under way, and soon our first antelope was brought down. Later on in the day we encountered these creatures in large droves, and apparently, as never before, manifested no little curiosity, frequently waiting until we were right among them before starting, and then retreating only a short distance to stop and observe our movements. We could have shot them as readily then as sheep in a barnfold. A few miles further southward, and we were in the very heart of a game region. Elk, deer, antelope, wild geese and ducks, sage hens and mountain grouse, were seen day after day, until we were fairly surfeited with shooting, and for a change devoted ourselves to sight-seeing. After reaching the summit of the moun tains and feasting our vision for some hours we began the descent, which was very diffi cult, inasmuch as falling rain froze as it fell. I took my cartridges from my Winchester, fearing lest I might slip and discharge them. When half way down the mountain we reached a small plateau in the center of which was a clump of cottonwood trees. Ralph was perhaps three rods ahead and Foley fifteen paces. I turned from the path to this clump of trees for a moment, thinking perha;>s I might start a cinnamon bear. Judge of my dismay when a Rocky Mountain lion suddenly sprang from the thicket, resting upon a broken tree not twenty feet away, and savagely glaring upon me, apparently prepared to spring upon the intruder who bad entered his lair. It was a most exciting moment. I quickly brought my rifle to my shoulde •, and aim ing between his eyes, drew the trigger to no effect. Again and again I attempted to dis charge the rifle, forgetting in the suspense that the cartridges had been withdrawn. It was, indeed, a trying ordeal. If I stopped to remove what was an imperfect cartridge, and substitute another one, or, if I turned and fled, the glaring creature, who looked to me as big as a buffalo, would pounce upon me and tear me to pieces in a jiffy'. I did neither, but fortunately had sufficient presence of mind remaining to whistle in a low tone to Foley, just ahead. He turned, and taking in the situation at a glance, quick as a lightning flash, sent a bullet through the animal’s heart. “You look a little pale, Mr. Judd,” he exclaimed in a hu morous manner, as he quietly came back to me. “I don’t think you can blame anybody for being pale under the cir umstances.” I responded. It was very fortunate for me that I had no bullet in my rifle; being in such close proximity, I should undoubtedly have shot high above the point aimed at, and barely grazed his skull, when the then wounded and consequently infuriated ani mal ivould have jumped and finished me in short order. On inspecting the surround ings we found the remains of n antelope close by, upon which the now dead “enemy” had gorged himself. lam told that when near evening one of these mountain Rons delivers its peculiar roar the antelope for a long distance are fairly terrorized and flee for miles. Ancient and Modern Meteors. From the Boston Transcript. Since Pliny’s time, there has been a long record of aerolites, which aremore exactly described, and no museum is so poor that it does not exhibit one or more specimens of those visitors from unknown space. About the oldest known specimen is one weighing 280 pounds, which fell at Alsace in 1492. which is still preserved in the church at Ensisbeim. The largest masses on record were found about seventeen years ago on the west coast of Greenland by the Swedish Arctic Expedition. There is now in the col lection of the Royal Academy of Stock holm one of them which weighs 25 tons, and the museum of Copenhagen has an other weighing 10 tons. In the British Museum is one weighing 5 tons, and in the museum at St. Petersburg, one of 1,635 pounds. The Smithsonian Institution, at Washington, has very remarkable specimen discovered in Mexico, in 1700, which, ac cording to an Indian tradition, fell 200 years before that, during a shower of stones. Its weight is 1,400 pounds. There are over one hundred specimens in Yale College museum, one weighing 1,635 pounds. During the present century aerolites have been