Newspaper Page Text
THE GOSSIP OF GOTHAM.
Rebellion Breaks Out in the Salva
tion Army.
Will Investigation Stop It P—Why a
Bair Restorer Caused Bill to Sup
port Cleveland.
(Copyright.)
>'ew York. Sept. I.—Rarely does it occur
to the average New Yorker that the
metropolis affords a field for the talents
of empire builders unequaled by any city
in the world. Of this fact the pres
ent condition of the Salvation Army
affords striking evidence. Unknown to
mos' Americans, Ballington Booth, com
mander of these eccentric legions, has
become so powerful as to have success
fully defied the authorities, but at present
be has on his hands a rebellion among his
troops that seems likely to require all his
military skill, if he Is to suppress it at ail.
As very'few are aware, the revenue of
the Salvation Army has now grown to
enormous pro
t portions in this
country. Not
only are numer
ous millionaires,
including a well
known soap man
ufacturer and a
prominent finan
cier contributing
liberally to it,
but very many
prominent people
} including mem
bers of the Van
// derbilt and Sloan
families, have be
commander booth, come auxiliaries,
and the dollars flow in with encouraging
regularity. The great building of the
army, of which the corner stone was re
cently laid, is to be an architectural tri
umph. The banners and uniforms of the
troops have begun to assume-genuine
military luxuriance, and the various sta
tions are do longer cheerless ana bare,
but snug and comfortable. In the case of
the officers of rank, the improved condi
tions are quite noticeable, for they live
well and are by no means pinched where
money is concerned.
But as prosperity came, so did dissen
sion. The rank and file began to com
plain that they were being ground down
under the weight of despotism. Now, it
is true that the government of the army
is military in every sense of the word,
and, as staff captain marshall recently
put it, “when you’re in the Salvation
Army you do as you’re told.” But, ac
cording to the complaints preferred by
various barracks, the rank and file have
no show at all. Favorites, like Capt.
Patty Watkins, are promoted over the
heads of the veterans. Another griev
ance is the importation of recruits from
England to fill soft berths. It ma.v not be
known that the Salvation Army is a very
foreign organization. Ballington Booth
is an Englishman, and very naturally he
prefers his countrymen when promotions
are in order. But so great was the griev
ance when several new men recently came
over from England to fill commands that
appeals to the alien contract labor law
were threatened. However the matter
was smoothed,overby Commander Booth,
and promises are alleged to have been
made that remuneration would be raised
to a decent living scale. The women of
the army are particularly incensed be
cause they are forced to enter saloons to
sell copies of the War Cry, the literary
medium through which salvation news is
disseminated in this country from the
official standpoint. It is to this practice
that recent intemperance among the army
women Is attributed. Not a few have
been seen intoxicated on the streets of
New York lately, as the police records
show, It would seem that when a female
Salvationist has nothing in particular to
do, she is obliged to sell War Crys if she
wants any money.
All these grievances culminated in a
series of visits by Salvationists to the
army headquarters on Keade street, and
Commander Booth is alleged to have
promised some amelioration. He also
agreed, it is stated, that the price of
army insignia and uniforms, which are
sold from New York, should be reduced,
and, further, that no more Englisn were
to be imported, but that Americans
should have some chance for promotion.
For a time matters appeared to be
smoothed out, but the commander is said
to have feared the results of his compli
ance on the Salvation regiments through
out the country, and to have “slumped,”
to use the term applied to his action by
his disgusted troops. The great revenue
of the army' is pretty well drawn upon as
it is, and a general increase of pay w ould
prove embarrassing.
The New York barracks determined
upon revenge. Owing to the pecuniary
influences which have been brought to
bear upon the Army the cruder forms of
its war upon the devil have been aband
oned. New Yorkers no longer see the
Salvationist transparency: “Why pay
sixteen cents a pound for mutton when
you can get the Lamb of God for nothing?”
while the hymn, “Hooray' for the Lord”
has even given way to “Lead, Kindly
Light." But the soldiers made a sudden
return to primitive forms of combat. In
three different barracks thing3 became so
noisy that whole neighborhoods were
kept awake night after night.
Tambourines were thummed, drums
were pounded, shouts rent the
midnight air, and in a general way
pandemonium reigned. The very result
longed for by the sly Salvationists ensued.
One fortress of the Lord was raided, and
a whole regiment was paraded to the po
lice court. Naturally the commander
was embarrassed, and it cost him more to
rescue his troops from the clutches of the
law than it would have done to increase
their pay all around.
And all over the city the same com
plaints arose. Salvationists are as noisy
as Salvationists can be. The holy war is
making sleep a lost art in many parts of
New York. Neighborhoods are circulat
>ng petitions and general distraction
reigns.
. But the commander will not give in. He
ls asserting his authority in Napoleonic
fashion, and the battle grows active with
°ut the least suspicion having yet been
aroused in the minds of ttie chief suffer
ers as to the real source of the difficulty.
DR. BURTSEDL’S COMING.
Hr. Richard L. Burtsell should be in
New York by this time. He was expected
la> t month, and his arrival is awaited
infinite eagerness, in view’ of the
liquor problem now attracting national
attention to tho
[ athollc church.
the doctor was .
known to be in . /
laris during the J
" lsl week in /?§fV jßfcclOT
and it / f/M 7
has been stated f 1/lM
lhat he went to [/IQR fmLgP
riomo as advo- ijuM
rate of various \\'V .-aSp’g ~
deposed priests \Mf
throughout tho
’d n his retufn
W|ll have docu-
Kents likely to '
tnake him as ZS"'
peat an author- *
h.v in his way as dr. bubtseld.
ha to in himself.
