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EUEIK6T3nr3_PL AYlNO
very Lively Account
judßrownins Very
y eu . TorkUumc Trade Review
.fT o ”; he vsav you hoard Rubinstein play
when you were w York
“I did, in the cool.
•‘tVhat * well tell you
*: .* creation of the world. ’
now; no mock modesty. Go
• h !^ e |l sir he had the blamedest biggest,
eii, . ? r you ©ver laid ©yes
cattycorned 1 - distracted billiard
cm somethin Uke The ljd wft , hristodf
tS H‘ e mcht h v wt'if.i was. If it hadn’t been
and mighty ins ides clean out and
'em tothe four winds of heaven/’
‘‘YouKe did !but don;t inferrup’ me.
~-,i-0 fi-st set down he’pesrd to keer
V h hrv U-U 'bout plavia’, and wish’t he
nll? -/com He dweedie-eedled a little
hal '; r j ‘ r ’,‘ e ad tro dle-oodle-oodled some
pn the trU w a a d boxin’ the
Sg bein' in his way, and 1 sez
I, S rran settin’ next to me si, What
toa foo i playin’ is that?” and
‘Heisßut presently his hands
L mmenvd c" lB1 ’’ 0110 ’ no:l,er U P ail,l
kevs like a nassel of rats scamper-
roueb a garret Very swift. Parts of
)“ ', t th -ngri. and reminded me of
squirrel turnin’ the wheel of a
says to my neighbor, ‘he’s
.vowin’off. He thinks he’s a doin’of .t,
hut e ain’t got no idee, no plan of nothin’.
U heMplaymeup a tune of some kind or
j m I
°' "But my neighbor says ‘Heish!’ very im
ratl [ -vus just about to get up and go home,
bein’ tired of that foolishness, when I heard
a little bird waitin' upaway oil in tne woods,
and ealii ’ sleepy-like to his mate, and I
1, oke d up and I see that Rubm was begm
mn'to take some interest in his business
and I set dowu agin. It was the peep of
dav The light come faint from the east,
the breeze bl -wed gentle and fresb, some
i ,o- e birds waked up in the orchard, then
some more in the trees ne-.r the house,
and ail begun singiu’ together,
people began to stir, and the
girl opened the .shutters. Just than
the first beam of the sun fell upon the
1 loss'uas a leetl more, and it techt the roses
on the bushes, and the next thing it was
broad dav : the sun fuiriv bi-ized. the birds
ketl split their little throats; all
the leaves was movin’ and flashin’ diamonds
of dew, uid the whole Wide world was
bright,’a id happy as a king. Seemed to
me like there was a good breakfast in every
bouse in the land, and not a sick child or
women anywhere. “And I says to my
neighbor,‘That's music, that is.’" But he
glared at me like he’d like to cut my throat
"Presently the wind turned, it begun to
thicken up, and .a Kind of gray wist come
over things; I got low spirited d’rectly.
Then a stiver rain began to fall, i could
see the drops touch the ground, some
fia.hed up like long pearl eurrings, and
some r. lied away like round rubies. It was
pret'v but, melancholy. Then the pearls
gathered themselves into long strands and
ne klaees, and then they melted into thin
silver streams running between goldon
gravels, and then the streams
joined each other at the bot
tom f the hill, and made a
brook that flowed silent, except that you
could kinder see the music, ’specially when
the boshes on the banks moved wi,en the
music went along down the valley. I could
smell the flowers in the meadow’. But the
sun didn’t shine, nor the birds sing; it was
0 foggy day, but not cod. The most curious
thing was the little white angel boy, like
you see in pictures, that run abend of the
music brook and led it'on, and on, away out
if the world, where no man ever
was—l never was, certain. 1 could
see that boy ju3t as plain as I see
you. Then the moonlight came,
without any sun-set, and shono on the
grave-yards, where some few ghosts lifted
their hands, and wont over the wall; aud
between the black sharp-top trees splen
did marble houses rose up, with fine ladies
in tiie lit up windows, and men that loved
'em, but could never get a-uigh ’em, and
played on guitars under the trees, and
made me that miserable I could a cried, be
cause I wanted to love somebody, I don’t
know who, f etter than the men with tho
guitars dd. Then the sun went down, it
got dark, the wind moaned
and wept like a lost child
for its dead mother, aud I could a got up,
then and there, and preached a better ser
mon than any I ever listened to. There
wasn’t a thing in the world left to live for
0"i a blame thing, and yet I didn’t want
the music to stop one b.t. It was happier
to Be miserable than to be happy without
tang miserable. I couldn’t understand it.
1 bur.g mv head, and pulled out my band
k-rchief and blowed my nose loud, to keen
from cryiif. My eyes is weak any way; I
Uidnt want anybody to b 9 a gazin’
at me a-s idlin’, and its nobody's
business what I do with my nose. It’s mine
But some several glared at me as mad as
fucker, 1 hen, all of a sudden, Old Rubin
changed his tune lie ripped and he rar’d,
and U. tippe, am ht , he prmlctH j aat j
he charged like the grand entry at a circus
was tnreodo thUt !ll ‘ tl ‘° Ras in the bouse
Tn i I HIM, ? nce J thin KS KOt so bright,
“ ‘ mv heed, ready to 100k * n> !
man in the face, and not afeard of nothin’.
