The morning news. (Savannah, Ga.) 1887-1900, April 27, 1890, Page 10, Image 10
10 WOMEN AS REPORTERS. THEY SUCCEED —l3 THH GAME WORTH THE CANDLE♦ Is the Feminine Element Doing: Good or Harm in Newspaperdom ? A Craze for Ecclesiastical Embroid eries--Artists’ Alodeis-The Riding: Coetume. (Copyright.) New York, April ‘36.—lf ever I write the confessions of a newspaper woman I •hall have to record things pleasant and un pleasant, but I fear I shall not be able to pet down any answer to the question, is the feminine element doing more good or harm by its invasion cf the sanctum. The earlier journalistic efforts of women were usually on a high p ane. Not many women are now called on for such work as was done by Margaret Fuller on the Trib une. If Grace Greenwood were beginning again, her articles would probably have to take a less seriou i tone. The women who describe Washington’s gowns and engage ments are perhaps able to write, but thev certainly don t write Mary Clemmer Ames’ congressional correspondence. Even Olive Logan, who made an honest eff 'rt to get back to legitimate criticism of public men and measure;, was often enough forced bock on the cabinet buds and the senators’ wives Women’s occupation of the newsDaoer field is a newer thing across the water than with us, and whether it be because of this or iu spite of it, or because of the different tone or journalism, or the exceptional gift of the individual, Airs. Crawford has a po sition and an influence which we cannot match in America. Mrs. Sullivan’s Lou don letters during the sittings of the Par nell commission is probably our closest re cent parallel. Women’s work in New York newspaper dom has materially changed within a few years. There is a erea: deal more of it and much of it is exceptionally good of its kind, but the exper.euoe of one of the best known and most successful writers is probably a fair example of that of many more. “Ido very little newspaper writing now,” she said yesterday, “ad lam tempted to go out of it altogether. When the changed hands I was informed that art and musical criticism—my specialty—was net a line iu ■which the new pr iprictors cared to employ a woman, but if I would do tea table gossip P.nd society chatter they would pay me well.” Another newspaper writer, and one who has won legitimate distinction, was amusing me the other da>' with accounts of how she “rircumweuts” her editor. “He is firmly convinced,” she raid, “that ■women care for nothing but beaux and but tons.*frivols and frills. I can’t introduce into my Sunday page the things women really think and talk about, but I get there just tho same. I never say a word about the higher education of women, but if the collegiate alumnne have a meesing, then I report it and it goes as a news item. I dare not mention women’s clubs, but if there is a club lunch, then 1 at once tuck in uuder a display head some of the bright speeches, judiciously interspersed with de scriptions of the table decorations. Oh, he thinks I’m very submissive, but he’s cir cumvented every time the presses roll.” At big Cooper Union meeting of the Association of VV orking Girls’ Societies last ■week I counted no fewer than eighteen women reporters, and idly wondered how many of them were circumventing their editors. Schemes for brightening the lives of working girls may be of little conse quence abstractly, but when some thou sands of them hold a convention then the ■womau reporter, especially if people of ■wealth and social importance join hands •with the toilers, sees her opportunity. I doubt if there is a paper in New York on which from two to a dozen women are not “getting in space” witu more or less regularity. The number of unattached writers, out-of-town correep.ndents, semi literary aspirants of every description, in creases every season. A few women hold responsible positions calling for the exercise of their best powers, nearly all probably give some attention to the art of circumven tion, but for the most part ducats drop with their most pleasing frequency into the pock ets of those who set up m business as under clothes editors, purveyors of cosmetic se crets, interviewers of actresses and dilli gent searchers after sensations. The carnival of publicity through which our society is passing as one phase of its evolution is helped on a good deal by the woman newspaper writer. The bulk of small talk is written still by men, but there are certain things which men cannot do. A man cannot cultivate a fashionable dress maker's acquaintance by paying her price for an occasional visitiDg