Newspaper Page Text
■yds light to sound.
OT3APH ASD CAMERA. TO
f frodlcj a living picture.
ftenuerfal Fowers of Edison's Kice
■togrep=. by Which 82.800 Photo-
Hgraphs Can be Taken Every Half
l io ur, So that an Opera Can be Wit
■ r.flseel at Home.
H From the Sete York Herald.
■ From the laboratory of the Wizard of
Keo: park there is coming an invention
Khich out-E<l isons Edison.
I It is the marriage of the phonograph with
camera —the union in one instrument of
H)und and sight.
[■With it the opera can be carried into the
S-iflor and the artists can not only be
■ear l but seen.
■ r> J( . popular preacher, the eminent public
K. Hll er. with it can all be brought to the
■ome.
■ xne new wonder will be called the “kineto
■raph," a strange sounding title to the ear
80-uay. but destined perhaps soon to become
11. ramiliur as locomotive or telephone, both
■t: ange words in their iufancy. Mr. Edison
Has 1 een at work on this newest conception
Kf his genius for three years. Now he
■cows that its base principle is right all
■hat remains to be done is to perfect the de-
Hals.
■ The new invention is a combination ma-
Hbine, in which the phonograph and the
■hot-graphic camera work together. It
Krill reproduce not only sound, but also a
■icture of what pasSes before it. Not a
■more instantaneous impression of objects,
■biit a continuous representation of them for
L considerable space of time.
Ur. Edison claims it will reproduce an
opera. The photographer will render the
music aud the photograpic apparatus will
reproduce the performers so that their
presence on the stage will be depicted, every
muscle of their faces will be seen to work,
their strides, movements, all will be true to
nature.
In other words, the camera will give a
continuous picture of a singer on the stage
for say thirty minutes, all his motions and
gestures, while its ally, the phonograph, will
record every note he utters.
To produce this result it was necessary for
the inventor to be able to take a series of
instantaneous photographs, following each
other in such quiok succession that no lapse
of time can be detected between the impres
sions recorded, and the series of pictures be
come in effect but one continuous picture.
And this Mr. Edison has succeeded in
doing. Operated by an electric motor, bis
camera will tako forty-six impressions in
each second of time, and in this way the
impressions are recorded bo rapidly that the
motions become resolved into pure motion,
instead of a series of jerks. The impres
sions are recorded on a long roll of ge atine
paper fastened to a spindle, whioh passes
over a photographic lens.
This is how Mr. Edison himself describes
the wonder: “The machine starts, moves,
uncloses, stops, takes a photograph, closes,
starts, uncloses, stops, takes another, and so
on, and forty-six of these are recorded every
second.”
And this process can be kept up for thirty
minutes without a pause. So 2,760 photo
graphs can be taken each minute and 52,800
every half hour. Thus the full raprssenta
tion of say, an opera, the movement on
the stage and music can be recorded by this
novel machine.
AS LARGE AS LIFE.
Mr. Edison has no doubt that he will live
to see an opera recorded and reproduced by
the kinetograph. Said he:
“I take, for example, a dress rehearsal of
‘Erminie.’ I will place my machine on a
table in front of the stage. The two agen
cies, the phonograph and the kinetograph,
will work together in harmony aud with a
continuous capacity of thirty minutes.
Both will start as the curtain rises. The
phonograph will record the music, while
the kinetograph will record the motions of
the performers at the rate of forty-six im
pressions per second. This will give a con
tinuous picture of what is going on on the
stage. Afterward the phonographic slips
will be developed, replaced in the machine,
and a projecting ions will be sub
stituted for the photograph lens.
Then the reproducing part of the pho
nograph will be adjusted, and by means
of a calcium light the whole effect can be
reproduced at life size on a white curtain
in front of an audience. The original scene
will appear to their eyes as true as life.
Taay will see the singers before them, and
all their movements and gestures will ap
pear as if they were actually on the Btage.
The colors will not appear, but otherwise
you will see and hear the opera as you see it
at the Casino. The machine is, in fact,
merely a mechanical eye.”
