Newspaper Page Text
THAT wonderful baby.
pEN - PORTRAIT OF THE EX-PRES
' IDENT'3 little daughibr.
s >, e Resembles Both Parents, Has Her
Father’s Head and Her Mother's
Levely Cain—the Has Also a Lively
Temper and Rules the House.
From the A'eto York World.
Baby Cleveland is a sweet, sleepy little
. j an d a born boss who rules one of the
nj o6 l distinguished houses on Madison ave
cuo with her eyes shut. She is quick tem
pered, rebellious and unromantic, full of
vital 'energy and intolerant of neglect.
AY hen she wants a thing done or not done
she k.cks vigorously; if her wishes are not
jYßi.ected she doubles up her littlo fists,
o' ..us ! er mouth and yells vociferously.
The casual observer, to whom all babies
are exactly alike, would see nothing re
markable) in this sweet morsel of humanity,
but she is really an exceptionally interest
ing study. She is just the sort of child that
a domestic man like Mr. Cleveland would
idolize, for in her tiny face and form he
catches glimpses of himself as well as of the
woman he chose to be its mother.
Half of her face is striekiugly like his—
large forehead, heavy brows, small eyes,
strong nose and large facial angle. There
is remarkable width of the face from temple
to temple. In the lower face the mother’s
likeness is seen. Mrs. Cleveland has a very
pretty mouth and as lovely a chin as nature
ever modeled in a human face. Miss Cleve
land b&s the same pretty mouth, the same
lovely chin, the same smooth curve of the
cheeks ana the same laughing dimple,
tightened in charm by tho faultless delicacy
of infantile beauty. Her bright little eyes are
gray-blue, and she has quite a shock of long
hair, black as jet and fine a3 corn-tassels.
Oddlv enough, she is not a dimpled baby;
nobody could call her roly-poly, and she
hasn’t even the suggestion of a magic brace
let or necklace. An authority oa babies
would take her to be a boy. She is strong
and muscular, has a large frame, superb
respiration, good appetite, perfect digestion
and the promise of developing into a large
woman. Although a 10-pounder, she is a
magniflce.it specimen of humanity, well
formed, beautifully binged and perfectly
able to support her own weight. Her head
doesn’t lop over when she is raised up; she
doesn’t give one the impression that she will
g .l to pieces at the bath. She takes to water
like a web-foot and shows a decided taste
for white castilo soap and velvet sponges.
Unlike the average bale Miss Cleveland
does not tub in a china bowl. She has a
little rubber bath in which she flounders
and splashes every other day, aud after be
ing dried she is band-polished like a piece of
line old mahog any, powdered until she is
as dusty as a jelly-roll, and then bandaged,
bundled, pinned and blanketed in the usual
way.
There are perfumes enough in her dresser
to di own her and a sufficiency of sweet
powder to bury her. but not a drop or a
pram is used in her toilet, and yet every
body who hag met her declares that she is
the sweetest and most fragrant baby in
town.
Baby Cleveland’s measure was taken for
a canopy cradle last week, but for the pres
ent she is restricted to a little Moses basket,'
Eimi.'ar to the one found in the bullrusnes
ages ago, but with Blightly more embellish
ments. It is lined with tufted blue silk,
flounced with soft wiii'e lace and pillowed
with down. This snug tola nest is made of
willow, stands about i uc inches from the
floor and is handled a- conveniently as a
lady’s work-basket. Sometimes baby and
the basket are on a chair, and often the
r.urse or doctor will set them on Mrs. Cleve
land's dining stand, but as a general thing
they are at the foot of the bed, within sight
and reach of everybody.
Her adaptability is something extraordi
nary. Sbo already owns the doctor, nurse,
tnaid and upstairs girl, and she bosses her
father, mother and grandmother in a wuy
that is absolutely shameful, but they all
seem to like it, for not <jne word of com
plaint 1 as t ecu heard.
