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WOMAN OF FASHION
Ihc Autumn Bride in Her Beautiful
Simplicity.
Materials for Wedding- and Traveling-
Gowns— Fur a Most Fashionable
Trimming— The Tendency of the
Coat— Some Handsome Ones Des
gcribed.
(Copyright, 1893.)
New York, Oct. 18.—Truly wedding
gowns ought to have anew impetus given
lo them this fall, for the list of prospect
ive Prides is steadily filling up. Miss
Flora Davis headed it with a brilliant
Paris ceremony, and in her wake will fol
low maidens as equally fair. As many as
three Misses Sands, but each of a differ
ent family, h*ve plighted their troth, and
A SILK DOTTED OAT7ZE.
Will be married within the next two
months. Miss Draper, renowned for her
beauty, will shortly become Mrs. Vaughn
Clark; Miss Eleanor Duer, affianced to
Joseph I.arocquo, Jr., will stand before
the altar on Oct. 25; and many others
tfiil step from the highest ranks of maid
enhood into the sedater class of wife
hood.
S But, for all the interest attached to
such affairs as these, more attention is
riven to arrangement, pomp and original
ity in the costuming of bridesmaids and
maids of honor, than to the gown of the
bride herself. A magnificent simplicity
is the one essential. Satin, in the pearly
shades, is still the material, the veil is
still of tulle, the trimming of lace, or of
pearl passementeries, if one is not super
stitiously inclined, and even the orange
blossom still forms part of the toilet.
The cut of the gown is either Princess
or a round waist with tho skirt full and
wide, of course. Accordeon plaits appear
even in the wedding gown, and the quaint-
/! /S 1
TULLE AND ORANGE BLOSSOMS.
B' ss nf the ordinary street ;ind house
( "'mi is manifested to slighr degree in the
b ndal costume.
tll,,r e is so much more of a field in
,;ll 'h to plan your bridesmaid's cos
mrics or the dress of your maid of honor.
i s "J tbere i R but little law. for coloring
at. i* 0 one's own discretion, and your
■ tonuatit maids may bo brilliant or de
• 'ire. may serve as fitting backgrounds
11 the jiure splendor of the bride, or as
oetviup to brighten her paler tints,
most occasions, however, the bridos
■aids wear delicate changing silks, while
M ’ii the maid of honor, be she child or
•’0 an, greater wealth of coloring may
heaped.
lint are not all wealthy, and such
a’gestinns would send despair into the
it'. ® an y a simpler girl. whose bridal
, ■" must be corrt*i>oudingl> siui|d<-.
nw lucre are the quieter silks, tho
very finest of silk and wool combinations,
the dainty crepon, and other flue white
stuffs. Only let her keep to the pearl
tints.
Now that brown is such a general favor
ite, the bride need not hesitate to wear it
in the fear that her bridehood may hi- de
tected. And such beautiful browns as
she can procure these luxuriant days. If
one tint docs not suit her, numberless
others are at her disposal, in soft, heavy
cloth, in the rough, wiry goods, in the
gentler camel's hair, in the sackings and
the favorite basket cloth. Let her trim
with velvet, with satin, with fur, par
ticularly the last. For fur satisfies the
yearnings of the ordinary woman's heart
after the magnificent, to greater ex
tent than any other trimming. So make
an effort to procure your fur. If need
be, do without an extra gown in order to
have at least one richly trimmed with
fur, quiet and elegant finish. And velvet
is accomodating likewise. Velvet ruffles
on sleeves, velvet collars and capes, are
handsome, and quite as comfortable, on a
chill November day. When it comes to
the basques on your short bodices, the
velvet will need to be added in triple
effect and quite plain, one falling simply
over the other- But where the ruffle
effect is desired, satin is employed in the
trimming, and then the basques may be
gathered in prettier fashion.
Of course the brown maiden will like
wise have a shot gown or two. The
bi-colored woolens, in brown and another
tint, give greater latitude in trimming,
for the quiet tints are then brought out
more clearly. The browns and dull reds
may have dull red velvet sleeves, revers
aud bands. The brown and greens have
rich verdant shades in the minor points
of the dress. And rose-color and black
are commonly enhanced by rich trimmings
in corresponding tints.