carefully studied and analyzed, and indeed, aside from the general outside appearance by which they are readily recognized byan ex pert, a chemical analysis is the one sure test by which they can be distinguished in doubtful cases/ In many cases they are largely composed of iron, and from one which fell in Mexico, a sword blade was made, which once was in the possession of Gen. Ord, of the United States Army. The origin of these mysterious visitors has been widely discussed, but never thoroughly ex plained. Of the various theories there are two which attract the most belief. One that space is filled with floating masses and that our aerolites are that portion of them that comes within the sphere of the earth’s attraction. The other is that they are pro jected from the sun and other planets by the inconceivably tremendous forces at work there. A few years ago some excite ment was created by the claim of a German scientist that he had discovered traces of animal life in aerolite, but this was never confirmed. The report concerning the phe nomenon of Thursday evening stites thut the mass was still verv hot., so much so that people could not approach within 50 feet. In a modified degree we believe that this is the condition in which others have been found in this country and elsewhere. It is strange that in the fall of so -many large massses with such tremendous force there has never been any well authenticated case of loss of life. There have been reports of fatalities resulting from this cause, but wo believe they have never been con firmed. Mrs. Jam son’s ftrange Experience. From the Boston Traveler. “The Story of au Enthusiast,” which was published recently, is written by Mrs. C. V. Jainis in, of New Orleans, the author of “Woven of Many Threads,” and of many short stories of exceptional power, one of which is “The Drinkwater Tragedy,” pub lished in Harper's Magazine a few years since. Mrs. Jamison his the temperament of the dramatic novelist. Her organiza tion is singularly responsive to invisible and mysterious influences. When visiting Bos ton last summer Mrs. Jamison related to the writer a curious incident of her childhood. Sho was entering the parlor and saw before her a man in mili tary dress who seemed entirely at home in the"room, and the little girl supposed he was a caller and thought no more of it at the time. Bator she asked her mother who the stranger was, describing the military cos tume, but no one in the house knew of him or had seen him. Some time later the girl discovered among some old family iiortraits at the house of a relative, which she hud never before secn, the exact portrait of the man whom she saw in her mother’s parlor, and learned that he was an ancestor of the family. There is no doubt that the finer perceptions which take cognizance of things invisible toothers are a genuine endowment of certain organization.-, and wheu accom panied with the distinctive literary faculty such writers give the perfection of imagina tive romance. Throat Diseases commence with a Cough, Cold or Sore Throat. “ Brown’s Bronchial Troches” give immediate relief. Sold only in bores. Pi ice 35 ct*. . THE MORNING NEWS: SATURDAY, NOVEMB..A 19, 1887. DRY GOODS. Priestley's M Dress Goods. TI7E beg to announce that we have in stock 35 different ■ tylea of the celebrated English nianu v 1 faclurer, PRIESTLEY. These goods are as well known among ladies as Coates Si'Old Cob ton and we therefore take pleasure in calling attention to them. They comprise in part of: PRIESTLEY'S Silk Warp Henrietta Cloth at 75c., $1 and $1 35. PRIESTLEY’S Ravenna Cloth, entirely new this season. PRIESTLEY'S Prapde Alma, always desirable. PRIESTLEY'S Melrose Cloth, a beautiful design. PRIESTLEY'S Panama Cloth: this is an exceedingly handsome cloth PRIESTLEY'S Black India Cloth; everybody admires it. PRIESTLEY’S Silk Warp Melrose Cloth. PRIESTLEY' S Black Diagonal Cloth. PRIESTLEY'S Black Hone use Cloth. PRIESTLEY’S Satin Striped Cloth. PRIESTLEY'S All Wool Null's Veiling. PRIESTLEY'S Silk Warp Nun's Veiling. PRIESTLEY'S Cashmere de lnde; extraordinarily beautiful We call attention to the fact that our