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-V the INDIAN COUNTRY.
VIP’S I** THIS LIFS O? A BOR*
l?lt paa MAN*3 WlFg.
c f Varying Sorts In th© Nortli
B ple *ed Man's Home on a
v t>on~Tne Pence Siam When
Bei-Sollior. and In
froVl the Sew York Sun.
one little woman in the province
115 ,b -a a toss the line, who reads the
' 'V tho western Indian scare with more
* e ?° t appreciation ot what the dis
' h - mean than most persons possess.
P t ; b as"and k eps a country cross-road
6 a n,i the Indians of a neighboring
mon are among bis customers.
2 was a white man in the neighbor
‘ i , n kept catting roles on the edge of
reservation. The Indians warned
! w stop. He kept on, and one
inr about t iree years ego be was
f‘ 11 pside a bundle of poles dead, with a
■ ' be . e be had never any more brains
* be needed. When the Indians have
f l - used to a deed of this sort they act
„ rr peculiarly—very much as rebellious
t nren do - They sulk Bnd haDg about
and refuse their rations. Any
thing may lead them into open revo-
Bt n but fair and intelligent treatment,
10 m they usually get in Canad., is apt
1 . v mollify them and bring them
£ T“i tb the ration house and the old
r ?n*tnisi Idinw, while they were sulking
, , it, 2 me between war and peace, a
l i.' .f them strode into the country store
‘Vthe merchant’s wife stood behind the
ail alone, her husband having gone
f uniey The stately blanketed figures
Sf the bucks filled the little store. The
said “H w do?” The India .h
„ “ted but did it t speak. Their custom
hroact'with an anpearance of deliberation
Mcb finds expression in as much as two
kiits of silence even when they want no
mi™ ° than a plug of tobacco. This
t bey gradually settled into fixed
nsitioas, one against the door frame, two
!f ttr eo i barrels and boxes, the others
Lit the counter. They came at 10
nWk in the morning. At 11:15 o’clock
'. of them stid “whiskv.” In the new
winces no one is allowed to sell or give
Lor to an Indian on any pretext, and if a
man : as anything better than water
p drink he must have obtained a permit
tm the lieutenant governor, even if it is
jrreiv bottled beer or a family keg of ale.
Ttii little womau bad no whisky, and would
Cot have given tuo Indians a spoonful if she
lad owned a distillery. She said so.
The Indians grunted and relapsed into the
nflective state. In half an hour one said:
“Lcos: we want whisky; we go take it.”
Ha pointed to the floor to indicate that he
meant to go in tbs cellar and forage for the
stuff. The woman was alarmed. Ever
since* the murder of the pole cutter the
entire white community for miles around
had been uneasy in proportion as the In
dians had been sullen and impudent and
re 4 ve. The worst was feared, and this
little woman confidently believed that the
hour for the expected massacre bad
arnved, and that it was to begin in her
store and with her life. Every one in the
Julian country knows that when
the Indians deliberately violate the
law or the conventionalities
they do so because they have decided to
revolt. And here were twelve braves an
n uncing that they meant to have the for
bidden fluid—a; and advancing toward the
back of her sto. eto ransack her cellar. She
did not know what to do. She was so
frightened that her sense left her, and noth
ing was left bu: her sex. So she acted like
a woman. She came around from behind
the counter and put her little brown hands
against lbs shoulders of the leader of the
twelve and began to shove him toward the
front door. When she had shoved him up
to where the next one stood she spread her
little arms and shoved both men.
“Toil get out,” said she.- “Come, now,
you must all go out.”
She had not sufficient muscle to hold up a
AVinchester long enough to empty it. But
the shoved away, and the big, statue que,
nsewood-colored bucks fell steadily back
until they were all in a bunch in the door
way. Then she gave a mighty dash at all
of them, and said: “I’ve got a mind to call
ciy husband” (he was fifty milesawav), and
she gave another shove and landed them
out on the porch. Then she shut the door
end bolted ,t, and, though I did not hear
ter say so, I will warrant she went up
stai: sand had a jolly good cry in further
justification of that sex that draws upon
its weakness for its strength.
Her name is Mrs. Lemoine, and she and
her husband came from Cnicago. They
keep store in IVhitewood, Assiniboia, oppo
si'e Mr. Higginbotham's— the only two
stores in a vns country where the houses
ere often ten miles apart and men go mad
from loneliness.