gown with a con fident reliance on ge ting back double the outlay by leading niadame to gossio about the costumes in preparation for the next eocial event in the rich Mr. So-and-So’s private ball room. A man cannot cultivate a lady’s acquaintance at an afternoon tea and call on her next morning ■with a snnling “Please let me see your engagement book for a minute or two,’ or a “IVill you tell me if you are invited to Mrs. Brown’s, and do you happen to know if Mrs. Jones is going and what Mrs. Smith’s two daughters w ill wear f’ I sup pose a man can and does, but I never chanced to see him, pull cut a pad of writ ing paper at a reception and follow two prominent women aoout, standing just ■within earshot, w;.i!e he took for a daily “peeper” (as the newsboys say, not without’ accuracy) full notes of their private conver sation. Men can and do go into society on a professedly social footing, while all the time on the watch for a piquant incident or story, but I doubt if .hey do these things as successfully as women. It is the woman’s tact, her nice discrimination, her instinct which tells her just how far she can go v liich brings her services into requisition, ■while her success recreates the demand. In ♦he struggle for existence she seas a chance ♦-> do something which falls in with the temper of the times. She does it. she is asked to do it again, she has made her mar ket; if she would sell she must supply it, for it is there that now her wares are in de mand. If the landlady demands her money and a woman is weary of washing out hgr own kerchiefs iu a hand basin, is she going to tawk about her unsalable ideas in the future of literature while she remembers tbe parting words of the editor. “We’ll t ike 1,500 to 2,000 words if you can get up something good in the vein of your last Funday’s article on‘Rich Women who Eat Olives at Luncheon.” The extraordinary ■woman is going to stick to the literature, the ordinary o: e is going to find or invent women’who dote on radishes. The newspaper writer wnose stock in trade is personalities is not maliciously dis posed toward her victims. Sometimes she holds honestly the code of morality which is too generally accepted among newspaper men that there is little or nothing a news paper hasn’t a right to know, and usually her experience has been such as to lead her to regard most people as seekers after newspaper publicity. Of course she knows that she can innocently enough display anew single bangle without the faintest stirring of a wish to see it chronicled as an item. Of course she knows that she can give a din ner to eight or ten other professional women in delightful Bohemian fashion at a httle Italian restaurant without the least dwire to get glory out of tho performance. Ot course in a general way she knows that five women out of six desire nothing more than to keep ont of the new pvpe s in these days wnon the scrubbing of skeletous forms • regular part of spring and fall house c.eanlng but her adventures with the sixth woiran have m-ide her cynical hbe remembers how, iu the innocence of * in hpr Bala< * days to an idol she had set on a pedestal; how she 3h. vlrtil* 0 ! 110 " 1x1 - to describe some ot i,s virtues to the worla; how the idol wrap; ea itself in delicacy' and . ffended l' L*?- m a garment, and bow sh j went feeling as if she had neglected to put oil her shoes before approaching “shrine! Desecrate such a sanctuary with public ad u'ation? Never! But she remembers also how the dav< went by and there came a letter. Tbe idol had taken it for granted she would know the reserve and outraged majesty were not genuine; tho idol enclosed money for 100 copies of the paper contain ing the article which mus: by that time be readv to appear. L -st the information at hand might not have proved sufficient the idol sent clippings of three laudatory sketches written "by three quicker wi ted journalists, and a couple ot photographs taken for the occasion. She remembers the pleasant lady' who in her first lonely winter in the big city in vited her to her “afternoons.” She thought she was asked for the pie isure of her com pany, and it never occurred to her to ga zette the guests or to praise, in print, the tea. One day her hostes : spoke to her of another reporter who had “attended every one of her receptions last winter and never did a single thing for he .” “Never did anything?” came the per plexed inquiry. “Not a line. She has access to the society columns of the . the know.” A little wrinkling of the forehead. then full iltumiuation. It is the misfortune of the society