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STRANGE WINTERS.
SOMETHING ABOUT TEARS WITH
OUT WINTER OR BUMMER.
Warm Winters as Heralds of Disaster.
Cyclones Which Have Como in Their :
Wake—Records of Old Time.
From the St. Louis Republic.
Never was there a more truthful saying
than the one which tells us that “supersti
t.cn dies hard.” Fully understanding his
t v. .1 weakness in the face of nature's
greater manifestations, man seeks to peer
into the future through the instrumentality
t>£ signs and omens. The exceptionally
miiJ weather which has characterized the
last two months of the past year (I had as
well include the entire twelve, as 18S9 will
doubtless go into history as the year with
out a winter), has caused a brood of calam
ity prophets to spontaneously spring up all
over the country.
The croakers have promised us famine
and i esi ieace in wholesale doses. One pro
fessor with A. M. D. D. and other sections
f the alphabet, both before and behind his
name, tells us that it is not generally known,
tut it is a fact, never.beless, that the
earth’s crust is hundreds of foet thinner than
it was a decade ago, that fierce ar.d insati
able fires are now raging but a few hun
dred feet below the outside covering upon
which we live, and goes ou to 9ay that the
newly developed g s fields of the middle
and northern sta e3 are but conditions
which owe their origin to the gradual as
eenuing internal fires; that these tires will
eventually penetrate to nature’s great gas
retorts and cause an explosion which will
kill all the inhabitants of the gas regions,
besides opening up a chasm through which
the waters of t.,e great lakes will rush aud
blot the Southern States off the face of the
earth.
Auother thinks somewhat in the same
vein, only he bel.eves that the inhabitants
of t. e sections named will have died off
with pestilence years before the final ex
plosion aud consequent rush of waters.
Both are of the opinion that winter is a
thing of the past, and that in the future the
mercury will rise to 100“ mote frequently
than it will fall to the freezing point. An
other sees the "black death''follow ing in
the wake ot the Russian influenza, a .and pre
dicts that 1890 will not t e 100 days old be
fore our eiMos and towns will be sadly
decimated by the plague.
THE LAW OF COMPENSATION.
All these and dozens of other dire calami
ties have been [irom.se I us by these modern
astrologers and soothsayers, as pay for the
privilege of enjoying two semi-tropical
winters, not stopping to think of or to take
into consideration the fact that these mild
winters, tue present and the past, are of
themselves pay for the five Arctic winters
which were given us without intermission.
The daily papers this year devoted column
after column to accounts of sub-tropical
Oh.'istmas festivities at various places
throughout the United States. Thinking
that these must be the signs of the end of
time, which the scriptures tells us will be
pr< ceded by a season in which summer can
not be oistinguished from winter only by
the falling ot the leaves, the writer be
thought himself that it was time to make
an investigation, anent the saying that
forewarned is forearme.l.
SOMETHING LIKE IT.
A counterpart for this unu9ual phen
omena was found much sooner than was
expected. On the second page of
Vennor’s Weather Bulletin, for Jan
uary, 1882, was found the following:
“During December, 1877, a western
newspatier remarked that not sirice 1837
has any December season been known
so mild. Lawn grasses are growing finely
and dandelions are in bloom; navigation is
perfectly open.” Commenting on this,
Mr. Vennor says: “Now, again, in
1881. wo have to record a very
similar state of affairs for the same
month of the year.” The “Christmas
Weather” dispatches in the Republic of tho
26th ult., especially the one from St. Pan],
'linn., one would think were without a par
allel. Investigation proves the reverse.
The St. Paul 1 ioneer Press of Dec. 22,1877.
contained an editorial, of which the follow
ing is an extract: “This remarkable
weather knocks the Old Settler Associa
tion on thoir beam ends. * * * Here it
is the 22d of December, with the mer
cury dancing on its heels to the
music of 50’ above in the shade.