Just before she entertained me sho had
Eor.e out lino her backyard — which is
nntisn America—to see what was annoying
her chickens. It was nearly dark, and she
cum just make out the hencoop and a
white skirt on a clothesline. All the rest
was haze. S' e stooped to open the hencoop
“ cor i and noticed that it was ajar. Before
she rad time to raise herself erect again a
. wolf lounged out of tne lattice do or
and passed in front of her. She bad
tot time to think, she savs, so sne iust
raised up and clutched her skirts and threw
tnem up and down, crying “Shool Shoo!”
to the wolf, as if she mistook him for a hen.
ihe wolf stiffened his limber joints and
urued and stared at her, amazed. She
at ,,, lm aild whipped her skirts again.
Shoo, said she. A panic seized the
. Probably never before had one
”, 1118 wind seen himself so justly
and acutely measured. The contempt, the
impatient scorn, expressed in this treat
nient cut him to the sen), and he fled with
yowl from before the woman. Mrs. Le
mome tells that story gravely, like a propo-
Htion in mathematics. She adds that she
as Jimp ail over” when she got back.
* " raea have humor more often than they
Possess the sense of it.
B 6 , ee more Indians in journeying
°ss L; nada than in crossing this country.
ar . e o£ all sorts > from the kind t. at
* bead work and make baskets, near Mon
rea. and that have not shot anything
mote dangerous than a rabbit in three
rf,r at D, us ’, to the warlike and magnifl
, Blackfeet, Bloods, tSarcees, and
bni fV !S °I l } ie P lains < and the dirty,
T>n' ea “** d ’ fish-eating wretches of the
, . _;,h G eoast. Up in the forests of the
, thcre ar e fewer Indians, and
ey are a degenerate lot, remnants
tha Ojibbeways, wood frees
£L Crees. The large game
• apt I" 0 htt poor and wormy, and fish
. . ae *[. raal stay. It is surprising how
*, ® atl k will sap the manhood of a race.
‘ “ e ed g® of the woods the 7 go to cnurcn
Sundays, and save up, the rest of the
iw t'* bu y Louisiana lott ry tickets,
-j®, “eke their money by working for the
luason Bay Ccmnauy, for white sports
and tt , s fishermen and lumbermen,
appers and hunters. Many live in cabins,
Fr. u are of pure hr® 6 ' l - Those who have
or e L c , , ln their blood are most often Itnpov
ir!., e . d . b y the admixture. The ambitious,
illustrious and respect-worthy “breeds" are
I,® that have Scotch, Irish or Enghsh
wii i * them - The deeper you go in the
n is or wood and water up north the more
, n r ?u“ d are the I diacs, until at last you
them in far separated tepees, owning a
r . o i le ’ a f( l a w, tvro dogs, aw old gun, a
coffee pot and blankets. Nobody is afraid
i , them and nobody respects them. They
? he®; l kept from starvation by the
audsen Boy Company through so many
■ titers that their debt is forgiven them.
that i Cai themrelves by tribal names, but
tribal f , have no government or
out on the plains, where the present
> IS - yh>l see tho Indian as
ear.y like what he wag as it is poggjble for
“ race to be that has lost its all—the buffalo.
The true heaven of those Indians is in their
memories, behind them. Their young
bucks si-g of their vict ries and scalp* be- ;
cause their songs and ceremonies require it. ,
tut very few of them ever saw the buffalo !
or (except in c-riain tribes) ever t>x>k part
in a fight. However, they have the old j
men with them to tell of the past,
and their legends, traditions, dances, and
sports all te and to keep the Ind an
nature vigorous, even while it is idle. Asa
rule, they are not big or strong men as
compared w.th the whites, but they com
mand respect became the white man's
knowledge of them has never gotten be
yond the conviction that they are ex
tremely unreliable. They are the play
things of impulse and emotion, and one
will langh at you to-day f r doing that for
which the next one would kill you. With
them it L all as it happens, and the conse
quence is that bad white men have adopted
the motto that "the only good In
dian is the dead one.” while white
men of better nature are apt to
respect, the Indian, a-.a are certain not to
trifle or fool with him. Asa ru e the In
dians and our soldiers get along well
together. The Indian likes a soldier b -
cause he is a lighting man, and I suspect the
fee ing is reciprocated for the same reas n.