But the bride who is married in travel
ing gown or pretty homo dress, is worthy
of note. A wedding of a few days ago,
at a country house, showed a bride that
had passed her teens a number of years
before, and who was suitable attired in
an attractive gowu of straw-colored,
silk-dotted gauze thrown over a black
silk petticoat, and with a yellow ruche
at the feet. A gathered bodice of soft
yellow over blac k was partly concealed
tinder the vest of velvet, richly em
broidered and passementeried in pearl,
that fell over, with long pointed ends in
front The sleeve puffs were a little
higher than is usual, and were made up
of innumerable smaller puffs Long black
suedes wrinkled to the short puff. The
tiny hat was all of black lace and velvet,
with a Mercury wing at the side.
Hut the bride will need another wrap,
and nothing could be calculated to suit
her or womankind in general better than
the beautiful garments of to-day. As the
velvet collarette or rever slopes gently
away from the drooping gigots sloev-s,
mi the heavy mink collarette falls upon
heavier coat sleeves and the effect is
even quainter in fur than in velvet for
the fur is so helpless that It faila just
THE MORNING NEWS: SUNDAY, OCTOBER 22, ISO3.
where it is put, with not a bit of grace;
and it looks so settled and immovable
that the effect might bo ungainly were it
no* so delightfully fashionable. Then
the stole, too, is a great characteristic of
the winter coat. A great long one in fur
is no unusual sight, falling even to tho
feet, over a short garment. A partic
ularly fascinating creation of this sort
was a rather short cape of coachman's
color cloth, over which hung a plaited
collarette in rich gold brown velvet;
over the velvet came the stole, in beauti
ful lynx, melting into the golden tint of
tho velvet, starting in a collar at tho
back, but widening out in front to form
a yoke, theu falling in the long wide
bands.
A rich coat is a plain three-quarter
length, in dark brown diagonal, plain,
save for the deep, straight collarette of
heavy mink that falls over.
A dark green coat lias leg-o’-muttons in
velvet to match. It turns hck in large
rovers that are edged with na row sable,
and the fur continues to run down the
coat's edges. The opening loft by the ro
vers is tilled In with a collar that con
tinues for a short distance down the front,
in bands; and where the fronts of the
coat meet, a little lower down, one edge
of tho sable disap]>ears for a short spaoo,
to come out a few inches below in tho
shape of a tiny fur head, that peeps forth
from what looks like a little pocket, cut
into the side.. The effect is very taking.
A handsome black coat has velvet
sleeves again; immense revers that start
upon the shoulders and that continue into
a broad plastron. The revers are well
nigh hidden under the decoration that
covers them—pretty black embroidery
touched with jet, and, at the edge, two of
those tiny plaited braid ruffles that are so
popular. The skirt of the coat was also
richly worked, and showed some of tho
tiny ruffle effect also. An astraehan col
lar finished itself in two bands that went
•half way down the front.
But a truly magnificent carriage cloak
was queen of everything I saw this par
ticular day. A rich black satin with a
row of mink down the front, is a descrip
tion not particularly inspiring, but it was
the minor details that excited the en
thusiasm. A huge, wide sleeve showed
that the cloak had a lining of deep crim
son velveteen, covered with satin polka
dots. The neck is turned hack into a
plaited falling collar, showing the red of
the lining and edged with tho mink. In
the front the collar falls in pretty co
quilles, and, beneath, turns back entirely
from the front to show a warm vest all of
mink that fits closely and stops at the
waist line. It is caught in by a shining
band of open jet, laid over crimson satin.
Eva A. Schubert.
A LEAD PIPE CINCH.
(Copyright, 1893.)
