Newspaper Page Text
“of no mmr*cE "
A Sattrtoal Skit Upon Oscar Wilde's
Latest Flay.
Prom the St Oarrtts.
Scene—A Roora~-The Duke of Daffodil,
Lord Oswald Annealcy, the Countess of
Bury St. Edmunds and Mrs. Enfield Rott
er* discovered In graceful attitudes
Tho Countess of B. St. E —And have
you really been in Africa. Lord Oswald!
It seems such a short time since you went
away.
Lord O. A.—To me it seems a century.
What is Africa!
Duke of D.—Africa is the grave of re
putations and the forcing house of liberal
unionist candidates.
Mrs. E. R. —O, my dear duke, don’t
mention politios. It’s such a practical sub
ject.
Lord O. A.—There are no politicians in
Africa, only rhinoceroses.
The Countess—l saw the rhinoceros
last week at the zoological gardens. I
thought it such a depressing animal.
The Duke—Depressing, dear lady ! O, no!
It is full of character. If I were not a
bore, I would be a rhinoceros.
Mrs. E. H.—With a wreath of straw
berry leaves. And I would come and feed
you with buns. How delightful! But are
you really a bore?
The Duke—They say so in the House of
Lords.
Lord O. A.—The House of Lords is an
anachronism, tempered by breweries.
Mrs. E.R.—And bishoprics. I like bis
hop's. They are so unoriginal.
Lord O. A.—Originality is the thief of
time. But what is time, and why should
it not be stolen?
The Duke—Timo is the revolution of lati
tude, and evolution of platitudes.
Tho Countess—How very true! Lord Os
wald, if you will give me that chair I will
sit down to think it over.
The Duke—Don’t sit on a chair. Its so
human to sit on a chair.
Mrs. E. R. —Is humanity necessarily
original?
The Duke—Humanity, when sober, is
invariably tiresome.
Mrs. E. R.—Thank you. I was never
drunk in my life.
Lord O. A.—How can you ever be sober,
when your presence constitutes inebriety
in others! To know Mrs. Enfield Rogers
is a liberal intoxication.
The Duke—And not to know her is tho
blue ribbon of a blameless life—the red
jersey of the Salvation army. There is
nothing so terrible as blamelessness.
The Countess —I knew a blameless man
nee. He was desperately in love with
me, but he would never say so.
Mrs. E. R.—O, how Interesting! But
what did he say?
The Countess—He never said anything.
The Duke—l am convinced that I was
that lover. How should a beautiful emo
tion find expression in anything so usual
as words? Indeed, how should it find ex
pression at all?
Lord O. A.—lt cannot; because, as long
as it is beautiful, it must be art. Only
nature speaks. The heavens are telling;
but they are not so telling as an emotion
which can find no outward expression of
any sort.
Mrs. E. R,—l like the idea so much. A
great, blind, dumb, deaf emotion is
surely what we must all wish for.
The Duke—We should never wish. A
wish is a bubble distended by its own
emptiness. It is vitalized incompetei oe.
The Countess—O, yes, that is it exactly.
I once wished to be married, and I have
been sorry for it ever since.
Lord O. A.—Marriage is the entangle
ment of the unintelligible with the inhar
monious. No one can understand a woman,
and no one can listen to a mad. Marriage
is also a failure.
The Duke—Life would be intolerable
but for its failures. But that particular
failure should bo severelyleft to other
people.
Mrs. E. R.—Bury St. Edmunds, for ex
ample.
The Countess—O, Bury St. Edmunds!
Did I tell you lie’s been writing a book?
The Duke—Books are tho torment of
the nursery, and the ultimate resource of
the dull. The man who reads a book
is within measurable distance of writing
a play.
The Countess—And if he writes a play,
is his destruction certain?
Lord O. A—Nothing is certain except
death and tuxes.
Mrs. E. R.—l almost feel as if I had
heard that before. Of course it can’t
have been in a book
Lord O. A.—You may have said it your
self. It is so necessary, when a beautiful
thing is said, to say it over, and over, and
over again, Wien I arrived in Afriqa i
asked them to put up a bourd on tho
beach, saying ‘ Missionaries Shot Here.”