At all events, it is a mistake to suppose that
th>-se opposing forces hate one another; just
as it has always been a mistake not to let
the war department manage he Indians.
Few readers in the east understand what
an lnd an reservation is. It is simply a
slice of nature, unimproved, unfenced', un
altered. The reservations differ with the
varying regions in which they occur. One
may be well wooded and watered, and the
next a half bare, hot tract of sand and
buttes and alkali. On each reservation the
Indian agent has his quarters, which are
apt to be very comfortable and “civilized,”
like a farm house or a frame cottage such as
is the typical home in every thrifty village.
The meat contractor has his slaughter
house elsewhere in the reservation, and
near it is apt to be a sort of storehouse,
where accounts and supplies are kept. The
Indians ire where how they please. In
one reservation y u And considerable land
under tillage by them, in another very
little. They are encouraged to undertake
the simplest forms of faru lug,hut at the best
the larger number live idly. The major.ty
live ii tepees, as of old, but the tents are of
cotton instead of buffalo bide or buckskin.
The boys from the Indian schools who have
b°en taught the | use of tools go
back Jto the reservation and
build cabins. This is is to show the stay
at-homes what an Indian can do, if he will.
These cabins are increasing in number very
rapidly, but he who looks for the pict
uresque will halt at the tepee every time.
The hfe within is not altogether what we
cms dor luxurious. The ashes of the lodge
fire blacken the middle of the grou id, as
the smoke of the fire has dyed the walls of
the tent: tne Women aro squatting here and
th-re, and the dogs and children are
running in and out. If there is a baby, it
may be stark naked in its mother’s hands,
or it may be done up in a sort of a stocking,
and thrown down among the litier of rags
and blankets on which the people sleep.
The rations of raw meat bang from hooks
or on wires overheads, and the men recline
royally, pice in mouth, in the place of
honor, precisely opposite the flap or hole
which serves as a door
Just now, if a white man meets an In
dian on the northern plains, they watch
.each other from afar. The white man does
not know what will be the outcome of the
encounter. Nor does he know how many
unseen red men are in hiding on their bellies
in his path. He makes the peace sign,
raising one hand, palm out, and then he
waits for a repetition of it from the
red man. If he gots the sign he is
only slightly relieved, but under that ten
sion the slightest relief is grateful, and be
spur3 his horse and m-eis his coppery
brother. They salute, tobacco or water
passes from one to the other, perhaps, and
they go on together or apart, as it happens.
Julian Ralph.
A OOKPSS FOUND AT SEA.
The Body of a Beautiful Woman
Found Afloat Off Florida.
From the Key Went Equator of Dec. 30.
Capt. J. W. Gardner left Cape Sable
about daylight yesterday morning for Key
West alone in bis schooner, Maggie Valdez,
and at 7:30 <>r 8 o’clock a. m., bet ween Cape
Sable and Harbor Key, about forty live
miles from Key West, he sighted an object
floating on the water, a few roads ahead of
him, which looked like a corpse. The wind
was blowing a small gale, making- the water
very rough, while numerous sharks could
be seen in every direction. Some of them
would have measured fully eighteen or
twenty feet in length.
In spite of the heavy wind and high seas,
however, Capt. Gardner directed his vessel
to the floating object, which, to his horror
and asionishmeut, proved to boa young
lady, not more than 30 years of age, who,
even in death, was possessed of marvelous
beauty, with perfectly shaped body and
limbs.
Hastily fastening a large fish-hook to his
boat pole, Capt. Gardner, with difficulty,
finally succeeded in ho king into the dress
of the corpse and secured the pole to the
side of the schooner; but, being alone, ho
could not give much attention to the corpse,
and he heavy seas soon broke the pole, and
the dead woman was again left to the mercy
of the waves and the innumerable sharks.
Capt. Gardner savs, however, that he
made several futile attempts to again secure
the corpse and t w it to Key West, but the
angry waves baffled every attempt, and be
was forced to reluctantly leave the body of
the unfortunate woman to furnish food for
the ravenous sea tigers.