* * * Ten boats of the St Paul
Boat Club, each occupied with scullers or
crews of oarsmen, sp rting upon the placid
bosom < f the ancestor of meandering
streams —all this and more, too, is the
result of the remarkable weather which
now prevails in Minnesota. * * * This
is a fact worthy of being placed on record
for the benefit of all coming investigation
of climatic facts and theories in Minne
sota.” At Kansas City ti e temperature on
Christmas day, 1889, lacked three degrees
of being as high as it was at Sr. Paul on
Dec. 22, 1577'. Only one of the Republic's
many dispatch senders, the ono at, Lock
port, N. Y., ever heard tell of a warm
Christmas before. He admits that Christ
mas, 1877, was five degrees warmer than
the same day in 1889.
NOTHING TO FEAK.
But the winter of IS7~-’7S is not the only
one of exceptional mildness from which the
writer has authority to draw. If it was
the present warm spell would be anything
but encouraging to our neighbors of the
“Far South,” the summer of 1878 having
been the year of tho great yellow fever
3courge; lurther on, however, it will be
shown that mild winters and an aftermath
of po tilence are i no way connec ed.
The winter of ISBI-82 was as i henomenal,
as far as unseasonable weatber was con
cerned, as that if 1877-’7B. On Christmas
(lav, 1881, the rneicury stood at from 45" to
bo’ above zero throughout the Mississippi
valley, merging into summer heat from tho
miutli of the Ohio southward. The day
was clear and bright, with wind south to
southwest. In Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Mis
souri, lowa, and Nebra ka the farmers
plowed every mouth during the winter.
The iilac buds swelled into full leaf in
February, 1882, in nearly all tho states
named.
On Jan. 26, 1882, the best tested ther
mometers stood at 42° above in the morn
ing, at 57° in the afternoon, and did not
fall below 50° for over thirty-six hours.
February showed twenty-one days upon
which the mercury rose above 40° in the
shai e, and upon sixteen of these the tem
perature was above 50° so uetiroo during
the day. On the sth, tith, 10th, lltb, 12th
and 15th it marked 60° or übove, and upon
one occasion, the I2th, stood between 75°
and Bo° for five hours.
The thermometer responsible for this
-timing inconsistency failed to reach the
high water mark of Fob. 12 again until
alter the And of the first week iD June, with
a single exception. May 4, when it marked
82*. I mention this fact for the bmefit of
the reader who mny think} tho instrument
with which the readings were taken one of
inferior grade, and, in consequence, very
suscepitible to fluctuations of heat and c Id.
Southern people who get nervous when
they hear yellow fever mentioned in con
nection with the warm winter of 1877-’7B,
can gain some consolation by watching the
' hange which comes over the face of the
western and northern man when he is in
formed that tho spring-like character of
Jaunary and February, 1882, indirectly
brought about the many cyclones and
prarie-twisters of tho summer following.
Many scientists, living and dead, the late
air. V nnor among tho number, believe
aud believed that warm winters aro very
likely to be fallowed by a summer of de
structive wind-storms. As far as 1882 is
concerned the coincidence is remarkable.
the twister* began to exhildt that year
flown in Louisiana early in March, about
two or three weeks after the remarkable hot
rebi uary day, leveling several town- and
•Wing off tne negro population at an alarin
'ng rata. Next, in April, a prairie terror
"prang up, ail unlooked for, in Rice county,
•vaiisos; traveled iu a northeast direc-
tion, killing everybody in it* track. On
the same day three separate ci clones
crossed the state of Mich oan, killing in the
aggregate 17 persons and a great deal of
stock, besides destroying an immense
amount of property. From that time for
ward cyclones hatched out like tadpoles in
June. They were here, there and every
place for a couple of months, doing great
damage to property, but sparing human
life, except now and then an isolated family.
N. xt came the appalling calamity at
Grinuell, 10., in whichs6 persons lost their
lives. On the same night cyclones of minor
size visited Kansas, .Missouri, Neoraska,
Illinois, and Minnesota, killing from 3 to Id
in eacn state. Note the names of the stales
just mentioned and als . the list given above,
in which it was said that plowing continued
throughout the winter. After the Grinned
horror about a fortnight of comparative
quiet reigned. Then came the Texarica a
calamity, iu which 19 human lives were
blotted out of existence.