reporter that the people who want free advertising are the ones with who n she has frequently to deal. She learns to know so well the woman who receives her lying in a froth of laces on a pile of softly tinted cushions, with shaded c indies and langornus perfumes to bewilder and to charm. She understands the authoress of the erotic novel not ye brought into paying notoriety who asks her lunch and confides to her over dainty Sevre3 aud iridescent glass that she is “afraid her last book is really quite wicked.” I fear she laughs when told of fathers of debutances who grow black in the face of public over the placarding in their daughters’ charms, k .owing as she doe3 not infre quently that the pictures were obtained in private from the paternal albums. She sees so much of these people that it is not aiways easy to bear in mind that they are not usually people who have succeeded, but people who would like to succeed. There is so much insincerity that she sometimes forgets toere is a great deal more sincerity. Whether she is most creator of the craze for publicity or m st its victim, whether she believes with unflinching heartiness in the word she does or whether she fully ap preciates, as and > many successful correspon dents, the vulg irity of personal journalism, she doesn’t yield with oie-half the fre quency that outsiders might suppose to the perilous temptation to pay off grudges and to avenge slights, she doesn’t violate a confi dence, and she respects the desire for pri vacy whenever you can convince her that there exists a human being who doesu’t de sire to see her name in the newspapers. This is o:e ride for one set of women. Everyb dv knows that women write the columns of dire tions as to how to powder your licse and how to do up your back hair. Everybody does not know tnat the woman who is telling you to-lay what sorts of hairpins Mrs. Cleveland uses on Sundays, and what kinds she prefers for Monday afternoons, may have been wri ring yester day about the babi s’ hospital, and may give a hint to-morrow that will show a soore of croubled women a possible money making occupation. The women who manage the charities, the woman’s ex changes, the training schools for nurses, the free kindergartens, know how much they owe to newspaper women. The woman who has a helpful plan sees first tr.e possibility of its realization when she can win tue ear of an intelligent woman reporter. O.ie of the most success ful newspaper women 1 know said to me yesterday that she loved her work because it gave her so many chances of doing good. She could not give money, but she could give words that would put up blocks of buildings. This is the other side for an other set of women, iu spite of which it re man s true that the demand for articles about what actresses eat ana what the Van astorbilts feed their poodle dogs is too steady to permit the work of a woman newspaper correspondent to be considered as opening, save iu exceptional instances a “literary career. CHASUBLE, ALB AND STOLE. The most charming library I have lately seen is hung with curtains from old confes sionals. It belongs to a woman who loves books and who loves embroideries. She found tbee somewhere in Canada, in a littlo church that was dent laden und dropping in pieces, and she paid for them a price that was stiff enough to go some distance on re pairs. They're a rich crimson silk, dulled m tint by age, and wrought with gold thread and bullion. A lot of altar cloths and cloaks included in a recent exbi l ition of art objects was sold at prices plainly indicating what a hold the crazi for cburchly belongings has taken on women able to indulge such costly fancies in decoration. The laugh has gone round for years at the expense of a lady with more money than education, who was said to have bought hangings in Italy marked I. H. S. because the letters were her father’s initials, but non there are women in plenty daring enough to wear the heavy laces wrought for archbishops in their life long leisure by nuns, who grow dim-eyed over their selt-imposed tasks till they ould hardly distinguish the work of their own Augers as it lay across the priests’ shoulders when the bell raug and the censor smoked aud tho candle flame winked as the host was elevated. The fancy for ec clesiastical embroideries we have borrowed from the studios. The artists began to bring home from Italy spoils from the vestment rooms years ago. The secularization of the monasteries aud nunneries threw into the market a great store of albs, chasubles and stoles, which cost little or nothing, but