Newspaper Page Text
AGRICI7LTURA I. PEPARTMENT.
T_e Fia.d, Farm and Garden.
solicit for this department.
Ti e na-ne of the wr,tor should accompany
tbe letter or nr "ice, not nece sar.ly for pub
lication. out as an evidence of good faith.
1
To Improve Poor Soil.
A man may toil'hard !o accumulate a
]j ttl e fortune, a.d invest it in tra le or man
ufactures; liis business may fail and he
all hard earnings, but if he till apply
t„s tim e and talent to improving himself a
far 1, bis investment will n)t deceive him;
itcau'ot be consumed by (Ire or stolon,
and is ever ready t > respond to bis wants,
vs Thomas D. Baird i.i the Southern Cal
ticator. We receive no worn out land
f io m nature, but in our hands the soil be
comes exhausted. We should follow la
ture, and ai i t a system which will til! the
0 ,1 „itii vegetable matter to improve or
restore fertility. From my experience, 1 be
lieve no other crop b tter adapted to im
prove poor iand tha > rye. In all climites
, ot bing " ill make so fair a growth on poor
s jl. Rye sown in tbe fall is ready to plow
under by May. This fakes no plant food
fl om the s il. Much nitrogen, carbonic
aei i and some potash have been abstracted
from the soil and air and stored up in the
easily decaying substances of the rye.
Turiied under in bloom, heat and moisture
will liberate the plant food to bo appropri
ated by tbe roots of corn. When to be bad,
turning plow with a revolving coulter is
best for turning rye or any other green
crop. Fasten a chain to the double tree
and tot e fceunof the plow, give it slack
enough to keep j ist ahead of the coulter
which v ill cut the straw loose from the
ia jn land and the plow will tu nit nder
cicely. 1 believe that green crops turned
under must have a crop planted up m it
poem thereafter or else mac i of its ma urial
value will be lost. Ammonia is formed by
the decay of o ga iic nitrogen in the s til,
and is consumed by the growing crop in
stead of escapi 'g. Rye can be followed
with sown coru or buckwheat and this
turned whe s three feet high, and followed
by wheat and sown to clover next spring.
Thus we have a p .or soil filled with pi int
food until clover, a more fertilizing crop
can be grown. Tbe clo er will make one
or two tons of hay, which with the wheat
bran will feed m re stock, and thus make a
fine lot of manure to be spread on the
soil to feed green manure crops on other
fields.
Plowing under green crops is one of the
cheapest aud easiest methods of manuring
tbe is- i 1 may be read ly ad.nitt and by most
farmers, hut the difficulty is that thev im
agine they make a sacrifice fa clover or
a v crop simply to grow another, perhaps
of less value. A green crop of rye is con
sidered by some when turned under to be
equal to fori y t"0-horse loads of manure.
Green manuring is more evenly distributed
through thesoil, and is thus more eff c.uil.
When green manurial crops are plowed un
der the maturity of the crop is not neces
sary, and hence tbe land is not deprived
of those subs auces which enter into tbe
composition of the seeds and which are
more exhausting than any other part of the
crop. If, however, a crop of clover is de
sired for hay, it may bo cut and the second
crop turned under laie r in the fall as a green
manure.
G.eea manurial crops are not confined to
food crops alone; eve i the weeds maybe
utilized, provided they are not allowed to
seel before being plowed under, and by
sowing lime ove the land after each plow
ing there will be no acidity of the soil,
while tbe i otti ig process will be performed
more speedily, and tin benefit increased.
Gree i manuring not only increases the fer
tility of tbe so 1, but reduces it to a ine
cbanical condition far superior to ibat ef
fects! by implem-uts, and it is safe to as
sert tha during tbe period of growth tha
shading of the soil adds largely to the ad
vantages secured by the laud from tbe
growth of ma urial crop*.
Produce crates.
Tee American Agriculturist says great
trouble and vevatio . would be ave l to tha
salesmen who na idle garde i truce on cmn
tnission in cities if shippers and produce
raisers throughout t e co intry would use
uniform sizes of crates aid boxer. Tbe
and ales s.iould b) made to boldfud, roun led,
heaping measures—one bus.iel, half a
bushel aud o.ie barrel. The b ishsl is a
standard measure established by law, and
tbe barrel has b-eu for fifty years in gei
etal use as a standard measure f>r pota
toes, onions, etc. The barrel us and for this
purpose is of the size kao.vu as a Uat
hn pe I flmr barrel, a id has a capacity of
two and a half heaping bushels. By adopt
ing and making all packages of uniform
capacities throughout tue country, the
buye > will be bette satisfied, as they will
know w at they are paying for, and what
quantity they can measure out in selling.