“A dozen years ago, when I kept in
Adrian,” said the livery stable man, “I
had an experience which it gives me a
pain, even yet, to think of. A fellow rode
up to my door one afternoon and asked if
I cared to buy the horse he was on. Tho
animal was a 7-year-old dark bay, with
no blaze and only one stocking, in pretty
fair condition, but rough—his tail and
mane full of burs. I found him sound,
he seemed gentle and the chap only
wanted $125 for him; not dear for such
a likely looking horse for livery work,
as prices were then. There was nothing
suspicious about the man. He said he
had been teaching school back in the
country, and looked it. The horse was
taken for a debt and he had a regular
bill of sale for him. But the animal was
no more good to him, because he had had
the shakes, was sick of the west and was
THE BETTING RING.
going back home to Massachusetts by the
cars, from Adrian. To cut it short, I got
the horse for ♦IOO, with a good saddle and
bridle thrown in, and he went off on the
next train cast, as he said he would. I
had tho horse cleaned up and was well
pleased with my bargain, especially after
I gave him a jog of a few blocks, in har
ness, and concluded he would be a mighty
serviceable roadster.
The next morning two men, who named
themselves Sutherland and Hutchinson,
got off the train from Detroit to Adrian
to sell county rights for anew patent
.churn. They wanted a horse to take them
around among the farmers and I let them
have my new roadster. When they came
back in tho evening, they engaged him for
the next day, and I was glad to see that
he had not been driven very hard. So it
went on three or four days. Every morn
ing they drove him out and in the even
ing engaged him for tho next day. But
they didn’t seem to have much luck in
selling their churn and talked about giv
ing up and going away discouraged. I
suggested that they had better stay over
to the county fair, which was to open tho
next week, when they could show their
chum to everybody in that part of Michi
gan and would be likely to do well. After
a little talk the idea seemed to
F lease them and they agreed to stay.
posted them on whero to get their
’license and space, and hire a tent
and so on, for ail of which they
thanked me warmly. Then they con
cluded they would have to hire a horse
to take them out to the grounds and back,
and maybe drive around a bit, and they
would engage the one they had been
using. They would pay for him every
day, whether they used hitn or not, only
they stipulated that I was not, under any
circumstances, to let anyouo else work
him during the fair week. Of course I
agreed to that and one of them handed
me a S2O bill in advance to bind the bar
gain. I couldn’t have violated my part
of the agreement if I had wanted to, for
they took him away early every morning
and kept him until long after dark, but
he never showed a sign of hard work so I
had no reason to complain. And they re
marked, two or three times, what a com
fort it was to have the horse one was
used to and had learned to trust, par
ticularly for a person who didn’t pretend
to he much of a driver. Sutherland al
ways drove. He was a stout, healthy
sort of man. Hutchinson was a little
dried up looking chap, who said he didn't
know much abont horses and was rather
afraid of them.
At our county fair—the same as It is
now-a-days at pretty much all county fairs
—the fat hogs, and blooded cattle, and
patchwork quilts and such like were Just
a good excuse for horse racing—the only
near home chance the deacons had in the
whole year to do a little quiet betting on
a trot And as our managers gave liberal
purses, they used to draw good stock and
have fine races Bo they seemed to the
public anyway, but the fad was that
there was a regular ring of racing men
who had it ail fixed up among them wives
to divide the purses and milk the public's
jiockcis by throwing the races That was ]
all found out afterward, but uut in time to
do any good. j
They had one mare, of the ‘‘Gold Dust”
strain—“ Sultana,” they called her—that
could have won in every event she was
entered for, if allowed, but that was not
their game and there is no doubt she was
pulled in the two mile trot, best two in
three, on the third day, letting a black
named Nabob come under the wire,
winner by a head.
That evening Mr. Sutherland, who had
bet on Sultana and solaced himself
afterward with hard cider, accumulated
quite a jag, and when in a good mood for
freeing his mind, met up with the chap
named Carter, who owned Sultana. To
Mr. Carter he confided in a voice like a
fog horn his private impression that the
marc was no good; that she was a cow ;
that it was a dead skin on an innocent
public to match her against a real horse
like Nabob, and soon in such an aggravat
ing way that finally lie got Sultana's
ow ner liot and mad ail the way through.