L w , ami a brass band and a
K - ou at tho same time.
brick heeiv^ em keys h ]F e a thousand of
“V CK , be give em no rest day nor night he
’ ein’ V idle * t' n 'J *■“ mo , a ' goiu .' and not
tern atle to stand it no longer I iumned
TnlbT p y “ a 7, and JMt hollored; ‘Go
child ri \ h< P } u ) man, woman and
Tut „ n , 2 0:1 me.und shouted:
ut Lilli out! put him out!’ ‘Put vour
great-grandmother’s grizzly, gray tT ee-,is!i
‘Tech meif 6 midd } e " f liexc ‘'lontlif sez I
lech me if you dare! I paid mv monev
r -S pSielf
hear Ruby iftor and“ ’ * 1 boUlid t 0
kfe* h i s tuue , a ?ain. He
send to sen if thn D i? tip-toed fine’ from
soft, and lw m and ard -r ? e P la >’ ed
church beUover the hua ,7 tho
leaven w ip 01 , Tb e caudles in
the stars rise Th! by 1 s “
eternity bran to nU , great organ of
end to thw. , U’ S P’o 7 f r ,°'“ the world’s
to ’* and * all ‘ he a K^
feelingthacoufdn^jkP??* 1 * w-ter.full of
todron-up ,1 , thought, and began
dr ‘P ‘tron—clear and
sugar, mud with , 11^ 1 witu white
seed diauiids. R w „ P ' J '!? ort,d si ‘ver and
you the I tioncn n , swe -<k I tell
k;nderbmd bko hn lee ? >d - Kubin - he
it i- d r at h l aated t 0 ‘Much
terruiim, I,l,at bo r you' wouldn’t iu-
Oth.
fin Bers tbugh hf, h® 1 . H lad ‘, He r 'm his
si eev.-. s , opened hL ' l * e sh oved up his
bwr, he ug up hissmf a leet!o fur ‘
ifJ. sir.- jest wif„ V l ’., he ioaned over,
Seslaper f uee ' h f tb“t old planner.
f'Uued i nose, he trm fT her ■> aws ‘ he
scratch her cue, k s , e ‘ hor r a,ld he
k -t her flow Bbe , fair ‘y y o Hed.
slianiof,,] 1 ’ and be stomiied
like aril, s| le bleated in'* 10 bellowed
b wieake a huino l hku a calf , she
Pi K- fkhrieked Ik’ he ® ( l ueele(l bko a
"u. let her up a H r f fa l at ' aad then he
st’etc.own the i ol v 0.,/? e ’, un a quarter
hh hot clean into B Vh Un< i? ° f tlio
ta-ti.nd vou 1 card , h ‘ J b ,° , ' els of the
& ‘teruiide" r in thl„ thunder Sailoping
?'"iu in. f x-Hia-ed i aVW of Rendition;
kpjtu h go a d ilB ri Kb' hand with
i',4 e'rt;dsf P d,a7 ,L° Ut ° f thrt treble
b-J; 0 tmu cf
coirt b ear . needles, and vou
the’shadders
He for’ard ' l n , 1 old pian-
T r l< ii*v * ho J?Z d ' h * crcs’t over
/ tolhe
out, here and there, back and forth, up and
down, perpetual motion,double and twisted,
and turned and tacked and tangled into
forty ’leven thousand double bow knot’.
By jings! It was a mixterv.
‘‘Ana then he wouldn’t let the old planner
go. Ke fecht up his right wing, he fecht
up his left wing, he fecht up his center, he
fecht up his reserves. He fired by file, he
fired by platoons, by company, by regi
ments, and by brigades. He ope led ids
cannon, s:eg guns down tbar, Napoleons
here, twelve-pounders yonder, big guns,
little guns, middle-size guns, round shot,
shells, shrapnel. grape, canister,
mortars, minnies, and magazines,
every livin’ bomb and bat ery
a-goin’ at the same time. The house trem
bled, the lights danced, the walls shuk, the
floor come up, toe ceilin’ c >mo down, the
sky split, the ground roekt—heavens and
earth, creation, sweet potatoes, Moses,
niuepences, giory, ten penny nails, my
Mary Ann, hallelujah, Samson in a ’simmoa
tree, Jeroesal’m, Tump Thompson in a
tumbler cart, roodle, oodle, oodle, oodle.
oodle —ruddle, uddle, uddle uddlo—raddle,
addle, addle, aldlo, addle—riddle iddle,
iddle, Iddle—reetle, eetle, eetle, eetle —p-r-
--r-r-'-r-lang! Per Jang ! Per laug! P-r
--r-r----lang! Hang!
“With that bang! he lifted hisself bodily
into the a’r, and he came down with his
knees, his ton fingers, his ten toes, his elbows
and his nose striking every single solitary
key on that pianner at the same time. The
thing busted and went off into seventeen
hundred aud fifty-seven thousand five hun
dred and forty-two hemi-demi-semi
quivers, and I kuow’d no mo’.
“When I come to 1 were underground
about twenty foot, itx a place they call
Oyster bay, treatin’ a yankee that I never
laid ayes on before, and never expect to
again. Day was breakin’ by the time I got
to the St. Nicholas hotel, aud I pledge you
my word 1 didn’t know my name!
