Newspaper Page Text
DOINGS OF WOMEN FOL’a
that claim the attention op
THE FEMININE WORLD.
Mra. Mary E. Bryan's “Southern”
Corner—Fashions in Silver and in
Stationery—Tha Arts and Artifices
that are Employed in Spoons—
Woman and Her Kama.
(Copi/rioht.l
New York, March 8. —New York for
con; rasts!
One night I am watching with unenvious
curiosity the Us zing lights of a fortune in
diamoi.ds upon a fair, plump neck and the
more beautiful light in sparkling young
eyes; the next some newspaper errand takes
me to Cherry street, o*<l the fog fills the air
and the pavement is slippery with mud,
and forth to disport themselves in the dim
light of the blinking gas lamps come Sin
and Youth and Innocence and Poverty and
Childhood, tumbling out'of the tall old
rookeries that line the street on either band
to f rm before the eyes a panorama as
varied as a masquerade and as sad as that
is gay.
Cherry street is born in misery under the
dark arches of the bridge and runs through
squalor and vice, and an occasional touch
of happiness, snatched with difficulty from
untoward circumstances, till it dies in tho
dark vortex of tho East river. Its course
is typical of the lives of the “1 armaids”
who frequent the dives just north of the
corner of New Chambers street. Tho
wi cozing of an asthmatic violin from be
hind the green baize swinging door coni
jietes with a dreary piano behind the next.
Once in a while a woman with dull eyes,
expressionless face, tumbled hail- and rouged
cheeks stands in a doorway, peering out
into the mist and the night. Looking past
her, through the door half ajar, oue sees
men and women drinking together, not
merrily, but sullenly, even if with noisy
laughter. Homo of the girls are scarcely
more than children. One almost as large
brushes past you in the shadow where you
pause. Hhe whispers to a companion at
her heels:
•‘Lid j r e break the windows?”
“Yep.”
“How many?”
There is a ring of real enjoyment in tho
tone. What a glorious thing it is to be in a
very small and modest way a “tough!”
Little girls sprawl on tho pavement regard
less of the slime almost inch deep. Half the
men one meets are fighting drunk or
maudlin with vinous affection. Yet a
drunken woman is rarely seen. Cherry
street in this cannot compare with the
sights I have seen in the London slums.
Here in a dirty doorway are huddled to
gether a dozen hatless and bedraggled
w omen in neighDorly chat. In the next,
saddest sight of all, a lover and his lass,
rain-sodden and squalid, but oblivious of all
about them, look into each other's eyes and
say just about what at the very moment
some Prince Fortunatus and his princess
i re saying in a gilded drawing room up
town. Beyond, an angry woman’s
voice is shrieking out maleuictions against
some half-grown girls who are play
ing on a truck before her door,
and as you pass beyond sound of her
cursings you come to a slightly more re
spectable "quarter, where two well-dressed
women are entering with the air of being at
home at last in a tenement only slightly less
wretched than those beuind, and then there
dawns upon you the disagreeable fact that
in New York people who could in any other
great city of the world have comfortable
homes are compelled to live in places such
as these. Money can buy good clothes, but
no money they can lay hands on will com
mand comfortable quarters with rents at
their metropolitan altitudes.
The errand is done. Let’s get away as
quickly as possible. It’s pleasant uptown.
Although Mrs. Mary E, Bryan has be
come a loyal New Yorker, as was her mani
fest duty", seeing that the city has shown
her warm hospitality and that Mr. George
Munroe, the millionaire publisher, pays her
an exceptionally large salary for editing his
publications, yet she forgets not that she
was born in Tallahassee,and in her cosy par
lor she has set up a sou hern corner, which
Las become a rendezvous for old frie: ds
from the other side of Mason and Dixon’s
line. Across this corner is placed a couch,
and to its cushions, on any of Mrs. Bryan’s
reception “evenings,” the steps of dark-eyed
and graceful women from Dixie
involuntarily turn. It is withdrawn
a little from the pleasant bustle
of conversation, and drooping wreaths of
the gray southern moss which garland the
wall behind out their wraith-like
fingers and draw together, from every quar
ter of the apartment, with unerring cer
tainty, their own. Hung about by the moss
is a hue portrait of Jefferson Davis, and
above his head is an oil painting of Henry
W. Grady, just finished, which every south
erner of them all feels bound to inspect and
criticise. The pictures of tho two leaders
are draped in brown and gold, and about
the sofa beneath them reminiscences of
Beauvoir and of the days “befo’ da wa” are
constantly exchanged. By many beside#
the sofa’s occupants Mrs. Bryan is voted a
model hostess, for she clings to the pleasant
and hospitable old custom of introduc ng,
and by her merry tact and vivacity puts
each lie w comer immediately at ease.