The baby’s outfit did not come from Paris,
as has been stated by several imaginative
f ishion writers, nor wa3 it bought in Bos
ton. To quote p very high authority, “it
wasn't bought anywhere,” a piece of infor
mation, by the way, that wilt interest tue
many managers of infants’ departments
about New York, who hoped and yearned
to get the order.
Mrs. Cleveland tsa most womanly woman;
she is a very neat sewer, and as there is a
whole lot of sentiment in her nature, there
is nothing remarkable in the fact that she
preferred to make the little baby garments
"i h her own hinds. With her mother she
w t shopping half a dozen times. Pattern
| dresses, slips and underwear were supplied
by dilTerent friends.* Mrs. Perrine
'id most of the cutting and measuring,
! and together they hemmed, gathered
and stroked the muslin, ran tucks,
feather-stitched bands and cross pieces and
Put f>n finishing frills of lace scarcely half
sninoh in width. Tho material used was
marseiila, a sheer closely wovsn fabric, fine
as t rench cambric, with a soft, silk-like
jinisa; it was exquisitely made, every stitch
” 1 'it hand wrought, and while daintily
finished was so very plain as to cause ro
inark. There was no ruffling, no flouncing
<if ri y’ lace, no heavy embroidery and but
very little insertion.
All tho elaborate things were seat by
irienas, who wiil doubtless bo surprised
when they meet Miss Cleveland in her sheer
little tucked slips made by her mother and
grandmother. These modi3- wrought dresses,
I avonsington embroidered barrio oals ami
g cssanier-hke caps, while appreciated and
admired, are not likely to bo worn by the
favored infant.
1 chiffonier reserved for Baby Cleve
ana there are hund-knit sacques, socks aud
arghMis; pretty little flannel blankets em
oulsred with daisies, heart’s-ease and roso
uclo; caps made of silk, lace and fine cam
one mass °f drawn work, tiny bath
?' Y* eider-down, and silk, oosy flannel
j Wns ', sctl ‘l°ped round the edge and
itched with silk down every seam; bright
s™. “ . wrappers to throw over a thin
J„’jr ptior !, dre * so , w ith alternating
, ? 0 aoe QQ d Irish embroidery starting
K the waist and ending at a ruffle of needle
; petticoats, with less than
tjjjbtinabcs of the whole skirt bare of silk
_ jroidery, and top coats in every tint of
am and ivory, trimmed with white iamb,
Hg en “krown sable and blue fox, for e very
■ay in the week.
In the way of jewelry this idolized morsel
humanity has enough to warraut a pri-
Rur.^ 1 ani Ay safe. One set, of
toli * n f°‘d as flat studs with a
Ufcire diamond in each. This is the gom
tnU v C1 ’ cct!on. Then there are hammered
e: °Il wrs °f white aud blue
1 , ad several sots of torquoisa. There
■ an.k ij p ‘ ns f‘ ir fastening shawls, bibs
I iii er stra l ,s and cards of gold and
■ sjjs Butot >’'Plns of various sizes aud de-
I ar ficle in Miss Cleveland’s basket
I qtai, l —the silver powder box. ex
■ y hammered, tlie big white puff with
■tu E. cut Cupid’s head just visible above
I Wirt V dowu i tb o B °f c bristle, silver-
I l ’ rU6h; th >vory soap box, tho
I kj-tedpincusnion, the scent bottle and
■ c*”, llan klass anatomi/.er and the little
■ ttulcure tools. Like tbo baseiin t
I niiVi"^A***® 1 ** I* lled with blue silk aid
■ ..I'"' "’bite lace. Even tbo einbroid
■ caiii* 0 . napkin to throw over the top
■ "fhe love and best wishes ’of
I YM rfrieod -
R ClevaT 1 ! ba * been permitted to see Mr*.
