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FAIR FAX COLLECTORS.
SOCIETY’S LATEST FASHIONABLE
FAD IN CHICAGO.
Pedigrees and Romances Attached to
Fans Investigated and Laid Bare-
Some Interesting History Showing
the Varying Popularity of Fana
From the Ckicaoo Inter- Ocean.
The Flabelliferae is a South Side club. A
high-sounding title for anew club. Among
the women? Yes; most emphatically yes.
The women who enjoy most of sweet noth
irg-to-do, if any such can really be said to
exist in Chicago. Very few women perish
annually in our midst from sheer ennui.
What with monuments, world’s fairs, phys
ical culture, correct dress, lectures on poli
tics, philosophy, literature, art, ad what
not, the feminine half of society is not likely
to vegetate, though it is a mil 1 winter.
There is something more they can do—
something new they can take up. New?
Spick and span new? Well, yes; new to
this region. Mr-. Hicks-I-oM and a good
ma-y others have done it before them.
Civilization, they say, flows westward, n
proposition that might be disputed if one
did not wish to talk about the new fad, for
such the heterodox call it—the Philistines
who, like Abou-Hassan, are outside.
Among the clubs of Chicago, for which
wt> are henceforth to thank our stars, is a
o iterie of the “sweetest girls," who will
hereafter devote all their learning and
energy, taste and money to the collection
of fans.
NOT THE RARE FANS
brought in bv the cart load bv enterprising
merchants of the city—costly flabaUiferae,
varying in splendor'ar.d marked from $lO
to $l5O. Perish the thought! The fans
t hat our young virtuose are going to collect
are the fans that have been—the fans that
lie buried in the past, as it were, the fans
one must dig and delve for even among the
mummified girls and sacred pussy cats of
dry and dirty old Egypt. One of the most
insinuating charms of the craze is the im
penetrable mystery surrounding the very
origin of the fan. Research sets in. A young
woman just home from Wellesley has
developed an archaeological bent. She is
said to he ferreting out. curious documents
which, she affirms, have been "ritten in
every language concerning it. After all is
said and done site admits, with a sigh, that
little is known, as a matter of fact, about
the fan in prehistoric ages.
The diabolical interrogation point stands
just where she found it, and the erudite
you c precieuse can give no answer. She
i- loth to acknowledge that, after ransack
ing the lore of sages from Spain to China,
tlio most glorious legends lend the fan
A DUBIOUS ORIGIN
in the eastern seraglio. Hereupon she
shakes her learned little head and tells us
such lablos merit no belief.
One pretty debutante attributes it to
i hina before the Christian era, and says it
was first made of palms and lotus leaves. A
certain king, she relate*, had a pretty
daughter, who mads a vow that if her
lather's arms should prosper in battle she
would forever keep the sacred lire aburu
ing.
But in v.-.in did she fan it. If she ceased
for an instant to breathe on it the heavenly
tire went out—it languished for the breath
from her own charming lips.
Another bright club member, who owns a
real Marie Antoinette fan, contributes what
ihs has learned on the subject. She has a
big cousin from Boston who is a theosoph
anil adores Buddha. Hence she is prepared
to insist that in all Indian legends there is
question of the fan. Pretty princesses, with
such names as Dewdrop and Lotus-leaf,
were ages agone borne about in palanquins,
screened by great bamboo fans. Others
which they maneuvered with their own
dainty digits gave them a silent language
only less sweet than their dulcet prattle,
T here is no doubt in the world that every
Hindoo maid bad her own autograph album
—a fan coverodfrom center to margin with
hieroglyphics, crotchets and quavers, which
when rea;! under the rose turned out to be
tender declarations.
THE WITCHING CLEOPATRA,
daughter of gods and kings, brought up by
the priests of Isis, nnd initiated into the
mysteries of the magi, was surnamed the
Siron of the Fan, though it was the emblem
of happiness and heavenly rest.
AT THE CLUB COLLOQUY.
Next week new developments and revela
tions will follow. Two jeweled emigres
fans will be handed round for inspection,
their romance recited, and their pedigree
investigated. In the meanwhile, as it has
turned out, chance haa, revealed the ex
istence of a manuscript compiled by a queer
old bachelor who also had the fan fad.