I said it every morning.
The Duke—ls it wise to say anything in
tlie morning? There is something bour
geois about the morning.
Mrs. E. R.—And pl3ys are always acted
in the evening.
The Countess—But if there are to be no
plays?
Tho Duke—A play—a beautiful play
may be acted if it has not been written,
and if it is not a work of art. The artist
cannot work, for work is tiresome, and
what is worse, ugly. A work of art is a
contradiction in terms.
Mrs. E. R.— And yet contradiction, in
some terms, is essential to conversation.
The Duke—There is no conversation
nowadays, only
[Curtain. But they go on conversing
behind it.J
A Monster Petrfiied Whale.
From the St. Louis Republic.
Leon del Mar, a Frenchman attached to
the surveying corps connected with the
National museum (Museo Nneionel), San
Jose, Costa Rica, reports a find of equal
or greater value tahn the Montezuma (Col.)
fossilized monster. Leon’s find is not a
’’dinosaur” or other half mythical creat
ure which the lapse of ages his trans
formed into stone, but a common every
day whale, 216 feet in length, with bones
mineralized until they are as hard as jasper
and as heavy as load. The Museo officials
are in a quandary and are debating as to
which would be the cheapest—to move
their museum building over onto the
mountain range where the petrified mon
ster lies, or try to transfer the flinty re
mains to the Costa Rica capital:
The point scloctod by this antediluvian
giant when ho concluded to give up tho
ghost, along about the timo of the close of
the cretaceous or some other geological
period, is a rift between two mountain
peaks, seventy-two miles from San Jose
and 3.300 feet uhove scale vol. There must
have been a season of high waters in that
section at one time. Either that or Del
Mar’s specimen was a regular mountain
climber.
The German students are not required to
attend the lectures unless they feel disposed
to do so. A stranger in a German university
city asks a young man: •’Where is the uni;
versity building?”
"I really don't know; I am a student here
myself.”—Texas Siftings.
MEDiCAL. ~
YOUNQ MOTHERS
We offer you a remedy which if
used as directed, insures safety to
life of both mother and child.
“MOTHERS FRIEND”
Robs confinement of its Balk, Hobror and
Risk, as many testify.
“My wlfte ut- only iwo bottle*of Mothers
Friend, she whf easily nod quickly relieved
—l* now doing splendidly/*
J. 8. Morton, Harlow, N. C.
Sent by express, charges prepaid, on re
ceipt of price, $1.50 per bottle. Bold by all
druggists. Book To Mothers mailed free.
BRAUkifi.p Kroulatob Cos., Atlanta, Ga.
CORStTS.
MOU toEKV li \o ~
™ C PERFECT
FI S URC MMa pit
NOVELTY CORSET WORKS.
BOl.c MANUFACTURER*.
JOY MADE A MANIAC OF HIM.
An Immigrant From the Azores Goes
Mad on Seeing Hie Fiance.
From the San Francisco Examiner.
P S Lemos, a young Contra Costa
county ranchman, went to Oakland to
get l married. Ho met his bride for the
first time in nine years, and was in the
evening committed to Agnews asylum for
the insane. The shock of meeting her and
the prospect of seeing all his hopes accom
plished was more than he could stand,
and he became a raving maniac. Lemos
came from the islands of Azores nine
years ago, and started to make a fortune
for himself in Contra Costa county. When
he came away from his old homo, nearly
ten years ago, he left a little black-eyed
maid waiting until she should hoar from
him in far-away America, to tell her that
he had made a fortune for her and bid
her come to him. Lemos went to Birones
valley in Contra Costa county, where he
bought a small ranch. He worked hard
and watched his property grow in value
and his business increase, and as he
worked he dreamed of tho far-away island
and the little maid who was only waiting
for a word to come across the seas to him.