with their glow - ing colors and rich stitchery in gold and silver, silks and pearls, made most wonder ful hangings and backgrounds. First one wealt-.y woman and then another caught the idea, aud began to buy on her summer tours and to commission agents to be on the lookout for fine pieces, and then the agents themselves cornered the market and put up the figures. Everything of the sort is now very expensive, but if vou are able to procure an altar cloth from* an old cathedral to throw over the cduch in vour drawing room the chances are that its white silk, yellowed by time, with border or cherubs’ heads with silken curls and ti >y wings all in tarnished gold will win you more admiration as a woman of resource, than any other possible decoratton. The relig ieuaes and the pious lay women put their religion into their Augers. Trie silks and 6atins from the vestment chests are rich enough to stand aloe, and tbe scroll de signs in bullion thread that are like those illuminating the pages of old missals are done to last 300 years. One well-known New York womau ha3 the mantel of her parlor decked with two g irgoous embroidered cloaks, and these are enough to maintain her social reputation. Another has her receiving room curtained with ecclesiastical cloths in reddi-h brown, stitched with gold and green mid blue, and a third has half the chairs of her drawing room upholstered with the same elaborate silken labors. The womau who keeps up with the times is ever on the alert for a prize in the shape of a scrap of church em broidery that can be turned into a table scarf or a piece of stole that will cover a divan cushion. Some of the best things of this sort I have seen belong to *a woman who, by long prowling Among dealers in antiques in half the capitals of Europe after them, has become a connoisseur and amassed a famous collection, but is now un happy because sho cannot find a house witu just the right light in the library to display to advantage her g.ieu hangings wrought in blue and silver. THE FLOWEH RIDE AND THE RIDING COS TUME. Now that the violets are blooming and the sky is a vault of brilliant and unfathom able blue, the horsewomen are out for their flowerrides. Overthedownsof Long Island or up the splend and roads that wind along the banks of t e Hudson nr among the Orange hills they gallop, and drink tea from costly Dresden cup3 handed about under bu ldiDg maples at noon and bring home more pleas THE MORNING NEWS: SUNDAY, APRIL 27, 1890--TWELYE PAGES. ant recollections than posies. From a dozen to twenty fair riders make up a party, and sometimes they are accompanied by an equal number of cavaliers booted and spurred, but oftener their only escort it the fashionable riding master. The woman who rides has broken loose a little from the conventional habit this season. She wears a waistcoat in blue and white, very probably, or English pink and cream. Her bodice bas cutaway fronts which may button over tbe I night colors while cantering through the park, but which on a flower ride she is sure to turn back in flapping revers. Her skirt may be black or bottle green or dark blue as formerly, but it is quite as apt to be in one of a dozen soft shades of gray. It is short and scant and outlines her figure as she sits in tbe saddle. She wears a silk hat in the park, but an English straw when her steed feels the grass under bis heels. It is a matter of course that she does not sit astride, and equally a matter of course, in spire of the doubts of the scoffer, that the good-looking dress reformer who bas gotten so much notoriety through the mistaken zoal of a reporter never had the slightest in tent ion of scampering through the park to set her such an example. If ever we wear divided gowns it won’t be on horseback in the beginning. Nevertheless, theory of immodesty is absurd. The riding habit as now worn is frequently more immodest in its revelations of the figure than the frankest bathing gown. If the divided gown should ever material ize for summer athletics, it is likely to be used on the lady’s bicycle first, as aclimbing suit for mountain excursions second, and for horseback riding las: of all. I know a couple of women wco use it aireadv on the bicycle. That is, they say they do. The bicycle rider’s position is such 'and these particular gowns are so convenient in cut and and aperies, that I never suspected the bifurcation until I was informed. I have lately seen one divided dress for Adirondack wanderings. It is more like a zouave cos tume tnau anything else, not at all pretty, but perfectly seemly. We