What he does not know about fans is uot
worth the knowing. He has quite a rare
collection, too. And ha can give our club
girls some new points. So at the next con
clave, according to assignment, a young
lady just home from a foreign tour, and
who ha* learned her French in France, will
road for the delectation of Horosis a trans
lation that will keep to the following lines.
An Arabian poet tell* about an enchanted
fan made of the pbenix feathers, in the
niid-t of which was a brilliant sunburst of
precious stones. This fan decide! battles,
and w as in the keeping of a cruel old fairy.
A Persian prince bamboozled the sorceress,
and finally got possession of the fan by
marrying the daughter of a victor king.
IN ETRUSCAN ART
fans are found iu artistic bas-reliefs, espe
cially on antique vases in great numbers and
curious forms; the majority have a handle
and flat part like our modern Japanese
screen. An interesting fan about which
i / tine tells us is one with a romantic story
found in Spain in the fifteenth century,
nnd called the “Spaguuola.” In it was a
magic mirror that revealed the existence of
hidden love. Catherine de Medici brought
into fashion Italian fans surrounded with
feathers, for nil the world like the ostrich
ami marabout fans with silver inlaid pearl
cased handles that you can buy to-day for
635. But at that time they were sold to
the grandes dames and cavaliers of the
C' urt for more money than that. Cava
liers? Yes, cavaliers, and right royal ones
at that. Henry IIL was "a perfect love of
a man,” as the chronicles say, but had cer
tain little whims that made him a trifle
eccentric. He wore gloves, a very odd
thing for a man to do at that day—he
fanned with a fan, aud wore cosmetic
masques to bed.
The icign of the fan in the theat r began
before Moliere. When Richelieu and the
abbesof his day used to visit the actresses
behind the scenes the fan was their great
m tense in the presence of such appalling
griat. ess. Without it self-possession would
L' v e failed them. Their ran was to them
what the balanciere is to the tigbt-rope
dancer. The fan inspired enigmas, epi
grams and sonnets.
THESE MADRIGALS
show that the fan was always mixed up
wit h love and gallantry. It served as a
pretext for many a lender declaration.
When Mlie. Mancini, the dreamy niece of
( ordinal Mazarin, flirted so desperately
with the king, he complimented her on the
grace with which she maneuvered her fan,
**' and made a royal puu that mantled her
petty face with a blush. About this
tone artists began to paint on
s-ken lans birds, flowers, and niytho
-1 -rical scenes—all that decorative art
'"old draw from the domain of the
- oes and graces. By permission of his maj
e y the nulou of famnaker* was incorpo
r ited mto a guild with royal letters patent.
>U the * lames of the seventeenth century
w orn very long noils ond carried their fan*
*‘t y wtiere, whether closed as at church.
' :>cii as at receptions, or hanging at the side
■'’intb# promenade. In tin- theater, as
'W, the fn swayeti t > aud fro over the
l woiii of beauty, and tie frou-frou of It*
* then tissues, with the cliokiagcf its gold
b'l ivory bandies, tii&u as tiow, lent ** >-
“htioeat to the smiling ' face behind it,
'at would have b*o wi sof fashi in with
ut the fisu? How Hu ll the boUes of that
time have ever kept their countenance
under the constant outburst of galhc wit
ar and gaiety.
At the close of the century.thanks t > Mine,
de Mamtenon and her crusade against fem
inine luxury, she followed the fashion and
became more modest.
IT SHRUNK IN SIZE
so as to slip into the confessional. When
given to a young girl it was no longer
accompanied by a billet doux or madrigal,
as formerly. 1 here as an end to all that,
for the court of the old roue king was be
come devout and doleful. Little fans which
had fluttered under black hoods were after*
ward replaced by others as gay as tropical
birds. Amohitrite in her pearl shell,
Adonis ar.d the graces received their
apotheosis. In the eighteenth century,
above all the fan hid its share iu the physi
ology of t ie toilet, and figured among the
weapons which love prepared to . meet the
powdered abbe* and their madrigals. At
the Hotel de Sully, at the Duchesse de
Maines, in ail select and polite circles where
g od taste aud talent met, tbo fan displayed
its graces iu the hands of pretty women.
Then the fan quired a charming language.