His description ot the da id woman is as
follows: About 5 feet 5 inches in hight,
weighing probably about 145 pounds; long
silken brown locks floated in a tangled mass
about her head and neck; the be mtiful and
well-shaped neck was encircled with
an elegant gold chain; the left
wrist w ith a massive gold
bracelet, while the right arm hung limp by
her side and sank deep into the water,
caused from the fafct that the right shoulder
had been cut by the jaws of a oanabalfstic
shark; the face was exquisitely beautiful
and the complexion like alabaster: however
the nose, ears and eyebrows were more or
less disfigured by small si a-erabs, which
hung in schools to tbe clothing. The feet
we e encas and in elegant blue silk stockings,
aud tbe dress was made fa rich gray ma
terial. cut and trimmed in the latest style.
Her age was not over 18 or 30 years. Gard
ner thinks that the lady was one of a pleas
ure party, aud accidentally fell overboard
during the night from a pleasure yacht
and was drowned, this accounting for the
absence of the shoes or slippe s. Or, it may
be possible s e fell overboard from some
passenger steamship.
FOB GEORGIA POLITICIANS.
.Senator Colquitt continues too weak to
attend tbe sessions of the Senate.
Mrs. Crisp and daughter have arrived at
Washington a 1 and are registered at the
Metropolitan hotel.
A special from Homer to the Atlanta
Journal says: “An election comes off shortly
for a tax receiver, and there are five white
candidates and one colored for the position.
There are enough darkies to elect their man,
Love Martin, if some of the white men
don’t withdraw.”
The Washington correspondent of the At
lanta Journal writs*: “Members of con
gress run in pairs as a rule. Two men take
a liking to each other, and their liking
ripens into friendship, and after that they
are chummy. You do not see this member
without seeing his friend, and vice versa. I
have not been able to locate tbe Georgia
team on the matter of their friendships, but
I can speak for at least four of them. There
Mr. Carlton and judge Cothran
of South Carolina, who affiliate
not only in a business wav but socially. Mr.
Urirnes'bas an associate in Mr. Robe tson,
a young member from the Baton Rough
district of Louisiana. They are quite in
separable. Mr. Lester, too, has a Louisiana
fried. Mr. Boatner, of whom he is very
fond, and Mr. Turner and Col. Bob David
son of the Tallaba see (Fla.) district are
pronounced companions.”
THE MORNING NEWS: SATURDAY, JANUARY 1891.
CA.NDUB CHIP ■
A Cold Wave— S', pmantsef Orangee—
A Grove Sold.
Candler, Fla.. Jan. 2.—A severe cold
wave passed over this section Sunday night
and Monday. Heavy frost and ice formed
m exposed places. It was at first feared
that the ycung vegetable crops were in
jured, bu’ they are coming out all right.
Some of the tender growth cn orange and
lemon trees was nipped, but no material
damage done.
Dr. O’Neili of Havana, 111., has purchased
the five-acre orange grove of G. H. Harr,
in town, and will make this his home. The
grove is just beginning to bear. Price paid,
11,200.
Rav. H. S. K igwin of Orlando preached
in the Presbyterian church last Sabbath
morning and evenii g to a large congrega
tion.
T. M. Ricards is shipping his orange crop
from his fine grove. He will have 800 or
300 b xei of excellent fruit, the most of
which he has soid delivered on board cars
here. Quite a number of sales have been
made lately and a uumbe -of groves are
b Log planted. The faith of ti e people in
the orange business s ems stronger than
ever, a .and the new system f selling the trait
at home meets with great favor.
A TEAM’S CLOSE CALL.
They Dash Across a Railroad Just
Ahead of a Trair.
Orlando, Fla., Jan. 2.—The team of
Jessie Bumby ran away yesterday while he
was trying to hold them, and they crossed
the track of the Tavares, Orlando and At
lantic railroad just as a train backed around
the curve. The train struck the wagon,
and made kindling of it. Bumby was
knocked down, but not hurt, and the horses
ran away with tne tongue and front wheels
of the wag n. They also were uninjured.
A bTIAUSa RUNS AG-.OUND.
She Was Floated by the Next Tide
and Escaped Damage.
Fernandina, Fla., Jan. 2. —The United
States steamer Armeria of the lighthouse
department struck on a lump caused by a
sunken buoy while entering this harbor
yesterday. She lay six hours hard and fast.