To clinch all, the patent churn man
swore lie was hiring by tho day
a common livery stable plug, that
ho would bet could beat Sultana
a one mile heat anyway, and ho
pulled out a roll of hills like a
fat man’s leg. to make his bluff good. To
Mr. Carter, who was out for tho dust and
meant business all tho time, that proposi
tion seemed a peculiarly Juicy piece of
pie. He knew well enough that his mare
could beat Nabob any day and at any dis
tance, and the idea of any fool matching
a common livery roadster against h r
made him happy, especially for a one-mile
heat, which was the Surest thing she had.
The up-shot of their wrangle was that
they actually made a match for $. r >oo
aside, one mile treat, between Sultana and
{> j^r;
THE ALLEGED STUDENTS
my roadster, to be trotted the next morn
ing, at an hour when the track would be
free if tiiey could get the manager's per
mission—and the money was put up in
good hands, safe to go to the winner. To
get the manager’s permission, the trot
had to be represented to them as a bit of
fun, for a basket of wine, just to teach a
lesson to the churn-man, who was too
brash for his own good; and they
it would bo quite a joke.
A few minutes after the match was
made, Sutherland’s partner in the churn
business wobbled into to the saloon where
the horse-talk was going on, and ho was
full as a goat. He seemed flabbergasted
when he heard, and succeeded in under
standing, what had been going on. and tho
two partners had quite a row', Hutchin
son calling his fat friend all kinds of a
fool for what he had done. But w'hen
some outsiders interfered in the interests
of the public peace, which seemed liable
to be broken, little Hutchinson turned on
them savage as a mink, aud swerving
right around, as rf drunken man will, he
swore he would stand by his partner, what
ever his partner did was right, and ho
would back liis partner with
every dollar lie chad. Then he
flashed up a roll of money, like tho
other chap’s except that it seemed to
have grown up to maturity. There must
have been at least $3,000 up on each side,
outside of the stakes, before the bluffing
and calling down came to an end, and
drunk as the churn men were, they took
good care the money was in solid, respon
sible hands.
When the story of the match got around
tho next morning there was a feeling of
sadness in the community, on account of
all the ehummen’s money being up with
Mr. Carter and his friends, for it was
felt that those who had not got a piece of
so good a thing had actually lost Just so
much. But that cloud had a silver lin
ing. Two innocent-looking young chaps
—students from Ann Arbor, they
said they wore—strolled into town
to see the fair, and being at the
track when the trot was about coming
off, simple-mindedly put a few dollars on
my roadster. Well, people literally
climbed over each other to get at them,
offering all sorts of odds to grab a share
of their pelf. They got 3to 1, then sto 1.
and, when the horses were scoring, is
high as 10 to 1. It might have seemed
strange, if anybody had thought about it
at the time, how much money they had—
being only students—aud how ably they
caught everybody’s hot and worked up
the odds; but all said it was just youtn
ful pig-headedness that made them act
so, and quoted wise sayings about "a fool
and his money” and ‘‘more money than
brains,” and so on.
I didn’t have a cent up. When Suther-.
f
TIIE ANIMAL HAD THE SHAKES AND WAS
SICK Or THE WEST.
land brought tho horse home, after the
match was on. he didn’t seem to mo even
a little bit drunk. He told me what was
up, offered to dei>osit the value of tho
horse as security he would not be harmed,
and said he would give me one huudred
dollars if he won. and fifty anyway, so I
told him it was all right as far as I was
concerned, but I was sorry lie was going
to lose his money. He sort of smiled, but
then seemed to recollect himself and
sighed, remarking that “it couldn’t bo
helped now,” but he wished 1 would let
Hutchinson stay in the stable that night
with the watchman, to see that no harm
came to the horse, because he didn’t trust
those racing men.