may come to these things yet, but the rush is not impetu ous just now. The discussion, however, has brought out a good many admissions that the side saddle is fit only for short excur sions. ARTISTS’ MODELS. There is a flavor of romance about tjie studios, but on no subject is more nun senee talked than about artists’ models. Last week the Art Student*’ League held an exhibition. The room in which the sketches of the life classes were exhibited fascinated me. First, I had to acknowl edge that the men drew from the nude con siderably better than the women, then I made certain that neither men nor women had had good figures to draw from. The female models apparently had figure* that the average woman would take precious good care to disguise well with draperies. How women with such bodies can get paid for posing is a mystery, supposing that good models exist at aIL In truth, the model as she is is very different from the model as she is supposed to bo. In the first place she is just as modest and just as vir tuous as any other woman. There isn’t the lanst flavor of impr priety about her or her calling. In the next place she needs a thorough course of physical culture before a literal copy of her will give you anything beautiful. She hasn’t a go;d chest, she doesn’t stand erectly, she needs somebody to teach her the first priuciple3 of graceful bearing. She is indolent, and she grows fat easily. A set of photographs lately re ceived from Paris, where thev get much better models than iu New York, shows that even there good figures to work from are the exception and not the rule. WOMEN AS CLERKS. Apropos of the endless discussion of the impoliteness of saleswoman on the one side and their Ijw wages and long hours on the other I have noticed a coincidence. There are stores where no important line of pro motion is open to wo nen, tbe heads of de partments, buyers, etc., are nearly all men. Tnere are stores w here responsible positions are held oy women. I have lately begun to notice that iu these latter I nearly always get well treated. More than this," there is oue store which for years I shunned because its saleswomen were rude. I have been there once or twice lately and found smil lug courtesy. It so happens that two posi tions not before filled by women have been given to them. Is the coincidence anything more? Is the negligence due to the lack of ambition? Supply a stimulus, a bone, an outlook for the future, do you get "better saleswomen? Eliza Putnam Heaton. NEW DESIGNED LADIES’COSTUMES The Princess of Wales oa Horseback. New York, April 26.—Our sketches this week are redolent of bright, breezy, out door life —of long delightful days oa shaded, winding country road3, of moun tain climbing and sea-shore rambles, and hours spent, rod in hand, by quiet trout streams —in fact of all those open air de lights which are in such marked contrast to the more artificial amusements of tbe winter season. A NEW RIDING HABIT. A*oecialty, is an entirely new riding habit made of waterproof, fancy diagonal cloth suitable for summer wear. The bodice is cut in quite a novel fashion, with a waist coat of a very horsey-lookiug check Kersey cloth in bright colors. Tbe bodice can either button across this in the center, or remain open all the way down, at the wish of the wearer. The skirt fits to a nicety, being cut on a patent safety principle, in such a manner that it will nei her "drag” nor “ruck up,” and can be made to wear on any modern saddle; thus combining with elegance the greatest comfort and security to the wearer. This skirt is also as graceful and comfortable for walking as riding, being arranged to fasten up very ingeni ously on one side. Tbe breeches or trousers are made of silk Jersey, or material to match the habit. A silk bat is usually worn in the park, but for country wear a low felt derby or even a straw hat can be worn, tho latter being much in vogue in England last year for young ladies. The most approved boots are dress Wellingtons, gloves tan dogskin. It is not generally known that ail the habits Redfern makes for the Princess of Wales are made to be worn on the right side of the horse, owing to a slight injury that the fair equestrienne sustained to her knee when a child at Copenhagen. Her royal highne s has had all her daughters taught to ride on cither side of tbe saddle, informing Mr. Redferu that she thought it OWEN’S ELECTRIC BELT. IT JBfrPR. A. OWEN S EIECTmc BELT. Ml 5-^ improved July XL 1889 LADIES 1 ***** I li 1 / Sl\ flillM* *" L 39 I I iidTSiiii 1 a! r win comwre with JL Tte current Is under the control of the wearer seder, nbe if 111 i|nl ■ j Ifa 1 I BOBnwjeyv. Mro.ntfp suit any eomptotat -. thlscas-:otbe done with cay ether belt. Tbe suspensory* } #ll Wf’pwa i E ditEct’2 to tee f?m !ry, the ditks are so aditur-d that by means of our somtenc.