It emphasized the sligiite-t shade of se >ti
ment. If it foil to tiie floor it was the sign
of vexation—and in fine was the solution of
every problem. Certain circles were criti
cised according to the way in which they
played the fan. The tri-colored fan, with a
ri bon m the handle to close it at pl-asure,
brings us down to the revolution.
AMONG THE BOURGEOISIE
at the opening of the states general, and
later the women of the Faubourg fcst. Aus
tin displayed ic at tho taking of the lias ile.
At the decimation of liberty the fan, which
which was the sole weapon of woman, was
consecrated to freed im; for, as if by in
stinct, woman understood that the rights of
men were somewhat hers, and she ven
tured to indulge hopes of independence and
power. Her fan was decked out iu tri
colored ribbons, wi ich replaced the rosy
nymphs aud coquettish shepherdesses of the
Watteau regime. In the hands of proud
citoyennes swayed the revolutionary fans,
on which were inscribed the republican de
vic>s, “ Liberte ,” “ Ertalite ,” “ Fratcrnite, '
and “ Vive la Nation r Marat fans evolved
the image of Corday, with knife in her
hand. Under the directory the women
carried crepe fans, and one of them be
longing to Mme. Tollien is now one of the
precious relics boionging to our new “club. ”
The Empire fan, at dawn of the present
century, salute i French soldiers from the
balconies of Italian villas. It also played
its role in the hands of the coytinieres, who,
like angels of charity, flitted among the
dead and dying on the battle-field. Under
the revolution fl mrished anagramitic fans;
that is to say, that by means of au ingenious
mechanism a legend or mot on the edge of
the fan cculd be Viiiaiiged, by a transition of
letters, into a sentiment —for instance, Rome
read Amor.
UNDER LOUIS PHILIPPE
fans lost something of their prestige. The
fan, like the parasol, became democratic.
As for the present time, there is no modest
shop-girl to whom love does not pay hom
age with a bouquet of roses, a billet-doux,
or a fan to add to her arsenal of Parisian
graces. At the beginning of the present
century an English lady established at Lon
don an academy to teach young girls the
exercise of the fan. There were six evolu
tions, and when drawn up the curious
battalion wore to go through them twice a
day and obey the following orders: First,
take fans; second, unfurl fans; third, dis
cnarge fans; fourth, fans down; fifth, fans
up; and sixth, use your fans. This last was
the chef d’oeuve of the exercise, and the
most difficult part of the performance for
this fan rifle corps. The eolonelle directed
all the operations with a largo Marlborough
fan.
At the present time, wherever pretty
woman lives aud reigns, the fan appears
with its fascinating and exquisite coquetry
furnished with all the resource* and variety
of modern art and decorative science. Japan
floods the world with fans. In summer
months at concert, >pn the boulevard, before
the cafes, on the lawn at croquet and tennis,
the fan, with its tattooing of brilliant color,
accentuates the life and gaiety of the scene.
Its fluttering movement seems to throw off
faint feminine exhalations, which rise to
the sensitive brain; and when it is found in
winter, palpitating in the tete-a-tete near
the laughing lips ot a pretty face.it pos
sesses tho potent charm of a sorceress.
A Wonder in Multiplication.
From the St. Louis Republic.
The school teacher * and mathematicians
in general throughout New England, espe
cially Maine. have been devoting consider
able time to what at fi st glance seems a
very common problem in multiplication.
It appeared recently in a Maine journal
and is as fellows: Take the number 15.
Mult ply it by itself and you have 225. Now
take 225 and multiply itbv itself, then mul
tiply that product by itself, and so on until
15 products have been multiplied by them
selves in turn. The pro .lem aroused con
siderable interest in Portland. The bjst
mathematicians worked on the prob
lem until they began to see how
much labor was involved in the
task of its solution, when they
made this discouraging report: “The filial
V roduct calls for 83,539 figures (the first of
which are 1,412.) Supposing that each
three figures occupied an inch of space, the
answer would be almost 1,100 feet long. To
work t'. o problem in its entirety requires
about 500,000.000 figures! Suppose these
figures to be made at the rat ) of 100 per
minute (which is rather fast work), a per
son working 10 hours a day and putting in
300 days each year, would be between 25
and 30 years performing the operation. If.
in multiplying, he should make a row of
ciphers, as ho does in figuring out common
problems, the number of figures and ciphers
required to express the final answer would
be 523,939,228.