The weather was calm and she came off
without damage on the following tide. She
did not take a pilot, as the chart showed 17
feet and the steamer drew but 13. The
obstruction has been reported for the past
six months, but no effort has been made to
remove it.
People at Suwannee Springs,
Suwannee. Fla., Jan. 2.—The follow
ing are among those at present at Sulphur
Springs:
Mrs. H. S. Haines (wife of General Man
ager Haines of the Savannah, Florida and
Western railway), servant, her son, C. O.
Haines, purchasing agent, and her
daughter, Miss Miriam, came in the general
manager’s private car. They will remain
several weeks.
J. B. and J. R. Maddocks of Savannah,
Ga., came to-day, on account of ill health
of the former.
Louis W. Buckley and wife, former cor
respondent for the New York Daily Court
Bulletin and Florida Times-Union, ar
rived tc-day.
Mrs. Judge Hopkins of Atlanta, Ga.,
came Monday last, and will tarry for sev
eral weeks.
Other guests are Clinton Felder of Sa
vannah, J. H. Cook and wife of Brooklyn,
George Storey White and Miss White of
Malvern, Va., and C. A, Woolsey of Jersey
City.
Baldness ought not to come till the age of
55 or later. If the hair begins to fail earlier,
use Hall’s Hair Renewer and prevent bald
ness and gray ness.— Ad.
FOR GEORGIA FARMERS.
Albany News: J. M. Chessire, manager
of Col. John P. Fort’s Tompkins place, has
marketed from a two-mule farm this year
fifty bales of cotton, and has stored on the
p’ace 600 bushels corn, 50 tushels Held peas,
300 bushels sweet potatoes, a quantity ot
sugar cane, and other produce.
Mcßae Enterprise: Stephen Boney of
China Hill, in this county, is one of the
very best farmers in this section. He has
now' 500 bushels of fine corn for sale. He
made tee past season SSOO worth of good
hav, bo-ides plenty of potatoes, syrup, peas,
etc., and everything else usually grown on
a farm. He has also some line jersey cows,
from which ho gets from six to ten gallons
of milk per day.
A New Kins of the Dudes.
From the Athens iOa.) Banner.
A country bumpkin swaggered down
Broad street yesterday afternoon, and his
costume was a study in colors. He was
attired in a coat of vivid green, relieved by
a braided ermine; his vest was a pale and
sickly looking pink, while his trousers were
jet black. He gave his name a Jason Wil
son, from the rural precincts around
A' hens. He was certainly a quaint looking
bined with his Joseph-like appearance and
the expression he carried. When last seen
he was gazing admiringly at a street car
and surrounded by a ragged group of ragged
peablosson.s, who thought he was an
advertisement for some patent medicine
house.
CUTICURA REMEDIES.
Eczema on a Boy.
Sufferings Interne. Head 'Nearly Raw.
Body Covered With Sores. Cured
by Cutlcura Remedies.
■ Messrs. Stevens & Bruner. Monroe, N. C.:
Dear sirs— About two months ago, on your
recommendation, I bought a bottle ot Cuticura
Resolvent, one box Cuticura Salve, and one
cake of Cuticura Sovp, for my son, aged thir
teen yoars, who has bean afflicted with eczema
for a long time, and I am pleased to say that
I bedeve the remedies have cured him. His
sufferings were intense, his head being nearly
raw, his ears being gone except the gristle, and
his body was covc. ed with sores. His condition
wav frightful to beho.d. The sores have now
ail disappeared, his akin is healthy, eyes bright,
cheerful in disposition, and is working every
day. My neighbors are witnesses to this re
markable euro, and the doubting ones are
requested to call or write me, or any of mv
neighbors. WM. 8. STEPHENSON.
Winchester p. 0., Union Cos , N. C.
Disfiguring Humors.
I have t een a terrible sufferer for years from
diseases of the skin and blood, and have been
oblig' and to shun public places by reason of my
disfiguring humors. Have had the best of phy
sicians and spent hundreds of dollars, but got
no relief until 1 used the Cuticcra Remedies.
which have cured me, and left my akin as clear
and my blood as pure as a child's.
IDA MAY BASS,
Olive Branch P. 0., Miss.