Vivacious is the term that suits both Mrs.
Bryau’s face and manner. She is of me
dium height, slender, and has quick black
eyes, an expressive mouth and a brainy
forehead which you seldom get a glimpse of
because it is covered hy a mass of thick
dark hair. She is unc nventional, absent
minded, brimming over with warm-heart
edness and keen sympathies. She i3 a
woman or strong individuality, and her
swarming occupations never ruffle her
temper or irritate her nerves. Ido not re
member that I ever saw her when she did
riot wear a smile. She conducted the Sunny
&outh in Atlanta for ten years before Mun
roe offered her a New York position. She
is an effective reciter of her own poems.
Somebody was saying the other day that
Mrs. O. B. Bunco is the only woman in New
York who would be capable of bolding a
"salon.” This is the time of year when the
salon idea always revives. In Lent, for lack
of amusement, we fall back on the alleged
conversazione. Mrs. Bunceis credited with
a peculiar tact in bi inging together jieople
who are congenial. More than this, she keeps
a conscientious watch on her guests, and, if a
man and a woman show symptoms of tir
ing of oue another’s company, she provides
them expedi'ionslv with other partners. In
this way a kind of progressive conversation
party is maintained the entire evening.
The same devotion to duty on the part
cf a less tactful woman sometimes re
sults disastrously. The idea that a
periodic snaking up is good f r
a drawing room having once taken
full possession of a nos ess, adieu to comfort
for that, ovening. One dares not for an
instant cease talking lest the quiek eyes of
the mistress spy out the lapse, and, presto!
the brilliant sentence y ou were evolving is
so much brain action w asted, for the man
you were about to spring it on is whisked
ouo way and you are sp.rited another, and
the two of you are set down in opposite
corners to look over at one another discon
solately and begin again the painful Hash
ing of fireworks in a fog of strangers. There
is good conversation always at the Gilders’
and in Miss Kate Sanborn’s circle. There
is talk worth listening to, of a somew hat
serious order, at Mrs. M. Louise Thomas’,
and, as said iu the beginning, Mrs. Bunce
is a hostess who is a model.
Along with a letter from Miss Grace
Howard, the daughter of Mr. Joe Howard,
Jr., who has has just gone back to her
"ork among the Indians at Crow Creek
Agency in South Dakota, there arrived a
picture of the borne she has voiun a ily
' npsen, a little cottage on the prairie witn
not'a tree in aight. not an much as a bush to
on ak Uie monotony, liar nearear. neigb-
IkMs are some Indian laxuiltM who have
built bouses at the distance of perhaps a
third of a mile. If she wishes to see white
faces she must ride thirteen miles to the
agency, and there is no town within seven
teen mile-. Miss Howard has a grant of
eighty .acres from the government and
has ten Indian girls living iu the house with
her. Her work is really an industrial proj
ect, rather than a missionary or an educa
tional one. She is making a brave effort to
organize employments which shall furnish
work to the Indian women. The girls who
return from Hampton institute, she writes,
have learned some of the ways of civiliza
tion, but there is abs lutely no incentive
fer them to go on with the new life they
have begun. For the Indian buy there is
always the farm, but for the girl there is
nothing. Housekeeping in a Sioux cabin is
too simple to furnish much occupation, and
if she wishes to sew there is not a rag or a
scrap on which to employ the needle.
Miss Howard is taking advantage of the
fact that the strongest desire of the Indian
who has come in coniact ever si remotely
with white people is to wear white people’s
clothes. The girls who live in the house
with her are taught to cut and fit ad make
buttonholes. The garments which are
turned out at this littie home factor} - are
put on sale at moderate prices, a.d their
teacher hopes that the beginnings of a busi
ness are being established which may in
time grow to supply a larger number of
women who are sorely in need of it with
something to do.
Miss Ho ward scoffs at the idea that she is
in her self-decreed banishment in any need
of sympathy. She has filled her home with
the thousand and one rtfinemeats that are
necessaries of life to the cultivated woman,
and sends east in triumph photographs of
her pretry sitting room. She says that the
bight of an Indian’s ambition is to own a
trunk, and when the red woman has
acnieved a mountainous Saratoga and
stowed away in it every article of every
description she possesses, she sits down in
the middle of her cabin and smiles in serene
Sioux satisfaction.