I la *afT° d ' Ay order oi Dr. Bryant, but she
1 fler L*rr flaopr. • were informed by
*<*li . r ' w fl“ u Mr. Cleveland has no
nurt., ”*pr*s. bis joy. He spends ai
foil. with the midget as the women
s.*.,', 1 * 1 allow, and kiwtee and bites her
e ; | ‘ “"til she begins to klek suit
lu, _ *“ w *• nothing the matter with her
*hi u ‘ a when she opens her mouth
bouxo A® fl**rd all over the
Km p,' f ar reasons which are not
b n a,. *** tu Us big lovlug tether,
wh*. i tefndtted to handle hu de ightr
-s wants to take her for llttte walk
round the room, which is everv half hour; I
he is compelled to take up the whole outfit, !
basket, baby, pillow and all. It is au
armful, but seemincly a very pleasant 1
burden, and the picture is one brimful of
human nature and domestic happiness.
The t.appy young mother doesn't say
much, but it is learned on authority that
she i- half afraid her baby giri will be
squeezed and hugged to death.
HAND SHAKE 3 .
Past Methods With Remarks Upon the
Present and Future.
From the St. Janies' Gazette.
What is to be the next ala mode shake of
the hand!
The question was suggested at the present
moment by a very inadequate cause, being
nothing more than the tumbling off a musty
bookshelf of a woebegone little volume,
which proved to be a copy of the Pocket
Magazine for 1831, and the opening of its
faded, staiued, and dust-begrimed little
pages at an article by some whimsical con
tr.butor on the subject of hand shaking, a
catalogue of the various modes in vogue at
the period. As some of these fashions have
survived through every chance and change
up to the present date, a few specimens may
here be given, to enable those who may re
cognize the different species to classify
them by knowledge.*
For instance, here is the “pump-handle”
shake. To this is yielded the place of honor,
“ft is executed,” writes G. of seventy years
ago, “by seizing your friend’s hand and
working it up and down through an aro of
fifty degrees for about a minu e and a half.
To nave its nature, force and character, the
shake should be performed with u fair,
steady motion. No attempt Should be made
to give it grace, still less vivacity. On the
contrary, persons who are partial to the
‘pump-handle’ shake should be at pains to
give an equable, tranquil movement to the
operation, which should on no account be
continued after perspiration on the part of
your friend has commenced.
“The ‘pendulum’ shake,” proceeds our
chronicler, “is executed by sweeping your
hand horizontally toward your friend’d,
nnd, after junction is effected, rowing with
it from one side to tae other, according to
the pleasure of the parties.” Here an amend
ment must bo made. It is not always “ac
cording to the treasure of the parties,” but
according to the pleasure of one, who cares
nothing about the pleasure of the other,
that the “pendulum” snake is prolonged.
Jolly old Admiral Sou’-wester, for example,
“rows” with my hand "from one side to the
other” wheneyer I meet him, and takes my
feelings no more into account than Neighbor
Goodfellow does. He "rows” away like
anything, all by himself; while my limp
reluctant digits perforce “row” also iu his
mighty grasp, but as for any co-operation
on iny part, he takes no more heed of ray
mournful inactive countenance than Good
fellow does of the beads upon my brow.
Evidently the “pendulum” shake has also
survived two-thirds of a century.
Neither has the next in imoortance,
“tourniquet.” died out in tho land. “The
‘tourniquet,’* we are informed, ‘‘derives
its name from the instrument made use of
by surgeous to stop the circulation cf the
blood in a limb about to be amputated. It
is performed by clasping the band of your
friend in your own as far up as yon can,
and then contracting the muscles of the
thumb, finger and palm till you have in
duced any degree of compression you may
propose. Particular care ought to be
taken, if your hand is as hard aud as dry
as a frying pan, and that of your friend as
small and soft as a young maiden’s, not to
make use of the ‘tourniquet’ shake to the
degree that will firce the small
bones of his wrist out of
place.” But, good heavens! there
be folks who will never hear of this latter
most excellent precaution, and who—let me
be intelligible. For years I have suffered
beneath the hearty greeting of that mus
cular Christiau, Parson Ploughboy. The
parson is large in mind and body. lie has
the hand of a mature octopus. When he
throws it around mine I feel the finger tips
tickling my arm far, far above the wrist
preparatory to the “contraction” which I
am only too well aware is about to follow.
