Newspaper Page Text
L taPP y HgABT* AT ROCKY FORD.
I, =-)orn F. Cooper Marries Miss
M 3 Nellie S. Jonaa.
, tty wedding took place on Wednes
* !t jbt at the quiet little town of Rocky
on the Central railroad.
Vr Seaborn F. Cooper of Meldrim and
Viis Nellie E., daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
r n Ynes, were uniUad in marriage at
ft Tome of the bride.
tb r£e ceremony performed by Rev
r r Flanders, pastor of the Scar boro and
L ' crd Methodist churches, in a very
manner, and waa witnessed by a
. of friends of the contracting
J*r*J mi* Laura Zeagler of Sylvania was
„{ honor, and Mr. John N. Bhearouse
■SLloTwas bsst man. Master Reani.
oJ ' “!.V Miss Millie Taylor of AugusU,
and niece of the bride, were the
of the bride’s home was very
decorated with palms, farua
pal net oes, jessamines vines and all
beautiful flowers. The arrange
’ in the bridal parlor were especially
,‘jne and effective.
cfc f s th “young oeople stood beneath the
w tii arch, loaded down with rare plants
.id flowers while the marriage service was
fmoressively performed, they looked the
of 'confiding love, happiness and
the ceremony Mr. and Mrs. Cooper
were the recipients of many warm congrat-
U About 11 o'clock a sumptuous supper was
nerved in the handsomely decorated dining
room Upon tbe dlniD * room center table
was displayed and greatly admired a min
iature engine and cars-typical of the great
Central system. The bride and groom
were the recipients of many beautiful and
useful presents.
Mr Cooper is a most estimable young
man in the employ of the Central railroad
ss agent of the new town of Meldrim, and
the bride is the accomplished daughter of
hr and Mrs. L. D. Jones. The young
couple start in life with many bright pros
pects and it is the wish of tbeir many
friends that health, happiness and pros
perity may bless their union. Mr. and Mrs.
Cooper left on the Central Thursday morn
ing for Atlanta and thence to Monroe, the
home of the groom’s father, Hon. V. A.
Cooper, present member of the general
usenibiv from Wa toil conntv.
Among tbe guests present were: Miss
Ada Rahil, Eden; Misses Howard, Moore
sad Zeagier, Mesirs. Zeagler and Newton
of Sylvania; Mr. and Mrs. Roberts, Mrs.
?. H. ami Mrs. George C. Burns, Miss L.
Burns and Mr. Beauregard Burns of Ogee
cbee; Mrs. J. E. Taylor of Augusta, sister
of the bride; Capt A. A. Winn and J. N.
ghe i rouse of Guyton, Mr. J. Furman of
Meldrim, Mrs. F. Parisa, Messrs. W. M.
Edwardy, Edwin Perrin and Mr. Ehrlich,
of Savannah; Mr. and Mrs, H. C. Kittles,
Mr. and Mrs. C. Wolf, W. C. Sheppard,
George Hag in, Mrs. J. L. Davis, Mrs. Dr.
J. May and (laughter and Dr. W. H.
Poster, of Rocky Ford.
AT THE COURTS.
Oossip Picked Up Here and There In
the Court Rooms.
Tbe superior court bogies the March
term to-morrow morning at 10 o’clock.
Fred Rudolph, a notorious oolored crook,
was run down yesterday by Detective
Wetherhorn for steeling a chest of tools
from A. O. Edwards. Justice Naughtin
committed Rudolph to jail to await the
action of the grand jury of the superior
court.
Harry Mitchell, a young colored msn,
was committed to jail yesterday Justice
Naughtin, for forging tho name of another
colored man to a thirty-day note for a
small amount.
The total fines in the police court yester
day morni g amounted to ISO.
The statement in yesterday’s Morning
News may have suggeated the idea that
Mr. M. Y. Maclntyre teas sued in the case
of Pferdme ges, Preyer & Cos. vs. C. C.
Campbell. This would be an error. The
firm of M. \. & D. 1. Maclntyre was
garnished, and having funds of the de
fendant in their hands as his factors, one of
the firm signed as surety a bond to dissolve
the garnishment given by the defendant
In this way only were they connected with
the case. The defendant (Mr. Campbell)
has already filed his motion for a
new trial upon the grounds that the
verdict is contrary to law. te the
evidence, and to tiie charge of the court
and it wms that the verdict rendered ili
have to be set aside even as to Mr. Camp-
Mi. ’1 he judge instructed the jury that he
as liable for the difference in the market
to the day the cotton was to be delivered,
atd not for the value some weeks later'
when plaintiffs supplied the deficiency, and
vhe.i the market had materially advanced.