Mr. Edison has not yet a perfected ma
chine at work. He does not expect to have
a perfect one for some time yet. He has an
ex[>erimental one rigged up iu his workshop,
covered by a wooden box. It is a regular
photographic machine impelled by an elec
trio motor. In the top of the box was a
hole about the size of a silver dollar. The
machine was started and I looked through
the orifice. What I saw was the form of a
man about an inch in size boning and rais
ing his hat. The motions were natural aud
continuous and no break could be detected
between them. The picturo I saw was only
a negative, photographed on an endless slip.
At the greatest rate of speed no gap could
be noticed between the bows. They came
along smoothly and naturally. But when
the speed was decreased to twenty and
thirty pictures per second the difference was
at once noticeable. The motions became
jerky and irregular.
THEY CAN BE DUPLICATED.
Once set going by any power the camera
works automatically. It is the great speed
attained and the great number of impres
sions in a limited space of time which, Mr.
Edison says, enables him to get the pure
motion or continuous photograph depicting
everything that occurs.
The vibrations of light and motion are
gotten rid of. The two machines, the phono
graph and kinetograph. must work simul
taneously and exactly together or the re
sult would not baa success.
After the impressions are recorded auy
number of duplicates can be struok off and,
when perfected, this machine could be
operated in any household.
The time will come when they may be
erected in hotels, and a nickel dropped iu a
slot will enable one to hear and see Patti
sing one of her gems.
Nor need it be confined to operas. It will
reproduce anything that can be photo
graphed and the phonograph will attend to
the sound.
it can be applied to the ring and a whole
prize fight or sparring exhibition, with the
motions, blows and talk, can be reproduced
before an audience.
The w izard says it is very simple. “I wrote
an article some year* ago.” he said, “hinting
at this very invention. The papers made fun
of me—said Iliad better stop talking. This
made me mad, aud I determined to carry
the conception to a successful issue. 1 felt
confident that I could do it. The only
trouble about it was to take the impressions
last enough, so as to secure pure motion.
This I bare done. I intend to bave it ready
and in practical working shape for tbs Chi
cago exposition.
"Do 1 expect to make money out of itf
Well, I have never thought of tbar. I have
worked it out for amusement; it han been a
pot hobby of mine.”
Aud the greatest inventer of his age
looked quite content with the rest'- of bis
labvr.
Melons. Blood Poison, Catarrh
Uur*d qairklf sod permanent!r br attention to
diet ad a- ourae of P. !' p iFries)y Asti. Fuke
Kn*4 end poteesturui, Ny untile m alt tte aUsa
esadPatrd by the titnii awaumng properties
of I' p P fysysieu a4 lo4ig**lton. iu> all
We fnxMfuland dio*r—Ms forebodings, cored
sltli f P, t.~M.
UNDER THE SPHINX'S LEFT EAR.
Names of Napoleon end Wellington
Topped by an Illustrious American.
From the Chicago tinea.
“My sojourn in Europe,” says Cob Ed
ward G. Mason, president of the Chicago
Historical Society, “was wholly delightful.
The climate is salubrious, the scenery is ba
wilderingly novel, and the natives are
politely attentive. When I went to that
part of the world my health was failing;
for several years I had worked bard, and
my nerves had suffered a particularly
severe strain in that famous debate in
which, as president of the historical society,
I was compelled to engage with Hiram At
water of Kaskaskia relative to the exact
location of Pierre Menard’s barn prior to
the June rise of the Mississippi in lfMd. I
had been in Cairo but a week when I felt
folly restored, in cor pore et in men A I
return to Chicago splendidly equipped to
grapple with the brilliant sophistries of
Norton, the artful heresiea of Head, the
cold pessimism of Mac Veagh, and such
other specious persuas.ous as that talented
coterie with wuich I am wont to associate
may choose to bring to bear upon me.
“That object in all Egypt which most en
gaged my attention was the sphinx. I vis
ited it a number of times, and each time
regarded it with absorbing interest. My
companion at such times was the venerable
sheik, Kamir-el- Abdul, a man of profound
learning, and I never wearied of the rem
iniscences with which he beguiled the
tedium of the journey to ana from the
pyramids.