prices are strictly the lowest in the market, and invite ladies to examine these goods and compare prices. There Is nothing out this season In FANCY DRESS GOODS Which we have not in stock. Wo claim that our Dress Goods stock is superior to anything yet seen in this city, and we claim to be able to sell the best goods at such prices at •vbich only medium qualities can be purchased elsewhere. We know talk is cheap. We ask you to investigate. If we do not come up to promise we can't make you pure ase. Hence we cordially invite you to call and satisfy yourself whether our promises are good or uot. We have more to risk than you have in making this announcement. We risk our reputation. You risk a little of your time. Do You Think We Can Afford to Sham? If we have convinced you of the above facts, we beg you to look through our Silk, Velvet and Plush stocks. OUR BLACK AND COLORED SILKS Are unquestionably of the best wearing Silks in the market. We warrant every yard to give satisfaction. We have them at all prices. We would kindly ask you to examine our Si and Si 25 Silks. We feel that we can justly brag of them. You need not buy any, but we would like you to know what we have. Our Silk Plushes and Silk Velvets Are of every shade and hue in plain and fancy designs. We also desire you to see our Moire Satins. They are very pretty and cheap. Braided and Beaded Trimmings. We have everything In that line to be found only in the most extensive trimming houses in New York, and we also insist that our prices are much below the fancy prices you have to pay lor them elsewhere. Our English Walking Jackets, Dolmans, Wraps, Tailor-made, in Plush, Velvet, Silk, Cloth and Fancy Materials, is unsurpassed in style, general make-up, assortment and prices. You cannot afford to purchase elsewhere. It is absolutely necessary that you see our stock and judge for yourself before purchasing. Remember, we do not ask you to take this all in good faith, but to investigate what we have said, as it is to your benefit as well as ours. DRUMMER’S SAMPLES. We have purchased a large lot of Drummer’s Samples at 50c. on the dollar, and offer them correspondingly low. They comprise Hand-made Knitted Toboggans, Infant's Sacques, Infant's Caps, Silk and Worsted Stockings and Mitts. Also, a large line of Infant’s and Children’s Merino Embroidered Sacques and Cloaks. OUR BAZAR Contains a most superb stock of all kinds of FANCY GOODS? Plush and Leat her Work Boxes, Plush and Leather Manicure Cases. Flush and Leather Shaving Cases. Fans of the most elegant designs in Lace and Ostrich. Feathers, Bisque and Bronze Figures, and thousands of other elegant articleo suitable for Wedding Presents, etc. This Week We Offer in Onr Bazar Two Articles at Special Sale. 100 dozen full regular SEAMLESS BALBRIGGAN LADIES’ HOSE at 10c., which cannot be had elsewhere for less than 25c. 250 dozen 40-inch DAMASK TOWELS at 10c., worth 25c. ■ t David Weisbein, 153 BROUGHTON STREET. FURNITURE, CARPETS, MATTING, ETC Scared to Death. WAKE UP OLD MAN, GET UP AND RUN! Or you will be late to get the pick of those astonishing bargains in FURNITURE and CARPETS, which LINDSAY & MORGAN are offering at Bankrupt Prices. They are showing a most elaborate line of FANCY GOODS in their Furniture Department, and have just received a large invoice of NEW RUGd iu their Carpet Department. Don’t be late, but come at once and make your selection. LINDSAY & MORGAN. MILLINERY. KliOi; S Iv OFFS' Onii of lit fall Season 1881. O' However attractive and immense our previous season’s stock in Millinery has been, this season we excel all our previous selections. Every manufacturer and importer of note in the markets of the world is represented in the array, and display of Millinery goods. We are showing Hats in the finest Hatter’s Plush, Beaver, Felt, Straw and Fancy Combinations. Ribbons in Glacee, of all the novel shades. Fancy" Birds and Wings, Velvets and Plushes of our own im portation, and we now offer you the advantages of our im mense stock. We continue the retail sale on our first floor at wholesale prices. We also continue to sell our Celebrated XXX Ribbons at