The defendant, through his counsel, ad
. *hiß liability. It seems, however,
that tbe jury did not respect the charge
aid the verdict will, therefore, have to be
at aside.
ALL KINDS OF FOOD GOOD.
Sanitary Inspector Deevergrera' Re
port Upon Market Produce,
Inspector Desvergers of the Citizens’ San
itary Association, in his report of inspec
tions of food produce in the Savannah mar
ket for the week ending last night, says
that dressed beef, dressed mutton, dressed
"iahty ven * son aT eraged excellent in
at!d alive, averaged
’ r Ck e ui b ? ef ‘ P ickl ed tongues, pickled
H* feet, pickled tripe, corned me ts and
“Iso averaged
rl. asdld fish, oysters, prawn and crabs.
jn T a vegetables averaged excellent,
good. Fruits, such as
j OO ’ “ ana na3 and grapes, averaged
tl V'a ‘','? ector veporta that the market
food nr a bIS Kee P a close eve upon
9 brou K ht nto the city market,
‘er U? Z'Vi? ttUe 'diou upon the man
mark-t | Wh,Ch the , stalls a:ld floors of the
V ar “ keDt ‘ Hb sa >' s . however,
othlr h . n “ at ® nal condition of the stalls and
not wo n?°w ttoents of the market house is
and tion of bla the cit - v - aid tnat the oon
rl:° Q _ of a “““her of the vaults and of tbe
p roa ,, g L! ays of the basement is a re-
Rail and c.tosana.
® 3 a Spß9r ’ who hafl hi leg taken off
an,l Fio-H d9at ? n J' ie *crgi. Southern
this cirj ld<l , yester d a >’, formerly lived in
PA'i f ‘ ra ’! eng,De OQ the Savan-
Th - da Qnd Western railway.
Chronicle compiled the
1890 an v k'.',? 5 155 railroads for January,
comnanU *■ Fo £ the lattßr P Brlod thesi
R S,T a nd. *36.773,531. against
r ...., for the former month, a com-
Th ealnof *-’ 16J,328. or over 6.2 per
bui 3•> 8 ootn P ara tive gain in mileage was
UL per cent.
A>J t 8 1 “ t WBt ‘h the Engineering
iresn ~,,p u i ‘ ,bl ’d statistics showing toe
T nited rail( vay construction of the
Aceordi [' ,r „ tl ' e ca endar year 1891.
IS 81 a Lo to 1 , e figures presented
have ° f l all ' va T projec ed. which
Placeri proß P ect of bing completed or
foie ;„? Dd^ r contra ct or construction be
mUesor loV lm - Ct this mileage 9,279
iected l >er cent- of tiiejtotal, are pro
the r .- the el *hteen southern stales. In
cent* ‘, rn section of thecountry the chief
York anH a^ ,vit y are in nhe states of New
thf-at M t„ Pennsylvania in the east and
the wo.-'* °i^ ontarla and Washington in
the f 1 ®** of Washington takes
mm,,, „ w . lt h. 1,478 miles, and Alabama
H or ,'i, “, ext ith 1,157 milas. Georgia and
\e-v v' a r° lna have over 900 miles each,
ind pl° rk Texas °ver 800 miles each,
iv- r ,w, lis -' f i ’ a:i ic, Tennessee and Montana
trnonk®? eacb - Tbe Projeottd con
. L “divided as follows by groups of
New Eugiand, 817 miles; Middle,
L‘?. “•**:. north central, 1,636 miles;
; 1 -Atlantic, 2,253 miles; south central,
tortW ,U ! ! “ S; southwestern, 2.670 miles;
-feS™’ 2 * 513 milOS ’ and Facifio
THS WEEKS AMUSEMENTS.
The Theater Open but One Night—
Tbe Archer Conoerts.
The present week will not be a very pro
lific one in amusements. The theater wiU
be open but one night, Friday, for Rice’s
Evangeline. The Japanese Village will
continue for several days at Mas.nic halL
The organ concerts bf Frederic Archer,
at Christ church, Thursday and Friday
nigbes, will be the musical event of the
week.
Eeauttful Evangeline.