How many pretty things there are for the
woman with $20,000 a year and a carriage.
Take spoons. It’s iu no way necessary to
be torn with one, even of the most precious
metal, in your m nth, but if one couid only
be sure of having, say a coffee spoon,with a
handle surmounted by a daisy enameled in
colors to put into one’s mouth after one was
born.
Spoons are assuming individuality. Peo
ple who are fastidious are beginning to
discriminate between them according to
their decorations for different courses at
table almost as carefully as they uo between
their chinas. The soup ladle is apt this
winter to have for its bowl the semblance of
a fluted shell, or a fairy boat, or the inverted
back of a turtle. Sometimes it has designs
of round, nodding tomatoes etched on the
handle. Bonbon spoons, ice cream spoons,
and coffee spoons are the duehessts and
countesses of the court of spoondom. The
bonbon spoon affects the antique. It has
a large, circular and almost flat bowl,
with a short handle expanded into
a large, flat and quaintly fashioned
top, sometimes reproduced exactly from
medimval French and English models, and
always with a wealth of curious detail
work expended on its wreathing and twist
ing patterns. To be dainty and lavishly
c< stly is the object in life of the tinv coffee
spoon. These ends are accomplished by
turning the ha dies luto flower stems, each
surmounted by a different posy. In a sot
just finished for a wealthy lady, the bowls
are of antique silver set in a narrow gold
rim. The buttercup, the dandelion, the
field astor, the violet, the daisy, pink ad
other native flowers are mounted on the
handles, mid enameled in colors. Gold aud
silver are twisted together to form the
stems. ’I he cream ladle corresponding has
its bowl fashioned in the shape of a wild
rose.
Coffee spo .ns with miniature monkeys
for heads, after the model of the old apostle
spoons, are favorites just at present at the
afternoon tea spreads of Gotham’s
bachelors.
The newest cream spoons are of medium
size and have oddly designed heads, which
look as if a scrap of lace or a fairy hand
kerchief had been thrown over the end of
the handle to protect the fingers from the
chill.
Sugar tongs are being made to imitate
turkeys’ claws.
There are spoons designed so classically
that you eat your soup with one decorated
with Venus born of the sea, who is drawn
in her shell by dolphins; cut up your roast
with a knife on which Hercules is capturing
the wild boar, and your game with another
on which Acteo.i, who has been changed
into a stag, is being devoured by his own
dogs; are served with your salad from a
spoon cn which Paris is giving to Venus the
golden apple, eat your dessert while gazing
on Bacchus feeding a panther with grapes,
pick your nuts in view of the second labor
of Hercules and drink your coffee to the
tune played by the Bacchantes wnen they
taught the infant Bacchus to dance.
But these delights are for the woman
with $20,000 a year and a carriage.
The same fortunate individual has all her
toilet articles, even to what “Ilavvy” in
"Ermine” calls "teeth-brushes,” mounted
in silver. Last fall I met a pretty iittle
lady whose face was puckered into a per
plexed frown.
“I don’t know whether to buy a silver
backed bonnet brush,” she said, "or an
overcoat for my husband.”
A few days ago our paths crossed a
second time. “Which was it?” was the
query.
“The bonnet brush, of course, and I’m so
glad it’s been a mild winter,” this with a
benevolent smile.
'1 he silver brushes, combs, trays and
boxes in beautiful repousse designs certainly
make a brilliant foreground to a woman’s
toilet mirror, but they are very difficult to
keep clean. A silver set, which makes any
pretensions to completeness, can hardly
contain less than 100 articles, and the sets of
Mrs. F. W. Vanderbilt, Mme. l-anza, Mrs.
Langtry and others who have made a hobby
of collecting, count up many more. Mattie
Sheridan, the busy little society reporter,
who writes for six different papers, hadn’t
once been to bed until Lent came in before 2
o’clock in the morning since Thanksgiving.
Miss Sheridan’s hobby is her silver collec
tion. “I’ll give you a silver box,” said a
friend, “if you’ll shut up your eves by 10
o’clock seven nights in succession.” “Let me
have the box in advance,” said Miss Sheri
dan, “aud I’ll begin the first of March."
'1 here’s much to be done w ith the modern
woman by means of judicious silver tempt
ations.