I knew, of course, that Carter and his
gang had too sure a thing for it to he
worth their while to drug the horse, even
if they had the chance, hut humored him
and Hutchinson staid. For a man who
didn’t know much about horses, the way
he rubbed that roadster down, and bathed
his legs, fed bun. tested bis shoes and so
on , was really surprising. A queer sort
of feeling floated iuto mind, not exactly a
suspicion, but the biggest uncertainty l
ever felt, and I concluded I wouldn't bid
And the to * t morning when I saw It was
Hutchinson and not Butherlsud who took
the reins, and that he suddenly looked
like a driver from way !>♦< k. 1 was quite
satisfied 1 hadn't bet any, thougn 1 could
not say why. I Just said nothing to any
body.
Well, the trot came off. My livery
plug went away from Sultana at the
uuarter: was too good lengths ahead at
the half: at the three-quarter, the pace
was so hot for her that she broke and
went up in the air and by the time her
driver got iter down again to a square
gait site was too far behind to even save
her distance. You never saw such a
scene of dismay in your life. The public
howled and gnashed its teeth. My! How
folks did swear that day! As for Car
ter, he was just wild; swore it was a
put-up job. said the horso was a ringer
and demanded that all bets should be do
el a red off Butthocburn men proved the
honesty of their position easily enough
by me and the bets were paid.
Mr. Sutherland didn't wait to close up
his churn business. He just left it. Ho
and his partner, after giving me the hun
dred lie had promised, took the next train
for Detroit. And the two college stu
dents left at the same time, seeming sat
isfied with the fair. And most of the
currency of Lenawee county left by that
train.
I felt ten feet high that night and
wouldn’t take $lO,OOO for my roadster In
fact. I refused $5,000. In my mind's eye
i iiad a world txiater, one to take out bn
the grand circuit and win everything
with it.
But along in the forenoon of the next
day an Indiana sheriff from Marshall
county. I think, if I remember right, came
to town looking for a stolen horse and
found liim. Yes, you've guessed right;
it was my roadster. The owner of the
horse was along and identified the beast.
The bill of sale, in his name, which I had.
was a forgery. Proof was clear and 1
could do nothing hut give up. The ownor
was square enough, however, to give mo
back tlie hundred I had paid the thief, so
that on the whole transaction 1 was $l4O
ahead, and had no right to complain.
About a month afterward the facts
came out and Carter had been right.
There was a put-up job, and the pre
tended churn men, the students, the
thief, the real owner of the horse—and
the sheriff, too, I guess—were all in it.
Hutchinson was one of the best drivers
in the land and had trained the horse,
so the gang knew they had a cinch on
Sultana, but to work it it so as to get all
out of it that was jios.sible they had to
play their comedy in tho fine way they
did. Tho horse was one with a repu
tation already, and as he had a blaze
face and throe white stockings, his
marks would have given him away if ho
had not been neatly dyed, and tho dye
would have been worn or washed off,
had they not so engineered things as to
keep him practically in their possession
all the time I nominally had him. To
renew his color and to maintain him in
good racing form, ready for a big effort,
was easy enough the way they arranged
matters, and they played their game
through from start to finish without
a fault, the effect thereof being perfect
in the -nature of what I now hear
spoken of as a lend pipe cinch on thciboys.
PLUNDER FOR THE CHRISTMAS
TREE.
Train Robbers Loft a Box of Stolen
Watches on the Steps of a California
Church.
From the San Francisco Examiner.
About two years ago tho pastor of the
Methodist church south of Visalia found
on tho doorsteps of his church a Japanned
tin box full of watches. Tho church was
just preparing an elaborate festival for
Christmas. A splendid Christmas tree
was among the features of the proposed
festival, and the good people of Visalia
were lavish with their donations that
were to hang on the branches of that big
evergreen in the little church. But that,
box of watches was much theblggest con
tribution to the gifts with which to stock
the Christmas tree.
Even the unsuspicious minister was
startled by the generosity of tho unknown
friend of the church. Before hehung the
watches on the evergreen boughs among
the colored wax tapers and bonbons and
threaded popcorn and Sunday-school
books he took the precaution to give
notice in tho papers that certain un
deseribed jewelry had been found, and
that the owner could recover the same by
proving pro|*ertv and paying for the ad
vertisement. Some of Wells, Fargo A
Co’s, men saw the notice and wont around
to the minister's. He hud put the casket
containing the watches inside a cigar box.