But It was this very work and the wasted
nervous energy that drove him insane
on his wedding day. One day he made up
his mind that there was room for two on
liis Contra Costa ranch, and the word
that both had waited /or so long was at
last sent. She was to come to Oakland,
join his brother’s family, who live at 1667
San Pablo avenue, and there they were to
be married. She arrived on Tuesday and
went to the residence, while Lemos was
sent for. He came to Oakland in the morn
ing and started for his brother’s house.
Everything was prepared. Tho lovers
who had been parted for nine years were
on air from the time he left his Contra
Costa homo. The railroad was too slow,
and when he reached Oakland he could
not hurry enough to reach his brother’s
house. The door was opened. He rushed
to bo reunited; tho wedding was to
take place in the afternoon, and thay
were then to go back to
Contra Costa county. He walked
into the house and to his fiance. Thero
was a cry of joy, a wild shriek of delirium,
and Lemos became a raving maniac. The
strain of waiting, the overwork, the
anxiety, the delight at meeting her, all
conspired to undermine his reason. The
tension had broken and his mind had gone
with it. He was taken to thecounty Jail,
where it was found necessary to put him
in a straight jacket. He raved about his
marriage and declared that his arrest was
for the purpose of preventing his marriage,
and that all had conspired to keep him
away from his bride. The examination
was held in the evening, and on his wed
ding day he was committed to the Agnews
insane asylum.
SANDWICHES.
They Were Known Even by the An
cient Romans.
From the Fall Mall Gazette.
The ancient Romans were very fond of
them, and called them “offula.” It will
be seen, if the French encyclopedist Is to
be accepted as an authority, that recipes
for making sandwiches on the other side
of the channel are of a very restricted
nature. French cooks, domiciled in Eng
land, have been much more voluminous in
. their recipes for the preparation of tooth
some sandwiches.
The eminent Francatelli, who was a
pupil of Careme and ‘‘chef” to her maj
esty the queen, and subsequently to the
Reform Club, was the inventor of “Ade
laide” sandwiches, which were not dain
ties, the bread being stamped out in a
circular form and fried in clarified butter
to a light golden color. Between two of
these “croutons” was placed a prepara
tion of minced cooked chicken and ham,
mixed with curry paste; the sandwiches
were then anointed with grated parmesan,
mingled with butter, ana baked for five
minutes.
Francatelli’s “Victoria” sandwiches
were composed of thin brown bread and
butter, with layers of thinly-sliced hard
boiled eggs, small salad and cleansed
fillets of anchovies between the layers.
And to the same inventive genius we owe
the “Bretby” sandwich, made of slices of
white bread and butter, cut from French
rolls, with alternate layers of chicken and
shred lettuce.
Sandwiches for ball suppers can be
made of thin scollops of roast fowl, game,
or any kind of cooked fish, or of tunny,
lobster, or the tails of pickled brawns or
crayfish, masked by white mayonnaise
sauce and aspic jelly; while ordinary
sandwiches, according to Francatelli,
should be cut from half-quartern loaves
and made from thin slices of beef, veal,
ham, or bacon, seasoned with pepper and
salt, and French or English mustard,
sliced pickles being sometimes added.
An American authority on the cuisine
very wisely observes that sandwiches re
quise more care than is usually bestowed
on them, for the reason that everyone be
lieves that he can cut sandwiches. An
analogously naive belief has long since
been held as regards the driving of gigs
and the writingsof leading articles.
Asa matter of fact, for perfect sand
wiches the bread should be made on pur
pose, and the baker should be requested
to bake it in tins and raise it w'ell before
it is put in the tin, so that it shall not be
full of holes, as in that case too much
butter will be consumed and the sand
wich will become disagreeably greasy.
It is only gluttons who like sandwiches
in the bread of which the numerous per
forations are filled with butter. Epicures
prefer delicate slices of pure, white crumb
of bread, with a united surface, and the
under sides tenderly and discriminatingly
spread with a thin layer of the “best
fresh.”
Some Mustache History.
From the Boston Evening Transcript.
What is the history of the mustache?