Tho little ring stands are among the clev
erest of recent novelties. For the writing
table comes a coii of bright c lored candle
j cord running up to burn at t e heart of a
silver flower, over which, when the sealing
wax has been melted, comes down a little
silver night cap for snuffer. The silver
trowel for tho conservatory, the little silver
boxes for nail and glove powder, the silver
trays for hairpins and hat pins, the silver
jars full of perfume, the cruel-looking out
beautiful silver daggers, the silver-handled
dusters, tiiat are tiny hut may cost SSO, tho
puff boxes, the small hand mirrors and
smaller pocket mirrors, the fan chains and
flacons, the silver curling tongs, the cologne
ilasks,, the glove stretchers, the odor boxes
and const rs for t urning incense, all these
aud ath ousand other trifles beguile the
dollars of tiie fashionable woman.
When the Woman’s Press Club gave its
last order for stationery the clever young
women who compose it and who must be
supposed au fait in the requirements of po
lite correspondence decidua upon two va
rieties of note sheets, one a fosnionable
standard, the other a novelty. For the
standard thev chose white linen paper,
without gloss, slightly rough in finish abd
of regular octavo size to fold once in a
square envelop - . Centered across the top
ot this, in simple German letters, is th<
legend “New York Woman’s Press Club."
iu the place where the fashionable lady
would have engraved in small Roman capi
taD her street and number. Fur the nov
elty they took a “granite” |*|/er.
which is the latest abadw cf gray, and
had it lettered hi blue. This 1* in
’‘billet" sheet for the writing of pr-ttv
notes and informal invitations, lor which
THE MORNING NEWS: SUNDAY. MARCH !*. 1890—TWELVE PAGES.
until recently stiff cards would have been I
the thing. The Ladies’ New York Club j
uses billet paper iu white linen, with its j
name and address centered at the top in I
two lines. The best houses send out few j
colored papers, the tints allowed being
shades of lavender, blue, gray, and rose.
Mrs. Frank Leslie uses for invitations to
her receptions heavy cards with her device
in the upper lett band corner, and below
this on ei scroll her motto, "Tout ou Rim."
Mon grams, after a vacation of some
length, are again in fashion, and are
stamped both on letter and envelopes,
ofteuest perhaps in gold, but occasionally
in steel. They are of large or medium size,
never smalL Sometimes they are replaced
by the writer’s initials in antique lettering.
\\ ard McAllister usts billet, sheets of cream
tinted linen paper, and seals with wax.
Edna Lyall, whose real name is Ada
Ellen Bayiy, may find the material for
her n r, xt novel in this country. Iu "Dono
van” and “We Two” there are scenes oil
the Riviera,and in Italy; In “Won by Wait
ing" there are traces of her travels in
France, and “A Hardy Horseman” was
written after a visit to Norway. Miss
Bavly is fond of traveling, and has been
confined so long by illness to her home at
Eastbourne, that old English pleasure town,
tnat she feels inclined for a vacation before
making any further essays in literature,
and may cross the Atlantic ferry, so says
a private letter from London, when that
tempestuous piece of water has quieted
down after its winter tossings and ravings.
Annie Besant has given up her projected
American visit, and the reason for this
change of plan is interesting. Mrs. Besant
is a socialist and is interested above all
things iu the organization of the wage
earners. She wished to study tho condition
of the working people on this side of the
water, but has become convinced that social
theories have no such future here as in
England. The thinking mind in England,
she writes to a Brooklyn lady, is more
philosophical, more liberal than in this
country, where we are all absorbed in a
scramble for dollars, and while money and
worn are plentier here because of our rapid
growth, a socialist has nothing to learn
from us, aud the chances of a satisfactory
settlement of old, old questions seem to her
quite as good at home. Mrs. Besant says it
is not true that she is about to become
reconciled to the church aud to Walter
Besant, the novelist, who is her brother-in
law, through her theosophical studies.