“The man asked me the number of my
room, auii I told him: ‘Hot music on the
half shell for two!' I pintedly did.”
A FRUIT-GROWING VILLAGE,
Facta About a Place That Is Rapidly
Coming into Notice.
Grantville, Ga., Aug. 15.—Moreland,
Coweta county, Georgia, is destined to be
come noted for the fine fruit now being
grown at that place. The village is located
on tbe Atlanta and West Point railroad,
forty-five miles from Atlanta, and the coun
try adjacent thereto so impressed a Mr.
Smith of Sunny Side as a suitable place for
fruit growing that he took considerable
pains to enlist the co-operation cf the citi
zens in tho planting of a large quantity of
peach, apple, pear and plum trees, and acres
of grape vines aud strawberry piauts. Sev
eral citizous seized the opportunity to banoflt,
by the ripe experience of Air. Smith, and
pretty soon select fruit trees and vines
studded the surrounding hills. This year
the peach trees aud grape vinos of the first
planting, as well as many apple trees, hsve
borne a bountiful harvest, aud ship
ments in carload lots have been made
from this point at remunerative prices,
w’hsre hitherto “Kiug Cotton” has swayed
his scepter over the tillers of the soil.
Nearly, or quite 200 acres of land is now
filled with poach, apple, pear and plum
trees, and thousands of grape vines are now
flourishing whore heretofore but small
cotton piauts could be obtained. One
farmer reports 1,700 quarts of strawberries
from three-fourths of an acre of laud, and
ou same piece of land there are about 750
grape vines, which will average twenty
pounds per vine, or 15,000 pounds of graces,
aud at 2 cents nor pound for the grapes—
s3oo, and 5 cents per quart for the straw
berries—is.), we have a sum total of S3SS
from three-fourths of an acre of land which,
under the most favorable circumstances,
would not produce over one bale of cotton,
worth about ilo. These estimates of prices
are low, for the gentleman informed ine
that he realized SIOO for the strawberries
alone. The citizens of Moreland are in dead
earnest, and will reap far greater harvests
next year from all kinds of fruits
produced or grown there for the reason
that the trees aud vines will yield more on
account of anotheryear’sgrowth. I noticed
bunches of ripe aud green grapes on same
vine, produced, I was told, oy cutting back
the vines in some way known only to grape
growers. The people seam perfectly satis
fied with results so far, their greatest
hindrance being the heavy expense in trans
portation. Some shippers have received as
high as 3 cents each for peaches, and it will
not be long before a crate of fruit from the
orchards and vineyards of Moreland, Ga.,
with tlio name of E. N. Camps, Josiah
Couch, John Rollins, F. 8. Cureton & Son,
Smith & Dodds, Wat Brannon, Dr. G. E.
Camp, Joseph Camp or AV. G. Camp printed
thereon will be the only required guarantee
of the quality of fruit therein.
Camp and Cureton manufacture
crates, baskets, boxes, etc., for
shipping purposes, and their capacity has
been wholly inadequate to tho demands on
them by both home aud foreign shippers.
Moreland, once known as “Puckett’s Sta
tion," is a tnriving village, and the fruit in
dustry, which has arisen as if by magic,
will eventually bring the town and its peo
ple more prominently into commercial
centers, and to have the honor of being a
resident of such a place and among such
people will be one of the few things of which
any one might well bs proud.
WHAT 18 A FIBK?
An Insurance Suit in Which This
Question Was the Point at Issue.
From the Irish Law Times.
A curious point of law bearing upon the
responsibility of Insurance companies has
just been decided in the Paris law courts
(Fifth chamber of the civil tribunal of the
Seine) at the suit of the Countess Fitz
James vs. The Union Fire Insurance Com
pany of Paris, by which it is ruled that in
surance companies must indemnify all
losses sustained by an assured caused by fli c,
even in cases where no destruction of prem
ises has been caused by conflagration. The
Countes* Fitz James insured against fire in
the above company all her furniture
and effects for 558,i 00 francs, and in her
policy, under article 7, were mentioned her
jewels, among which figured specially a
pair of earrings, composed of fine pearls,
valued at 18,000 francs. On April 17, 1887,
one of these earrings, which had been placed
on the mantelpiece, was accidentally
knocked down by the countess and foil into
the Are, where it was consumed, notwith
standing every effort made to savo the
jewel. Expert jewelers were called in by
both parties to estimate the intrinsic value
of the property destroyed, and 9,000 francs
was stated to ba the amount, less fid francs
for molten gold rescued from the ashes.
The insurance company refused to pay
for the burnt pearl on the ground that there
was no conflagration, that the fire which
consumed the object was an ordinary fire;
in other words, that there was no flee, and
that the company was not responsible
where combustion had only occurred by the
ordinary use of a grate for heating pur
poses. The court, nowever, rejected this,
and ruled that “the word ‘tire,’ in matters
of assurance, applied to every accident,
however unimportant such accident may
be, ko long as it is caused by the action of
fire.” It was, therefore, ordered that the
Union Company should pay to the Countess
hitz James the value of the jewel, lees that
of the gold recovered, viz., B.94ofrancs and
costs.