previous prices. TO-DAY, 500 dozen Felt Hats, in all the new shapes and colors, 35 cents S. KROUSKOFFS MAMMOTH MILLINERY HOUSE, BROUGHTON STREET. ‘ LOTTERY. mm i ; M LOUISIANA STATE LOTTED COMPANY. incorporated by the izegislature m laoh. f>r Educational aud Charituole purposes, ai.d its franchise mode* a pare of tue present State l o i stitution, in 18111, by an overwhelming put ul .r vote. Iti Gram! Single dumber Drawing take ilaer monthly, and the uraim Semi- Annual UrawiugK e>ery *U months (J uuo and lieeemoerj. “H> do hereby certify that toe xupervUw the arrangemenU for all the Monthly and Semi- Annual Drawings of the Louis ana state Ijot teru Company, and in person manage ivui con trol the Inn wings themstives, and that the same are. conducted With honesty, Jairntau i, and tit ooou Jaith toward ait parties, and ii'e authorize the Company to use tins oertijicaie , with J'u> tirades of our signatures attacJied, m Us adver tisements. ” Commission#™. IT> th? vnder.ianerl Prink* anil Ranker. tnfH pay all Prize* drawn in Ihe fyouieiana State Lot teries tr’* ■>’ <*-u he presented at our cannier*. J. H OGLESBY, Pres Louisiana Nat'i Bank PIERRE LANAUX. Pres State Nat’i Bank. A. BALDWIN, Pres. New Orleans Nat’i Bank. CARL KOHN, Pres. Union National Bank GRAND SEMI-ANNUAL DRAWING 111 the Academy of Music, New Orleans, TUESDAY, December 13. 1887, CAPITAL PRIZE, $300,000. 100,000 Tickets at Twenty Dollars each. Halves $10; Quarters $6; Tenths $2; Twentieth sl. LIST OK PRIZES. 1 PRIZE OF SBOO,OOO is $ 300,000 1 PRIZE OF 100,000 is 100,000 1 PRIZE OF 50,0001s 50,0 0 1 PRIZE OK 20,000 is 36,000 2 PRIZES OF 10,000 are 20.000 6 PRIZES OF 0.000 are 25,000 25 PRIZES OF 1,000 are 25,000 100 PRIZES OF 500 are 60,000 200 PRIZES OF 800 are 00.000 500 PRIZES OF 200 are 100,000 APPROXIMATION PHIZES. 100 Prizes of SBOO approximating to $300,000 Prize are 50,000 100 Prizes of approximating to SIOO,OOO Prize are 30,000 100 Prizes of S2OO approximating to $50,000 Prize are 20,000 TERMINAL PRIZES. 1,000 Prizes of SIOO decided by. $300,000 Prize are 100,000 1,000 Prizes of SIOO decided by. .SIOO,OOO Prize are 100,000 3,136 Prizes amounting to $1,055,000 For Club Rates, or any further information app.y to the undersigned. Your baud writing must be distinct and Signature plain. More rapid return mail delivery will Is 1 assured hv your enclosing au Envelop bearing your full address. Semi POSTAL AiOTEs, Express Money Or ders or New York Exchange in ord narv letter. Currency by Express (at oorex •>•! *- b , ,... sstH j to M. A. DAUPHIN, New Orleans, U, or M, A. DAUPHIN, Washington, D. C, Address Registered Letters to MSVV OHLLA.Ns aatiov al bwk. ftew Orleans, La. RFMFMRFP That the prewnce. of Gen- Ru. IVI L. IVI L_> u. r\ era j s Beauregard and Early, who are in charge of the drawings, is a guarantee of absolute fairness and integrity, that the chances are all equal, and that no one can possibly divuie what number will draw a Prize. KKXRMREH that the payment of all Prizes is (and \HAM KKl> HV FAI R NATIONAL li.ANKti of New Orleans, nud the Tickets are signed by the President of an Institution whose chartered rights are recognized in the highest Courts, therefore, beware of any imitations or anonymous t-cliemas. ~ GROCERIES AND LIQUORS. 1,1 LESTER HAS A LARGE STOCK OF Afmore’s Mince Meat, Cheap. Atmore’s English Plum Pudding. Gordon and Dilworth’s Preserves, Cheap. American Champagne, Ejual to the Imported. Raspberry, Strawberry, Gooseberry and Apricot Jam. Seedless Rai ins, Currants and Citron, Cheap. New Butternuts, Almonds and Pecans. Imported Sherry Wine, $2 per Gallon. Sweet Sugar Corn and Sweet Sifted Peas. Everything 1n the Grocery Line Fresh and at Low Figures AT D. B. LESTER’S. 75 BARRELS APPLES. 2' K BARRELS EATING AND COOKING • ) PE MIS. .