In Greece and Rome no mustaches were
worn without beards, but in the conquer
ing days of the Roman empire several
half civilized races, who had come par
tially under the influence of the Romans,
and who wished to be rid of the name of
barbari, or wearers of beards, attempted
to shave in imitation of their conquerors;
but as they had very imperfect imple
ments for the purpose, and as the upper
lip is notoriously the hardest part of the
face to shave in the case of any one poorly
skilled in the art, they were unable to
mako u clean job of it, and left a quantity
of hair on tho upper lip. This mark was
a characteristic of several nations on the
coniines of Roman civilization; of tho
Gauls in particular, of the Dacians and
some others. See the Roman statue of
the dying Gaul in the Museum of Fine
Arts—perhaps the only classical repre
sentation of a mustache in that institu
tion. The Latin language has no word
for mustache. This barbarous accident
was unworthy of the honor of a Roman
name.
THE MORNING NEWS: WEDNESDAY. TI NE ill. ISO3.
THY CAT MOTOR
How a Smart Man Got Power to Run
Hla Machinery.
From Harper’* Weekly.
“I had a large cork and bung factory in
Grand avenue, and I needed power to run
my machinery. You know, of course,
that there is an immense amount of
stored-up electricity in a cat. The prob
lem for inventors has been to invent a way
to extract it profitably. In the rear of
my factory I constructed a one-story
circular building, some sixty feet in
diameter. On the floor of this I coiled a
glass pipe six inches in diameter. The
first coil ran around the outside of the
room, the coils gradually growing smaller,
till the last, in the center, was no larger
than this table. It gave me something
like a mile of pipe. The top and sides of
this pipe were lined with rather stiff hair
brushes, tho bristles being a little more
than an inch in length.
‘‘At that time Milwaukee was overrun
with cats. It was impossible to sleep
nights. I put a notice in the paper that I
would pay 10 cents a dozen for prime cats,
delivered at my factory. I got sixty dozen
the first day, and stored them in the base
mont of the power house. The motor op
erated thus: Placing in tho outer end of
the glass pipe an imitation rat, made of
rubber and propelled by a small interior
storage battery, I would then adjust a cat
immediately behind it. The rubber rat
would start off at a terrific rate—it was
made to go through the mile of tubing
in from two to three minutes —
and the cat, of course, followed
furiously, thinking to catch the sup
posed animal throughout the entire dis
tance.- Gentlemen, it was exciting to
watch a healthy active cat whip about
those spirals, with the mechanical rat
about a foot ahead, and going like a can
non ball. The cat’s back and sides rubbed
against the brushes and her electricity
was thus extracted. With a storage bat
tery and by sending a cat through every
five minutes, I generated enough electric
ity to operate my entire plant, light my
factory, and sell power to run neighbor
ing passenger elevators and small machin
ery. It also took the yowl out of the cats
and gradually tho city became quiet. At
the end of a week a cat could be caught
and used again.”
FAITH OF A RAI Niff AKER.
Prof. Jewell Believes He is Destined
to Control jthe Clouds.
Kansas City, June 18.—President C. B.
Jewell of the Jewell Rain Company of
Kan., which has been operating
along the line of the Rock Island railway
in Kansas, is in Kansas City to-day buy
ing chemicals with which to continue his
experiments.
‘‘l am surprised,” said Mr. Jewell Sat
urday morning to a reporter, “at the
prejudice I have found against our ex
periments in Kansas. People are often
unjust in their criticisms through ignor
ance of the conditions necessary to com
plete success. At one of our recent tests
in Kansas we got only a sprinkle at the
point where the test was made. Twenty
miles away there was a heavy downpour.
The people proclaimed that we had made
a dismal failure, but we had really been
successful. The wind blowing at a pretty
stiff rate carried the chemicals used in
producing rain several miles, and of
course tho rain did not fall in any quan
tity where they were sent up. Only on a
calm day will it rain at the point where
tho experiment is made.