“I shall never forget my first visit to the
sphinx. Starting from Cairo before day
light we reached our destination just as the
solar orb, issuing from the glowing east,
cast upon that mighty stretch of sand the
losy flood of his gracious benediction. The
sullen bead and massive shoulders of the
beast-woman loomed up threateningly be
fore us; tne pitilessness of forty centuries of
desolate loneliness lay like a shadow on the
ruthless face and over the cruel eyei; here
at last 1 found the master expression of utter
hopelessness. Oi serving my unwonted
seriousness—for I was, indeed, awed by the
solemnity, the grandeur and the awfulness
of this spectacle— the good sheik sought to
dissipate the gathering clouds of sadness by
relating certain entertaining bits of histori
cal information.
“ ‘Here, light of the western world,’
quoth be, for he always employed the
ornate metaphors of the Orient when he ad
dressed me; ‘here the years meet and bpeak
with one another. Monarchs of all ages
have come hither to commune with this
mighty monument to the genius of the
dead; hither come artisans to wonder at
the work of an art they know not of, and
hither repair the sage, the poet, and the
philosopher to ruminate in the shadow of
this pile upon tbeawful mysteries of human
life.’
“ 'Yes,’ said I, ‘the spot is pregnant of the
most solemn associations. It was here that,
as 1 remember to have read in my geo
graphy, Bonaparte encouraged his soldiery
to battle by reminding them that from
yonder pyramids forty centuries looked
down upon them ’
“ ‘Napoleon inscribed his name upon the
sphinx at that time,’ said the good sheik.
Take your spyglass and you will see the
name cut upon the neck of the sphinx just
below the ear there. Below it appears, in
Turkish,the name of the great Sultan,
Abdul Hamed, while to the right, upon the
cheek, you will see the name of Buffoon ,tbe
naturalist.’
“ ‘The head and face of the sphinx S9ems
to be covered with names,’ said I, contem
plating the mammoth through mv glass.
“ ’lt is even so, pearl of the prairies.’ said
he. ’For many years the great men of all
nations and tribes have delighted to cut
their names into the deathless monument;
even your people come here to do this hon
orable office, as you shall see if you sweep
your glass to the left and right and up and
down the surface of that scarred face.’
“I did as the good sheik suggested, and a
thousand noble names were presented to my
enraptured vision by the aid of my glass.
Among my own countrymen Bayard Tay
lor, Franklin, Burr, Prescott, Beacher,
Grant, Longfellow, Emerson—yes, and a
hundred others, representing our statesman
ship, our theology, our literature, our arts
and our sciences, had engraved their proud
names upon this historic, this solemn, this
imperishable tablet. And the great geniuses
of other nations had been there, too; I be
held with unfeigned delight the immortal
names of Wellington, of Cuvier, of Goethe,
of Cavour. of Kossuth, of Dumas, of Dis
raeli, of Schopenhauer, of Heine, of Byron,
of Scott, of Burton, of Browning, and of
other noble masters. The sight inspired rne
with indescribable feelings, my bosom
heaved with conflicting emotions, and I
seemed to commune with the invisible
spirits of those who in this human life bad
borne those names.
‘“Would the star of the west choose to
set himself amid that galaxy?’ inquired the
sheik, Kamir-el-Abdul, interrupting my
delicious reverie. ‘I have brought with mo
a chisel and maul, and yonder Arabs will
provide us with a rope ladder whereby the
summit of the sphinx can easily be reached.’
“I thanked the good sheik for the sugges
tion. With what pride should I return to
my native land and announce to my com
patriots that my name was high in this ros
ter of immortals; with what feelings of
delight should posterity gather on these
blistering sands and rivet their eyes upon the
imperishable name of ‘E. G. Muson’ la big
capital letters! Kamir-el-Abdul signaled
to the Arabs and they approached. I was
eager for action; my whole frume quivered
with excitement.
“ ‘But stay,’ quoth I; ‘another moment, I
pray, until I decipher that name whioh
stands boldly out, high above all the rest.