There is a lawyer who does a good deal of
real estate conveyancing, one oijthe chief of
whose grievances in life is the scant respect
that women show toward their names. The
fact that acer ain alteration taxes place in
tho name at marriage destroys, so he claims,
whatever regard a woman might be ex
pected to pay to an exact rendering, and
the fact trat any legal significance can in
any case attach to ihe form seems to be
quite beyond tho grasp of the average
teminiue brain. If a girl baby is christened
Elizabeth she will sign herself, when called
on to put her name to a deed after she ii
grown, Lizzie, Lisa, Eliza, Lisbet, or Lis
beth, according to which diminutive hap
pens to be her favorite for the year,
and will omit her middle name,
give it iu full or by initial, or
sign instead of her own her husband’s
name, according to her sweet liking. Tho
task of tho lawyer who has to trace up half
a dozen of these signatures to make sure
that they all refer to the same person is not
calculated to make easy the task of his wife
who has to soothe his ruffled temper with a
good dinner. That the married woman should
in all cases retain her own family name, pre
ceding it by her given name aud "following
it witti her husband’s family name, is the
lawyer’s plea, if he is to be saved from in
sanity. Frances Folsom Cleveland, Julia
Dent Grant, Louise Chandler Moulton, Julia
Ward Howe, Ella Wheeler Wilcox and
others set in this respect a good example.
Eliza Putnam Heaton.
Luck
Is a word which should have no place in
any vocabulary. A man must have ability
to succeed, and a medical preparation,
merit. There is no luck about SOZODONT.
It was sure to succeed from the first, be
cause it was good and did all that was
claimed for it.— Adv.
A Shrewd Advertising Dodge.
You will frequently find in the columns
of the daily papers paragraphs purporting
to be most entertaining morsels of news or
g .ssip, but the final italicized “ Adx ” gives
it away as the shrewd idea of some progres
sive dealer to attract attentton to his wares,
just as this is written to convey to your far
seeing mind the fact that M. Sternberg &
Bro. are the leading jewelers and dealers in
precious stones, silverware, bronzes, valu
able art goods for decoration and use. If
people could only begin at the other end of
all newspaper articles they might save a
little time, but they would lose a deal of
valuable information. — Adv.
Cornwell & Cbipman have the famous
Boynton Furnace, Heaters, and Ranges,
Danube and Newport.— Adv.
Just Opened at Bilva’a.
Anew lot of Lamps, all kinds, a fine line
Brass Fire Sots. Fire Dogs and Feuders.
Coal Va3es and Plate Warmers, second
lot.
Rodgers’ English Cutlery, Carving Set#,
etc. Silver Plated Ware, Forks and Spoons
Sets.
Dinner, Chamber, Tea, Fish, Game,
Salad, Ice Cream. Examine our rich Cut
Glass. Large variety of Art Pottery,
English, French, German, Japanese and
American.
Dolls aud Toy Tea Sets at reduced prices.
Plush D o-sing Cases cheap. Our sale of
Dinner, Tea, and Chamber Sets has been
large, but we have lots left, which will be
sold at popular prices. Don’t fail to see
Silva’s stock on lower and upper floors.
140 Broughton street.— Adv.
Cornwell & Chipman invite carpenters to
call and examine their line of Tools and
Hurd ware.— A dr.
Removed.
“The Famous New York Clothing House
has moved to 148 Broughton street, one
door from the corner Whitaker, where,
with increased room and better facilities, I
will be pleated, to see the old patrons of
“The Famous,” and clothing buyers gen
erally. Than Ling kindly for past patron
age I respectfully ask (i continuance of the
same. In my new quarters it will bo my
aim (as it has laeen in the past) by honest
busine s methods to deserve your praise,
and by giving you the very test of clothing
lower than anybody else will sell you.
Spring go ds are coming with every
steamer, and as soon as I get fully in order
I will sh iw you the handsomest line of first
class goods that you ever saw.— Adv.
Cornwell & Chipman handle the Thomas,
Roberts, Stevenson, Gauze Door Ranges
and Stoves, and the Broadway, Fortune,
aud Times. — Adv.
THE BOOK FOR BOOKKEEPERS
It Will Open Out Perfectly Flat From Fir.
to Last Page.
The Moiucnvi N*ws Printing House la the
licensed manufacturer of
BRUNSON S FLAT OPENING BLANK BOOKS,
(Adopted by the United State* Government.)
There Is no book made of equal strength. U
will open at any page and remain perfectly Hat.
There is no dancer of tba leaves becoming loose.
It Is the only elastic landing designed to open
fiat that has received the unqualified indorse,
meat of bookkeepers a* well a bookbinders.
Books ruled to any pattern, made to any use
and bound in any tyl . a _
We are making books for a number of firms
in tbli city and elsewhere, and will taka pleas
are hi showing them to those interested.
THE MURRiNG NEWS STEAM PRINTING
HOUSE,
Y.hitakor street, haraaeah.
REAL ESTATE.
siiai!