Uniform measures will also prevent a great
uvul, f fr.ud which is n>w porpstra.ed on
the public by tlis.iones de tiers.
1 he crates now used in shippi ig from the
south are of the following sizis: Fir a half
bushel crate, two end and one middle piece,
e ell four inches long, and three-quarters
''l u " hie i t ick; alati, one foot e i inches
b J ‘K, ne-qti rtor of an inch thick, from
out and a half t> th.ee inches wide. The
"null i.f tue slats will be governed by the
purpo e for which the cram is used, leaving
narrow or wide paces for von.ilation. For
* ■ ushel crate, there are two end n nl one
huddle piece each eight i ches wi le, four
teen inches I ng, aigi three-quarters of an
inch thick; slats t wenty-two inches long,
troui two to three inches wide, and one
quarter of an inch tliic.. Cabbage crates
fcive two end undone middle piece each
: "'lvo inches wile, twenty inc ics loug and
'i r n quarters of an inch thick; slats thirty
*|K|‘t niches lo g, three-eights of an neb
tin. k, and three inches wide. Three crate',
intended for hulf bushel or busuel, do
not hold heaping or rou ided measure, hence
!! ny do no, give satisfaction on northern
market-!, w iere heaping measure is the in
vunable rule. The < anbage crate is all
"Sht, a, it makes no differe ice how many
d-t, but in using the came siza for pota
to' < or onions, or any vegetable sold by tue
* )a ' t r *l ) it is very unsatisfac oty.
* h * Agriculturist than gives sizes of
"rates holding i eapitig or round and tneas-
I' tr half .a bushel, t"-oe nl and one
huddle piece each five inches wile, fourteen
ihci.es long aud three-quarters of an inch
r btck } "'s twenty-two ami o e-half i olios
,on *. o tie-quarter of an i ch thick, from
<> "mo three ioc ins wide, accordi ig to the
"teof ihe articles it is toco tain and the
* u ' of npetii gs f,r ventilation. Fir
crat s, two nod and o ie middle pieco
>nn i .cLos wide, fourteen i n*h • long,
11,5,1 ,h ‘ quarter! .fa. inch thick; Uts to
* *enty-t <oan I ooe-b il' i.ic ie two
ti * wi in and a quarter of an iuch
11 k. ho r a brnrel crate, two end and one
middle piece each twelve inches wide,
twenty i ches long, three-quarters o' an
inch thick; slats thirty-one i cites long, two
and o ie-half to three inches wide and one
quart.r to three eighths of an inch thick.
Loose Farming.
It is a serious mistaka for a farmer to
undertake mors than he an do well and
thoroughly, says the Baltimore Sun. it is
much better to properly cultivate tea acres
than it is to half do twenty, and, generally
speaking, as much of a crop would be raised
ou ten ncr. s under such cireuni sai ces as
there would be on twice ten. There is no
industry where real thoroughness gives
more evidence of advantage than farming.
The thrifty, tidy, handsome far us we see
hat e not been made such by careless manip
ulations. The proper preparation of ground
for any crop is half the battle, for no mat
ter l.cw prime the seed, the soil must be
congenial, both in kind and preparation, to
secure the Le t-paying results. Quality in
farming wi 1 cive better harvests than
quantity. Every intelligent farmer must
realize the fact, and observation will prove
that it ii the srnail farms that are the most
profitable. Large farms rarely have the
number of men employed that is necessary
at seasous. Seeding time comes, and bad
weather has delayed the work, a id the con
sequence is it is rushed through, half done,
and then the next j b is performed in the
same way. Many a farmer has had t >
have wok done over the sec nd time, and
then ihe yield is not as much as if it had
been propei ly done in the first place. A
i uccessfui farmer was recently asked what
ills systeig of farming was, and replied:
“I try to make my larm self-vupporting. I
diversify my crops, and purpose in the fu
ture to plant less, ma ure more and work
better. I keep as much of what I produce on
ti e farm as possible.” In reply to the ques
tion how farming could bo made to pay,
t.is answer was: “By giving your farm :s
cl se atteention as a m rcuaut or auy other
business man giv -s to his business, by di
versifying your crops, raising o t the farm
everything you use as far as possible, by
paying cash fo- what you are compelled to
buy, thereby avoiding time prices.” This is
’.he secret of successful farming in a nut
the.l.