This summary does not take into consid
eration the cyclone at Brownsville, Mo.,
and at Fayette, Pa., both of which occurred
in April of the same year; n r the ones at
McAllister. I. TANARUS., and at Montgomery, Aik.,
in May, each of which claimed a'bloody
record. One thing is certain, it takes into
consideration enough to show that ‘‘phe
nomenal” winter weather is a boon not to
bajappreciated.
OLD-TIME WEATHER.
The records for the summers of 1878 and
1882, it must be admitted, strengthens that
opinion; but what ate we to tuink of the
summer of 1816, which brought neither
cyclones or yellow fever, and which, in fact,
brougut a summer only in name. The
winter of 1815-T6 was as remarkable for its
unseasonable weather as that of 1837-’,>B,
1877-’7B, 1881-’B2, or even that of 1889-’9O,
which we are now enjoying.
E. Bishop, n intelligent old gentleman,
who lived at Essex, Mass., at the time, gives
the following interesting facts concerning
“the year without a summer,” to the James
town Journal-.
“December, 1815, and January, 1816,
were very warm, indeed so mild that flr. s
were seldom l.ghted in our rooms. February
was also mild as spring time, with the
exception of one or two cold days. March
was cold and b isterous the first half, then
mild to the middle of April, when winter
set in with ice and deep snows, which con
tinued till June.
“June was bitter cold, the coldest ever
known; frost, ice or snow almost every
night, destroying almost everything thut
frost could kill. Snow fell 10 inches deep iu
Vermont, New Hampshire and Maine,
3 inches in the interior of New York state
and in a part of Penu-vlvama and Massa
chusetts. July was cold and frosty. Ice
formed as thick a3 window glass through
out New England. * * * Au.
gust was worso still. Ice formed
a half inch thick and killed almost
every green thing in this country and in
Europe. * * * Corn for seed in 1817
that was raised in 1815 sold for $5 a bushel.”
Not until December, according to Mr.
Bishop, did the sun shine out warm like
spring. It seemed as if the seasons had
been entirely reversed.
If the mild winter of 1815—’16 brought
about a year without a summer, that of
1877-’7B brought a scourge of yellow fever;
1881-’B2 a s as m of cyclonic fury, what may
we expect for the summer of 1890? Abund
ant crops, perhaps, aud an ample opportu
nity to fill the cornucopia But this is not
the end of the phenomenal weather subject*
THE FEARS OF MEN.
Man’s faith in both heavenly and ter
restial things is not rock-rooted. During
the cold summer of 1816 the ministers in
the pulpit openly avowed their belief that
the sun was cooling ad that the end of time
was near at hand. In 1638 than two years,
in the hot, dry summer of 1818, when the
central and eastern states experienced au
eighty-days’ drought, public prayer was
held for the benefit of sinners in anticipa
tion of the day when the sun would blaze
out in all its fury and roast mankind to a
cinder.
Only three or four years since, when we
were in the midst of a series of Arctic
winters, the inutteringg of pseudo-astrono
omers were filled with dire portent. One
scientist of good standing gave widespread
currency to a belief that the internal firos
of the earth were dying out, aid that the
sun were fast loosing hi.-, heat-giving quili
ties, and that the earth's glacial zones were
gradually enlarging.
In olden time the weather took just as
erratic and eccentric twists as it does iu this
year of grace, 1890. and that, too, without
causing any great epidemics. The greatest
plague scourges known in history have oc
curred during or immediately following
severe winters.
CENTURIES AGO.