That would be the precise number of fig
ures used if the product of the left-hand
figure in each multiplicand by each figure
of the multiplier wa* always a"single figure;
but, as is most frequently, yet n >t always,
two figures, the mothod employed to obtain
the foregoing result cannot be accurately
applied. Assuming that the cipha- is used
on an average once in ten times 475,000,000
approximates l he actual number.
A South Carolina colored man preaches in
his sleep. The general rule, it will be remem
bered, among the clergy is to preach in other
folks’ sleep.— Boston 7 ransenpt.
MEDICAL.
SPRING HUMORS, whether itching, burning,
bleeding, scaly, crusted, pimply or blotchy,
whether of the skin, scalp or blood, with loss
of hair, whether simple, scrofulous, or heredi
tary, from infancy to age. are now speedily,
permanently, ar.d economically cured by that
greatest of all known humor cures, the
(uticura
Resolvent
A skin and blooJ purifier of Incomparable purity
and curative power. An acknowledged specific
of world-wide celebrity. Entirely vegetable,
safe Innooent, and palatable. Effects daily more
great cure* of skin, scalp, and blood humors
than ail other skin and blood remedie* before
the public. Sale greater than the combined
sales of all oilier blood and skin remedies.
Hold everywhere, iVice. sl. Hotter Dkuo
ami Chemical CowHrtUTioM, Boston.
| V'-.jend f or "Row to Cure Spring Humors ’’
.THE MORNING. NEWS: EIiII)AV, MARCH 21, tSfiO.
MEim.YL.
orTschehcs-s jPKBiMEPILIS oSLs
■—— STANDARD FOR OVsIR HALF A CENTURY ’V"”
mPflWrrll Cure I n<ligrtion, Sour Stomach, TTwirt
6iNiW Tmm, Flatulency. Colic, and a IHtoo*'* of £
' the Stomach; Ccwtivoneijs, Inflammation* ™
Diarrhea,Piie;*,aiui Dia‘os*.suJtUeßowels; --
m/taagitA <'on pest ion, Biliousness, Jaundice, N.nsw, 4%l£TGnill Q&lfe
nrjTflUla* Headache, (Jiddinesi, NervousneM, AVan-
G Wfvl&P dering Palm, Malaria, Liter Coinplaiot, Q fi
.. and all Diseases aris .tig from a Gorged and imi ■
Sluggish Liver. They clean the nrticdAM
Is a Positive Cure for coats, reduce gorge*! or congested coenli- "HI Cure
tions, break up stublx>rn complication*, *>- rtIICHS COLDC;
DYSPEPSIA store free, healthy action to the orcaipi, aud j j 1
give the system a chance W recover touo
And all Disorders of the Pi-and strength. They aro THROAT LUNGS,
gestive Organs. It is likewise _ , ll *• plsant l,> tba
a Corroborative or Strength- PUnELf VEGETABLE, and does u>t con lain a p;u tide
ening Medicine, and may be CTOJCTI V DFI Ifißl T °P' um anything injiiri*
taken with benefit in all cases *nIUILY nLLIMoLL, out. Itiathe BcstCuunh Xit-d
--of Debility. For Sal. by all also ABSOLUTELY SAFE, fetae*® *' World. Fur Sale
Druggists. Price, $1 00 per hot- by all Druggists. Price SUh,
tie. Dr. Schenck’s New Book For Sale by all Druggists. Price 2D cts. per bottle. Dr. Schetick’s Book
ou Lungs, Liver and Stomach per box; 3 boxes for Go cts.; or sent by on Consumption audits Cure,
mailed free. Address, mail, postage free, on receipt of price, mailed free. Addivsa
Dr LH.Schonck & Son, Phila. Dr. J. 11. Schenck A Son. Philadelphia. >•. P- I M f ~
MaLiirni
1890. PROSPECTUS. 1890.
SPRINS&SUMMER SEASON
* AT
KrasM's Haiioti Slaery Eras#.
A continuous opening of Novelties is promised during
the entire coming season. Our Agents report shipping the
latest in Millinery from European and home markets. Our
retailing on first floor at wholesale prices enables ladies to
buy at same prices as are paid by milliners. Our Pattern
Hat Department, in charge of the best designers from New
York, will be kept up to its highest state of excellence. No
house North gives ladies such opportunities to select the
latest in Hats of Leghorn, Italian Laces and Straw, Fine
Flowers and other Novelties.