Animals Their Own Doctors.
Animals get rid of the.r parasites by
using dust, mud, clay, etc. The New
Orleans Picayune says that those suffering
from fever restrict their diet, keep quiet,
se k dark, airy place-, drink water and
sometimes plunge into it. VV hen a dog has
lost its appetite it eats that species of grass
known as dog’s grass, which acts as an
emetic and a purgitive. Cats also eat
rass. Sheep and cows when ill aok oit
certain herbs. And animals suffering fr m
chronic rheu ii&tlsm always keep as far as
pots.ble in the sun. The warri ir ants have
regularly organized ambulances. Latreiile
cut the antea; te of the ant, ad other ants
cam and covered the wounded part with a
transparent fiuid secreted in their mouths.
If a chimpanzee is w ounded it stops the
bleeding by placing its hand oi the wound
or dressing it with leaves aud grass. When
an animal has a Wounded log or'arm hang
ing on it completes the amputation by
means of its teeth. A dog, being stung on
ihe muzzle by a vi;>er, was observed to
plu ge its head repeatedly for several days
mto running water. This animal eventually
recovered.
A terrier hurt its right eye. It remaine 1
under a e muter, avoiding 1 ght and heat,
although it habitually kept close to tbe fire.
Itadojted a general treatment, rest and
ah tinence f oin fond. Tne local treatme it
consisted in licking the upper surface of the
paw, which it applied to tbe wou mad eye,
again licking the paw, when it became dry.
Animals suffering from tramautic fever
irent themselves by the continued appl ca
tion of col 1 water, which M. D>la may eon
si lers to be m re certain than any of the
other methods. In view of these interest
i ig facts we are, he thinks, forced t , adm t
that hygiene and therapeutics, as proposed
by animal t, may, i.i the interest of psychol
ogy, bo studied with advantage .Many
physicians have been keen oi servers of ani
mals, their diseases aud them tbods adopt
ed by then in their wonderful in-.inc to
cure themselves, and have uvaile l ttiem
elvesof t e knowledge so ohtai.ied in their
own practice.
Tha c a mer of the Future.
Blackwood's Magazine says the success
ful farmer of the future mu t be well
grounded in the gene al and technical
knowledge of his business. Ho must look
closely and more carefully into the internal
working of his lartn tnan was necessary in
former times. Ho must watch keenly
every movement of the foreign producer,
study the conditions and prospects of the
markets, and be prepar and to produce such
commodities as are likely to hiing him the
b :st l eturn. He must not tie himself to the
growing of certain crops, and
the rearing of certain stock, merely
because lis fa'hors did so, or be
cause ho himself found them profitable in
times goue by. He must cultivate an “open
mind,” be ready and willing to avail him
self of auy new system or modification of
pract ce calculated to benefit him, being
careful, of course, not to a t.inpt, upon a
lar.e scale, practices that a e ris;y, or that
l ave not bson proven by actual test. He
must not bo above giving his attention to
litttle points of detail, or to tiny tri lets of
income, for in a riculture, the “day of
small things” has assured y come, il tbod,
pre -.si in, industry, forethought, economy
sound and ready judgment and into li
genee—the-earetbe elements of successful
business. They are esse,ltinl to fhe farmer
of to day as to tbe busiest business mau in
the greale't commercial center.
Longevity of Orar.go Trees.
How I >ng will an orange tree live and
bear fruit? C. M. Lot mg writes from
Spain to H. J. Rudisiil, of Riverside, Cal.,
on this subject as follows: “I remember
talking witm you about the longov.tyof the
ora go tree, when you said you heard of
trees 100 years old that were still in bear
ing. I saw qu t" a grove at Cord.<va that
was planted over 300 .yea's ag", that is still
bearing fruit, very sour, and at Seville, at
the Alcazar, saveral tree-, b-ari g good
flavored fruit, were plante 1 over 500 ve irs
ago by Purer the Cruel. They stiii have a
good deal of vigor, and I heir fouage is
bright and clean. The fruit looks like that
oueall Mediterranean Sweet. With such
facls bt f re mo I oat.not but l.eli ve that,
in a country which inner.asing in popula
tion so rapidly ns ours, with so litt.e laud
suit ble for orang" culture there can
be no better investment for future profit
than such lard.”