Rice’s beautiful “Evangeline” will be the
attraction Friday night. Of the company
and the play the Kansas City Timet recently
said: “The familiar piece is kept In ex
cellent order, and age seems to bring no
objectionable wrinkles. The staging and
costumes are all that people have learned to
expect in this production, while the princi
pal characters are well bandied. Miss Patti
Stone is the Evangeline, and looks the
part almost ideally, and is furthermore
possessed of a good, ringing soprano voioe.
Miss Geraldine McCann is a ‘Gabriel’ of
especial attractiveness of face and form.
Mr. Maflit, inimitable as the ‘Lone Fisher
map,’ is retained. The new ‘Catnenne,’
Richard Harlow, is a graceful and humor
ous success. Mr. Jere McAuliffe Is a good
‘Le Blanc.' Mr. Fred L. Turner and Mr.
James A. Reynolds do the ‘Heifer.’” The
sale of seats will begin Thursday morning.
The Christ Church Concerts.
The organ concerts at Christ church
Thursday and Friday nights by Frederic
Archer, tbe celebrated ,English organist,
assisisted by leadiug Savannah vocalists,
will be interesting concerts. Theno w organ
in Christ church will then be heard for
the first time. Mr. Archer’s ability and
resources as a master of the organ are un
questionable, and his power of making that
grandest of instruments do its beet is. even
to the uninitiated, a source of wouder.
It does not taice long after be begins to
play to realize that he is a master of tue
seldom fully mastered art of organ playing.
Thousands of people hear an organ every
Sunday in church and never really know
what organ music and orgau playing is
un il they bear Archer play. He is beyond
doubt the greatest of livlug organists, and
Savannah Is fortunate in being able to hear
him.
Stage Notes.
Kate Claxton will produce anew melo
drama in the spring. It is called ‘ ‘Two
Women.”
“Repertoiring” is the latest twist to the
atrical slang.
Fanny Davenport and Sarah Bernhardt
are having a wordy quarrel about “Cleo
patra.” which serves to aivertlse the play.
In tbe sixteen years that Ada Rehau has
been ou the stage she has played 124 parts.
LIGHTS ON SMALL CRAFT.
Recent Regulations Adopted Relative
Thereto.
Tbe following resolution relative to lights
on small craft was adopted at tbe thirty
ninth annual session of tbe board of super
vising inspectors and promulgated by the
treasury department in a circular issued
Feb. 16. The penalty for the infraction of
these rules D S2OO.
Resolved, That all coal boats, trading boats,
produce boats, canal boats, oyster bnats, flatting
boats and other water craft navigating any bay,
harbor, or river, propelled by hamipower,horse
power, sail, or by the current of the river, or
which shall be moored in or near the channel or
fair-way of ay bay, harbor, or river, shall carry
one bri ht white light forward, not leas than six
feet above the rail or deck.
Rafts of one crib and not more than two in
length, shall carry one bright white light on a
pole DQt leas than twelve feet high: three or
more cribs in length shall carry one whits light
at each end of the raft at the same hight. Boom
rafts with cross binders towed ahead of steam
era ou tne Mississippi and Ohio rivers, and ot her
waters flowing luto the Gulf of Mexico, and on
the Red River of tbe North, shall carry a white
light twelve feet high at the forward and of
the raft, and one such light at each side midway
betw en the forward and after end.
Rafts of more than one unb abreast shall
carry one white light on each outside corner of
the raft, making four lights in all. Bag or boom
rafts navigating or ancnoreJ in the fair way of
any bay, harbor or river shall ca ry a whi e
light at least twelve feet high at each end of
tbe raft, and one of such lights on each side
midway between the forward and after end.
Row boats shall carry one white liguttwo feet
above the stem.
Salas & Nicoll.
By a notice in another column it will be
seen that the firm of Salas & Wylly has
been dissolved, and that Mr. Salas has
formed a partnership with Mr. George A.
Nicoll, under the firm name of Salas &
Nicoll, which firm will hereafter conduct
tbe general lumber and timber business.
Mr. Salas, the senior member, is well
known in this city, where he
has carried on his present busi
ness for the past five years. He has made
for himself a reputation as an energetic and
careful merchant. Mr. Nicoll, his new
associate, has been, for the past six years,
private secre ary to Gen. G. M. Sorrel,
general manager of the Ocean Steamship
Company. Mr. Nicoll is a gentleman of
high character and careful training, and
has ample means, which be proposes to in
vest in the new firm. The bouse will doubt
less meet with the success that the merits of
its members entitle it to.