We shall continue our Ribbon Sale at same prices until
further notice.
S. KROUSKOFF.
CLOTHING.
Spring ami Slimier doing!
Our Stock is now ready and marked out at prices that ar e
bound to meet with READY SALE.
STYLES, QUALITIES AND PRICES
TT IST E IXL C E L L E D .
OUR OWN IMPORTATIONS OF
Children’s Clothing,
IIAS ARRIVED AND OUR
IMPORTATION OF NECKWEAR
IS NOW DAILY EXPECTED.
Those of our friends de*iiw a suit equal in quality and make-up of the best Merchant Tailors
work will do well by calliug early at
iA. DUYIHv & SONS,
The Reliable Clothiers and Fowlers,
161 BROUGHT ON STREET.
HARDWARE, ETC.
GEO. F. DREW HDW. CO,
40 and 42 East Bay St., - Jacksonville, Fla.
WHOLESALE AND RETAIL
HARDWARE, SASH, DOORS AND BLINDS STOVES AND TINWARE.
STATE AGENTS for Revere Rubber Company's Giant Stitclied R.ubb-r fleltinif, Henry Disitoi
4 Sons’ Circular Saws, Nicholson Files, Bterllnr Emory Wheels, A Iterator Axes, Sunoud * Cres
cent Ground Coarse Cut Saws, Starke’s Genuine Dixie Plows, HufTalo "oimiar.J reuk<, I. ntfiaa'i
A Martinez Paints. H. F. Avery & Sons' Steel Plows. Iron Aye Hand Garden Tools.' .Vledal Brand"
Koofintr Kelt, Thomas Roberts Stevenson Company’s Heating nnd Cousin*: Stoves and Rauxaa
HKaDUU AUTERS for lowa 4-Point Haro Wire, Kllisiurue A Jacobs’ Wheelbarrow, AllantlJ
White Lead, Campbell at Thayer’s Oil and Painters' Supplie*.
All orders shipped iinmediateSy on receipt. Correspondence solicited.
- —■" ■
HOTELS.
UNDER ONE MANAGEMENT!
DUB’S SCREVEN HOUSE
OPKK AM*. THE YEAR Hot’N'D.
FlfatU'imlti Alllti Lirff lstm.
s,j.* tor < i*! Traveler*.
23. IDTT23 Proprietor*
HOT K Ij t y b k k.
I WILL ON <> HftYOlfct: MAY l*r
! Dou of tb* NiniW Hi
t tho I'lifon,
MEDICAI*
ppp
101 □ I □
. *rtWx' **■■ f' <
■'*■** - ' - •■* *■■ ■
SttKVg
■■ /vyV - -• • • ■■ |, -
Phytk-lans endcmo P. P. P. as * •plondld combination.
Mid prescribe it with fcr**t Mtliftetlna for the cures of
•lUonu^mlßMicj^^Prlma^S^ndar^UidTertr
iR p P. c u • ”
■ ■ *1 V- I I | A
■> c r O F U L. r*
ary Syphilis. Syphilitic Rheumatism, Scrofulous Clears
4tnd Sores. Glandular Swellings. Hheumatinm. Malaria,
old Obmiilc lUce-s that have roasted all treatment,
I— ■■■l—■l‘~*~ ; —————————
P P. P. Cu 9B
!e l o*o D POISON
fwfrl ■- "
Catarrh, Skin Dtieuea, Frtenm, Chronic Female Com
plaints. Mercurial Poison, Tettor. Scaldheatl. etc., etc.
lVP.PjJ_powerful tonic and an eacellent epplti-
O P P C URE! *
ifuM A f I S Rfl
M>r, building up the system rapidly.
Lad lor. whose systems are poisoned and whose blood
1 l ar 1 -
'*■} , i ■ .
P P P CU B M
Fa* L A R I A
wsc r''mn sx&mar.:
ties nre peculiarly benefited by the wonderful tonic and
blood clean slog properties of P. P. P., Pricaly Ash. Poko
Root and Potassium.