Horae Dontietry.
More trouble and lack of condition are
caused by nice ated and irregular teeth
than is generally supposed. Much tenth
THE MORNING NEWS: MONDAY, APT IT* 29, 1889.
should be promptly removed with forceps.
Tnere is no reason to doubt that a horse
with u ce-atei teeth suffers as itite s.ly
lrom toothache as a human subject. Irreg
ular growth or fractures of the enamel n
the outer e iges make the teeth so rumgn as
to injure the inside of the cheek, sometimes
causi g ulcers. In other cases some of ti e
grinders grow more slowly than others and
fail to meet those ii the opposite jaw, eaus
i g what is ca ied “quidding,” or i perfect
ma ticatiun of the food. The temedy is to
fi e t e teeth iuto the prouer shape. Horse
dentistry is mow recognized nsau important
branch of veterinary practice.
Farm aud Stocs Notes.
A hen and chi ks in a garden sometimes
prove beneficial, as they dost" v many mi
s.-cts, hut they should fie kept away from
plots that havn i eeu recently s. ede.l,
Thu bes food for making liens lay is a
pound of team n eat, chopped fire, given
three limes a w.-ek to a tl ck of twenty
hens, lint very little grain is required at
this season.
Cotton-seed meal will not do for hog feed,
as the lint bulls in the stomach, aud cannot
bo voided. This objection to cotton-seed
in. al is not applicable to domestic animals
otner thau tbe iiog.
The air assists in the growth of plants
when it goes down to tbe roots. It not
miiy serves as n chemical agent, but warms
the ground, carries off surplus moisture,
ad assists in decomposing plant food. Deep
plowing allows ihe air to eater and warm
the soil.
Plants vary' greatly with respect to their
demands for food, t eir cpabiiities of gadi
ing the ingredients from s i! aid air, and
the effects of differing f. rtilizers upon the r
growth. Hen e, the proper fertilizer in a
given ca.e depe .ds upon the crop as well as
upon the soil.
Harrowing should be repeatel, if the
lumps are not, reduced, after each rain (but
not wfi.au tne ground is too wet), in oruer
to get tie soil fi e. Harrow! gis work
that pays in the e and. The fin r tne soil,
r n tue better its condition for receiving
seed, the more advantages of growth ure
se used.
Be careful in handling the working stock
w hen the ousy sutson opens. Gu.ls, sore',
lame, ess a..d otner difficulties win re-ult if
tbeaniii ai- have been kept ion closely con
fined and given but iittie exercises. When
tbe horses lo gin work lo tue season they
should be examined every day in order to
avoid cbafiiug from the collars or harness.
If tbe farmer will remember wbat it is
to be buttery himself he may some;lines
h vea kindly feeling for !is young stock.
If he add then to the thought that long
fasting adds t.o meat to exposed stock lie
ma feel his picket touched, fr m the
spring if the you: g things 1. ok well they
will bring rouble the money that other fel
low’s will wh j t ok no care of his.
Household.
Rice Muffins.—To one quart of sotir
milk add three weii-biat n eggs, a litl e
sat,a te so onful of ;oii and rice tt ur
enough to make a st.ff baiter. Take in
rings.
Beef Croquets.—Take cold roa-t beef;
mince it fine; put m an onion chopped fine,
s eetmarjoram, a little powered clovts;
moiste with the L> ef gravy; make it imo
bn is, dip iu the beaten > elk of an egg, roll
in flour and fry iliem iu ia and.
E glimh Fi -h Sauce. —One and a half
ounces of cayenne, two tables coululs of
walnut catsup, two tablespoon; uls of soy, a
few shreds or gallic and shall t, one quart
of pure vi ega ; put iu a h rge bottle and
sha-e every day for two weeks; th n put it
into small bo t.es and coil: th m well. In a
few uuys it will be fit for us >.
Popular Science.
An English firm has been using p troleum
for fuel l a torped -boat and getting a
speed of 21 krots. T. e oil is carr.cd in the
vessels’ double bottom*
The bulk of the water of the ocean has a
low temperature. It is ice cold at tbe bot
tom, even under the equator, but on the
surface within the tropics Unre is :elative!y
a thin film of warm wa er with a tempera
ture of from TO degrees to 8-t degrees Fa.ir
e iheit.