THROWN OUT OF THE
MARKET 1
On and after March 10th, all Lots at Sack
ville, Without Regard to Location,
will Advance in Prices from
20 to 40 Per Cent
ryilF. REMAINDER of lota in Middle ward
and East ward will bo sold < after the above
date) at prices ranging from (thirty-five dol
lars) to SSO (fifty dollars) per lot* Monthly pay
ments of $1 (One dollar), without other ex
penses: while some lots in West ward may be
obtained, ranging from $63 (sixty-five dollars)
to $75 (seventy-five dollars).
HENRY SACK.
Parties willing to dispose of Lots already
bought will please notify or communicate with
me before March 6th. H. S.
COTTON COMPRESS.
~3VnOE.SE
THE most powerful and effective in the world,
exerts a pressure on the bale of 5,000,000
pounds.
EIGHTY of them have been introduced in the
last ten years, which are now compressing
OVER HALF THE AMERICAN CROP.
Several of those first erected have pressed
over ONE AND A QUARTER MILLION BALES
each, WITHOUT DEFECTOR APPRECIABLE
WEAR. Their immense weight and strength
have rendered them the ONLY’ DURABLE
COMPRESS in use.
Sole Owners and Patentee*,
S. B. STEERS & CO.,
Cotton Exchange, New Orleans.
EDUCATION Ali.
EDUCATE FOR BUSINESS
115 00NCIRJ8S ST.. COBStBB BULL ST.
BOOKKEEPING,
Embracing all the latest approved methods.
PENMANSHIP
Taught in a manner unsurpassed.
SHORTHAND.
Simplest, briefest, most legible and rapid
system.
Business Practice, Commercial law, Corre
spondence and Mathematics, etc., all taught in
the most practical wav. Day and night sessions
for ladies and gentlemen. Preparatory depart
ment, with English branches, for boys.
.t. y. x*. McCarthy,
Principal.
TOBAC QO.
IF YOUR CUSTOMERS
USE GOOD TOBACCO,
—T It Y T3l E—
“1 Mei Bieket.”
This Brand Will Please Them.
For particulars apply to
HENRY SOLOMONS SON,
Wholesale Agents,
INSURANCE.
F. X. DOUGLASS’
Fire Insurance Agency.
SCOTTISH UNION AND NATIONAL
LION FIRE INS. CO.
WESTCHESTER FIRE INS. CO.
Also, Special Agent
MUTUAL LIFE INS. CO. OF N. Y.
Office at C. H. Olmstead & Co.’s
Bank Building.
Tfdephone No. 15D.
DRY GOODS.
New Springs Goods
ARRIVING DAILY AT
M. L. BYCK & BRO.’S,
156 BROUGHTON STREET.
RATINES, elegant patterns, 10c. Challles sc.
L? Ginghams, Figured Lawns, Checx Nain
sook, all fr in sc. and up.
Elegant line of Hemstitch Colored Bordered
Gents’ Handkerchiefs at 10c.
Laundered and Unlaundered Shirt* 40c. and
up.
Gents' Domet and Wool Flannel Shirt*.
Gents' R. K. Scarfs, four for 25c.; cheap at
10c. apiece.
Jerseys from 50c and up.
DRUGS AND MEDICINES.
Hendy’s Compound Damiana
/NUKES Mental an I I’.iysteal I ihaustl .n,
\J Nervous Proatratioo. Impotence, etc.; de
scriptive circular by mad <m application.
J. O. MIMS Ac CO.,
Successor to W. Y. Hoily, northeast corner
West Broad and hr van street*.
CLOTniNG.
mu
Who are desirous of dressing
their boys in a neat, stylish
suit of clothes will find the
Little Lord Fauntleroy Suit,
with Cap and Sash to match,
just the thing.
APPEL&SCHAUL,
Sole Agents for Savannah.
Our Custom Department,
which has met with such suc
cess for the past three years,
especially with such people
who are hard to get a good
fit, is now in full bloom.
Spring samples have ar
rived, and inspection is so
licited.
We call attention to lovers
of neat neckwear that we
have received our new Spring
Neckwear, which we are sell
ing at our usual popular
prices,
Apl & Stall
One Trice Clothiers, Hatters and
Men’s Furnishers,
163 Congress Street
HOTliirt.
Hotel Curtin,
ST. AUGUSTINE,
FLORIDA.
OPEN FROM DECEMBER UNTIL MAY.
Fir3t-Class In Every Detail.
Reasonable Rates.
ft?" Rooms Secured by Mail or Telegraph.