Cutlcura Remedies
Effect daily more great cures of humora and
diseases of the akin, scalp and blood than all
other remedies combined. Cuticura. the great
Skin Cure, and Cuticcra Soap, an exquisite
Skin Purifier and Be.'unifier, externally, and
L'lmccsi Resolvent, the new Blood Purifier
and greatest of Humor Remedies, internally,
cure every species of itching, burning, scaly,
pimply, and hiotoby diseases of the skin, scalp
and blood, from inlamy to age, from pimple*
to acrofula, when the best physicians and all
other remedies fail.
Sold everywhere. Price, Cuticura, 60c. ; Soap,
25c.; Resolvent, $l. Prepared by the Potter
Drug and Chemical Corporation, Boston.
trtF Send for “How to Cure Skin Diseases M
64 pages, lOO testimonials.
DIMPLES, black-beads', red, rough chapped,
I I 111 had oily skin cured by Ccticura Soap.
WEAK. PAINFUL BACKS.
Kidney and Uterino Pains and Weak
nesses, relieved in one minute by tbe
llwli ConcvßA Anti-Pa™ Plaster, the first
* ■ and only pain-kiliing piaster.
rr T T 77 MORNING NEWS carriers reach
II |l, every part of the city early. Twenty.
A AA fl Te cents a week pays for tbo Daily,
HOUSEHOLD WORDS ALL OVER EUROPE.
Van Hojten’s Cocoa
“BEST & COES FARTHEST.”
Now that its manufacturers are drawing the attention of
the American public to this first and, ever since its invention,
the best of all cocoas.it wiH soon be appreciated here as well
as elsewhere all over the world. All that the manufactur
ers request is simply one trial, or, still better, a compara
tive test with whatever other cocoa it may be; then Van
Houten’s Cocoa itself will convince every one of its great
superiority. It is because of this superiority that the
English paper Health, says : “Once tried, always used.”
VST To avoid the evil effect* of Te* And Coffee use constantly VAN HOUTEN S COCOA,
which is* STRENGTHENERof t lie NERVES and ft refreshing art*’ nourishing bevorago. [&2
CASTORIA
for Infants and Children*
“Castor! a U so well adapted to chfldien that
I recommend it as superior to any prescription
known to me.” H. A. Aliens:), M. D.,
11l So. Oxford St., Brooklyn, N. T.
CLOTHING.
A F’t’ K It
CHRISTMAS it is DULL in
SOME LINES.
l r F ISBB IVEVER
DULL at LEVY’S. The
TRICES won’t allow it. We
had a tremendous Christmas
trade, but we are as insatiable
as the Beadle would have had
Oliver Twist. We WANT
MORE trade, therefore the
BIG DIBCOUNTB
-A_re still “oil’” till Janu
ary Ist. TSTot long —long enough
for you to get in your Winter
stock of OVERCOATS and
CLOTHING.
REMEMBER!
20 per cent, on OVERCOATS.
lO pen? cent, on CLOTPIIISTGr.
B. H. LEVY & BRO.
BTOVIto.
I —,
A r\ imp of indigestion sat.
/ \ Within tke chimney Flue
J A- And looked quite dre&ry as ke said I
** There’s naught for me to do!
I and my brothers, in the stove
Will never caper more.
It*s one- oF those wholesome things,
They call a Ta/Tre (BauzeDoor!
nr TOU WANT THE BEST.
Buy the CHARTER OAK,
WITH THE
• WIPF rAII7P OVFN DOORS.
Hnfleon\jby Eaero.lfiior xranufacturlnir Cos., St. iAtuin, Jtto. Sold by
CLARK & DANIELS, Agents, • - Savannah, Ga.
TO ™
LINDSAY & MORGAN’S
Broughton and Barnard Streets,
Where You Are Sure of Cetting
Best Goods for the Least Money!
.Children Cry for Pitcher’s Castoria.
Van tIOUTEX’S COCOA.
t;if. stavpabd co oa of the wori.’-i.
MEDICAL
Tni Cbhtacr Company, 77 Murray Street, N. Y
Cantoris oupm Colic, Constipation,
Sour Stomach, Diarrho-a. Kruotation,
Kills Worms, gives sleep, and promotes ill
gestion,
Without injurious medication.
aoTiiisa.