A door that opens autom iticaily on put
ting a coin in t e slit has recen ly been
brought out. The door is made do be,
each half being L-sba ed ad hinged at ti e
angle. They are closed and b Id fas; bra
lock which unlocks when the coin actuates
it aud the door opeas. it closes again a ter
tbe person enters.
A process of lettering bone or ivorv, by
sinsmg the I tie s i to tbe materia! ii a
permanent fash.on, h s recently been in re
duced. i hese iv r plate are taking the
p.lace of eng. aved metal plates for signi,
checks, badges a dso on. El ctrical eugi
neeri hav.i also adopted the new plates,
which can likewise he applied toorgansaud
pianofortes.
A fleshly executed painting may have
its colors presented in Iheir.elow to-es of
the old misters by first covering the back
with a coating of fuller’s earth, which ab
sorbs all remaining ' oil, and then, on re
moving it, covering the back wit i a coat if
linseed oil, Alien tha colo s presently im
bibe. 'I hu is tbenileqed di-cove yuf ae l
ebrated F\ each 1 ainter.
Dr. Henry Ducnentis h is drawn no a list
if the disorders winch especially affect the
left half of the boiy, and concludes there
from that it p is-esses a b ogr qihicil in
feriority to the right. He says obliterating
artcri 1 ia a tlt-css Hr* left Sylvian urt i y oft
erier; tubered aff-tsilie left lung oft -ncr;
ealcu! iyis nephritis and renal cysts the left
kidney; ovaritis the left ki n--y; orchids
the left testicle; varicocele the lefts; er malic
veins; neuralgia, c orea, by t ried awn -
thavia. the iolt side; cancer of the breast tho
left mamma.
JIKIMUAU
03 CURE
BILIOUSNESS, SICK HEADACH3,
Dyspepsia, Diver Complaint,
Heartburn, Indigestion, Jaundice.
"BY USING THE GENtTNB
Dr. C. Tr1 c LA^E’S
CELEBRATED
OLIVER PILLS!
■ . PKEPAKEb ONLY BY
FLEKfUNC B Pittsburgh,Ps.
3TBewara of CotTNTERIo IX* made tn St. bculr
SEA FOAM SOAP;
Ylessfs. D S. BROWN ft CO. have caught up
with orders for this isO.'.l’, 'Ve a;e pleased te
announce we are able to supply the demand far
it.
Henry SJ a i & Son.
it can be bought at all retail stores at live
cent* p r e ike.
mil J T MCRMN’O NFWS carriers each
I I I < * vc Y P-of Ihe cliy early. Twenty
-1 ii Ju dvc cent* a week pays for the loady.
PEAR LINE
About Boiling Clothes
.and Disease-Breeding Germs
l)r. H. M. Passing, in an
\ ;'-.l article in American Analyst.
[j.V 1 ; says: "The dirt and nil
lwr T’i ? ~~| so most be entirely re
V:m moved from the interstices
VN of the clothes, and all mi
crohes must be destroyed.
Ailf'The only and easiest way to
do this is by heating the
O vrater in which the clothes
<S— are contained to the boiling
point. The boiling water,
by constant self-agitation, is forced through the inter
stices of the fabrics, and thus cleanses them from dirt and
disease-breeding microbes as they can be cleansed m no
other way , and without in any manner injuring the fabric.”
James Pyle’s Pearline will wash in hot or cold,
hard or soft water, and by r any of the so-called “ new
labor-saving methods but for the easiest and best way
of washing, refer to the directions for washing by bill
ing given on back of each package of Pearline. $
K .At T-.i.kiinfis, ,4, JAMES BYT E, New York.
REFRIGERATORS ANI> WINDOW SCREENS.
NEW stock: jlt
LINDSAY & MO! MIAN'S,
24 BARNARD ST., One Door Northeast 01* Brou^litoa.
REFBIGER-tfc Aa u xmmM
aw, “ 3 "
C a I " :l!l
n 1 KTC "
Chests, . F ra rv
DM O I
1 ' ■ '- t /<
l!0S?UTI):Si:.
m t BEDBeM
blro-vliir p-szfjsj PARLOR
SH j -'llI s -
WINDOW Bp -T] ' PK,ITV '
Okw iiAliS iA ‘ ■ ‘■' . 1 ’vjiij,—-• t.V ',e--‘ r - \jl W'• nil'll ,-,-nts f,,r ili
n rt 1 pa LkTSBJf* Ou rchahli' smim.