-.i) Barr U HEBR< >N POTATi >KS, Sh Sacks ICIO and JAVA COFFEE, LIQUORS and WINES oi all ki (is, SUGAR, CANNED MEATS, Choice FLOUR, CANNED GOODS, NUTS ami RAISINS. New TURKISH PRUNES, New CITRON, MUTTER, CHICK E, I.ARO, SUGARS. SOAP. STARCH, CRACKERS, BROOMS, PAIRS, < RAN 1 .EKKIiSS, GRAPES, etc. For sale at lowest prices. A. H. CHAMPION. NEW RAISINS, PATRAS CURRANTS IN BARRELS, Vostizza Currants in Cases CITRON IN 50 POUND TIN BOXES, TFIK FINEHT INPOItTKD. NEW NUTS AND FIGS. As Fruit Cake la better with some a*e, would It not be well to buy the Fruit at once?. ft. M. & C. W. WEST. CONTRACTORS. RJ. FALLON, BUILDER AND CONTRACTOR, Hi DRAYTON STREET, SAVANNAH. I| , S' r ”I \tks . uiuytly luiuished tor uuddlug J Ul UliW L'lUli, CLOTHING. MENKEN <£ ABRAHAMS. 158 BROUGHTON STREET, TsT erw and Ur’aiSlxiom.afble CLOTHING! UST edkzwear, SRirts, XT nderwear, TJ xnLlDnellaS;, IRaxTD'bex’ Coats. Latest styles in HATS, best $1 SHIRT in the city. Suits made to order. Satisfaction guaranteed. PARTIES in the COUNTRY can have goods expressed C. 0. D. free of charge, with privilege of returning if not suited. MENTtEN & ABRAHAMS. NEW YORK OFFICE, 660 Hroadwav. IRON WORKS. KEHOE’S IRON WORKS Broughton Street, from Reynolds to Randolph Streets, Sa'van.ri alx, - - Georgia. CASTING OF ALL KINDS AT LOWEST POSSIBLE PRICES. THE RAPIDLY INCREASING DEMAND FOR OCR SUGAR MILLS AND PANS • TT AS induced us to manufacture them on a more extensive scale than I I ever. To that end no pams or expense has been spared to maintain their HIGH BTANARI) OF EXCELLENCE ■ These Mills are of the BEST MATERIAL AND WORKMANSHIP, with heavy WROUGHT IKON SHAFTS (made long to prevent danger to the B V operator), and rollers of the best charcoal pig iron, all turned up true. W They are heavy, strong and durable, run light anil even, and are guaran gMS7flK{B|aM£inpi t's'd capable of grinding the heaviest fully matured g All our Mills are fully warranted for one year. HBwSBIwW possess smoothness, durability and umforuiitv ot Ujlcknewj ; F A KSUPKIUUK TO THOSE MADE IN fg^jjaL WE GUARANTEE OUR PRICES TO BE AS LOW AS ANY OFFERED. A Large Stock Always on Hand for Prompt Delivery. Wm. Kehoe & Cos. N. 11.— I The name “ KEHOE’S IKON WORKS/ Ik cast o& all our Mills and Pans. SHOES, C LOTHING, NOTIONS,* ETC. SLAUGHTER! SLAUGHTER! For One Week Only AT COHENS, SOUTHWEST COR. BROUGHTON AND BARNARD STS. 600 Pair Ladles’ French Heel and French Kid Button Shoes, worth $5, selling for $2 76. 1,000 Pair Ladles’ Fine Kid Button Shoes, all widths and sizes, worth $2, selling for $1 25. 1,000 Pair Men’s Fine Shoes, worth $2, selling for $1 25, 2,000 Pair Men’s, Boys’ and Children’s Shoes, all kinds and sizes, worth $1 50, selling for $l. Infants’ Shoes, Infants’ Shoes, regular price 25c. a pair. AT COHEN’S, SOUTHWEST CORNER BROUGHTON AND BARNARD STREETS. WATCH THIS SPACE. YOU if I Mil lIIIS SPACE! NOW, WHO ARE D. A. ALTICK’S SONS ? - • " ■! HI Ml, _ ■■ FURNITURE AM) CARPETS, CA I! IMIS! C AII IMIS! CARPETS! Now is the time for Bargains in Carpets. A fine selection of Cotton Chains, Union’s Extra Supers, All Wool, Two and Three-Piys, Tapestries and Body Brus sels just arrived. Our line of Furniture is complete in all its departments. Just received, a carload of Cooking and Heating Moves So call on us for Bargains. We don’t in tend to be undersold, for cash or on easy terms. TEEPLE & CO. 193 and 195 Broughton Street. crockery! glassware, etc. <- It A3i I> JL> I>S PLAY AT China IPalace of New Mat Gold and Beautiful Decorations in Haviland & Co.'s Celebrated China. Pompadour bhape all the Rage. New Borogue Ware. Satin Ware, in all Shades and Colors. Celladonna, Burmese, Briliiantine and Beaded Ware. French and Belgian Rich Cut Glass Ware. All of our own direct importation, Gas Shades in all the Most Delicate Shapes and Tints. W# are receiving on errnr (tfnmnr NEW GOODS from all countries, suitable for WEDDING and HOLLIDAY PRESENTS. Call and inspect the immense stock of STAPLE AND FANCY GOO OS at WEST’S CHINA PALACE, 133 BT?OrTGHITO]y STREET. MERCHANTS, manufacturem, mechanics, corporations, and all others in need of printing, litnortraphing, anil blank books can have their orders promptly tilled, at moderate prices, at the MORNING NEWS PRINTING ItOUUL. 3 Whi'alter street. TAWYERS, doctors, ministers, merchants, j mechanics ami others having books, maga zines, ami other printed work to lie bound or re bound can have such work done in the best stria of the binder's art at the MORNING NEW* bLNDEKY. 3 Wmtaker street. 5