E. N. WILSON, Manager.
I’ULASKI house,
Savannah, Ga.
ENLARGED AND REMODELED WITH
PASSENGER ELEVATOR. BATHS.
ELKCTRK • APPLIANCES. AND
ALL MODERN CONVEN
IENCES,
Making one of tho lieat and most complete
hotels of its size in the South.
Cuisine and service of a high standarl.
WATSON & POWERS, Proprietors.
THE
De Soto
SAVANNAH, GFA.
HPHIS New and Magnificent Hotel wan opened
1 for business JANUARY 1, 1890. For par
ticulars, terms, etc., address tho proprietors,
JOHN A. BAKER & CO.
Tli© Seminole
WINTER PARK, ORANGE CO., FLA.
r IMUS new and elegant hotel, accommodating
J four hundred guests, will be opened Jan.
Ist, imoo, under the able management of Mr. W.
F. Paige, so well known as tho successful man
ager of the great “KaaterskiH” in the Cat*kill
Mountains. It is superbly located upon high
land between two beautiful lakes, the ground
gentiy sloping to the shores of both, and from
the pronienude on top eleven lakes can be seen.
Everything that human ingenuity can devise
has been provided to make this beautiful house
attractive and homelike for old and young.
Sleepers from New York without change. All
trains stop at Winter Park. Send for guide.
Address W. F. PAIGE. Winter Park, Orange
Cos., Fla.
Huntsville, Alabama,
Charming Spring Resort in the
Alabama Highlands.
HUNTSVILLE HOTEL
NEW,SUBSTANTIAL AND ELEGANT. 7
THROUGH PULLMAN SERVICK.NEW YORK,
WASHINGTON AND CHICAGO. Poll
KATES AND BEST ROUTES. ADDRESS,
HARVEY s. DENISON, Manager.
CARRIAGE WORKS.
CARRIAGE WORKS.
SANBERG & CO.,
Ft. Julian, Congrwat and Montyo-nery street*
FRANKLIN SgUAUE.
Wa niter to Uie public the beat work 1 a our
line la Uteetir. I
MEDICAL.
SSf MIHHUitpPILLS lei
DR. SCHENCK'S |f | ”!lEli£l!l!z j| DR. SCHENCK’S
STANDARD FOR OVER HALF A CENTURY “ "■—
Nk r ffl iWf fII Ours Indigestion, Sour Stomach, Heart-
burn, ristulsacy, Colic, and all of §|
■ the Stomach; C’osdh♦*<*•§, Inflammation, • "
- l>purh<va,pile*,and Dieeanoeoftbr H>*vlh; -
WAIIOA Contortion, Biliounnesa, .Jaundic* Nausea, tm,
■ flSIil 1 Headache, Giddiness, Nervousness, Wan
-1 ****Fliw doring Pain*. Malaria, Liver Complaint, U 1 g(|U|
- - - - -and all Dugases arising from a Gorged and _...
Sluggish Liver. They clean the nmeous
la a Positive Curo for coats, reduce gorged or congested condi- Will Cure
tions, break up stubborn complications, re- f+ ll#* LIC rAi
DYSPEPSIA stors free, healthy action to the organs, and "?• '-'ULUS,
give the system a chance to recover tone An< * Ail Diseases of the
And all Disorders of the Pi-and strength. They aro • THROAT AND LUNGS,
(estiva Organs. It is likewise tier* r--r ad ir- It is pleasant to the taste,
a Corroborative* or Strength- PURELY V LCL I ABLE, and does not contain a particle
ening Medicine, and may ho cTDirTI V Dri inri rr of opium or anything injuri
taken with benefit in all coses *- T nLUMDLL, ous. It isthe IWt Cough Med
of Debility. Formic by all and A BSO LUTE LY SAFE** cin * *■ the World. For Kajp
Druggists Price, WK) per hot- by all Druggists. Price $1 X 1
tie. l)r. Schenck's New IWk For Sale by all Dniggists. Price 2 T* rts. per bottle. Dr. Schenrk’sßook
on Lungs, Liver and Stomach per box; 3 boxes for 65 eta.; or sent by on Consumption and its Cure,
mailed free. Address, mail, postage free, on receipt of price, mailed free. Address
Dr. J.H.Schenck & Son, Phils. I>r. J. 11. ttchenck & Son, Philadelphia, Pa. Dr. J H Schenck A Son. Phils.
< ’LOTH I VO.
nun ~ mm
IT IS TUFF.