Some transcendent genius has with consum
mate valor braved the perils of the en
deavor, and set his mark where no less
noble hand may reach.’
“I scanned that name eagerly. A solemn
stillness —fitting in its reverential absolute
ness —reigned all around. I saw and read
there, high above the rest, triumphing over
the names and titles of emperors, kings,
Drinees, warriors, statesmen and the rest,
blazed, as it were the polar star set in the
highest point of the heavens, the proud, the
pre-eminent, the imperishable name of ‘A.
C. Anson, First Base!’ ”
HE GOT WIILIaM’S SPANK’NG.
No Injustice Done, However, as All the
Other Passengers Testified.
From the Chicago Inter Ocean.
There were eighteen men and one small
boy in the Indiana avenue car as it swung
around Lake street on to State yesterday
afternoon. As it turned on Madison street
the ladies, must of them fatigued by chas
ing after spring dress bargains in the stores,
began to tile in. and one by one the men
rose and gave up their seats.
At Twelfth street there were twenty-six
ladies, one large old gentleman and tne
small boy seated, while a row of able
bodied citizens developed tbeir muscles by
dangling from the ends of straps.
The large old gentleman seemed to be
watching the small boy, but the small boy
was not watching the large old gentleman.
He sat with his hands in his pockets, fidget
ing upon his seat, and anon whistling in a
penetrating undertone. As each lady got
in he favored her with a Denetrating stare,
which performance caused the large old
gentleman to scowl.
At Eighteenth street two more ladies en
tered the car and reached for strap*. The
old gentleman instantly rose and with a
courtly bow surrendered bis seat to the first
of the ladies. Then he looked around for a
seat for the ottwr, and suddenly his eye (ell
upon the small boy, still seated and con
tentedly whistling softly to himself. A
pained ezpression spread over the old gen
tleman's face, and a startled gaze quickened
on the boy's features as a baud -a large,
firm hand reached hi* a. ru and a pained
votoesaid “William, get up this instant
aud give your s-st to the lady. Great good
ness! That I should live to see a bor of
ruins sitting a: and whistling stale a lady Is
standing! What will jour poor old m >lh*r
say wbeu i teii ber hUMI William, lam
THE MORNING NEWS: SATURDAY, MAY 30, 1891.
going to teach you here and now never to
disgrace my name again.”
The small boy listened open-mouthed to
the geutle tirade, and ineffectually trying
to wriggle out of the firm grasp, now sud
denly found himself elevated, face down,
over a large broad knee. He bad just time
to gasp: “I ain’t no boy of yours,” when
there ensued what is described aa one of the
gr.-ndeet and most symmetrical wbackings
ever administered in this or any other age.
During the performance the small boy hail
repeated his original statement three timee
in three different keys, and then he was set
upon the floor.
The conductor, a man of deliberation
evidently, here thought it his duty to inter
fere.
“Here!” he said; “you sh uldn’t lick that
boy if he’s no relation to you.”
“I never seen him before,” whined the
boy.
"What? What?” said the old gentleman;
“ does the young rascal deny his own
father?”
Then he put ou bis glasses, and his
expression of astonishment was beautiful to
see.
“Why.lbless me,” he exclaimed, “wty, l
thought it was my younge6t boy, William.
Dear me! I hope 1 haven’t inconvenienced
you, young air; you’ll excuse me, won’t
you?”
Here the car was running merrily past
Twenty-sixth street, and the boy said some
thing that souDded like “police.”
“O, you want to go to the police station?”
said the old gentleman benevolently. “Been
carried to far, eh! Well, we’ll rectify that
mistake at once."
And that large, kindly old gentleman
took the small toy by the collar helped
him gently over the hind platform, and
dropped him.
The boy was so bewildered that he stood
on the road until he was almost run over by
a hausora, while the old gentleman stepped
back into the car, where the men all touched
tbeir hats, while six ladies arose aad
quarreled with each other to give him a
seat.
COLQUITT*B NE ft LLVE.