KEEP OFF THS GRASS.
Tho Suggestion to Beautify the City
t. eartily Commended.
Editor Morning News: V/ill you kindly
allow me space for a few lines in your pa
per?
In to-day’s issue of tho News appears an
article headed, “Beautify the Souares and
Streets,” an article w hich I am sure every
good citizen of Savannah is heartily in
sympathv with. I have traveled a great
deal, and” have seen nearly every city of
beauty and renown on both continents, and
if therefor my judgment is of any value, I
must say that Savannah is one of the most
attractive and prettiost eit es it ever was
my good luck to behold; and yet, in her
original, for she is original, and semi-trop
ical appeara ce, she could be made more
beautiful and attractive still by tiking
more care of the grass-clad squares and by
adding a few trees and some flowers here
and there.
It can be done. In Copenhagen, the
Athens of Northern Europe, possibly the
most beautiful and clean city in all the old
world (L mean modern oities), the hand
somest flowers, the most beautiful grass and
magnificent trees greet the eye of , tho be
holder in every direction; and if this can be
the case in cold little Denmark, why not in
the beautiful, warm and sunny south?
Savannah is rich in memories ot historic
value. She is a city that her inhabitants
may well love and be proud of—tbe greatest
seaport and the Empire city of tho south.
As such thousands of sirangers flock to ner
each and every year.
And as good cltizms we ought to do
whatever we can, with a hearty good will,
to make her just as attractive as we can.
Thanks to a kind providence, we have a
mayor who already has accomplished a
great, great deal for our city. Why not, Mr.
Mayor and gentleman of the city council,
take steps to protect our squares, to plant a
few trees wherever they are needed, and
sprinkle a few flowers among the green
velvet carnets here and there?
Every good citizen is with you, and I am
perfectly sure that .Savannah can accom
?lish fully as much as any other city on ibe
ace of the great American continent.
Respectful, law-abiding citizens will always
respect a “Keep off the Grass.” Others must
be made to respect it. C. F Weber.
Wife— You don’t tell me that Prof. A has
been struck dumb?
Husband—Yes, l ist night. And he was mas
ter of seven languages.
Wife—ls it possible? And was be struck dumb
in all Sevan?— Tej)kt Siftinos.
THE MORNING NEWS: SUNDAY, MARCH 1, 1891-TWELVE PAGES.
FASHIONABLE DINNERS.
Their Effect Upon tha Health of Those
Who Partake of Them.
Brooklyn, N. Y., Feb. 38.—T0 give an
opini n in regard to the fashionable dinner
and its influence upon health, as I have been
asked to do, would be to arrogate to myself
superior wisdom and better taste than many
of my friends and neighbors possess. But
a two or three hours’ course dinner was
always to me au insupportable and unneces
sary bora. I have never had auy use for
these occasions and never shall have. That
this lack of appreciation of what is gen
erally considered the very climax of
hospitality and good cheer may be due to a
vital lack in myself, I am quite willing to
concede. I like a dainty lnncheon where
ladles are permitted to wear suitable cos
tumes, out I do not like to feel compelled
to remove a flannel under garment for tbe
purpose of exhibiting my neck and arms.
1 see no reason for thus endangering my
health, or sacrificing my modesty, or my
prejudice against this decollete style—
whichever my friends choose to call it.
But the objector may say, “One is not
obliged to bare one’s neck and arras.” This
is true. One could go in a stuff dress, aud
wear tourist’s ruffling in tbe neck and
sleeve, and still be allowed to sit at the
table, but when one is invited to a “swell”
dinner—what an appropriate term—one is
expected to wear a costume which conforms
to the prevailing style. It is almost as
unpleasant to depart from tbe etiquette of
such occasions as it is to shiver and flush in
a low body and no sleeves to speak of. I
honor the woman, however, who can at
tend a dinner party in a modest and health
ful gown. The examples of such must be of
the greatest value, and I am equally
ashamud of the women who wear gowns
immodestly low in the neck, and who are so
ignorant of the laws of health as to thus
recklessly expose themselves to draughts
and varjring temperatures.
There is still auother side to this dinner
party subject. W hile the prodess of eating
is going on, one can only talk to one’s im
mediate neighbors. There can be no gen
eral conversation, and, unless one has en
tertaining companions, there is nothing left
but to listen to the buzz of voices, and the
popping of champagne corks,and to see that
some sort of justice is done to the viands.