Brown’s Iron Bitters is a specific in all
cases of swamp fever, intermittent fever
or malaria of any name. Low, marshy
ground, stagnant pools of water, decaying
vegetable matter, changes of climate while
suffering from general debility, all produce
malaria. Brown’s Iron Bitters cures all
forms. Don’t use quinine. It creates con
stipation, produces headache, and not infre
quently rheumatism and neuralgia. Brown’s
Iron Bitters never does. It will care them.
, HEN ' the young woman with the gored dress
rails in love with the young man with the gourd
a an olher example of the eternal fitness
ot thmgs,—Terre Haute Express.
THE MORNING NEWS: MONDAY, AUGUST 10, 1880.
Weather Forecasts.
Local forecast for Savannah for to-day:
Fair weather, slightly warmer.
I 1 Special forecast for Georgia;
fill Generally fair, stationary temper-
I Jature, easterly winds.
Comparison of mean temperature at Savan
nah, Ua., Aug. 18, 1889, and the same day for
eighteen years;
Mean Temperat-i-rh. from the I^harture
normal s ‘“ cß .^ n '
for lSyears Aupr 18. ’B#| - - or *’ • SK ’
*' U_| 6 1 535
COMPARATIVE RAINFALL STATEMENT.
Amount A “ frSSfVto
tor s , p} normal '
b j -|— or j ’
■SB 1 00 i -I- 28 | -I- 4.56
Maximum temperature, minimum tem
perature. Oil.
The height of the river at Augusta at
7:33 o’clock a in. yesterday (Augusta time)
was '.0.0 feet—a fall of 3.8 feet during the
past twenty-four hours.
Cotton Hojnon Bulletin for twenty-four hours
ending fp. m„ Aug. IK. 1889. 75th Meridian time.
Districts. Avkuaqb.
Nam*. Max - 1 M > n Raln-
Tem P TANARUSn P fall, t
Atlanta 1 8 82 62 ! .00
Augusta | 10 j 82 60 ; .00
Charleston | 7 I 82 62 jOO
Galveston. !8 j 90 70 .00
Little Rock i 11 1 86 62 , .00
Memphis 15 j 86 64 i .00
Mobile 3 I 86 62 I 06
Montgomery 4 84 61 Oil
New Orleans 10 88 62 1 .00
Savannah 8 > 86 68 i .00
Vicksburg 3 j 88 64 | .00
Wilmington 3 82 60 1 00
Summary | j j
Means | 85 | 03 I *T
stations or Max. Min. Ram
savannah district. Temp Temp falil.t
Alapaha ; 82 ; 08 i .00
Albany { .
llainbridge 90 70 i .(in
Eastman ! 94 72 I .00
Fort Uaines I j
Jesup 82 6 1 66
Live uak
Mi!ten 81 60 i ’.OO
Quitman
Savannah 82 66 'op
Smithville 86 66 . 00
Thonmsville go 70 .00
Waycrosa 1 ~ j
Summary | .... |
Moans. j 86 | 60 | [66
Observations taken at the same moment
of time at all stations.
Savannah, Aug. 18. 7:36 i>. l, city time.
Temperature. !
—•
Direction.
I 'Z. I
Velocity. ! ?
Rainfall.
Name
OF
Stations.
Portland 64 SIV 10 Cloudless.
Boston 70i W 6, Cloudless,
Rock Island 66 NWI 8 Cloudless,
New York city — 72 s F.l 6 ~..
Philadelphia 72 8 W; 6, ... Cloudless.
Detroit 68 g 6 ... P’tly cloudy
Fort Buford 80 SK 12 , Cloudy.
St. Vincent 72 N .. .. Cloudless.
Washington city... 70.N Ej.. | Cloudless.
Norfolk 72 S E P’tly cloudy
Charlotte.. 72jSWj..{ jCloudless.
Hat terns 70 R . P’tly cloudy
Titusville 78 N E 12 *T Cloudy.
Point Jupiter,Fla.. 78NE8 .74 Cloudless.
Wilmington 7s E ..... Cloudless.
Charleston 74 E Cloudless.
Angus a ! 7-4'Cmi.. .. iP'tly cloudy
Savannah 74 S E 6 .... Cloudless.
Jacksonville 74 N K 6 .... (Cloudless.
Cedar Keys I 76i E (22... Cloudy.
Key West i 82 E i.. .... Cloudless.
Atlanta. 74 E | 6 . Cloudless.
Pensacola 80 S E [ 12 .... Cloudless.
Mobile 82 S E 12; .18 Cloudy.
Montgomery 78 E .....Cloudless,
Vicksburg 78; N ..|.... jCloudy.
NeWOrleans. 82SE; 6 .... Cloudless.
Shreveport 80,8 E Cloudless.
Fort Smith 78 8 E Cloudless.
Galveston ! 82 8 12 Cloudy.
Palestine ; 62 E Cloudless.
Brownesville ...... j
Rio Grande
Knoxville 74 N [ P'tly cloudy
Memphis 78 E i 6 .... Cloudless.
Nashville. 78,Cm Cloudless.
Indianapolis 74 8 i Cloudless.
Cincinnati 76 N 1 Cloudless.