Rightly is that vise-like grip of his denomi
nated the “tourniquet;” he might hire
himself out to surgeons, in lieu of the in
strument itself; he could stop circulation
for anv length of time requited, and
the only point on which he might
require admonition would be respect
ing that irrepressible tendency toward
“forcing the small bones out of place,”
hiuted at by our authority in the Pocket
Magazine. The same pen has a terrible
tale to tell in connection with this danger
ous band shake. “A hearty young friend,”
he says, "addicted to the study of geology,
had acquired by the use of the hammer an
unusual hardness and streugth of hand and
wrist. One day, on returning from a scien
tific excursion he met a gouty aud wealthy
uaclo with a ‘tourniquet’ shake of so severe
a nature that” —mark what follows, ye
reckless and hard-handed youths of the
present generation—“he had the pleasure
of being disinherited as soon as his uncle’s
fingers wero sufficiently recovered to hold
the pen!”
Tae “cordial grapple” comes next under
notice as a haad shako of considerable pop
ularity under the last reigu. “It is ac
companied,” says our author, “by cheerful
exclamations of weloomo; it is a good
traveling shake; it may bo indiscriminately
performed.” Ay, ay; we all know that
shake; we see it extended to the playmate
of childhood, tho school fellow of riper
years, the most recent acquaintance, tho
fellow passenger of half a day, with the
same engaging impartiality. It is accom
panied by “cheerful words of welcome,” is
it? We can hear in our minds the “How
are you? How are you?” which performs
that part of the duet nowadays. We know
how much it is worth—ditto tho hand
shake. Each is simply the result of physical
well being and general bonhomie, baviug
no significance fur the individual nor any
value for him as their recipient. Brown
“cordial grapples” Jones; Jones “cordial
grapplos” Robinson; all three “cordial
grapple” anybody and everybody as long as
tnings look tho right way in the city and
the inner man is at ease with its surround
ings.
On the other hand, the “Peter Grievous”
touch indicates the precise opposite of such
overflowing genia'ity. It is, we are as
sure i, “pensive, deprecatory, accompanied
by a cast-down look and au almost inartic
ulate inquiry after your friend’s health.”
And here, for the first time, we are out of
touch with the fashions of 1821. It is no
lon cer the mode to be “pensive, depreca
tory;” while if a mere form of words should
shape themselves into a query regarding
another’s welfare, the last tbiug to be ex
pected would be a response. Hence a tender
martieuhsm would be altogether throw n
away. IVo have, bowe.er, our own edi
tions of the "Peter Grievous" touch. We
have the hand like a dead fish, and the ha >d
that adheres like a burr—the latter without
any aoparent volition on the part of tho
owner We have the red, raw-looking
hand whose horrible healthiness conveys a
tacit reproach; we have the clammy claw,
and the' bony knuckles. These are the
newer variations of the "Peter Grievous”
touch. . . „ ...
Nor are the “prude major' and the
“prude minor” hand shakes still extant.
"The ‘prude major,’ ” wo iearn, “only per
mits the fingers to be touched down to the
second joint; the ‘prude minor' sacrifices a
whole forefinger.” For these, as bai been
already noted, our fashionable fair once of
to-day have up to the present time substi
tuted their own device*. In the very young
these whimsicalities are to be good-humor
edly tolerated, youth is the s-as >n for nou
senso, but when middle-age-1 spinsters and
portly matrons catch up the folly of the
passing hour, and seek to pas* for silly giris
again thereby, how is It that they do not
peroeive that in their han Is the silliness be
comes offensive and it* perpetrator a laugh
ing stock? . ... . „ . .
Again, we ask, what will be It# next de
velopment I _____
Kudos I User that Tnnmlng * girt hae In
duced him to give up bl* cigsrs
Valsiie) -ll’uin That's inure than aoy ot the
hoys oovrt ever 4*. - JsJsnisyvio Jisemi,
THE MORNING NEWS: THURSDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1891.