He Says His Call Upon Gov. Bill was a
Deltghtiul One.
From the Hew York Recorder.
Senator A. H. Colquitt, who has all along
been looked upon as the leader of the sup
porters of ex-President Cleveland in Geor
gia, has returned hero from Albany, where
he went as the guest of Gov. Hill. He is at
the Victoria hotel, where Mr. Cleveland is
also a guest. When told that his visit to
Albany was attracting great attention in
political circles here, Senator Colquitt said:
“I read the telegram from Atlanta in the
Recorder. It is true that I went to Albany
Monday and made a social call upon Gov.
Hill. I had a very delightful time. •If my
visit has caused a political sensation in
Georgia I aui prepared to meet it. How
ever, Ido not see why any fuss should be
made about it.”
The senator was asked ab >ut that portion
of the dispatch which stated that no greater
insult could be offered him than the sugges
tion that he could never be weaned from his
Cleveland faith and that now a change had
“come o’er the spirit of his dreams.”
“It is true,” said the senator, “that I was
a friend of ex-President Cleveland and I
am still one. I was a strong supporter of
his administration.”
The senator came here over a week ago to
attend a meeting of the Slater fund trustees,
and has been living at the samo hotel with
the ex-President. The reporter asked if ho
bad called on Mr. Cleveland yet.
“I have not mot him yet,” the senator re
plied. “I have been very little about the
ho; el, and it Las happened that I have not
run across him.”
“Who is ymir choice for a democratic
candid .to for Presidout?”
“It is too early yet to discuss candidates
for President. If I was a New York demo
crat I would not say who my choice was.
The elec ion of a governor in tho fall should
determine the choice. I should favor a can
didate on principle and also consider hit
availability. When the time to make the
choice comes I may favor a good western
man instead of taking one from New York.
I don’t know if we have an available man
in the west, but if Gov. Campbell should
carry Ohio again this fall he will be In the
list of available®. But now I don’t want to
be interviewed, for people might sav that I
was seeking notoriety, and that is not taste
ful to me.”
The senator was pressed to say something
about his visit to Gov. Hill," but he posi
tively refused to tell what he and the gov
ernor talked about, except that they men
tioned the governor’s proposed visit to
Georgia in ihe early fall upon the occasion
of the unveiling of the Gra iy monument.
Gov. Hill has accepted the invitation to de
liver the oration.
“Will Gov. Hill go to Washington and
take his seat as senator?”
“I believe he will. Common sense and
good politics demand that he should, and 1
believe these reasons usually control your
governor’s actions.”
“Will the farmers’ alliance men of Geor
gia join the new third party?’
“The member* of the farmers’ alliance in
Georgia are nearly all democrats, and there
will be no third party in my stale. The
alliancemen are agreed on the tariff prin
ciples of the Democratic party. They are
strongly in favor of free coinage, and so
are the democrats of the state, with a few
exceptions.”
A prominent Georgia democrat was seen
at the Southern Club, and on condition that
bis name would not be mentioned talked
about the visit of Senator Colquitt to Gov.
Hill.
“There can be no doubt,” said he, “that
the senator ho* deserted Cleveland and gone
over to Hill.”
The Great Success
#59 of the genuine imported Johann
Hoff’s Malt extract as a tonic nutri
tive has caused a crowd of fraudu
ffir’sKfiP'l lent Imitators to come into the mar
ket. Beware of them! The genuine
tias the signature of “Johann Hoff”
° U the Deck of * very bottle. Eisner
& Mendelson Cos., sole agents, 6 Bar
”wnsiiiißw clay street, New York.
BEEF EXTRACT,
Baron Liebig
The great chemist pronounced the well
known Liebig Company’s Extract of Beef,
made of the finest River Platte cattle, in
finitely superior in flavor and quality to
any made of cattle grown in Europe or
elsewhere. He authorized the use of
His XI as the
trade
mark of
LIEBSC Extract
COMPANY'S of Beef.
For Delicious For Improved and
Beef Tea. Economic Cookery.
FISH AMU OESTERS.