The elements don’t seem to run our way at all this season.
TUFF AIN’T IT?
WERRY RUFF,
Having so many nice Winter Suits, Overcoats and Un
derwear left on hand. Nothing but sacrifice in this world.
AIN’T IT RUFF?
B.H. Levy & Bro.
iirmn ~iwn
CARRIAGES, BUGGIES, WAGOira, ETC.
“QUALITY IS Kl3Sra. T5 ~
“MEEIT WINS.”
OUR MOTTO: Square Dealings.
OUR AIM: To Improve Our Goods and Please Our Customers.
OUR RECORD: Twenty-two Years in the Carriage, Buggy, and
Wagon Business.
OUR BUSINESS: To Look Strictly to Keep In the Lead of the
Trade.
SALOMON COIIEN.
I’. B.—A carload of TURPENTINE WAGONS Just received, with steel axles, and be sold lower
than ever.
1 1 . -i i
HOTELS.
UNDER ONE MANAGEMENT^
DUB’S SCREVEN HOUSE
OPEN ALL THE YEAR ROUND.
First-Class in All its Appointments. Sam
ple Rooms for Commercial Travelers.
- 3DTJ33., IPz7o3px±e'fco3r.
"com MISSION .MERCHANTS.
CLAYTON R. WOODS. JOHN K. GARNETT. CHARLES B. MALONE. ”
WOODS, GARNETT & CO.,
SUCCESSORS TO WOODS & CO, 5
Cotton Factors and Commission Merchants,
HLJ lJay Htreet. - - Savannah, fcra.
Literal advance, made on consignments of cotton. Prompt attention given to all business.
YUKNISUINO GOODS.
FINE GOODS
For Gentlemen's Wear,
AND
Danlap’saml Naseiraento’sHats.
leliDß-wnt Unlerviar
SUITABLE FOR OUR CLIMATE
MEN’S “FULL DRESS” SHIRTS and VESTS
in White, Marseilles, and Black Silk.
WHITE LAWN BOWS, and BLACK SATIN
TIES and BOWS for evening.
PERRIN’S KID and DRIVING GLOVES,
Evening Shades, and for street wear.
FINE UMBRELLAS, SILK HANDKER
CHIEFS, and MUFFLERS.
CHEST PROTECTORS of Black Silk, Quilted.
MACKINTOSH COATS, Water-Proof, aud
Light Weight.
Men’s Underwear and Fine Goods Generally
LaFAR’S,
27 Bull Street.
, W CENTS A WEEK pays for the
• • J -w DAILY HORNING NEWS, deli,.
Si 0 lmal , MOMNIMO
<■> —w m any part ‘A Urn uly.
BEWARE.
Our Senior ia in the
Northern markets pre
paring a landslide of
Spring Goods for us.
lie wires us, “Make
Room.” Only one way
to do it, and forth goes
the MOVER:
“RE-SLATIGHTER PRICES
THAT ARE ALREADY CUT
TO THE QUICK.”
HOTEL' TYBEE,
WILL OPEN ON OR BEFORE MAY Ist.
fr
One of the Handsomest Summer Resorts in
the Union.
OI US.
TIDE WATER OIL * COMPANY,
12 Broadway, N. Y.
K
Refineries: Bayonne, N. J. - Thurlow, Pa.
SOUTHERN AGENCY
Tide Water Oil Company,
INCORPr (RATED aud organized uuder the
laws of Georgia, manufacturers and dealers
in Ilium.nating and Lubricating Oils, Greases,
Mill Supplies, etc.
Successors to
BLODGETT, MOORE, & CO., Savannah. Ga.
KBER BLODGETT & CO., Charleston, S. 0.
Warehouses: River st., 1
Factory: East Broad st.. Savannah, Ga
Ufllce: East Bayst., j
OFFICERS:
C. IV BURTON. President, New York
KBEN BLODGETT, V. P„ Charleston, 8. C.
J. M. MOORE, Manager,) „ •
l>. C. CARSON, Teens , ) Stfvannah, Ga.
' *"———————
REAL ESTATE.
J ic. FXJLTO3ST
Real Estate and General Collecting
Agent,
8 DRAYTON STREET.
C FECIAL attention given to the collection of
C vents and the care of real estate. Patron*
age respuctfuliy solicited.
TIT I? *'>*n*a NEWS amm
| II P evaiy pun of the city curly Twwaty.
IULUk eruia a wtwk pais tut tfca Russia
7