GLFAN3D AT GAINESVILLE.
Tho Famous Rocky Point Hammock
and Its Immense Output.
Gainesville, Fla., Oct. 14.—T0 the
southwest of this city, five miles distant,
and bordering on the west end of Payne’s
prairie, is a section of hammock land known
a3 tho Rocky Point region. This region
has been made famous in all the great
marts of the northeast and northwest by
the abundance and tine quality of
vegetables and oranges grown there,
and it is now astonishing the natives
by its enormous production of bay
and grain. The News reporter went among
the good people of this thriving section
yesterday for the purpose of eliciting some
facts and obtaininig some figures. J. H.
Crown, J. 8. Crown, Buist Crown, Clinton
Crown; S. P. Cannon, Henry Denton, D. L.
Wroton, Jones & Brown, C. W. McDonald,
and W. H. Barton and Daughtry Ferst,
eleven farmers, shipped last spring 38.0UU
barrels of cabbage and 15,000 crates of other
kinds of vegetables to northern and western
markets. These eleven farmers paid to the
railroads for moving this freight *31,000.
The increase iu the freight rate
this year over last cost them
#0,300, the Crown family alone paying
#3,400 of the increase. They have cut and
housed over 300 tons of crab grass and beg
gar weed hav and most of them have mado
corn and oats enough to feed their stock for
tho year to come. This hay sells here at
#lO pier ton, half the price of western, and
is yet considered even better than the latter.
This wonderful work has been accomplished
mainly by the use of manure and improved
impements of all kinds. E, S. Wroten was
the first to use the mowing machine, seven
years ago. Now almost every farmer has
one.
EMPLOY WHITE LABOR.
White labor is now almost exclusively
employed, because the negroes have gone
off to the phosphate mines and railroad
camps, being onticed hither by higher prices
than the farmer can afford to pay for such
labor end their natural preference for em
ployment where large numbers are congre
gated. These farmers say that they find
the white lab ir cheaper, more careful,
trustworthy a id altogether more satisfac
tory. The owners of groves on Rocky Point
report the crop bright and about one-third
larger than last year.
We are having extremely chilly, damp,
cloudy weather now, and the fires are again
blazing on tho hearthstones.
One schooner load of iron has arrived for
the Gainesville and Tallahassee railroad,
aud another is on the wave bound for Fer
nandinn, from which place it will be taken
by rail.
Judge Findly has dissolved the injunction
previously granted against the liquor men
at Archer.
There are now 176 pupils at the high
school here.
The Orlando fair convention resolved
to raise SIOO,OOO as the maximum, #50,000
as the minimum amount, to
secure representation for Florida
at the great show. Individual
subscriptions is the method, supplemented
if possible by appropriations by the com
missioners of the vnrious counties. If the
minimum is not secured by April 1, 1892,
then the money is to be returned to tho
subscribers less 10 per cent, for inciden
tals duriug collection.
AGENT OK THE SEMINOLES.
Dr, S. B. Chaain of this city has been
commissioned by the Secretary of the In
terior a special agent for the remnant of the
once brave and powerful tribe of
Indians known as the Seminoles.
About 240 all told of those
Indians have isolated themselves in the
terra incognita south of the Caloosahatchie
river, and which desolate region they only
leave once in a great while, and then only
a few at a time, to procure salt and ammu
nition from the whites at Funta Gordau or
Punta Rassa. This tribe once had for a
chieftain the famous Powell, or as
better known to “song and story,”
Osceola or “Rising Sun,” who wss
betrayed by a flag of truce and miserably
perished of consumption contracted between
the damp walls of Fort Moultrie in Charles
ton harbor. The doctor leaves Thursday for
Fort Myers, the nearest point of public
communication, to take up his residence
with the dusky sons of the swamp.
Mr. Hyde is going to erect another brick
block on the north side of the square.