CII AH \ t ||' island Dyeing and
Oil Al* III') ■■ --Q. W-HFgyAj ll.' trotabliai
Rags, Fringes ' " amdrela.d I ''"
MILLfNKRT
The Rush and Crush al Krouskoff’s
Mammoth Millinery House.
We do not believe there ever was before seen in any Mil
linery Store South such a throng ol cu-tomers as we had in
our store during the Easter week an 1 all last week. From
morning until late in the evening there was oue steady stream
of purchasers, aud we found ourselves compelled to keep
customers out on la-T Saturday night, and this did not sur
prise us, as -ueii attractions we had to offer were worthy of
the occasion and disj by of marvelous Ribbons, Flowers and
th( usands ot Hats, to suit every woman and child in the city,
and cur immense line oi’ Pattern Hats, trimmed under the
supervision ol the most artistic Milliners the North can -how,
and what is still more attractive, our Retailing at \\ holesale
Prices. And we shall repeat these inducements, continuing
the sale of our stock of beautiful and line Millinery*, with
which our three large 110 >rs arc crow led. For the present,
and until farther notice, we shall Retail at sfhne price as we
Wholesale upstairs, and also continue our Great Ribbon
Sales as heretofore.
S. KROPSKOFF’S HILLINERY HOUSE.
Extraordinary inducetri 'iit' are alw ,y< oJT.vre Ibvuv ui Millinery •rolx at this soavm,
huHntver before did > off ir goods t auch ruiuoua pric nax now. r, > comi g wc.jk
will wituixj tie greatexi. “ tie and tne lowet p ic-s nv.-r mad), ladle x that co i ornplati
purcliax ng any kind of Millinery do "is should not tail to look through our stock, winch
is brig t, n w a id atira i.ive, and go- oui pr.ces.
Miss S. M. bOUUNE tformerly with Mr- 1’ 00l I -ri> lung :er.
gV L T M A. Y E U'ts.
NOTE—Those in search of Fine Bbws at t w pr should not ftul to visit otir Shoo
Depa trneut,
MOKMNb NKWs STEAM PKINTIM. IIO!>*E.
B-T-E-A.-M.
AT THE
Stem I'riiife House f Ills lok News.
0 0
tV Scud jo'ir order* where they can he fli:< and expe iltlou'iy anj I'cenomically by
MORNING NEWS BUILDING. SAVAHN.UI. OA.
FTK.AM PRINTING PRESSES,
STEAM LITHOGRAPH INO I’ROSSER
fcTKAM RULING MACHINKs,
hTKAM HOOKING HA,'HINES
MI'HI ItACrv FORMINU MA■ (IIINE&
STEAM RTA’-IVING IrU4BES.
t'ltAM NUMhKRINO JIACHINiSa
.STEAM CU I'llNU it A CHIN U-S,
El EAM hEiV INti MAC, IN IC,-,.
HKAII HOOK SAWIN i MAi’TINT.S,
Hi AM .VIKaKoVYI’I .1 MAOHINKS.
LTEaM I'Ai'i-it DAMPING ii YCUINEi.
DRY (ioons.
MslMlpri
Wo Continue Oar Great Spring Sale of New and
Seasonable Goods. Still Greater Offerings in
Every Department. Matchless and Unprece
dented Values in all Part3 of the Store.
15c. Crinkle Seersuckers at 7 1 Red, Cream and White Damask worth 60c.
10c. Red and Blue Embroidery at 3c. at 4Jc, Special.
£;> Parasols at SI 08. Misses Lisle Thread Hose, worth 500. and
Mull Caps worth 75c., at "sc. 75c., at 21c. and 31c. Special.
Ladies’ 15c. and 20c. Collars at 100. Ladies’spri < and summer U. Vests at half
Men’s White Lawn Ties, 10c. dozen. price. Special.
Mon’s P. K. Scarfs, 8 for 25c. Ladies’VV hite Skirts and Drawers worth
40c. Towels at 25c. (Do., at 25c. Special
60c. Doilies ut 37c. dozen. All over Silk Laces at $1 25 • worth $2 50.
Great reduction from real Value in Black and Colored
Silks, Dress Goods, Ginghams, Satins. White Goods, Etc. And
we recommend all interested to take advantage of this’opportunity
to secure the choicest goods at a fraction of their real value.
GUSTAVE ECKSTEIN & CO.
STOVES.
/iv IDEAL BROILING.