“Prof. Melbum attempted to throw
mystery around his experiments, but we
do not. Of courso we do not tell the
chemicals we use. but our car is always
open to the public for inspection and the
presence of any number of spectators
docs not deter us from going ahead with
our operations. Our work is done entirely
by gases, which we liberate through a
sort of a smoke stack and Which ascends
rapidly, how far I do not know. We
have progressed fat enough to. determine
that there is nothing in the concussion
theory. You will hear people say that
heavy downpours always follow great
battles. This is not true; history will
not bear It out. As much powder was
burned at Gettysburg as in any battle
history records, but there was no rain.
At Dodge City we sent up a balloon filled
with explosives, but we got no results.
Rainmaking is still in a crude stato, but
I have great faith in it and I ultimately
believe that man will be able to control
tho heavens.”
Are These Locust From China?
From the Baltimore Sun.
A correspondent of the Rockbridge
(Va.) News tells of the discovery at Tim
ber Ridge, in that county, of a hole in the
ground from which locusts are pouring in
great abundance. The local conviction is
that this hole extends through the earth
to Egypt or China. A citizen attached a
bullet to the thread of a spool of cotton
and lowered it in the hole. “It went,”
says the veracious narrator, “down until
the thread of the spool was all run off,
making 600 feet, and no bottom was dis
covered.” The presumption is that the
hole goes through, and it is suggested that
“it would be well for the President to
place a guard at the hole and keep back
the paupers and scoundrels from China,
and if our government intends to enforce
the exclusion act, I think the cheapest
and quickest way would be to put them
in this hole and let them go home. They
can supply themselves with a parachute,
and all going the same way there will be
no danger of a collision.”
CUTICURA REMEDIES. _ _
COVERED WITH SORES
Tried the Doctor and Almost Everything
1 Could Think of, But Noth
ing Helped Me,
Thought I Would Try Cuticura Remedies,
lu One Week 1 Was Cured.
I tried the Cuticuha Remedies and they
did everything for me. My head und tody
were coveed with some kind of sores, und I
tried almost everything I could think of, and
finally I tried the doctor, but nothing helped
mo. After, reading your advertisement I
thought I would try cuticura Remedies. I
bought the Cuticura. Cuticura Soap, and
the Cuticura Resolvent, ami one week
after I began using them my sores dried up,
and I have not had them since.
Mrs. E. A. JONES. Mclntosh, Ga.
Cuticura Never Failed
X have been using your Cuticura Remedies
for several years, especially the Cuticura,
and it has never failed to do what is claimed
for it. It is about the only remedy I keep In
my house all the time. I would not be with
out it for money 1 think It Is the best skin
euro In the world I use It for all kinds of
sores, new or old. and It always cures them.
Prof. J. W. PORTIS.
Davis Military School. Winston, N. C.
I had a very severe case of what the doctors
called ring.worm or tetter on my foot. After
trying several of the best physicians for over
a year without benefit, was induced to try
your Cuticura Remedies, which completely
cured me.
JOHN C. SHOFNER, Nashville, Tenn.
Resolvent
’the new Blood and Skin purifier, internally,
and Cuticura, the great Skin Cure, and
Cuticura Soap, an exquisite Skin Beauti
fier. externally, instantly relieve and speedily
cure every dlßea.se and humor of the skin,
scalp and blood, with loss of hair, from in
fancy to age, from pimples to scrofula.
Sold everywhere. Price, Cuticura, 50c.;
Soap, 25c. ; Resolvent, *l. Prepared by the
Potter Drug and chemical Corporation,
Boston.
Mr- •How to Cure Skin Diseases." 64 pages,
50 illustrations and testimonials, mailed free.
QIQVIC Skin and Scalppurified and beau-
DnD I O tilled by CUTiCCItA Soap. Abso
lutely pure.
_ r mm* mmmr"
i 1 "■*" - *m i trhjgn- nVxni ' n.i-ia
I O SAY, Ct you see by the candle’s dm light, ( j
Whet so badly I need for to-morrow's bouse-clesmog I
I know if I heve that, I’ll get through by night)
Powder.