EHTAHUaHED 185A
M. M. Sullivan & Son,
Wholesale Fab aad tyiter Dealeri,
IS* Bryan at. and 112 Boy loan, Savannah, Qa.
FMi orders for EVnta Qorda neossd ho**
MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS.
" ; '
k healt’chicaqo*
MEDICAL.
Quit Everything Else.
S. S. S., is the only permanent cure for contagious blood
Taint. Old chronic cases that physicians declare incur
able are cured in every instance where S. S. S., has had
a fair trial.
I honestly believe that S. S. S. saved
my life. I was afflicted with the very
worst type of contagious blood poison
and w- almost a solid sore from head
to foot. The physicians declared my
case hopeless. I quit everything else
and commenced taking S. S. S. After
taking a few bottles I was cured sound
and well.
Thos. B. Yeager, Elizabethtown, Ky.
CASTORIA
for Infants and Children.
“Castorlaissn well adapted to chikii en that
I recommend it&s superior to any prescription
known to me." 11. A. Arches, M. 1).,
11l So. Oxford St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
“LA GRIPPE.”
BLANCARITS ,oi . , r d .r f PILLS syrup
have been used with great success in dases of attack; also during tho
critical period of CONVALESCENCE, when the patient is grea ly de
bilitated and liable to develop catarrh or pneumonia.
BLANCARD'S preparations are unequaled as a tonic and an al
terative for fortifying the system and PREVENTING A RELAPSE.
Sold by all Druo(usts. E. FOUGERA & CO., Agents,
‘ifi, 2S and 30 Aortli William hi., Krw York.
GRAND BARGAIN SALE.
1,000 dozen (Tents’ Scarfs only 10c,; worth 25c.
500 dozen Wash Four-in-Handa at 8c ; worth 25c.
080 dozen French Silk Scarfs, with wide ends, only
10c.’; w’oFth 50c.
425 dozen Silk Stripe Four-in Hands only 16c.; worth
50c.
50 dozen French Striped Underwear, sizes 34 to 38,
at 50c. the Suit; worth $1 50. Sold in Suits
only.
36 dozen French Balbriggan Fnderwear, all sizes,
$1 25 the Suit; well worth $2 50,
LADSEB, NOTE.
50c. Blue Chambray Shirt Waists, all sizes, tho best
make, by Collat’s, only 24c.
40c. Knee Pants. Good goods ; first-class make.
25 gross Windsors, full length and all silk, Bc.; regular
price 25c.
WE ARE KINGS ON VESTS
200 dozen Single-Breasted Duck Vests at 75c.; worth
at least $1 50.
150 dozen Double-Breasted Duck Vests at SL;
worth $2.
Upon entering our store you will find them on the
Front Table.
tw The above-named Bargains you can
see in the Windows exactly as Advertised.
lothing, Shoes and Straws at Lowest Prices.
COLLATES, BROUGHTON ST.
FURNITURE AND CAKi’ETs.
LINDSAY & 31011 GAN,
165 and 167 Broughton Street,
Have taken account ot Stock and now wish to reduce amount
of same. Bargains to be had in Side Boards, Hat Racks,
Parlor and Chamber Suits. A full supply of seasonable
Goods on hand, viz: .Mosquito Nets, Baby Carriages ad
Refrig ors. We are still taking up, cleaning and taking
care of Carpets during the summer. Cali and see the Live
Furniture and Carpet Men of the State.
MERCHANTS, OMwalarittran. marehaoloa,
corporations, and ol: there ui oasd ol
yrtetlag. IMhoqrapains, and Monk boofe* can
h* Uwr ordsn prompt!y ttlimit a* iu.jtkr.-sM
a* Mm MOUNTED NEWS FUN TIM
■PONE. 8 WkSHs omom-
Children Cry for Pitcher’s Caetorla. j
Send for our
new book on
constitutional
or Bkxid
Diseases,
mailed free.
The Swift
Specific Cos.,
Atlanta. Ga.
Oaotorla cures CoHc, Constipation,
Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea. Eructation,
Kills Worms, gives sleep, and promote* di
gestion,
Without injurious medication.