The best authorities on weather and
plague with their relations to each other,
tell us that the winter of K>47-’4B, t e
winter before the black death swooped
down all Europe like a destroying angel
and took 25,000,000 of human being, was
one of unusual severity, both seas at Con
stantinople being entirely closed by ice for
a period of nearly a month. The Toarnes
was frozen to a depth of sixt'.-one inches
that winter for fourteen weeks; all small
birds aud mammals died of excessive cold,
yet when the plague reached London it re
duced her population to the extent of over
100,000. Europe was not eutirely rid of the
awful disease until the year 1349, the year
in which the London Telegraph say the
wheat was in full head on Easter Sunday,
proving conclusively that a disease, how
ever, deadly in its character, will run its
course and die a natural death os well in a
warm as in a cold winter.
In 1172 the temperature was so high that
leaves came out on the trees in January, and
birds hatched their broods in the following
month. In 1286 the weather was equally
mild, and the maid-ns of Cologne wore
wreaths of wild violets and coin flowers at
Christmas and Twelfth day. Iu 1421 the
trees flowere t in the month of March, ana
the vines in April; cherries ripened in Aoril,
and peaches and apples in May. In 1572 tne
trees were covered with leaves in January,
and the birds hatched their young in Feb
ruary. In 1576 thesamet ine was recorded.
According to th 6 most authentic records
there was neither frost or sno v in France
during the winters of 1538, 1607, 1609, 1617.
ad 1659; finally in 1662, even in the
north of Germany, the fires were not
lighted, aud trees put on their summer dress
in February.
MEDICAL.
Wfil be paid to any competent chemist who will
find, on analysis, a particle of Mercury, Potash,
or other poisons in Swift’s Specific (S. S. S.)
AN EATING SORE
Hendereon, Tex., Ang. *3, 1839. “For eigh
teen months I had an eating sore on my tongue.
I wus treated by the best local physicians, but
obtained no relief, the sore gradually growing
■worse. I concluded finally to try S. 8. S., and
was entirely cured after using a few bottles.
You havo my cheerful permission to publish tho
above statement for tho benefit of those similarly
afflicted.” C. B. McLzmore, Henderson,Tex.
Treatise on Blood and Bkm Diseases mailed free.
THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO„ Atlanta, Qa,
FOR SALE.
' EMPTY SACKS.
OECOND-HAND EMPTY SACKS, various
© Linds and sizes, for sale by
C. M. GILBERT & CO.
Bay and What Broad Streets.
THE MORNING NEWS: SATURDAY. JANUARY IS. 1890.
PEARS’ SOAP.
“Paris
yfOWL-. Exposition,
Vnmnmg iߧ9
Pear S obtained the only gold medal
awarded solely for toilet SOAP in competi
tion with all the world. Highest possible
distinct ion l'
MEDICAL.
rEECHAMc
ifei£!Pl ULSS^Sr
For foal: Stomacli—lmpaired Biiestion—Disordered Liver.
SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS.
PRICE 25 CENTS PER BOX.
Prepared only by THOS. BEECHAS, St. Helens, Lancashire, England.
B. F. ALLEN it CO., Sole Agents
For United States, 365 & 367 Canal St., New York.
Who (if your druggist does not keep them) will mail Beecham’s
Pills on receipt of price —but inquire first. (Please mention this paper.)
CHOCOLATE.
• ns —i wrTmr— tt irawinnwitn—i—■mwin.i.i win inim-mimm
w 30 Million Pounds
Menier chocolate!
IHUMt AND EATEN EVERY YEAR.
Ufgifp BECAUSE of all CHOCOLATES 3
if il 1 ■ It is the purest and best.
Paris Exposition, ISS9 1- % colSVedall:
Ask for YELLOW WRAPPER.
—FOR SALE EVERYWHERE-
BRANCH HOUSE. UNION SQUARE, NEW YORK. is]
LIPPMAN BROS., Wholesale Agents. JOHN LYONS & CO., Retail Agents.
FURNITURE AND CARPETS.
LirVIYSA-Y A MORGAN,
Corner Broughton and Barnard Streets,
HEADQUARTERS FOR
BABY CARRIAGES.
F I N E, Baby Carriages
coiioi plu sh
BABY
CARRIAGES.
Our Stock of Baby Carriages is simply immense, and will be
sold at Prices which will surprise you. G-ive us a calL
LINDSAY & MORGAN,
Leading F limiture and Carpet Men.