One very fashionable course at present is
tbe Bpeghetti course. This delicacy is not
broken up in the cooking, and one is ex
pected to hold tbe fork in a
perpendicular position, and after
winding it round and round this
instrument to carry it to tbe mouth with out
dropping or trailing it. lam sorry to say
it is considered a proof of familiarity with
good society—not to say the four hundred—
to crowd this mass into the mouth in tle
maaner described. To cut one’s spaghetti
and take it up in convenient and de.icati
mouthfuls is to show one’s self a very coars <
and common person. I am always very
coarse and commou on these occasions, and
very unfashionable, for my collar boms
and shoulders feel more comfortable
when covered, and I don’t like to
see goose flesh on any one’s arms, particu
larly mv own. At the last dinner party I
attended, a lady, who was so supremely
decollete as to be disgustingly naked, had
a severe obill which was only mitigated by
freqnent sips of oognac. She died a weok
later of nnsumonia, developed from the
cold caught at this dinner party. “O, I
wish I had worn a high bodipe,” the said to
me after the brandy began to take effect.
“Bend your waiter for a shawl,” I sug
gested.
“O, dear, no,” she replied with an ex
pression of anxiety impossible to describe,
“that would never do.”
These are some of tbs reasons why I do
not like the ultra-fasbloaable'dinner party.
There are others just as vital, but space
forbids me to pursue the subject.
My readers, aud especially those who
have asksd me for the “St. Dsnls roll”
recipe, would laugh heartily if I could tell
them my persistent and heroic attempts to
capture It, a id my various and ignomlniom
failures. I suppose if I had asked to see
the cook who made these rolls, in
other words, it I had gone to
the work in a straightforward way 1
should have succeeded. But I didn’t. I
attacked it diplomatically—that Is politi
cally—though not in the least as Wattorsou
went for Hill. I hinted, and praised and
sounded the depths of knowledge possessed
by assistants, in short made such an utter
goose of myself that I had not the face to
do what l should have done In the first
place. But the experience has provoked
many a hearty peal of laughter, and given
birth to some jokes which without it would
have been impossible. A young Brooklyn
housekeeper who was determined to get this
recipe or perish in the attempt invited a
few friends to luncheon the other day. I
must confess that I felt a little priok
of jenlousy as my eyes rested ui/on the Bt.
Denis roils. They were perfect in sppoar
a-ce, and when I asked “how on earth” and
all that sort of thing she responded that she
had just imitated and had not been able to
get even an official whisper regarding the
delicacies. Tnose much sought after rolls
are said to be thoroughly hygienic, and
they look like four very light and brown
little biscuits put together. “I took,” said
mv hostess, “one quart of sifted flour, a
little salt, a great spoonful of powdered
sugar, a scant half cup of sweet butter and
enough warm milk to make a soft
dough., Into this milk I dissolved one
half of a Fleischmann’s compressed yeast
cake, and when thoroughly mixed placed
tbe pan containing the dough in my bread
raiser. In two hours and a half it was as
light as a feather. Then I floured the
molding board and cut off enough dough to
make four little biscuts—a la St. Denis. I
cut each separately and then joined them
till I had a square of four, and so on until I
had used up my and 'Ugh. Then I put the bis
cuits into my bread-raiser for half an hour,
aud afterward baked them half an hour in
a quick oven.”
Those rolls wore just as satisfactory as
the ones I had worked so hard to get and
resembled them in appearance as well.
The bread-raiser spoken of J>v my friend
is a wonderful invention. Let" the da.- be
cold or hot, wet or dry, the bread always
raises perfectly and in "just such a length of
time. It is a great saving of work and
worry.
"What of the dress goods for spring and
summer?" lam asked. We have bad no
opening- yet, but spring bonnets are already
seen on the streets. There is anew material
for gowns called the Armadale zephyrs.
These goods are very dainty nnd lend them
selves beautifully to tea-gown effects. 8 me
of these designs are suitable for street wear.
Tbe Zephyrs will wash perfeotly and bid
fair to be tbe most sought after among thin
goods. They are as cheap as they are
artistic. Eleanor Kirk.
THROWING AWAY MONBY.
A Bhop Girl's Protest Against a Wo
man’s Great Extravagance.
From the New York Timet.