Pittsburg 70 0 m Cloudy.
Buffalo 68!S W 6 ... Cloudless.
Cleveland— 70 S j P'tly cloudy
Marquette 72 Cm .04 P'tly cloudy
Chicago 76 SW 10 P'tly cloudy
Duluth.. 70 Cnv.. Cloudy.
St. Paul 84,S E: Cloudless.
Davenport 78 S jlO .... Cloudless.
Cairo. 76! S I Cloudless.
St, Louis 80 SW 8 .... Cloudless.
Kansas City 78 S E 10 .... Cleudless.
Omaha 8O 1 8 i 8 .... Cloudless.
Sioux City 82,8 ElO .... Cloudy.
Bismarck 78: E 12 ... Cloudy.
Rapid City 84;8 E! 6 .... P’tly cloudy
Cheyenne 76) W 6 .01 P’tly cloudy
■*T Indicates trace, finches and hundredths.
C. F. von Herrmann, Observer Signal Corps.
Beecham’s Pills act like magic on a
weak stomach.
To the Ladies.
There are thousands of ladies throughout
the country whose systems are poisoned and
whose blood is in an impure condition, from
the absorption of impure matter, due to
menstrual irregularities. This class are
peculiarly benefited by the wonderful tonic
and blood-cleansing properties of Prickly
Ash, Poke Root and Potassium—P. P. P.
Roses and bounding health take the place
of the sickly look, the lost color and the
general wreck of the system by the use of
Prickly Ash, Poke Root and Potassium, as
hosts of females will testify, and many
certificates aro m the possession of the com
pany which they have promised not to
publish, and all prove P. P. P. a blessing to
womankind.
At the Harnett House, Savannah, Ga.,
you get all the comforts of the tsigh-prioea
hotels, and save from $1 to $2 per day.
Try it and be convinced.— Boston Home
Journal.
Pleaae Don’t
For a moment suppose we are fooling when
we say we are selling out; it is as sure as
you live. The senior member of the firm,
after an active partnership of thirty years,
retires, thus necessitating the closing out in
order to settle up. What better evidence
do you want than your own eyeef We
offer you a suit for sio that is worth $22 of
anv man’s money. Our sls suits are as
good (if not better) than anv sls suit you
can buy anywhere. We otTer you our sls
suits for $lO. Hats, shirts, and everything
in our line is offered at reduced price.
Remember, that it is not now a question of
profit, the goods have to be sold regardless
of cost. “The Famous," 144 Congress
street, northeast corner Whitaker, Savan
nah, Oa.
BARGAINS AT SILVA’S.
Spring Clearing Sale of Surpluß Stock,
Odd Lot 9, Remnants and blightly
Imperfect Goods at Less Than Cost
to Make Room for New Importations.
A large lot of lamps vory cheap.
(Special prices on dinner sets, tea set*,
chamber sets and fancy articles.
A splendid opportunity to secure bar
gains.
Arn opening spring stock of fly fan*,
water coolers, ice cream freezers, wire dish
covers, and other summer goods, which
will be sold at low figures.
A large lot of lunch, market and other
baskets.
All this and much more at Silva’s,
140 Broughton street.
Yot’NO Harduppk—But don’t you think you
could learn to love me? Is there no hope?
Ancient Heiress—l am afraid not .Mr. Hard
uppe. My heart was lost when I was but a
young girl.
Mr. Harduppe—But you oughtn’t to count
wliat happentd away before the war,—Terre
Haute Express.
EVERYBODY IS INVITED
TO TABS ADVANTAGE OF 0178
ONE CENT > WORD COLUMN.
For 15 cents you can have "your aay" in the
Hounsa News, provided you say It in 15 words, 1
and pay 1 cent for each added word. The
CHEAP COLUMN embraces advertisements at
all kinds, viz.: FOR SALE REAL ESTATE, j
TO LEASE, SALE HOUSES, HORSES AND
CARRIAGES. SALK MISCELLANEOUS, BUBI- !
NESS OPPORTUNITIES, PERSONAL, BOARD- i
da. WANTED HELP. WANTED SITUA
TIONS, WANTED ROOMS, WANTED BOARD.
FOR RENT ROOMS, WANTED AGENTS,
wanted houses, wanted Miser lean*
OUS, LOST AND FOUND, TO LOAN, RE
MOVALS, AUCTIONS, EDUCATIONAL, PRO
FESSIONAL. MUSICAL, ATTORNEYS, Etc.
OUT OF TOWN ADVERTISERS
will have their orders promptly attended to and
will receive copies of the paper with the adver
tisement marked for inspection Count the
number of words in your “ad" and remit
accordingly. Please remember that no
Utement la inserted for less than 15 cents.
LETTER BOXES
In the Morniko Nkws are furnished without
cost for the receipt of answers to advertisers,
and all communication* are tirictln eonjt
dtntial.
Persons having advertising accounts with
the Morniko News can send advertisements
BY TELEPHONE when it Is not convenient to
write and forward them to the office.
Tslephone of Business Office is No. 3G4.
Calls answered until 10 p. m.
PKRSONAL.
rp\VO DOLLARS AND FIFTY CENTS pays
L for one dozen Cabinet Photographs and oik
extra in Bxlo giltframe. J. N. WILSON,2I Bull
street.