P P P. CUO'
;#3sV ■£#*£. , A
pr HP EPS I A,
LIPPMAN BROS.. Proorlotore,
WKor.ss.adUS dbugot.'-
liftMan Block. SAVANNAH, G.V
dilv Ar
,^|f s tSite2'"; 0 l u N
Ciffi* J: Na k,"c a
USXfMKKS.
f Sk Great Inrlcortor,
•JMnt+eIZSHX a Blood .Pnrlflor, Flei.h
"* Iftnlieratld NerveTonte.
H ..lie. core* M&larla. BlMomumw.
ffl hM mJi BIT* Scrofula. Dyvpep,i. l.ru-
JM m jff uVm 11, corrhrA. * In.potency and
af'Wr”U v Oenrr.il Doblfliy. nrellenj
for Removing I’lmplr. ..no
, a, -a 'Beautifying . Coniplrijon.
Kbß P [Email: linear routed 7 tao
7/Jj S W H mottle. At Druggl-tH hj
ST ■ B RalJ ' mail. 50 Cent.. Ale I ."do*
g y JaBMW Moiliilnetu- New York.
Money Returned by follow
ing druggists If Alexander’s
Cholera Infantum Cure,
Cholera Morbus Cure, or
Piie Ointment fail* to cure:
Butler’s Pharma** W. ML MM*
n <J. Strong. Held * Cos..
Edward J. Kieffer, W. F. Reid,
W. A. Rlgman, W. M. Cleveland.
J. R. Halthvanger, Wm. F. Handy,
J. T. Thornton, W. A. Bishop,
Symons & Mell, A. N. O’Kaoffo * Oo„
M. Johnson, T avid Portar.
WHOLESALE BE UPPMAN UWOtL
LOTTIBI.
LOTTERY
OF THE PUBLIC CHARITY.
ESTABLISHED IN 1877, BY THE
MEXICAN
NATIONAL GOVERNMENT.
Operated Under a Twenty Years’ Contract
by the Mexican International Im
provement Company.
Grand Monthly Drawing* held in the Moresque
Pavilion in the Alameda Park. City of Mexico,
ami publicly .conducted by Government Offi
cials appointed for the purpose by the Hoar*-
?ary of the Interior an 1 the Treasury.
Grand Monthly Drawing, April 3, 1890
CAPITAL PRIZE,
#e30,000.
*O,OOO Ticket., nl HI, 0320 O,TO
Wholes, SI; Halves, @2; Quarters, ot.
Club Rates: 55 Tickets tor SSO
. U. S. Currency.
LIST OF PIUZEK.
1 CAPITAL PRIZE OK $60,0001* $50,001)
1 CAPITAL PRIZE OF 20,000 is 30,000
1 CAPITAL PRIZE OF 30,000 is 10, .H1
3 ORAND PRIZE OF. 2,0001s 2,000
3 PRIZES OF .. l.OOOare 3,000
6 PRIZES OF 500 are a.ooo
20 PRIZES OF 200 are 4 <OO
100 PRIZES OF ]ooare.. KMMO
3:0 PRIZES OF .Via re ... 17*000
55. PRIZES 0F.... 20arj.... ll.OA)
APPROXIMATION PRIZES. $
' 0 Prizes of sno, ar>p. to SOO,OOO Prize. $ 9,000
150 Prizes ot >SO, npp. to 20,000 Priz ..... 7,500
15 ’ Prizes of $lO, app. to 10,000 Prize.... 6.000
799 T rini rials of S2O.
decided by .SOO,OOO Prlzy. . 15,280
2276 Prizes Amounting to $17.8,5%
All Prizes sold In the United Ijtatos full pal 1
in U. S. Currency.
SPECIAL FEATURES.-
By terms of contract the Company must de
posit the sum of all prizes included in the
scheme before selling a single ticket, and re
ceive the following official permit:
CERTIFICATE.—If hereby certify that the
Rank of London and Mexico hat on tpecitU
depo ti the neceenary funrlt to ijunrnntee the
payment of all prize* drawn by the Loterla
de la Rublica.
A. CAST ILIA). In teri'cntor.
Further, the Company is required to rlistrlb
die 50 percent of the value of all the tickets i*
pr>/.es a larger proportion than is give.: by any
otleir Lottery.
Flntliy, the number of tickets is limited to
802X01 20,000 less than are sold by othsr lot
teries using the same scheme
For full particulars address U. Basssltl,
Apartado 736. City of Mexico, Mexico.