Sold ' by N. r. FAIRBANK & CO., Chicago. !
> Everywhere St. Louie, New York, Philadelphia, Boston, Montreal. J
BABIMTENTIER.
GIVE BABY AN AIRING,
AND USE ONE OF OUR
Baby Tenders,
Price Only $3 50.
-AT—
LINDSAY & MORGAN'S
TWO STORES,
141 Congress and 31 Whitaker St,
Now is the time to take
up jour Carpets and put
down new Matting. We
have a fine line.
P. P. P, Pimples
PRICKLY ASH, POKE ROOT Blotches
AND POTASSIUM ——
Makes ™ d
Old Sores
Marvelous Cures
Prickly Ash, Poke Rootnnd Potassium, I
the greatest blood purifier on earth.
mnL. J Bolls, eregypelas, syphilis, rheuma- I
*4*o nil r rilsfln tism, scrofula. blood poison, mercurial I
UIUUU I UlvUI! poison, and all other Impurities of the I
Blood are cured by P. P. P.
Randall Pope, the retired druggist of I
a* I . Madison, Fla., says • P. P. P. istne best I
Uhoilinnfiom alterative ana blood medicine on the I
niinUittuilolll market. He being a druggist ami bav- I
IIIIUUIIIMIIwm tag sold all kinds of medicine, bis un- I
eollcitcd testimonial is of great impor- I
tanoe to tho glck and suffering.
-_J Copt. J. D. Johnston.
tinn NnrnTIIIfT To atttchom it may concern:— ltake I
UIIU wWI Ul UIU great pleasure in testifying to the effl- I
cient qualities of the popular remedy I
for eruptions of the skin known as I
P. P. P. (Prickly Ash, Poke Root and I
P. P. P. purifies the blood, builds up Potassium.) I suffered for several I
the weak and debilitated, givesstrengtn years Wtth an unsightly aod disagre- I
to weakened nerves, expels diseases, eablo eruption on my face, and tried I
giving the patient health and happiness various remedies to remove It, none of I
where sickness, gloomy feelings and which accomplished the object, until I
lassitude first prevailed. this valuable preparation was resorted I
In blood poison, mercurial poison, to ■ After taking three Imttles, In ae- I
malaria, dyspepsia and in all blood and cordance with directions. lam now on- I
skin diseases, like blotches, pimples, tirely cured. J. D. JOHNSTON,
old chronic ulcers, tetter, ecaldbead, Of the firm of Johnston A Douglas, |
we may say without fear of contra- Savannah, Oa. I
diction that P. P. P. Is the best blood Henry w[ntCTi Superintendent, of the I
purifier inthe world. Savannah Brewery, says: he has bad I
Ladies whose systems ate poisoned rheumatism of the heart for several I
and whose blood is in an impure con- years, often unable to walk hlspain was I
dition, due to menstrual irregularities, so intense; he had professors In I’hlla- I
are peculiarly benefited by the won- delphlabut received no relief until be I
derful tonio and blood cleansing pro- came to Savannah and tried P. P. P. I
perries of P. P. P„ Prickly Ash, Poke Two bottles made him a well man and I
Root and Potassium. ho renders thanks to P. P. P.
All druggists eell It. _ )
LIPPMAN BHOS., Proprietor**,
Lippman’s BlooVt. Savannah, 6a
MINERAL WATER.
HIMSI HililCT.
GEYSER WATER,
POLAND WATER,
CONGRESS WATER,
HATHORN WATER,
HARRIS LITHIA WATER,
BOWDEN LITHIA WATER,
BUFFALO LITHIA WATER,
FRESH FROM HIE SPRINGS 111 HUB 10 Si.
LIVINGSTON'S PHARMACY
LEATHER GOODS.
Railroad and Mill Supplies.
KUBUEB ANB LEATHER BELTIXO, LACISO, RIVETS AND PACKING, WATER
AND STEAM HOSE.
HARNESS, m SADDLES, M BRIDLES W. AND ffl COLLARS.