The express company’s man told him that
if the Jewelry was that for whieh they
were looking, tiie box eonlaincd a number
of watches, and they told him tho num
bers of the timepieces and described
them. They added tho information that
the box was part of the plunder secured
by robbers who months before had held
up a Southern Pacific train near Goshen.
They paid for the advertisement and the
preacher surrendered the timepieces.
The cigar box was sealod and placed in
the bank at Visalia.
There it remained until a few days ago.
They were keeping it against the time of
the apprehension of the train robbers. All
this was long before the robbery at Collis
attracted attention to Chris Evans and
the two Sontags. Evans was only
known as a hard-working, serious minded
farmer, and his two friends were able
bodied young men who hewed logs and
drove teams.
Wlion George Sontag made his confes
sion the other day he was asked if he
knew anything about the box of watches
that the parson found on the church
doorstep.
“Did Chris or John ever say anything
to you uhout them?” asked Detective
Hume.
“Yes,” answered George. “I think that
was in the Goshem robbery that they
took that box of watches. They wrote
on the box ’train robbers’ and put it on
the steps of the preacher's house in
Visalia, and i think that’s where they
found it. the preacher or tho Janitor of
the church.”
‘ Who did it?” was tho next question.
‘‘l dou’t know who it was; it was either
Chris or John. They didn’t want to han
dle any Jewelry.”
The detective announced that he pro
posed to test the truth of George Sontag’s
confession, and the box of watches sug
gested a way. Ho telegraphed the ex
press agent to examine the box in the back
vault to see if it bore out Goorge Kontag’s
story. The agent’s report was received
yesterday. T lie watches were found all
right, and scratched on the bottom of the
case was the word "train robbers.’’ It
was only scratched in lightly, and had
escaped the eye of the parson. No one
knew of the word on the box until George
Sontag told about it on Friday last.
Ohips In the Western Plate.
There Is the story, says the Fibre and
Fabric, of the gentleman who Inadvertently
slipped a blue poker chip Into the church col
lection plate and then called upon his pastor
with an apology for his carelessness and a
silver doll&r Instead of the chi p.
"Oh no." sakl the man of (Jod, knowingly,
"that s not enough. A blue chip Is worth (T>
In your game."
An Oklahoma divine was oven shrewder.
"The collection will now Ik* taken." be said,
"and 1 wish to remark further that poker
chips don tgo any more, (let 'em cashed be
jury you come and bring the money. lam
lord and to this decision by tbc fact that some,
of the brethren have been shoving off chips of
their own making on us and letting the
laugh be on us when we went to get them
cashed *t the llewtlrop Fortune parlors."
A physician points out that fat people on
dure most kinds of Illness much better than
thin people because they have an extra
amount of nutriment stored away In their
tissues to support them during tht ordeal
Moreover, there are many other consolations
for person* of a! umlaut girth. They are
generally optimists by uulpre. geulal and
Ji llv companions who society I* universally
preferred to that of people with angular
frame* and dispositions
SIJWA.XIiIi SPRINGS.
THE WATER OF LiFE.
fj. fees*
w^>-
NOW IS THE TIME TO VISIT SUWANEE,
Relieve the system of BILE and MALARIA and he
made NEW. Read the analysis of New York’s noted
chemists, Drs. CHANDLER and PELLEW:
C. F. CHANDLER, Ph. D.,
C. K. PELLEW, K. M..
East 49th street, corner 4th avenue,
Chemists, and Assayera. new Yoßk, Oct. 10, 1893.
Andrew Hanley, Es<p, Suwanee Springs, Suwaneo. Fla.:
Dear Sir—Below find report of analysis of Suwanee Springs water.
CERTIFICATE OF ANALYSIS.