-* the Elec-S •> #4ll Sripfeaafe? A1 tot&Y&iv ' ,D< ’ “* GrqieJmproveinent; ever made in applying electricity* _ i f 41J This r>(viy tcit just rtcun patented. Every buyer of a belt wants tbe best, ana this he will T Seek View# M ocr Yo. % fail r.o->-* cnanntee he!- win?.*£ *£ J* differs finmsllpriiep. It Isa Hatiery fick contaizin U 9 Galvanic cell:, with lOideprees of etrength, except* * . lias* Positive and .Negative current, and the Current can be reversed. GifcEN ELECTRIC CELT & APPLIANCE C© t 300 North Sroadwqy. St. Louis* Mo. and 826 Broadway. Northeast Corner o£ 12th, Mew YorltCity. mo f an **26 would avoid ali tendency to injury of the spine. “REDFERN” FANCY WRAP. The wrap illustrated is a “chi” combina tion of velvet and lace. The sleeves are artistically draped a ;d caught up with rich corded ribbon?. The front is brought to a point about an inch below the waist semi fitting aud finishing off with jet ornaments. The embroidery is band-worked on velvet, making a unique addition to this wrap. The neck can bs worn onen or closed, purely a personal taste, filled in with a light pat tern of lace. REDFERN TOILETTE. This is a delightful gown and has just been completed. The finest broadcloth in a lovely shade of “vieux-bleu” is used for the chief part of the gown; the panel at the left side of skirt, vest and sleeves are of similar material in ivory white, elaborately braided in the renaissance style, with fine twisted cords, in which mingle copper, silver and vieux-bleu. The loosely folded fronts of bei-galorio are in the latter color, as are also the small loose fronts, proceeding from the under arm seam?, and just revealing their lining of ivory white silk. The noticeable feature of this gown is tho narrow collar band, whicu is quite super ceding the high-necked gowns that have been popular so long. A Drge hat of creamy-colored straw, trimmed with vieux bleu ribbon and ostrich tips, is intended to to be worn with this gown. Redfern. A BRICK HOUSE OF SUITABLE WIDTH FOR A TWENTY-FIVE-FOOT LOT. Very Complete Accommodations, In cluding a New and Desirable Feat ure—A Range Room —By R. W. Shoppell, Architect. (Copyright by tho Aifthor.) General Dim-nsiors—Width, through sit ting room and ball, 22 feet 4 inches; depth, including veranda and Tange room, 69 feet finches. Heights of stories: Cellar, 8 feet: first story, 9 feet 6 inches; second 'ory, 9 feet; attic 8 feet. PERSPECTIVE. Exterior Materials—Foundations, stone and brick; first and second st ries, brick; gables, shingles; roofs, dark blue slate. Outside blinds to windows of dining room and kitchen extension. Interior Finish—Hard white plaster, with plaster center* in parlor, sitting end dining room, and hall. White pine flooring in first and second stories; spruce flooring in attic. White pine trim throughout. Main stairway ash. Wain-cot in kitchen. Pict ure moldings in principal rooms and hall of first story. Inside folding blinds to all windows in" main part of house. All in terior woodwork finished in hard oiL Colors.—Brick work cleaned down at completion and repointed. Trim outride doors and blinds dark green. Sashes and ram conductors Pompeian red. Veranda floor, seal brown. Veranda ceiling, yel low stone color. Gable shingle? dipped in and brush coated with brownish stain. Accommodations. —The principal rooms and their sizes, closets, etc., are shown by the floor plans. Cellar under whole house, with inside and outside entrance. Two rooms and hallway fini-hed in attic. Skylight set in roof over hail. Width of house sui ab'e for twentv-five-foot lot. This de-igu would appear well as ad üble house. Back stairway conveniently accessible from kitchen and from dining-room to kitchen closet. C at and hat closet under main stairway. China dining-room. Doorway may be cut throuih closet in dining-room. Open fireplace i.i parlor. Range is set iu a small, well venti lated room off the kitchen proper, which prevents over-beating of kitchen and keeps odors from the h use. Sliding doors be tween parlor and sitting-room. i§|i fs*: -1 INP—a 1 | **•- n S' ' 1 * JL- i| M I | pf T* N j | '' V g VVT^SrNCtd. tri W. a r S <S rq j*,.... L f E=J CELLAR—FIRST FLOOR. Cost $3,000, not including mantels, range, and he ;ter. Th3 estimate is based on New York prices for materials and labor. In many sections of the country the cost should be less. ■ j m. \il Etf *| j 1 I l iSfcfWg*.' Iq.h'Ruom | I; V °T*f; I T < S li so-.n'o; | ito| I ISO? .