LOG HAMKS, TRACES AND TIMBER HARNESS.
NEIDLINGER & RABUN,
• 154 ST. JULIAN, 153 BRYAN STREETS.
Children Cry for Pitcher’s Castoria.
MEDICAL.
SOME SHOES.
Are good looking, hut will
not wear, and keep their
shape. Ours will, because we
only keep the very best that
is made, Our Russets are
all the go, and the quality
and price meet every re
quirement and desire.
NEW NECKWEAR
Has just been received by
us. Every gentleman who
wishes to dress neatly and
be in style will buy the love
ly styles which are now dis
played by us. Don’t buy
shoddy goods, just see ours.
UNDERSHIRTS AND--
You need go no farther,
,for we have them in all
styles, and for the finest
wearing and stylish quali
ties they are as cheap as
any in the country. Don’t
buy flimsy goods, but get
good goods from
WAKEFIELD & LEE,
“THE"
Hatters, Haberdashers & Shoemen,
27 BULL STREET.
MACHINERY,
KEHOE’SIRON WORKS,
IRON AND BRASS FOUNDERS, MACHINISTS, BLACKSMITHS AND BOILF.RMAK
ERS, ENGINES, BOILERS AND MACHINERY. SHAFTING, PULLEYS, ETC.
Special attention to Repair Work. Estimates promptly furnished. Broughton street
from Reynolds to Randolph streets. Telephone 268.
SUMMER RESORTS.
BATTERY PARK HOTEL,
Asheville, N. C.
Open throughout the year. Elevation 2,800
feet above sea level Most magnificent wen
cry and climate east of the Mississippi river.
The hotel lias been rcoently completely reno
vated, repainted, recurpeted and repaired in
every way. Flcst equipped hotel In the south
—hydraulic elevators, electric bells and lights,
music hall. Ball room-tennis courts, bowling
alley and ladles' billiard parlor. Beautiful
drives find first-class livery Cuisine excel
lent; service splendid. The hotel, located
upon a pluteau covering K acres, 180 feet,
above the city, is within five minutes’ walk of
the postofflee, churches and opera house, and
commands tho best view ol George Vander
bilt's palace. Special electric oars to hotel
from all trains. For particulars concerning
rates, railroad facilities, eto., apply to
E. P. McKISSICK Manager.
SPEND YOUR SUMMER AT
The Oakland Heights,
ASHEVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA
A strictly first-class hotel, where every ap
pointment Is conducive to health and pleas
ure Elevation 2,400 feet.
Location perfect. Magnificent, mountain
views. Absolutely pure spring water. No
malaria. No mosqnltns. Only house In
Asheville where consumptives are not re
ceived. Cuisine unsurpassed
A fine hath establishment Ip connection
with hotel in charge of skilled attendants
Terms for board weekly: Single rooms'll SO
and upward; double rooms $32 00and upward,
according to size and location. Special rates
during May and Juno. Carriage meets every
train. For fufther particulars address
E. VAUGHN. Oakland Heights.
1 Asheville, N.C
IfllOODllTf SULPHUR SPRINGS
HOTEL,
N.C.
Under New Mnuttgoaient.
Tbl hotel has been thoroughly renovated
and many Improvements made atuona which
are many porcelain baths with hot and cold
water.
Will Open June 15, 1893.
For terms and further particulars address
B. P. CIIATFIELD, Proprietor.
Also of Highland Park Hotel. Aiken, S. C
SWEET SPRINGS,
Monroe county, West Virginia, accommodat
ing comfortably 800 guests This popularand
well known summer resort will open Juno 15.
Elevation abov?) tidewater 2,000 feet. TTBsur
passed climate Cuisine highest standard.
For further information apply to
W B. BISHOP, Manager.
THE LAFAYETTE Finest location, now
manu#ernont, all modern conveniences, excel
lent cuisine. First-eiasH accommodations for
185 guests. #2CJD to 12 50por day. Special rates
for the season. C. K. TODIJ, Muuagff.
White Sulphur Springs,
WEST VIRGINIA.