The sample of water from SUWANEE SPRINGS, submitted to us for examination con
tains In one United States gallon of 331 cubic Inches:
Chloride of Sodium . OelOdgraina
Sulphate of Potaxsa ..'..'A! nflOCTgrains
Sulphate of Lime 1.77 W grains
II carbonate of Soda 0.9*13 grains
Bicarbonate of Llmo ll.ol#9graini
Bicarl onate of Magnesia 3 4827 grains
Oxide of iron and Alumina n ir.ii>grain'll
Silica o.Bo4mgrain#
Organic and Volatile Matter 2.1M00 grains
Total Solid Matter 2ToOl7grains
Respectfully, your obedient servants,
No - 3.110. [Signed] C. F. CHANDLER, Ph. D.
CLAUDE E. PELLEW, E. M.
Suwanee cure* Rheumatism, Dyspepsia, Liver and Kidney Troubles and all Blood
and Skin Diseases. If you can't visit Suwanee drink the water at home. It i* put up
in bottles and carboys, aud If your druggist doe* not keep It you can obtain It of
ANDREW HAWLEY, Savannah, (in., or Nuwanpn, Fla.
MINERAL WATER.
LIVINGSTON’S PHARMACY;
SOLE AGENT
FINE COIN FECTIONS.
POLAND WATER*
HARRIS LBTHIA WATER.
A Few Pairs Hawk's Spectacles and other $2 50 goods now selling at 75c per pair.
LIVINGSTON’S PHARMACY, ’Phone 293. Congress & Bull Sts.
- - - - 1 . .... . ■ ■V .
LEATHER GOODS.
Sea Lion and Walrus Leather
FOR COVERING GIN ROLLERS.
Rubber and Leather Belting, Packing, Hose, Lacing,
Rivets, Pegs and Glue. Harness, Saddles, Bridles, Col
lars, Log Hames, Traces and Harness.
154 ST. JULIAN, 153 BRYAN STREETS.
• ... W '.-I-..'...’. ■ . ’ " ' T"3
MACHINERY. CASmiGS^ETC^
KEHOE'S - IRON - WORKS;
WM. KCHOE & CO.,
Founders, Engineers, Machinists,
Boilermakers and Blacksmiths.
All kinds of repair work promptly done. Great reduc
tion in prices of
SUGAR MILLS AND PANS.
Estimates promptly furnished. Broughton street, from
Reynolds to Randolph sts. Telephone 268, Savannah, Ga.
MEDICAL.
LIPPMAN BROS.. Proprietors,
Drjsqlsis, tippman’s Block, SAVANNAH. GA.
IE GUARANTEE (1 HE,
and can confidently state
that our “Chill and Fever
Tonic” is the best medicine
in the world for Chills and
Fever, Fever and Ague and
Dumb Ague, and to our cer
tain knowledge we know
where all other medicines
have failed our “Chill and
Fever Tonic” has eradica
ted the disease in every ca.se,
LIPPMAN BROTHERS,
Wholesale Druggists,
Savannah, - Gkokgia.
HOTELS.
Complete lloteL
Tho Toorintft’ Ke*ort.
The Drummer*’ Horn*
Comfortuble, Convenient.
Rperial KteM to Hummer Hoarder*.
CHARLES F. CRAHANI. Proprietor,
INSURANCE.
CHARLES F.PRENDERCAST
(Successor to R. H. Footman 6l Cos.)
it nine in Sion tom
106 BAY STREET,
[Next West of the Cotton Exchange !
Telephone call No. 31. SAVANNAH, (JA.
STEAMBOAT LINES.
The Steamer Rlpha,
E. F. DANIELS. Master,
On and after SUNDAY. Oct. 18, will
change Iter Schedule as follows:
Leave Savannah. Tuesday 9am
Leave llcaufort, Wednesday Sain
Leave Savannah. '1 hurxday It am
Leave Beaufort, Friday Sam
The stcau r will stop at Bluffton on both
trip.- each way
lor further information apply to
C H. MKBLOCK, Agent.
YIfANTED, merchants to try the benefit*cl
v V advertising in the "One cent a word"
columns of Ibo Motunuiu Ms,*. U wiU oe
teiuly pay
13
SOLE AGENT