Thr Centaur Corn ant, 77 Murray Street, H. Y
" ■ -- - - I' .JMIH ' - IMM
•y<> COUNTY OFFICER*.- Rooks and Blank*
1 rsquirol by county officer* for the um> ot
the courts, or for office use. tutu lied to untsr Mr
Ifcc MORNING NEWS I'JUNTINL liOUßfcl
Vkitaosi etrnst. ——-
STOVES.
JUST H[W Ta rjOK t iwir WJirt WElt.
THATS WHAT ALL 00 NOT KNOW.
THE FIRST THIN 6 15 TO GET YOUR MEAT#
AND THEN THE FIRE MUST GLOW.
DONT SPOIL THE MEAT ANO WASTE THE FIRE
but have a Wire Gauze Door
PUT ON YOUR RANGE AND ROASTS WILL TASTE]
BETTER THAN E’ER BEFORE!
rF’ VOTJ WAJjTT THB
j Uuy tins CHARTER OAK)
nAM7F OVEN DOORS;1
Made only hy F.w/l#r yi anti fart urinff Cm., St. I.ouin, Ho. Sold by
CLARK & DANIELS, Agents, • - Savannah, Ga.
. none la.
THE MARSHALL.
Summer Rates,
AMERICAN METHOD,
S‘2 PERDAY.
EUROPEAN RATES. Rooms SO cents, 76
cents, 81 CO per person.
H. N. FISH, Proprietor.
PULASKI HOUSE,
Savannah, O'a.
REDUCTION IN RATES
FOH THE
STXdVLdVFIEIRj,
JUNE Ist TO OCT. Ist.
Rates $2 50 per Cay.
L. W. SCOVILLB.^
THE
DE SOTO,
AVAN N AH, GA
One of tho moot elegantly appointed hotrlf
In tho world.
Accomodations for 500
Gruosts.
OPEN ALL YEAR.
WATSON & POWERS.
THE MORRISON HOUSE
/ II.NTRALLY LOCATED on Una of street
‘ l oars, offers pleasant south rooms, with ox
c dlent board. New baths sewerav-and venti
lation perfect, the sanitary condition of the
house is ol’ the bast.
Con. Hkouuutok ako Drayton Strebth,
SAVANNAH, GA.
■.i in i
hardware.
CATCH ALL
Best in the World.
TRY OJSTE.
Palmer HarJware Cos.
UAKDiVAItt.
Cotton and Rubber
HOSE,
Hose Reels, Etc.
GARDEN TILE.
Edward Lovell’s Sons,
155 BROUGHTON AND 138-140
STATE STREET.
MACHIN SKY.
McDonough <t Ballaotyoc;
IRON FOUNDERS,
Machinists, Boiler Makers and blacksmiths,
STATIONARY AND PORTABLE ENGINES,
VERTICAL AND TOP RUNNING CORN
MILLS. SUGAR MILLS snd PANS
\ GENTS for Alert and Union Injectors, the
simplest and most effective on the market;
(lullett Light Lraft Magnolia Cotton Gin, the
beet In the market. „ . „
All orders pronqitly attended Wv bend for
Prtoe List
KIESLING’B NURSERY,
WHITE Ml,U>’F ROAD.
I >LA NTS. Bouquets, lieelgus. Cot Flower*
1 furulehcd toor-ter. Leave orOsirs at DAVIS
KliOtt. , eor. Bull and York eta The Hall Rad
war | through the uurterjr. telephoneMd
PUBLICATION'S.
NEW BOOKS
AT
Estill’s News Depot,
NO. 21 1-2 BULL STREET.
Price.