*o- " | fl ¥f fk s h i r „_ _. | ge„ t ft Sed Room and I ►.*•••♦• H ! 1 5'6'x*44' I LiawleJ l - ~ \ SECOND FLOOR—ATTIC. Feasible Modifications—Heights of stories, sizes of rooms, kinds of materials and c 1- ors may be changej. Open fireplaces may be introduced in sitting room, dining room, and three bedrooms, or all open fireplaces may be omitted. Sliding doors, part or all of plumbing, part or all of side veranda, aud attic finish, may be omitted. The one step platform at foot of main stairway may be omitted, thus giving more space to front hall Two front bedrooms of second story may be combined to form one large room. After Twenty Years. My wife’s a winsome wee thing. Wed twenty years or mair, And aye the bonnier growing, ' As baitb mine eyes declare. ’Tis love that made her bonnie, And love that keeps her sae, In spite o’ time and fortune. On life's uncannie way. Lore scares awa' the wrinkles From off her smooth white brow, Am duty done through good and ill Aye keeps her conscience true— Aad yields her happy peace of mind, If e’er the world goes wrong, And turns the murmur of lament Into a cheerful song. The kisses gather on her lips Lise blossoms on the rose. And kindly thoughts reflect the light That in her bosom glows— As wavelets hi a running stream Reflect the noontide ray, And sparkle with the light of heaven When rippling on their way. She is a winsome wee thing. And more than twenty year She's twined h-rself about my heart By all tnat can eudear; By all that can endear on earth Foreshadowing thiugs above. And it al my baopy soul to heaven. Rejoicing in her love 1 Charlss Macsat. mb 1 ii ri ri i wr—a—m— asmmmm—— PURIFY YOUR : BLOOD AND DISEASE WILL VANISH Spring Medicine. Nothing is so efficacious as P. P. P. for a Spring Medicine at this season, and for toning up. invigorating, and as a strengthener and appetizer, take P. P. P. It throws off the malaria, and nuts you in good condition. P. P. P is the best Spring Medicine in the world tor the different ailments the system is liable to in the Soring. P. P. P. is a sure cure for rheumatism, syphilis, scrofula, blood poison, blotches, pimples, and all skin and blood diseases. Terrible blood poisoning, body covered with sores, two bottles making the patient as lively as a ten-year-old. Tb s is the case and testi mony of Ja.e Hastings, traveling salesman. Savannah, Ga. A Marshal Saved, Life and Hair. Monticello. Fla., Jan. 21, 18S9. For the last eight years I have been in bad health, suffering with malaria, rheumatism, dyspepsia, dropsy. My digestion was bad, and ray hair ail cuma out. In fact. I was nearly a wrecK. I had taken ki iney and blood medicines, which did me no good. When I began taking P. P. P.. about three months ago, I was as weak as a child. T have only taken fur bottles (small size), and to-day I am a well man. and my hair has “come again.” I cannot recom mend P. P. P. too highly. W. F. WARE. Marshal Monticello, Fla. F. C. Owens, Witness. Dyspepsia and Indigestion In their worst forms are cured by the use of P. P. P. If you are debi Stated and run down, or If you need a tonic to regain flesh and lost appe tite, strength and vigor, take P. P P„ and you will be st: ong and healthy. For shattered con stitutions and lost manhoid take P. P. P. (Prickly Ash, Poke Root and Potassium) is the king of all medicines. P. P. P. is the greatest blood purifler in the world. For sale by all druggists. Mr. Foraker, with Cornwell A Chipman of Savannah, says he suffered weakness and gen eral debility, being almost unable to attend to business. Two bottles cured him and he is now a well man. For sale by all druggists. LIPPMAN BROS.. Proprietors, Lippman's Block. Savannah, Ga. MJEUICAZ* j Some | Children j j Crowing | I Too Fast | | become listless, fretful, without ener gy, thin and weak. But you can for-1 j tify them and build them up, by the j 1 use of scorn j OF PURE GQD LIVER OIL AND j HYPOPHOSPHITES Of Lime ajtd Soda. 1 They will take it readily, for it is al* ! J moot as palatable as milk. And it i I 1 should be remembered that AS A PRE VENTIVE OR CURE CF COUGHS OR COEDS, i iii B3TM THi OLD AHD WJNQ, IT 13 < liKEQUAII.EC. Avoid substitutions offered, j PETERMAN'S ROACH FOOD. THE people who have used PETERMAN’S ROACH FOOD highly recommend it to their friends end n ighbors. It has no equal in the world, as it attracts th • Roaches and Water Bugs as a food which they like better than any thing else. They all eat it any die. Put