A society for the prevention of cruelty to
animals is about to be organized. It is
much needed; needed in the interest of
helpless children as well as horses, cats,
dogs and cows. Another organization n
on foot, viz.: that of the sods of confed
erate soldiers. Its object is the perpetua
tion of the southern story of the war as
told by their fathers and the collection of
data for a history of the great struggle.
Once, years ago, when the owl had never
been disturbed by any sound more discord
ant than the voice of its mate as it called
from the dead spike of the tall cypress in
the brake, all travel in South Florida was
by hack or stage coach. Capt. F. H. Gra
ham, then the owner of the line, was one
day driving a consumptive yankee up to
Ooula, then tho railroad terminus south
ward, when the feeble sick man in a wheezy
voice asked: ‘‘What is that which smells
so badly underneath my seat?”
“Guavas,” answered the suave captain.
“Weil,"said the sick man, ‘‘it Is dead
and I wish you would stop the coach and
throw it out.”
BRIEFS FROM BLACKVILLE.
Two Tenths in One House in One
Night—The Town Election.
Blackville, S. C. ,Oct. 14. — Two deaths
in one house iu one night, two corpses in
one room at the same time, two funerals at
one time from the same family home are of
rare occurrence, but Blackville experienced
these peculiarities on Monday and yester
day. George Toole, a worthy colored man
living here, died Monday night at 0 o’clock,
having been sick for some time. His wife,
Hattie Toole, who had been sick but a few
da vs, died the same night at 10:30 o’clock.
The town election passed off quietly Mon
day. The following ticket was elecied with
out opposition: Maj. L. T. lzlar, intendant;
H. F. Baldwin, IV. F. Cross, L. R.
Free and C. H. Mathis, wardens. The new
council will doubtless effect needed reforms.
At the residence of the bride’s mother,
this morning at 9:30 Robert C. Mixson and
Mi3S Eva E. Reed were united in holy wed
lock, Rev. I). Tiller of theMethodi.it church
performing the ceremony. The happy
couple left on tho 10 o’clock train for Allen
dale, the boa.e of the groom’s father. The
contracting parties are numbered among
Biackville’s favorites. Tb> bridal presents
wore numerous, useful and beautiful. May
their sorrow bo little ones.
There are numbers of marriages billed
for the near future. One is to come off on
Oct. 2s, one on Nov. 4, nnd another Dec. 10.
These are the only dates the writer could
secure. Joy to all of them.
The Blackville graded school has opened
with seventy odd pupils. Prof. Wyer of
Virginia is principal, with Mrs. Kell v and
Miss Brademann as assistants. The school
bids fair to have a most successful session.
Pbof. Ferruccio Bcsoxi, the Russian pianist,
who left the Imperial Conservatory at Moscow
to loin the Now England Conservatory of Music
at Boston, is bit 25 years old, but ha* bean be
fore the public for eighteen years. He made bis
first appearance os au infant prodigy,
War* Justice Field was a student at Williams
College he displayed a fondness for languages,
oad after bis graduation be continued tbelr
study. He has a good knowledge of at lent
NHVea different languages, lodudiag modern
Oreak and iurkiib, aud i* undoubtedly me
linguist of the supreme bench.
great minds agree.
T 5 highest autboritlas In Kurooe unhesitat
ingly iwnoaunsud the i-odeo Past dies ‘Troches)
for all Toruai.. Lung and t siarrhal di
Against Hsians. La Grippe and otner atnios
uteri". Influence- this tr.-hos are williout
epiel. Beware of inutaUoa# Tae groom
meet nv Uw signature at Sumer H Mea iel
mm Cos (Me Agent#, Nw York, around each
Hum, I‘rtnHesMs
MEDICAL.
“A Modern instance”
Is sometimes more satisfactory than any number of “Wise Laws."