CLOTHING.
TYTE INVITE AN INSPECTION of our stock,
v v which, by judicious replenishing, Is com
plete in all departments.
A. FALK & SONS,
RELIABLE OUTFITTERS,
161 Broughton St.
DIAMONDS, JEWELRY, ETC.
DIAMONDS.
Fine JEWELRY, SOLID SILVER, and
fine PLATED WARES, BRONZES,
VASES, ORNAMENTAL and
I DECORATIVE GOODS.
- .WEDDING PRESENTS A FEATURE.
157 33r*oughton Street.
M, STERNBERG & BRO.
BANK STATEMENT.
CONDITION
OF THE
SAVANNAH BANK & TRUST COMPANY
AT THE CLOSE OP BUSINESS, DECEMBER 31st, IsB.
ASSETS. I LIABILITIES!
n>ans and discounts $ '*•>. :?7!> RS Capital. 4OO aM nn
levins in Suit .’A) tM Due D‘pfVUirs n
Mooksand Bonds 00 lYofit ami Loss (Surplus) 41 833 ift
lt< ul Estate. 32.500 it* Dividend (Unitai I* .... 11 340 up
J uruilure ant Fixture. 10,000 00 Due Kinks and Bankers . 117 MOW
Due by Banks in the State .\uu 9' uSpeeial ls>an -\xrhium
Due by Banks out of the State 25,;f17 21 -aw.juu uu
Coupons, interest, etc., due 4,073 07
Cash 107,830 71 I
t"TATE OF GEORGIA, Cofiitt or Chatham Personally came before me the President and
*■ Cashier of the Savannah Bank and Trust Company. ho on oath say that the als we is a true
statement, of the condition of t>aitl Hank at the dose of business on the day of hccvmber
IK**, and that said Bank, since its last return, to the l>ost of affiants' knowledge and belief, has not
violated or evaded any obligation imposed by law, either by itself its officers or agents
JOSEPH B WEED, President.
„ , , , ~ . . JAS H. HUNTER, Cashier.
Sworn to and subscribed before tne this 17th day of January. IS9O.
L W. LANDERSTIINE, Notary Public, Chatham county, Georgia.
DIRECTORS.
JOSEPH D. WEED. C. A. KEITZE. M. Y. MxoINTYRE
tohv F U ERWIN. JOHN LYONS.
JOHN L HARDEE, EDWARD KAUOW. WALTER CONEY.
D. C. BACON, 1. G. HAAS,
ORTH'ICERS.
JOSEPH D. WEED, President JOHN C. ROWLAND, Vico President,
■IAS it, HUNTER, Cashier. L. W. LANDERSHINE. Teller.
STOVES.
Lady of the House—Do you still like otir Charter Oat; Stove as well as when
wo first got it, Mary ?
Servant—Oh, every bit as well, Ma’am.
Lady of the House—! am expecting a friend to take dinner with us next week, on
purpose to snow her how nice our stove cooks everything, and I want you to have a nice
dinner for us.
_ bERVANT-Indeed! will. Ma’am. There’s no trouble to cook nice with that stove.
The Hire Uause Oven nooro makes It so much easier than other stoves I have
been used to, and I havo so much more time to make everything just right. Just look at
that roll! I never have had hick with bread, biscuits or cake, now.
Lady of tub House— I Why. how do you explain it?
Servant- Well. 1 don’t havo to watch everything so close for fear it wilt burn. You
know how careful you have to be with a I ak- <1 custard, it is so apt to bum on top before tt
is baked through. The Charter Oak bnkesit perfectly without any dangerof burning. And
then n roasting a turkey. I donit have to keep basting it every flveminiites. It roasts beauti
fully brown without it. ami without drying it up like the tight ovens do. And you know
how crisp the biscuits are without being hard and tough. You always praised mv blNcuits.
but II it wasn t lor the wire gauze oven door I know they wouldn’t l e near as nice. I hone
I’ll never have to cook anywhere again where they haven'tgotaChartcr'Oak Stove or Range.