\ r ES, Peaches and Cream, try Peaches and
1 Cream IIEIDT'S specialty, Peaches and
Cream.
U’ HEN you need either Wines or Liquors for
-i connoisseurs or the convalescent, M.
LA VIS’S ESTATE can supply you.
ITIOH Heat, Chafing and all skin eruptions,
1 nothing equals BOKACINE. Try it; 25c.
package at druggists.
JT'OR thirty days only, $2 50 pays for one
dozen fine cabinet photographs and one
extra Bxlo, framed in fine gilt frame. SAVAN
NAH PHOTO CO., 149 Broughton street.
I?OR fall planting— from reliable growers at
f low prices—fresh Bean, Cabbage aud Turnip
Seeds at HEIDT’S.
State
of
W BATHER.
HELP WANTED.
Y \T ANTED, good cook; also white girl to do
T v housework. Apply Congress Street.
XXT ANTED, an honest, ambitious man for a
TV permanent position, with an old estab
lished firm as their representative in his own
state; salary increased with experience; refer
ences required. MANUFACTURER, Lock Box
1585, New York.
\V T ANTED, a respectable elderly woman to
V v cook and take charge of house in the
country; one that will suit can procure a good
home. Apply at 35 Tattnall street.
\Gf>OD, sober, reliable barber can obtain
a permanent situation by applying to J. W.
HOWARD, Waycross, Oa.
EMPLOYMENT WANTED,
YITANTED.— I Young lady desires position as
TV stenographer and typewriter; rapid and
competent; legal, lumber or commission pre
ferred; unexceptional references. Address
STENOGRAPHER, Box 44.
MISCELLANEOUS WANTS.
X\T ANTED TO suburban lots
TT for improved property in this city. Parties
baviug properly that has to be taken care of
can get in exchange property that will take care
of itself. W. K. WILKINSON, 142 Congiess
street.
X\T ANTED, to rent or buy, now or as late as
T v Nov. Ist, 1889, a conveniently and pleas
antly located house, suitable for a small family
Address or communicate with A. P. DAVIS of
Davis Bros.
UYJIt Dyspepsia and Kidney Complaints use
A the celebrated Tate Spring Water, 40c. gal
lon; agency HEIDT’S.
\\f ANTED, good judges to try our special
T T brand, ‘ DeSoto Rye Whisky." which for
the pnjoe is unequaled; $4 per gallon. M. LAV
IN’S ESTATE, sola proprietor Telephone 54.
PARTNER WANTED in the “Monument and
1 Tombstone business,” to ho established in
Savannah, excellent opening for fine cemetery
work, and a rare business opportunity. Ad
dress R. WATHAN, 16! and 163 Whitehall
Btreet. Atlanta. Ga.
\\T ANTED, those who can appreciate rare old
TT Brandies, Gins, Rums, Whiskies, Wines,
etc., to call and examine onr Imported and Do
mestie Liquors. M. LA YIN’S ESTATE, 45 East
Broad street.
YY r ANTED, small house in southern part of
T T city, anywhere between Bull and Halier
sham; willing to give three or four years' lease;
rent about sls per month. Address 83 Jones
street.
C BALED BIDS WANTED for moving and
f ' putting in position on foundation a one
story frame building from lot i4, Bartow ward.
Charlton street, between Price and East Broad,
to Garden lot east No. 25, on Wheaton street
Address P. O. Box 86.
HOUSES A Vl* STORKS FOR KENT.
tpOR RENT, from Oct. Ist, that desirable resi
dence, No. 170*eja Jones street. Apply SAL
OMON COHEN.
IJOK RENT, house 11.336 Barnard, near Gor-
J- don. Apply to I. DASHER.
Iq’CR RENT, brick bouse 101 Liberty, two
1 doors east Drayton; every- convenience;
terms moderate. Apply Mrs. C. IIENNESBY,
Houston and President street!-:.
RENT, from Oct. Ist. house No. 39W
Jones street. Low rent and all modern
improvements. J. J. DALE.
F7OR RENT, possession Oct. let, house 12!)
Duffy street. Apply H. F. TRAIN, 125 New
Houston street.
TO RENT, from Ist October, the brick tene
A ment houses, 174 and 174)6 Jones street
Will put in order and rentekeap. W. D. BREN-
S' IN. at j. D. Weed & Cm’s.
RENT, first-class small house on Jones
sireet. C. D. ROGERS.
POS RENT, 146 Hull, corner Whitaker; in
1 first class order. Possession Oct. 1. Apply
to 140 Hull street. w y
FOR RENT—MISCELLANEOUS
f"OR RENT, warehouse on River street, for
merly occupied by Artesian Ice Company.
Apply to F. G. BELL, Buxines* Office, Morning
News.
A- ' ■ - -
FOR SALE.
IMPROVED Texas Horses and Mares broke
and unbroke. J. F. GUILMARTIN & ( O
Cox’s Stables. ’
TEXAS MARES delivered at any point in car-
A loadlot3; prices reasonable. J. F. GUiL
MARTIX & CO.