APPEL & SCHAUL =■
UKUIIAu
LmH Imv
J|BF
CURES HIS
and preterit* it with grwnt •ntUf*etion for the enre of
li formt end Uy*> of Pritnury, fieeomierv end Tertiery
SypLilii, PjrpniiiUc
£<>rt, GNruiuUr Swelling*, Ilbeiinmtiem, Malaria, old
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an impure condition due to menttrua! Irrernleritlee are
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cluaimi propoitio* of P. P. P., IVtckly Aih, Poke Root
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Cures dyspepsia
LIPPSIAN BEOS., Proprietors,
Druggists, Lippman’a Biook, BAVAHBAH, GA.
FRUITS, VEGETABLES, ETCL
W. D. CHAMPION.
SPECIALTIES!
Groceries,
Liquors,
Fx'uits,
Vegetables
and Produce.
QUALITY THE BEST. PRICES THE
LOWEST. GIVE US A CALL.
A. H. CHAMPION’S SON,
152 Congress and 153 St. Julian Streets.
INSURANCE.
JOHN N. JOHNSON. A. L. FARIC.
JUIIN N. JOHNSONS Cft
FIRE,
MARIIE, CYCLONE
INSURANCE.
REPRESENT ONLY 1 IKSi-OLASs COM
PANIES.
98 BAY STBEET.
Telephone 84. P. O. Pox 4
clotihv©.
Til Til to 18 Sill
NOW.
During the Christmas holi
days your thoughts and your
purchases were for others.
Generous—proper. Now you
have a right to think of yourselves
again. What are you needing
in our line for your comfort?
Buy it—the winter season isn’t
half over. So don’t try to
bridge along until spring with
your old clothes. You’ll feol
better if you are well dressed.
Everybody does.
By the way, we haven't taken
you into our confidence about
our Storm Coats. When you
DO need one, you know, you
need it badly, and in a hurry.
We've a cheap line, taking the
price as a cue, but an extrava
gant lot of quality in them.
They'll cover you from your
head to your heels—that's what
you want stormy days. Fair
weather Overcoats—plenty of
them. You can’t help knowing
how stylish they are—enough of
them are on the streets this
season. Your kind of prices,
too.
DR. JAEGER’S UNDER
WEAR nowhere else in Savan
nah but here. Full Drsss in all
its exclusive novelty and ele
gance. Luxury at commodity’s
cost-line. Anybody will tell
you so.
mills,
the
Reliable Outfitters
UOIKU.
THE
DE SOTO,
SAVANNAH. GA
One of the mot elegantly appointed hotel*
la the world.
Accomodations for 500
Guests.
OPEN ALL YEAR
WATSON & POWERS.
PULASKI HOUSE,
SAVANNAH, GA.
Management strictly first-clan.
Situated in the business canter, \
L. W. SCOVILLm
THE MORRISON HOUSE]
CIENTIIALLY LOCATED on line of streeS
/ van, offers pleasant south rooms, with
regular or table board at lowest summer rates.
New baths, sewerage and ventilation perfect
the sanitary condition of the bouse Is of tha
best.
Cob. DHOUGHTON ahd DRAYTON STREETS
WALL PLASTER.
Adamant Wall Plaster.
The new and only superior
substitute Tor common Lime
Mortar.
BECOMES PERFECTLY DRY AND HARD
IN 24 HODRSL
Indorsed by the leading Architects and Build
ers throughout the country, and needs only a
trial to be appreciated.
Any further Information will be promptly
given on application.
SOUTHEASTERN PLASTER CO,
. Savannah, Gra.
WonKg-OLD UPPER RICE MILL.
ifEWELKI.
NE W GOO DS™
RECEIVED FOR THE
HOLIDAYS.
FINEST selection of Ladies’ and Gents' Gold
Watches and Diamond Jewelry, Gold
Headed tanes and Umbrellas, Gold Pens,
Toothpiclcs, and a large choice of Clocks and
tine bterlnig Silver in elegant cases'
LEMAIRE OPERA GLASSES.
Gold Spectacles and Eye Glasses and a variety
of fancy articles at
A. L. DESBOUILLONS,
The Jeweler, 21 Bull street.
LEATHER GOODS.
NEIDLINGER & RABUNT
—sole agents for—
HOYT’S LEATHER BELTING. REVERE RUB
BER CO.’S GIANT BTICHED BELT, '
LACING, RIVETS and BELT HOOKS.
184 St. Julian and 154 Bryan Streets,
SAVANNAH, - - - GEORGIA
5