G 1 RAND CENTRAL HOTEL. Cottages and
• Haths now open Accommodations first
class For Information call at all general
railroad ticket offices, or S6Dd lor pamphlet
giving full information.
U. F K4KLE, Supt.
CAPON SPRINGS AND BATHS,
With Its Hotels and Cottages, opens Jute Ist.
HAMPSHIRE COUNTY. W. VA.
Offers to the people of Georgia and elsewhere
Superior Mineral Waters. Baths of any tem
perature. A lovely summer home In a beau
tiful mountain region Safe retreat from
cholera. Kutes reasonable. Send for pamphlet
,nd secure rooms. Double daily malls and
telegraph. W H PALE, Prttp’r
•SCREEN PARK HOTELS*
GREEN PARK. N. C.
IitLEVATION 4,300 fe<)t. Scenery grand be-
J yond description, bracing atmosphere,
H5 J is the hottest day on record. Exemption
from hay fever and inalarU. Send for beauti
fully illustrated guide bonk Address GREEN
PARK HOTEL COMPANY. _____
HOTEL LAFAYETTE Opens June 17 Lo
cated directly on the beach. All modern im
provements. First-class ip ali Its appoint
ments. JOHN TRACY & CO.
GENTS’ FURNISHING GOODS
BUFFALO LITHIA SPRINGS HOTEL
Oil the Atlantic anil Danville R. R., Meck
lenburg County. Virginia, now open.
The Internal use of these valuable medici
nal waters In conjunction with the hot min
eral water baths has accomplished some of
lie most remarkable cures ob record —
especially Id Gout, Rheumatic Gout and Itheu
mutism
Facilities for hot and cold mineral water
bathing.
Send for pamphlet und see what many of
the leading physicians say of the value of
these waters In Dyspepsia and Kidney
Troubles and as a Nerve Tonic.
Parties leaving Savannah at 10 20 a. m via
the South Bound Rv reach the Springs at 11
o'clock next morning. For pamphlet, terms,
etc . address THUS. F. GOODE,
Buffalo l.lthla Springs. Va.
FAUQUIER Springs, Va.
.INO. E. UAKF.It. Manager.
(Late of Everett Hotel. Jacksonville. Fla.)
A modern brick hotel—Gas, Electric Bella,
Bowling Alley. Tennis and First-class Livery.
Hot and cold sulphur baths. For rates, etc.,
address as above.
HOTELS.
THE HOTEL TYBEE,
On the famous Tybee Beach, having been un
der Us new management thoroughly
renovated and Improved is
-SUM OPEN MR IHI SWtS-
The cuisine will be first-class, an unlimited
supply of Fish, Shrimp and Crabs being a
Special feature.
Excellent opportunity for Fishing, Boating
and Surf Bathing.
Cobb's well known orchestra has been en
gaged for season
Bates-Day. 12 50 and s.l week, tit6o and
115; breakfast or supper 600., dinner The.
BOHAN. CXI WAN k DBKBY.
; A Complete Hotel.
The Tourists’ Resort.
The Drummers’ Hons*.
Comfortable, Convenient.
Special Kates to Summer Boarders.
CHARLES F. GRAHAM, Proprietor.
The Morrison House.
("lENTRALLY located on line of street cars,
J offers pleasunt south rooms with excel
lent hoard at moderate prices. Sewerage and
ventilation perfect. The sanltury condition
of the house Is of the best. Corner Broughton
and Drayton streets. Savannah. Ga.
HOTEL MARLBOROUGH,
Broadway and 36iti sireei.
NEW YORK.
Four hundred rooms, single and en suite,
with private bath and toilet. Electrio light in
every room.
AMERICAN AND EUROPEAN PLAN.
First-class accommodations at fair prices.
Baggage convoyed freo of charge by leaving
checks at the office of the hotel.
LOUIS L. TODD, Proprietor.
WANTED, merchants to try the benefitso(
advertising in the "One cent a word”
columns of the Mouxixg News. U wiU oar
latuly pay.
5