CVjR SALE.—Money invested in the southern
A portion of the city during the past few years
has in many instances netted the iuvestor 1,000
per cent. Look at the plat of cheap lots that I
am offering Invest and reap a large return
W. K. WILKINSON, 143 Congress street.
UOR SALE, the Fruit Farm and Vineyard of
I the late John C. Taylor, located about
six miles from Savannah. For particulars ap
ply U)_L. W. LANDF.RSIIINE. Executor.
HOFFMAN Strawberry Plante, the most
prolific and fine for forcing. For sale bv
GEO. WAGNER, Thunderbolt road.
LOST.
IOST. on Friday afternoon, a gold ring with
j several pearls in the setting, on Barnard
street cars or ou York street, between Barnard
an l Habersham, Liberal reward if returned to
69 York street.
BOARDING.
(SuMMEii BOARD Special rates mads for
O table board for the summer seavm, and
met! tickets at reduced rate* at the HARNETT
HOUSE.
MItCELLAXEm s.
I*■ ('. HEIDT'S Magic Corn Cure. Try it ! Try
I• * it: Try it! Try it
IJKESCRIPTD >NS compounded with accuracy
and dispatch, using but first class drills at
HEIDT'S PHARMACY.
(■> IVEN AWAY—To purchasers of 50c. worth
F of Roods, a soda ticket. Try HEIDT'S
Peaches and Cream.
1 K*C. POUND Camphorline Moth Destroyer.
*' HEIDT’S for reliable goods at reasonable
prices.
,TC., 33c., 86c. HEIDT s Fine Confectionery;
As I popular because sujierior. Handsomely
put up.
•l'C. BOX three cakes HEIDT’S Artesian
e ' > Water Toilet Soap, just what h, wanted.
BEFORE you buy or sell property consult
ROBT. 11. TAT EM, Ideal Estate Dealer
and Auctioneer.
DIVORCES— A. aOODßlCll.attorueyat law.
184 Dearborn street, Chicago; advice free;
il years experience; business Quietly and legally
transacted.
m PER CENT, off for cash, from Santo a
Trunks unt.l Sept. Ist. NLIDLINUEK A
RAIIUN.
CLOTHING.
IT IS IMPOSSIBLE
For us to reduce
the Prices of our
Straw Hats, as they
were marked lower
than the lowest at
the start of the sea
son ; but in order to
reduce our stock in
general,we vyili, until
further notice, pre
sent the choice of
any Straw Hat in the
house to every pur
chaser of $5 or over.
Remember, our
goodsareall marked
in Plain Figures,
with but One Price,
thus making this
offer the BEST and
most BONA FIDE
offer ever made to
the public.
APPEL & SOHADL,
On_e IPorice
Clothiers, flatters & Men’s Furnishers,
163 Congress St.
SU MMER RESORTS.
THE ORKNEY SPRINGS AND BATHS,
Bhenaritloaii County. V:t„
YX7ILL continue to receive guests at regular
It rates until OCT. Ist, 1899, thus enabling
their patrons to enjoy the grandeur and beauty
of the mountains duriuß September. Send for
circulars. F. W. EVANS, Manager.
CATSKIId, MOUNTAINS.
TREMPER HOUSE.
Often June to October. Most accessible by
railroad of atty hotel in tho Catskills. AH
modern improv-ment*.
J. H. THEM PE It, Pboeuieia, N. Y.
LOUIS F. GOODSELL, M’g’r,
formerly of Cozzen's, West I’otut and
Pulaski House, Savannah.
DRUGS AND MEDICINES.
Sure Death
TO ALL COCKROACHES AND BUGS -a
new and effective remedy. It is not a
poison. Try it. 25c. per bottle. For sale at
the YAMACRAW PHARMACY, M. A. BAKIE
Proprietor, southeast corner West Broad and
Bryan streets.
p LUMPER.
l a. McCarthy,
Or-l, ijaknard street,
(Under Knlghtf of Pythian’ Hall),
PLIIBiSG ASD GAS FITTING.
STEAM HEATING A SPECUITT.
BLANK BOOKS.
THE BOOH FOB BOOKKEEPERS.
It WJU Open Out Perfectly Flat From Fir,
to Laai Page.
The MoßjtthU News Printing House is the
licensed manufacturer of
BRONSON’S ELAT OPENING BLANK BOOKS.
(Adopted by the United States Government.)
There is no book made of equal strength. It
will otieii at any page and remain perfectly flat.
There is no danger of the leaven becoming loose.
It is the only elastic binding designed to open
flat that has received me unqualified indorse
ment of bookkeepers as well as bookbinders.
Books ruled to any pattern, made to any size
and bound In any styi-.
We are making books for a number of firms
In this city and elsewhere, and wili take pleas
ure In showing them to thoee interested.
THE HOKNiNU NEWS STEAM PRINTING
HOUSE,
8 Whitaker street. Savannah.
f CENTS A WEEK pays tor the
• B P-w DAILY MORNING NEWS, dellv
' J m 1 ered EARLY EVERY MORNING
*■* in any part of the city.
A. R. ALTMAYER * CO.
mm's
Bullion and 801 l Sis.