Charter Oak Stoves and Ranges with Wire Gauze Oven Doors, are Manufactured
by the Iljrvehtior lUanufeieturlng Cos., St. Lords, Mo., and Sold by
CLARK & DANIELS, Sole Agents, Savannah. Ga.
HOTELS.
HOTEL CORDOVA,
ST. AUGUSTINE, FLA.
OPEN FROM DECEMBER UNTIL MAY.
First-Class in every detail. Reasonable Rates. Rooms Secured by
Mail or Telegraph. E. N. WILSON, Manager.
DRY GOODS.
MILIUS & CO.
XT' NTIRF. LINE DRESS TRIMMINGS AT COST.
J-i Children's I’lusn and Castimcre CLOAKS REDUCED.
£0 dozen HANDKERCHIF.S to close out at 8)40.; worth 10c.
SEAMLESS HALF HOSE, Solid Colors and Striped, at. 12We. a pair.
Entire Linn 33c. and 40<\ TIES and SCARFS REDUCED to 25c. each.
SPECIAL BARGAINS IN WOOL KNIT GOODS.
DRIVES IN UMBRELLAS at, sl, $1 25, and $1 50.
Grand Assortment of EMBROIDERIES NEW GOODS—at Popular
Prices. Drives at 3c., 5c., Bc., Sc., and 10c. a yard.
EVERY DAY BARGAIN DAY! SPECIAL DRIVES THIS WEEK!
at
MILIUS & CO.’S, - 159 BROUGHTON STREET.
SPECIAL—Loce Draperies and Flouncing*, for Evening Wear, very choice.
HARDWARE, K 1 < .
GEO. F. DREW HDW. CO.
4:0 and 42 East Bay St., - Jacksonville,
WHOLESALE AND RETAIL
HARDWARE, SASH, DOfIRS AND BLINDS. STOVES AND TINWARE.
STATE AGENTS for Revere Rubber Company's Giant Stitched Rubber Belting, Henry Disston
&' Sons' Circular Saws, Nicholson Files, Sterling Emory Wheels. Alligator Axes, Simood's Cres
cent Ground Coarse Cut Saws. Starke's Genuine Dixie Plows, Buffalo Standard -coles Longman
A Martinez Paints, IS. F. Avery A Sons' Steel Plows. Iron Ago Hand Garden Tools, “Medal Brand”
Roofing felt, Thomas Roberts Stevenson Company’s Heating and Cooking Stoves and Ranges.
HEADQU VRTER3 tot lowa 4-Point Barb Wire, KitOourne A Jacobs’ Wheelbarrow, Atlantic
White Lead. Campbell & Thayer's Oil and Painters’ Supplies.
All orders shipped immediately on receipt. Correspondence solicited.
HARDWARE.
HARDWARE,
Natal Stores Supplies,
WAGON MATERIAL,
FOR SALE BY
Edward Lovell’s Sons
15"i Broughton street and 138 and 140 State st s
GROCERIES.
W. I>. CHAXPIOH.
APPLES,
GRAPES,
BEETS,
CARROTB,’
TURNIPS,
ARRIVING THIS DAY AND FOR SALE BY
A. H. CHAMPION’S SON
Successor to A. H. CHAMPION.
AGENTS WANTED.
WHITE-HOUSE SSSSiSS
SMSOOOKBOOK
cal —Moat Con*en|#nt- The Obeii.eav-.Ttje Heat-The I.ata*
AUiLN.O. THOMPSON PUBLISHINOCO..ST.IOUIS.MO.
fiflfin INCH WANTED to handle thogrrait""
UUUU HiCkl fIONET SAVING WORK,COMPUTE
' ‘HORSE-BOOK f STOCK-DOCTOR”
llDepartmenU. 750 Engravings. Sales Sure-Fut
30DayTim. H.9.THOMPSON PUO.CO.,ST.IOUIS,MO.