There are thousands and thousands of modern instances in which
Swift’s Specific, has justified all the claims made
for it as the £ rcatest of vegetable remedies for
diseases that I have in their origin impure blood
and a debilitated condition of the system. Mr. John H. Lyles, of
Sorento, 111., w'rites: “I suffered for five years with mercurial rheu
matism, which was the result of potash and mercurial treatment by
physicians for constitutional blood poison. They not only failed
to cure me, but made me a physical wreck and my life a burden. I
then commenced taking Swift’s Specific. and after using a
few bottles was entirely cured of the rheu- mutism which the
doctors brought on by their remedies, and of the blood poison which
they had failed to cure.”
Treatise on Hlood and Skin Diseases Flailed Free.
SWIFT SPECIFIC CO.. Atlanta. Oa
ffPl AMR! A
CASTOR S A
Castoria is Dr. Samuel Pitcher’s prescription for Infants
and Children. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor
other Narcotic substance. It is a harmless substitute
for Paregoric, Drops, Soothing Syrups, and Castor Oil.
It is Pleasant. Its guarantee is thirty years’ use by
Millions of Mothers. Castoria destroys Worms and allays
feverishness. Castoria prevents vomiting Sour Curd,
cures Diarrhoea and Wind Colic. Castoria relieves
teething troubles, cures constipation and flatulency.
Castoria assimilates tho food, regulates tho stomach
and bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep. Cas
toria is the Children’s Panacea—tho Mother’s Friend.
Castoria.
Castoria is an excellent medicine for chil
dren. Mothers have repeatedly told me of its
good effect upon their children.”
Dr. G. C. Osooor,
Lowell, Mass.
•• Castoria is the best remedy for children of
which lam acquainted. I hope the day is not
far distant when mothers will consider the real
Interest of their children, nnd use Castoria in
stead of the various quack nostrums which are
destroying their loved ones, by forcingopium,
morphine, soothing syrup and other hurtful
agents down their “throats, thereby sending
them to premature graves.”
Dn. J. T. KmcmiLOE,
Conway, Ark.
Tho Centaur Company, T 7 Murray Street, Now York City.
tftfl A *s® I§| nearly half a century the t
i utSH wi WSB popular remedy, (superior to all others), >
SsS mu ES 1 055 9 with Physicians in Europe and America, )
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long standing or g Bh W The Best and Cheapest
ALL Druggists sell them for | § IP*
Zfikpin" rims uAroULCo j
DIAMONDS, JHYVJKLRY ETC.
OPENING!
STERNBERG’S
OPENING.
OPENING.
OPENING.
OPENING.
OPENING.
Ii Are Espected.
STERNBERG’S.
MACHINERY, < ASTINGS, ETC.
KEHOE’S IRON WORKS.
IRON ana BRASS CASTINGS,
ENGINES, BOILERS and MACHINERY.
dsilib REDUCTION
llpSpi IN PRICES OF WORKS” is cast on
£ nil our Mills and Fans.
SITCrAII MILLS and PANTS.
All of our 2 and k lloltcr Sugar Mill* have heavy Steel Shaft*, and are of the latent and most
approval design. Our Huger Fan* are can with b Atom* down. are amootb, uniform iri thick
neea all ter •urerlor to tnoie made ta the n*uai way. Write for Circular* and Fricoe. Hole
age alt for the IO.LIA.VCK SAKKTY W aTEH OOLIMN No boiler *huuld be without one.
"WM. KEHOE & CO.
BROUGHTON ST. PROM REYNOLDS TO RANDOLPH STS.,
a. B.iVANNAIL OA- 'X’iuLlCl'ilONlL kiua.
What is
Castoria.
“ Castoria is so well adapted to child ren thal
I recommend it as superior toany preecriptioo
known to me.”
11. A. Auchxr, M. D.,
11l So. Oxford St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
“ Our physicians in the children's depart
ment have spoken highly of their experi
ence in their outside practice with Castoria,
and although we only have among our
medical supplies what is known as regular
products, yet we are free to confess that the
merits of Castoria has won us to look with
favor upon it.”
Unitcb Hospita'. and Dispknsart,
Boston, Mass.
Allew C. Smith, Pres.,
LADIES!