... ■' .i—iy. ii ii ■■■mi ■■ ... i
* MACHINERY.
McDofloagh & Ballaotynei
IRON FOUNDERS,
Machinist* Boiler Makers and Elacksraithj,
STATIONARY AND PORTABLE KNOINESL
VERTICAL ANDT<)P KU.N.NI Ml CCK.N
MILLS, SUGAR MILLS and PANS.
A OS NTS for Alert and Union Injector*, ths
il K.mphwt and most effective on the n.arsei;
(iullett light Draft Magnoiis Oottoa Um th>
hast in tes uarinH.
All or.lots promptly attsndad to Ussd for
Price List.
msnufscMirer*, merchsnlcs,
cbrporstv.us. and all otte rs in nerd a I
cr > Hug. iilhegraphin/. and ilsnk Ise k> can
I*'.-turlr rs prompt iy filled at n.udervts
urces. stile- SuiCIAG NEWS ITUNXihU
kuVtZ. 3 WhiiAkdt zti cot |
EASTKR
THE MAIDEN
NOW SPOTTETH
HER
SPRING BONNET,
AND IT
BEHOOVETH
THE
YOUNG
MAN
TO HUSTLE
AND SECURE
HIS EASTER
SUIT, HAT,
AMI)
NECKGEAR
FROM OUR
OPENING LOTS.
B. 11. LEVY & BRO.
SHOE*.
WE HAVE GOT THEM!
GOT WHAT ? WHY THE MOST
STYLISH SHOES
llidj k ft M
Perfect l| of
fintiiriis.m^^lrlish.
ftny Style, All Widths, Ato E. Try Us Once.
The Glohe Shoe Store,
FURNITURE AND CARPET*.
LADIES, ATTENTION!
This cut represents the frame on which to dry I sice Curtains after they are washed.
BOTTLIITG-SH’3
CALL AND SF.E MODEL *., ——DMrROVznJ * ANY LADY, WITH
„ fllace Curtain Stretchers
OF SAME AT OUR (.’ARE, CANLAUNDKY
STORE. AFTER LACE | 1 jj HER LACK CURTAINS
J CURTAINS ARE TAKEN I AS GOOD AS BY
OFF OF THIS RACK "THE PATENT PROCESS
OUT 0< rOLWNO FRAME.
They Look New. hZS ‘‘Ecomomy is Wealth”
uoy ledy a operate them.
For Sale By
ZLIISriDS-ATy &c ZMIOIRG-^A-TST,
HHOUGHTON AND BARNARD.
We are fully prepared to estimate on Awnim; Work of e?ry description. Protect your resi
dences and offices from the strong southern sun.
|| REFRIGERATORS.
8 The Leonard Cleanable
l|j lEusicel -YYII Oijlxex’S-
Sß Catalogue showing designs and reasons why they
RMP A Beautiful Pamphlet free to all.
M. BOLEY Sr SON,
186, 188, 190 Broughton Street,
S - - - GA.
A N E W LO T
-a T 1 ’—
FURNITI'RE, BABY CARRIAGES, CHAMBER
SETS, SHADES, LOUNGES, PARLOR SUITS,
DINING TABLES
JUST ABEIYED AT
6 AND 8 WEST BROAD STREET.
Also a Nice Line of Cedar Chests. Terms to suit any one. Very
Liberal Discounts for Cash.
A. S. THOMAS,
6 & 8 West Broad Street, Corner Bryan.
t (HI MISHKIN JHKIU HANT*.
CLAYTON H WOOD*. JOHN K. GARNETT. CHAKLKtf B. MAI JINK.
WOO DS, ( i AHX lOTT Ji. CO.,
Cotton Factors and Commiasion Merchants,
Isy HI - . B>h viiiiiinli, tin.
Übrrai aJvu *. .uwlu uu eoungutuoul* LI mum. Prompt at UmUon givou to all buatiMM*.
CLOTIII NG.
SPRING
BULLETIN.
We are now opening our
SUPERB LINES OF
SPRING WEAR
FOR YOUNG MEN,
YOUTHS,
BOYS,
CHILDREN.
THE TOP OF THE
FASHION OF COURSE.
REMAINING
WINTER STOCK IS
GRADUALLY EDGING
OUT AT PRICES THAT
BLUSH AT THE SACRIFICE.
5