‘ ‘Some folks has money and some hasn’t,
and them that has it can spend it to suit
theirselves, I s’pose,” said a young woman,
evidently a shop girl, who had boarded a
down- town train at Twenty-third street.
She was talking with another young wo
man about woman’s extravagance in the
matter of dress. She was of tbe opinion
that if she were rich she would not throw
away money as some women did. but she
was liberal enough to allow that a rich
woman had a right to do with her money as
she pi ased.
"That’s all right,” the other young woman
said, replying to her companion’s philosoph
ical observation, “but once in a while I see
things which make me awful mad, and I
saw one of them to-day.”
"What was it?” demanded young woman
No. 1.
"Why, you know that woman who always
smells so strong of musk?” responded the
other. “Well, she bad a street costume
made up to-day that cost no end of money.
Wbat she spent on it would have kept me
comfortably for a whole Year. Do you
know what she did! She had a whole mink
skin set into the neck of the jacket, aud, not
content with that, she had the eves taken
ont of the minx and great big diamonds put
lo their plsoes—diamonds as big as the and
of mv little Anger."
“Real diamonds?”
" ‘Heal diamonds!” Of course, they were
real diamonds. They cost $165 apiece; the
bead of the department told me so. Now,
j wbat do you thiuk of that!”
“I think," said young woman No. 1,
“that the woman was a fool.”
“I think," said tbe other, “that she was
worse than that. I think she was down
right wicked. I don’t think a- y woman
has a right to be so extravagant as that
when there are people in New York who
are to poor that they are almost perishing
with hunger and cold.”
Con Nathan Whitney of Franklin Grove,
111, who was born Jan. *2, 1791, claims to be the
oldest living Mason. He joined the order in
1817.
CORSETS.
ii m
Listen
to plain facts about the Kabo
:orset. You can’t break the
>ones-for one thing. If you
io, within a year, you’ll have
/our money back. Soft eye
lets-that’s another thing that
an’t be had with other cor
nets. And hear how it’s sold:
if you’re not satisfied, after
a few weeks’ wear, you can
return it and eet your money.
A. R. ALTMAYER&CO.
AMUSEMENTS.
SAVANNAH_THBATER.’
Only One Performance, Friday, March 6.
RICE’S
BEAUTIFUL
EVANGELINE
With all its famous features. Under the Imme
diate supervision of Mr. E. K. RICE. CHARLES
J RICH, Proprietor and Manag-r. The most
popular Extravaganza on tbe American Stage.
40 Artists in the Great Company. More Be
witching, More Charming, More Fntrancin*
Than Ever. A World of Captivating Attrac
tions. Gorgeous and Dazzling Costumes, New
and Elaborate Bcenery.
Seats at Butler’e March 3d.
Next Attraction—Grand Opera by the oels
bratrd principal Artiste of the Emma Abbott
Cos., March 9 and 10.
ORGAN CONCERT
FREDERIC* ARCHER,
Assisted by Savannah -s leading singers, at
CHRISTCHURCH
Tharsday and Friday, March 5 and 6,8 p. n.
TICKETS. 50c. For sale at Ludden & Bates
S. M. H, and at Butler's Pharmacy,
ggggggff? ... LLHUJI'gJLBL-——!!-
SHOES.
V
R
I
C
K
S
ARE COMING
DOWN THE
LADDER
AT THE
MSI STORE
169 Bronslitoi Street-
BBOKXRs.
R. M. DEMEItE,
BROKKR,
NO. 5 DRAYTON STREET, SAVANNAH, GA.
Buy* and sell* state, municipal and railroad se
curities on oo n mission. Also real estate. I-oan*
neeotialed. Business respectfully solicited.
DA NIKI, HOGAN.
OPENEEE
Our Spring Stock, ita variety and beauty
are moreand more apparrnt.aiui last week'*
visit >re were e ithunanic over HOOAN’H
taste and liberal garnering from the world’s
expositions of all that is lovely for woman's
adornment,
WE REFER
This week particularly to our
CHINA SILKS
. PLAIN AND FIGURED.
Surahs in all colors.
PLAIN AND FIGURED
Silk Grenadines
FULL LIN* OF
White Goods.
SPECIAL !
50 PIECES FIGURED
Swiss Muslin
AT 30c.; WORTH 46c.
SILK WARP
BATISTE,
VEILING,
TAMISE,
GLORIAS
AND
BEN G ALINES
BLACK and COLORED
Dress Laces.