OUR OPENING OCCURS ON
TUESDAY MORNING,
OCTOBER 13th.
Our Two Floors
Carry section* from FAIRYLAND. You
are cordially invited to cone and see a dis
play r.ever before attempted in Savannah.
NO OBLIGATION TO BOY.
WE CANT DETAIL
YOU MUST SEE.
BEGINNING TUESDAY AND CON
TINUING DAILY.
DRY GOODS.
M TANARUS“ | jZ" Me?srs Gostave Eikslein i Cos. will ke’p (ha
! N I I L_ citublblinoDt closed oa MONDAY, Oit.bcr \1
“ECKSTEINS”
“High Glass Novelties.”
Novelty Robe Dresses $lO, #l2, sls, to $25.
Novelty Dress Goods 50c. 75c. sl, #2, $3, $4.
Bedford Cords. Fi est Make*, #l, #1 50, $2 50.
Bouclo Dress Good*, Solid and Fancy, 50c. to $2.
houruttes and Cheviots 75c. sl, $1 25, to $2.
English Cloths and Diagonal* from #1 to $4.
Henriettas and Serges. 100 Colors, from 10c. to sl.
Black Novelty Dress Goods 75c. sl. $1 25. to #2.
Plaid and Stripoi Novelties from 50c. to ft 50.
Novelty Silks and Velvets.
G. Eckstein & Cos., will sell on TUESDAY, Oct 13, and
after those line Blankets now displayed in show windows.
$8 FINE BLANKETS $5.
$4 Wool Blankets $2 50.
“FUR CAPES.”
Stylish Capes, New Shapes, $2 to $25.
Balmoral Skirts, “Latest,” from 750. to $5.
New Comfortables, Full Sizes, $1 to #7 50.
Wool and Velvet Shawls $2 to sl2.
Crib Blnnkets, White and Fancy, #1 50 to $5.
1,000 Pairs Blankets, all Sizei, 75c. to S2O.
Thai Best $1 Kid Gloves in Savannah.
Silver ol Handle Gloria Umbrellas (1.
Black and Fancy Ladles’ Hoso 10c. to #4 Pair.
“Tuesday” Special Drives.
Finest Stock in Savannah.
m mm & i
CLOTHING.
NOVELTIES
IN
Fall Weight
Overcoats,
The very thing for evening
dress, at $7 50, $lO, sll,
sl2, sl3 50, sls, $lO 50,
$lB. Displayed in our
Jumbo Window.
SILK VESTS $3 50. $4. $4 50, $5. $6.
Hits, Underwear and Firiisli®
OF EVERY DESCRIPTION.
OUR SHOE DEI’ARTMENT.
QDEPI ft I I Ladies’ Rubber Shoes 26c., all sizes. .
diLUIHL (Gentlemen’s Rubber Shoes 49c., all sizes.
Our Ladles’ $2. $2 50. $3. $3 50 and $4 Common Sense and!
Opera Toe are In it. Every pair of our De Soto $3 Shoes are,
guaranteed: long lace and button. James A. Banister cele
brated Hand-sewed Shoes for men, all styles.
DRYFUS BROS.
Congress and Jefferson Streets. | r
I OKi ltb.
ROASTED COFFEE!
GRADES OF COFFEE FRESHLY
Knotted. For sale to dealer* only by
C. M. GILBERT k CO.,
Importer* and < ogee tpattar*.
Children Cry for Pitcher’s Castoria.
GENTLEMEN.
You are cordially invited
to inspect our most com
plete selections of Domes
tics and Imported selec
tions of business and dress
SUITS AND trousers:
We are prepared to show
one of the most artistic
stocks of Clothing in the
South.
BROKER*.
F. C. WYLLY.
STOCKS, BONDS AND REAL ESTATE
JBOKiSR.
fitrlct A'tenvion <Jlu to All Otter*.
Loan* Negotiated on Mar*stable gactiriUea
Curr-apondcnco roltoit-id.
5