Upton's Infantry Tootles $ 8 00
Reed's Infantry Tactics SO
Dunn's Fencing Instructor (Illustrated)... 10
Drills and Marches, by I* J. Rook 38
Dick's Quadrille Call Book SO
Hoyle's Gaines (revised by Trumps) SO
Jerry Thomas’ Bartenders* Guide SO
Pick's Letter Writer for Ladles 50
Book of Five Hundred Puzzles SO
Herman’s Tricks with Cards sg
Heller’s Handbook of Mazlc 38
How to Beoomo a Public Speaker. SR
The Art and Etiquette of Making Lots. .. SO
Dick's Ethiopian Beenes ana Stump
Speeches 80
’Talks," by George Thatcher 28
Sainbn’g End Man’s Minstrel Gags 80
Jack Johnson's Jokes for the Jolly 30
Kavanaugh's Humorous Dramas 80
Webster's Pocket Dictionary 40
Worcester’s Pocket Dictionary 50
The Reading dub 18
Hphnlsb Self Teught (new system) 38
German Self Tauaht mew system) ‘JS
French Self Taught (new system) 25
Young Folks' Headings and Recitations.. 18
Dick’s Toast Speeches and Responses 80
Mill’s L iter Writer 38
The Peerless Reoiler lfl
Riddles and their Answer* 10
Hunter and Angler 10
Outdoor Sports 10
The Lovers’Guide 13
Shorthand for Everybody 10
Manual ol Photography 1#
The Gem Cook Book 10
One Hundred Choice Selections, from No.
1 to 29 30
Standard Recitations, Nos. 1 to 19.... .... 10
Address all orders to
WILLIAM ESTILL,
Savannah. Go,
FASHION BOOKS FOR JUNE
AT
ESTILL’S NEWS DEPOT,
21H BULL STREET. Price.
L'Art de la Mode 35c
IU vue de la Mode . 350
La Mode de Pari* 35c
Album of Mode* tAe
I / Uou Ton. 360
The beasou 86
Y oung ladies’ Journal 30a
Demurest Portfolio of the Fashions and
Wtiat to Wear for Spring and Summer, 1891.28s
Butteriek's Fashion quarterly for Spring
and Humirer, 1891 28a
Oodey's lady's Book 28a
Demorest'g Fashion Magazine 20e
Peterson’s Magazine 25a
New York and Paris Young Ladles' Fashion
8azar...... 35a
The Delineator 15a
The ladies’ Home Journal 10a
Harper's Bazar 10a
Mine. Demurest Monthly Fashion Journal.. 10q
Address all orders to
WILLIAM ESTILL. Savannah, dm.
HOSE.
Doijt Waste
OP interior Ho— but yrt
isP
ho*<l th mnistur*, •, KebbcrbtMe dues, dries like a towL
Of cuurss there an Imltallmu; there a r FOUR WA 1.9
however, ky whlek yoe can tell If the dealer la tryln*
to tell an Inferior hn*e. The Oennloe " Spiral" twa
I. A blacH line woven ia Be sure It If
BLACK, not dark blue, red or any*
thing but blach- - ■
11. The stencil ‘“SPIRAL* Patented
/•Varch 30, 1880,” on every length
ill. The CORRUGATED COUPLIffCand
BAND ay In cut. 1
■V Each length 1$ now put up with a
V lriK WRAPPER around the boon
near the coupling. dr* *
A tampU wtll be lent free if yon mention tbn pobheme
hem Sold everywhere. ( et
BOSTON WOVEN HOSE CO.. Manf’n. ef Rubier
B-I'mg and Packing. 226 Deyo*M™ St, Bastes |
205 Lake St, Chicago i 8 Bush St.. Su Frandice.
. ■ "Ji. 1 - 1 - 1 —=ai
LUMBER.
McCauley, Stillwell £ Ca,
Yellow Pine Lumber,
ROUGH OR DRESSED.
Planing Mill, yard aad office,Gwinnett s tree A
east of 8., F and W. Ry.
Dressed Flooring, Ceiling. Moulding*, Weatb
erbosrdlng. Shingles, Lathes, Etc.
Estimates furnished and prompt delivery
gua soloed.
INSURANCE.
CHARLES f. PRENDERGAST
tHuuusseor loß.lt. FooraaJi E Qo.J
Fine, mm and stoem insirasc*
KA BAY STREET,
(Kelt West at the OotWa Exehaaaatl
Telephone Uoil No, M. bsrtaaa*, &0,
5