Drolling can bo done in the oven of the
Charter Oak Range or Stove with the Wirs
jV'tSr'/' l Oauze Oven Door, more peifoctly than over
1 1' ' fvrffrS, tin live coals.
o\V\| Lay the steak, chops, ham or fi-h on a
/tsMf \t*J wiio nroilcr or meat nick, placing it in aa
/'Sfm y'' of* *. ordinary bake pan to catch the drippings,
i f ,* : Allow it to remain in the otfen with tha
1 ’> n toil elosi'd 15 or 20 minutes. No turning
1 •'oISp • required. At tlm end of this time it wlu
i U'J iouml nicely cooked ready to servo.
Tills IS TUB IDEAL WAV TO BKOIL MEATS.
• yf, i.%A There is no taint of coal-gas or smoke,
'S&kXj sL/ //| |\\ /XW and the meats arc more tender and better in
NaffiaL! The convenience or broiling in the oven
x):v 1 It be appreciated by every house-keeper,
XKand adds another to the many reasons why
NjKr t iio Charter Oak Range or Stove with the
Wire Gauze Oven Door should be preferred
end tea lixustrateo C.’stcuuns ano PuicE LtsTS. to all others now iii the market.
Bold bv CLAWK A DANIELS. Savannah. Ca.
liiriiEs
litmbilt fail
(J <J
with our Handsome lane of
MI! CLOTHING
Now call and see some of our
Beauties in
'Straw Hats.
'l’lie only house in the city
J that is showing a line of
Straw Hats in Fancy Colors.
The IIAZZLE DAZZLE of
Metropolitin Fashion All
the L (test Shades and St ripes
in TIIIN COATS and VESTS
lor Summer wear. To ■-ee
them is to make a selection
at once.
Our Motto,
ONE PRICE,
Ana tut ills Lowest.
APPEL k HI,
163 teress SI.
u
Agents for imported Col
lars and (‘ufls.
STOVES.
COOKING STOVES
and
IR, .A. IST G-113 S ,
REFRIGERATORS,
ICE CREAM FREEZERS AM) CBCRS&
CORNWELL a CHIPMBN,
ISO CONGRESS STREET.
GIU HON S’ It AN OK.
PLUMBER.
l.“a. McCarthy,
44 nAKNAFD s'riticsrr,
(L'udor Knight* of I’ytbia.’ Mali),
PLUMBING AND CAS FITTING.
C T!-\M HEATING A SPECIALTY.
KIESLTNG’S NURSERY,
WH.ITK HL.TJD’V ROAD.
IJLANTM, Kouquuti, lM|iu, Cut Flower.
furnUhed to order. lav<i order, at D A VIS
ISKOB. , bull and York *tt The Kelt Rail
way ilooted through tba ourtery. Telephone 20.
CARPETS, DRY GOODS, ETC.
Burned Out!
11l Sot hsiiiJ!
The destruction of my
stock of Dry Goods by
the late fire has necessita
ted the purchase of an
other stock entire, which
I now offer to my friends
and the public at rny tem
porary stand,
No. 131 Congress Street
The attention of pur
chasers is called to the
unparalleled prices and the
many inducements offered
and which the hurried
state of preparation pre
cludes us from enumerat
ing.
DANIEL HOGI
GARDEN TOOLBI
GARDEN TILE
Eorder Bx*io3sz,
GARDEN HOSE,
Garden Tools
FOB BALR BY
EDWARD LOVELL’S SON'S,
165 Broughton Street.
TERRA COT T V.
PEPtTH IMBOT TEIKI CDTTA &
Architectural Terra Cotta,
SPECIAL SIZES AND COLORS OF FRONT
BRICK.
!8 Cnrttandf, Nw York, N. Y.; Drexel Build,
ui;’, Philadelphia, Pa., HI South Clark ntruct,
Chicago, III.; Perth Atuhoy. N. J.
SUMMED DUINkSZ
('HAMPAONE. Btidweiter, Fuu.t and Na-
J tiuual Export ilwri on leu, the best ia tha
market.
J. 8. W. BARBOUR.
Corner Rnrn.rd and New Houston c tr.eta.
ft p CENTS will ray tor THE DAILY
J }h MOUMNCI NEWS one week, delivered
/.I to any part ol the city, tv-ml your ad
mm *# '11.!.. With Si cent, to the humneae
ottice aud have the paper deli vet and regularly.
5