up in 25c.. 50c. and 75c. mailable cans. Sold by all the principal druggists in the United States WM. PETERMAN, M’F’G CHEMIST, Office, No. 6 East 14th street. New York. LIPPMAN BROS.. Agents, Savanrah. M j j V P 3 At Wholesale by LIPPMAN BROS., Savan nah, Ga. pi CENTS will tay tor THE DAILY flfa MORNING NEWS one week, delivered / Sto any part of the city. Send your ad fa U dress with 25 cents to tbe Business Office and have the paper delivered regularly. MEDICAL. P. P. P. Is recommended by physicians because they see its healthy effects all around them. A leading physician in New York and director of one of the large hospitals, says, Feb. Sth. 1890, he has made use of the P. P. P. sent him, and was pleased to say P. P. P. proved effica cious in a number of cases, and adds, it is no more than he should have anticipated from the satisfactory combination of such well known drugs. A prominentrailway superintendent of Savan nah (name given on application) says be wa3 crippled bv a disease in lees and arms, power less to walk or eat without assistance, having lost the use of his limbs by rheumatism, mala ria, dyspepsia, etc. Pnysicians here sent him to New York, and tney returned him here, and ha was as complete a wreck as one could be and live. A course of P. P. P. has made him a well mac. P. P. P. is known among physicians in the South for its various and wonderful cures as the great blood purifler of the age. Blood Poisoning ■MMO———IPIT—ISTUiirn Primary, Secondary and Tertiary Syphilis, old s ires, pimples, blotches, scrofula", blood and mercurial poison, and skin diseas s are eradi cated by the use of P. P. P. Hosts of certifi cates are in < fflee to show ti e cures in these diseases where all other medicines have failed. Rheumatism Inflamatory, gout, sciatic, and its kindred diseases, with its excruciating pains, are cured by the wonderful bloo l cleansing properties of P. P. P. (Prickly Ash, Poke Root and Potas sium.) Catarrh Originates in scrofulous taint. P. P. P. purifies the blood, and this prevents catarrh. LIPPMAN BROS., Sole Proprietors of P. P. P.. Lippman's Block, Savannah, Ga. i ■ ————i n. in _ -u- LOTTERY. 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 Drawings held in the Moresque Pavilion in the Alameda Park. City of Mexico, and publicly conducted by Government Offi cials appointed for the rmrpotw by the Secre tary of the Interior and the Treasury. Grand Semi-Annnal Drawing, May CAPITAL PRIZE, #120,000. £*o,ooo Tickets at £*, £640,000. Wholes, £8; Halves, £4; Quarters, £2; Eighths. £l. Club Rates: 855 Worth of Tickets for SSO LT. S. Currency. LIST OF PRIZES. 1 CAPITAL PRIZE OF 8120,000 is 8120,000 1 CAPITAL PRIZE OF .10,000 is 40,000 1 CAPITAL PRIZE OF 20,000 is 20,000 1 GRAND PRIZE OF.. 5.000 is ... 5,000 2 PRIZES OF 2,0 fl are.... 4,000 5 I 'RIZES OF 1,000 are.... 5,000 20 PRIZES OK 500 are.... 10.000 100 PRIZES OF 200 are 20,000 880 PRIZES OF 100 are.... 38,000 529 PRIZES OF 40 are.... 21,160 APPROXIMATION FRIZES. 150 Prizes of $l2O app. to $120,000 Prize.s 18,000 150 Prizes of 100 app. to 40,000 Prize. 15,000 1?0 Prizes of 60 app. to 20,000 Prize. 9,000 799 Terminals of 840 decided by $120,000 Prize 81,960 2.289 Prizes Amounting to 8057.120 All Prizes sold In the United States full paid In U. S. Currency. SPECIAL FEATURES By terms of contract the Company must de posit the sum of all prizes included in tbe scheme before selling a single ticket, and re ceive the following official permit: CERTIFICATE.—I hereby certify that the Bank of Lonflon and Mexico has on specie! depot! the necessary funds to guarantee tne payment of all prizes drawn by the Loterid de la Beneficencia Public or, A. CASTILLO, Intervenior. Further, the Company is required to distrib ute 56 per cent, of the value of all the tickets la prizes -a larger proportion than is given by any other Lottery. Finally, tbe number of tickets is limited to 80,000—20,000 less than are sold by othsr lot teries using the same scheme. For full particulars address V. DsswH Apartado 788, City of Mexico, Mexico. SHIPPING. SaTannah, Beaufort and Way landing!. THE STEAMER “ BELLEVUE,” Capt. T. E. BALDWIN, TTTILL LEAVE steamer Katie's wharf every ) Y WEDNESDAY and FRIDAY at 10:30 a. m., landing at B'uffton on the Wednesday trip. Returning, leave Beaufort every MONDAY and THURSDAY' st 8 ail, landing at Bluflfton on the Monday trip. FARE 81 90 i ROUND TRIP.. $1 ”5 For further information apply to J. G. MED LOCK, Agent. mTT-p MORNING NEWS carriers reach I l-J i-i every part of thecity early. Twenty- XXX XJ five cents a week piys for the DaiW-