A BREEZY STORE OS A BREEZY CORNER
XERXES
Crossing the Hellespont and
coming with his million men
against the Grecian nation by
pouring his vast stream of
armed humanity through the
funnel of the pass of Thermop
yla* was enabled, by slaugh
tering a herd of people, (o
make all Greece tremble and
compel them to call forth all
their undaunted courage and
latent strength in order to
avoid utter destruction.
'I he army of Xerxes can
be well represented in the
present case by the million of
goods, etc., that will be in a
lew days pouring into our re
ceiving rooms. In order to
make room, in order to handle
them, we must commence
at once a
Grand Double Quick
Slaughter Sale!
A Sale so sincere and prices so
low that competition will ac
tually stand aghast and
wonder how wo do it.
THINK OF THIS!
DID YOU EVER SEE THE LIKE?
SECOND FLOOR.
One counter Ladies' Chemises, bleached and
unbleached, trimmed ami untrimmed, plain
ami fancy, good quality muslin and well made,
price 25c.; down Irorn 50c.
200 dozen Ladies’ Bleached and Unbleached
Drawers, plain and tucked, with embroidery,
25c.; down from 50c.
50 dozen Children’s Cambric Dresses, with
embroidered yoke, price zsc.; down from 50c.
Read This Twice.
1 lot Children's Blouse Knits, sizes 2to 5 yenrs,
price $1 25; down from
1 lot Ladles’ Cream Blouse Waists, all wool,
sailor collar, shirt sleeves, price $1 II); down
from $2.
FIRST FLOOR.
50 dozen ladies’ Fine Jersey Bibbed Vests,
regular 75c. goods. Price this week .i7c.
100 dozen Hoys’ Colored Percale Waists, regu
lar price 60c.; down this week to 26c.
Gloria Silk Umbrellas by tho Tens uf
Thousand.
Gloria Silk Umbrellas, with oxidized silver
and guld handles, 2G and 2s Inches long, at 89c
99c., 81 25, $1 19, ?! 75, *1 99; worth double.
Tie Olive Bill is Lost
It’s the Other Kind of Bills
We’re After Now!
50 dozen Gents’ Colored Gauze Shirts (brown
and bluo mixture), a grand treat, 83c.; worth
75c.
]no doz'-n Gents’ Unlaundered Shirts, linen
bosom and wristbands, equal to any $1 shirt.
This week 48c.
1,000 Xylonite French Beveled Plate Hand
Mirrors at 59c.; sold elsewhere at 75c.
Will Not Stand on the Order of
Going, But Will Go.
Summer Dress Goods,
Lawns, Millinery and all sum
mer fabrics at cost, and a
great many below cost.
Not Too Phunny, But Just Phunny
Enough.
Ladies’ beautiful Hand Sewed Oxford Ties
980.; were 1 25.
Ladies' Oxford Ties, were SI 50; down to
$1 19.
Ladies’ $2 Oxford Ties down to Si 49.
All of our 28 and $3 50 Ladies’ Button Shoes
down to $2 49.
ALTMAYERS
AUCTION SALES FUTURE DAYS.
TOKAY WINE
By J. McLaughlin & Son,
On TUESDAY, 20th inst., at II o'clock, in front
of the Custom House stores,
5 C'AFKS, HALF AND QUARTER CASKS
TOKAY' WINE. *
1 CASK SHERRY.
Direct importation. This is a good oppor
tunity for parties to procure • good, pure din
ner WiDe.
TERMS AT SALE.
cLoxaniG,
PICNIC!
We are going to give a
Picnic. Most Picnics are de
voted to the entertainment of
grown people. We are in
novators. We propose giving
one exclusively for the
Little Boys
Of Savannah and Vicinity,
It will be THE PICNIC of
the season, because it will
INTEREST the BOYS, and.
at the same time prove a
source of Profit to their
PARENTS.
PROGRAMME
BEGINNING
MONDAY,
Aug. 19th.
BOYS’ SUITS,
From 4 to 14 Years,
LIGHT or BEAM Weights, ai Preferred
—for —
Three-S3-Dollars
Comprising Suits WORTH
DOUBLE the Money, but
being Broken Lots,
They Are to Re Sold.
A glance at our SHOW
W DOWS will illustrate tho
of our oiler.
LADIES
Are especially asked to call
and examine these gooda
$3 $3 $3 $3
8. 1 LEVY 181.
LEMONS.
cabbage;
A POTATOES,
B ONIONS,
B LEMONS,
A PEANUTS,
G HAY, GRAIN,
E AND FEED.
“W, D. Simkins.
GARDES TOOLS.
GARDEN TILE
OK
Border Briofe,
GARDEN HOSE.
G-aircLoxL Tools
FOR SALK BY
EDWARD LOVELL’S SONS,
155 Broughton Street.
SH INGLES".
The VALE ROYAL MANUFACTURINGS
COMPANY have returned the manufac
ture of Cy prow Shingles ou the old mill Situ, auct
have a capacity of 125,000 per day. The twoi
higher grades are all cut uniform widths, either
4or 5 Inches, as customers may select. They
are for sale at $8 So, $2 50 and $1 50 perthousandl
at the mill, counting them as 4 inenes wide. X
reduction will be made on oarload lots. Above*
prices are for net cash. Orders taken at the miji
or at Boom No. 8, KeLTy's Bufidmj, Hay street*
3