Lli M HER DEALERS.
e/b. hunting & co„
Wholesalb Dealers and Shipper# op
Pitch Pine Lumber,
60 Bay St., Savannah, Ga.
Correspondence of milla solicited.
heal estate.
tI.KFULTON
Real Estate and General Collecting
Agent,
8 DRAYTON STREET.
SPECIAL attention given to the collection ot
rent* and the care of real estate. I‘atrou
ago respectfully solicited.
MEDICAL.
H- ". ‘ ■
O D D;
mx is
Physicians endorse P. P. P. m a splendid combination,
end prescribe it with *r**t satisfaction for the cures <x
P. p - P .\ S° A
SCR O F U L A
ary Syphilis. Syphilitic llnoumstlsm, ScroYu’on* •
nd Sorer Glandular Swellings, Mheutnat'.sin, Malaria,
cUMzhroiilclTics^^ris^hsi^rglstsi^^MrsatsaenV
F\ D P C u RES
a L o*o D F oisONl
plaints, Msrcuiial Polsen, Tetter. Heaklbeod, ts„ ste.
P. P. P-
V-e’uM ATI s m
ssr, building up the system rapidly.
I.adlfut writ's* systems are poisoned and whots hltwf
i^tMu^rmmr^ootwliUojwlui^j^nsnsjroal^roKnlseK
p p p. CUI'
if; l a r.I A
this am p- ouliarly benotluxl by the wonderful tonic
blood ciraitHlmt properties cf P. P. P., PrlclUy ash, PoJb!
Hoot and
p P. P.rCUO’
fr‘s°P EPS I A
LIPPMAN BWOS-, Proprietors,
WTTOLKSALK DkOTGUT.
Lippmsn Block. SAVANNAH. GA
icsas erOJXth a I Hlood Partner, llt
, "■■IHLUJIIhis il I MakorandNarveToale^
K gK . o Caret Malaria. MiloasnenU
MMB Etl Iff* Scrofula. Dyspepsia. LsaJ
Bf o’ BV4 48* eorrhea. In.potency and
BXy I a** General Beijtmy. etceltanj
A. tor Removing I'lmptee ang
Sea R gw Beautifying Compleiloiß
BH I ( Gsizv, Dssxsr’la
rgLtivi* ssswitri
Money Returned by follow-
Ing druggists if Alexander’s
Cholera Infantum Cure,
Cholera Morbus Curo, or
Pile Ointment fail* to cure:
Butter's Pharmacy, W. M. Miffs.
L. C. Strong. Rld * Oo„
Edward J. KiefTer, w F Ji>id.
W. A. Pigman, w. M. tdeveland,
J. R. Haiti wongar. Wm. F. Hendy,
J. T. Thornton W. A. His lop.
By mens A Meli, A. N. O’Keoffe A CA.
M. Johnson. David Porter.
WHOLESALE BY LIFTMAN BROS.
mp
bunions
A so war r PAIN
LjfPWANI
BUILIJING DESIGNS.
HOMES!
* ON
Easy Terms.
THE HOME BUILDING COMPANY tins sev
eral beautiful homes, nicely located, that
can be bought for one-fourth cash, balance in
monthly installments. One on Bolton, third
from Aberorn. One on Duffy, second frou!
Abercorn; and two on Duffy, near Whitaker,
Apply to
D. B. LESTER,
or 8. P. H AMILTON.
SPORTING GOODS.
Sprtii Ms.
HUNTING SHOES,
LEATHER, CORDUROY
AND CANVAS LEGGINGS,
CANVAS COATS,
CORDUROY HATS.
LOADED SHELLS,
PARKER, COLT.
AND REMINGTON GUNSi
English and German Guns,
Winchester and Colt Rifles,
AT LOWEST PRICES.
Palmer Bros.
NURSERY.
KIESLTNG’S NURSERY.
WHITK HI,ULUS’ 140 A-IT.
PLANTS, Bouquets, Designs, Cut Eloww
furnished to order. Leave orders at DAVM
BROS.’, cor. Bull and York sta. The Hett Rail
way through the uursery. Telephone HX
5