NEW FRENCH ROBBS, SPRING
PARASOLS, NEW FRENCH OHaL
LIES. UEPHYRB, ETC.
SELECT NOW FOR EASTER.
and. Hogan.
SHOES.
n n ii in
EVERYTHING
IN YOUR FAVOR.
A light store, freeh stock, atten
tive clerks, goods the choicest
pick*, prices the lowest poasibls onn
efstent with fair dealing. Can you
not see where your internet lies?
Don’t leave your interest and princi
pal both at the high prioed stores,
but
Come to Butler & Morrissey.
11 11 II II II
The
Leaders
IN
Low Prices
O M F T confound this claim with
L/WI v 1 the claims of others which
are not substantiated by facte. Our goods are
back of our prices, and we stand back of our
goods, ready to make every promlae good.
BUTLER & MORRISSEY,
Broughton St.
UUIIU.
THE
DE SOTO,
SAVANNAH. GA.
On© of the most elegantly appointed hotels
in the world.
Accomodations for 500
G-uests.
OPEN ALL YEAR.
WATSON & POWERS.
PULASKI HOUSE,
SAVANNAH, GA.
Uanagament atrlady flrvt-claaa
BNnatad in the bud ness center,
L. W. SOOVILLA
PLUMMER AND GA* FITTER.
ESTABLISHED 1803.
JOHN NfCOLSON,
30 AND 32 DRAYTON STREET.
Practical Plumber, Steam
and Ga3fitter.
All sizes of
IRON AND LEAD AND OTHER PIPES AND
COCKS.
A full line of Valves and Fittings, from % to
6 inches. Everything necessary to fit up Steam,
Hydraulic and Wind mill power.
Civil and Steam Engineers wiii find it to their
advantage to call.
BATH TUBS.
WATER CLOSETS and
WASH BASINS.
CHANDELIERB, OLASB OLOBKB,
And other articles appertaining to a first class,
honest establinDment always in stook.
INSURANCE,. '
CHARLES F. PRENDERGAST *
(Sucoessor to U. H. Footkxji A C 0.,)
FIRE, MARINE AND STORM INSURANCE,
106 BAY STREET,
[Next West of ths Cotton Exohange.l
Tslepboas Call No. 34. Savannah, Oa.
mnr MORNING NEWS earners reach
I M H every part of the sit} early. Twenty.
A II XJ five cents a week pays for the Daily.
DRY GOODS.
OTVPfIT IT 10.000 yards Extra Quality
\M -j A I White Striped Lawns and
ill I I fill Checked Nainsooks Slaugh-
JJU,Li,l ‘ ,Ll, tereci This Week at 5 Cents.
#
E KSTEIN’S
si si::; iti?ely ™
New Surah Silks! LAR&EST AND FIN"
New Fancy Silks! nnm PfllflpniTnH
New Faille Silks! LOI OfiLJiullUll
r R,'t n Si 'SI BF HIGH cuss
New Black Goods!
New Dress Goods! NOVELTIES”
New Robe Dresses! rmrm nnnnnj TM
New Dress Plaids! A 0111 llf WlB
New Striped Goods! sayahaj. ran-
New Grenadines!
New Styles Challies! ABLE GOODS AT
New Styles Satines! r nnrnnm nmnDP
New Printed Mulls! bUlfliOl miUIiO
New Scotch Zephyrs MAYS AT ECK-
New White Goods!
New Embroideries! STEIN S!
KMIETISCO.
CLOTHING.
A" THE weather
is so blooming changeable,
LJ Ll 1 NT don’t you know, that a fellow
can’t tell whether to advertisa
I IXT OVERCOATS
W IN, or STRAW HATS.
CONCERNING SPRING,
•
“Spring, gentle Spring,’’ and “In the Spring a young
man’s fancy lightly turns to thoughts of etc.,” is all
well enough in rhyme; but blessed if WE know where
Winter ends and Spring begins these days.
HOWEVER
Our Matchless Stock of fine SPRING- CLOTHING and
HATS IS HERE—and OUR remaining WINTER STOCK
jS still open to engagements.
T-A-IKIE YOUR PICK
IWTake a look at our “JOB” COUNTER.
B, H, LEVY & BRO.
TALKABOUT BARGAINS!
It will pay you to see our Goods and obtain our prices
before purchasing your
FMITBRH CARPETS AND MATTINGS.
We Are Offering Real Bargains.
M. BOLEY & SON,
IBS, 188,190 Broughton street.
7