Be this as it may, it is certain that he
ill return in triumph, if he returns at
I **• and since he is one of the greatest
I ™* authorities on canon law. it seems
w 10 lhat his P lea at the Roman court
”Uld not have' been made unless he felt
■are of success. Had itnot been for Ur.
i^ SeU K„ efforts Dr. McGl.vnn would '
tions ** restored to his Priestly func
thlVn n0 u exa,rf :f ratinK ma ers to say
that Dr Burtsell is the one man upon
hom the attention of the American Cath
ohccergy is fixed, and that he will
shortly be back in the United States is a
piece of news from the ecclesiastical point
of view of the tirst magnitude.
more police rumors.
,„r°, r - 80 ? e da - vs rumors have been circu
lated in New \ ork that the resumption of
the police investigations by the legislative
committee, which so recently drew na
tional attention
to its labors, will
not be as impor-
MggggJjjiSß tant a matter as
(Jo*— many think. This
(mi >s due to an ap
\Vp I prehension o n
. jwSSw gacious observ-
J y ‘ ers that what is
to come cannot
be more effective
*l' than what has
Q already trans
} pired. Thereforq.
they contend, it
inspector Williams, is well to leave
matters as they are. since the committee's
authority is, after all, limited, and the
people are as thoroughly convinced of the
existence of colossal police corruption as
they can be.
Inspector Williams, who is as famous a
policeman in his way as Byrnes himself,
is credited with knowing all the ins and
outs of this business, and to be able to tell
some things about tho coining doings
when these investigations are resumed
that would make “mighty interestin’
readin’.” However, he keeps his own
counsel and general uncertainty pre
vails.
But the Parkhurst brigade have heard
the rumors, and according to a letter
from the doctor himself, there must be no
cessation of inquisitorial activity until all
the corruption in high places is'revealed.
Dr. Parkhurst and Inspector Williams be
long to the same political party, but their
personal relations are far from cordial.
Inspector Williams is accused of having
found out some of the secrets of the Park
hurst crusaders and to have passed around
the “tip.” The situation just now is very
much like a complicated game of chess
and both sides must play carefully to win.
The police are by no means without
resources in this contest, as the reform
ers may learn to their cost.
One of the charges now going the rounds
is that the police have sought damaging
information about the past of some of the
investigators and mean to hold it over
their heads as a sort of hostage to discre
tion.
DB LAUDS CALVORCM.
Senator Kill’s baldness has grown so
pronounced in these latter days that he
uses, unknown to
most of his ad- -v.
mirers, a hair re- \
storer, with re- IHk \
suits that are by fRapsHA A
no means notice
able as yet. The wST, A ,
secret appears to VslK
have been be- Jf
trayed by the ex- JB MBhe"'
cessive zeal of an .UjWs. _
admirer, who sent
a dozen bottles of
a capillary en
couraging com- Y ”V
pound to the cap- \ a /
ital addressed to ' 1'
the senator. senator hill.
Tho senator himself is not pleased at
this desertion of him by his hair, but is
reported to be sensitive to all allusions
with reference to it. Nevertheless he
recently revived various forgotten classi
ealities and quoted from the 700 allitera
tive Latin lines, all beginning with “c,”
which are written in praise of the bald.
The sally made a hit and its repetition
resulted in a general bestowal of hair re
storers on the senator, who thereupon de
clared that the greatest men in history,
from Caesar to Bismarck, have been more
or less destitute of hair. Someone, his
tory is silent in the matter of his name,
asked the senator if his recent sutjport of
Mr. Cleveland was based upon any such
consideration. The laugh that ensued
was conceded to be at the senator’s ex
pense. And Mr. Hill took it all in that
suave, calm way of his which, more than
anything else, makes for his personal
popularity.
Senator Hill, by the way, is becoming
one of the best authorities in history in
congress. He is an omnivorous reader,
and the felicity of his comparisons and
perorations is due in no small degree to
the immense range of his general informa
tion. The present congress is noted for
the presence of numbers of unusually
well educated men in it, and among them
Senator Hill is by no means last.
THE JAPANESE MINISTER.
The coming presentation of the new
Japanese minister to the President
will be an event of more im
portance than is the case with most
diplomatic happenings. The odd court
dress of the Japanese will be an
interesting fea
ture, and the
• will doff it when
special commis
sion to investi-
States and he
Japanese minister in There are many
court costume. New Y'orkers
interested in Japanese railroad
projects, and investigators here look
forward with interest to the move
ments of the Oriental. It appears that
the Tokio government has had differences
with various chartered concerns which
have been treated rather cavalierly in the
readjustment of interests that ensued
upon government control of the railways.
The Japanese themselves, however, are
very friendly to Americans, far more so
than the Chinese are. This autumn will
witness quite a social plunge on the part
of the Mikado’s representative in the
swim of the Four Hundred. All the civili
ties are said to be inspired by a desire to
have a favorable report made to the
Japanese state department on the subject
of those railroads, but Orientals are not
more easily caught with chaff than are
the rest of our fellow creatures. In the
matter of the railroads they have cer
tainly outgeneraled some New York
financiers.
• statues of washing
Of all the statues of Washington, that
which s'ands in front of the sub-treasury
building in Wall street is most advantage
ously situated as—.
an object of con
templation and is JPfx!
awarded tho palm ■o\^\
for beauty and Vi jin
sculptural excel- I jIR
lence. It has just U
been paid the H
complimentot I El
servin g a s a |H |H| \
model for the H
bronze represen* EH mil
tation of the * vl[
father of his kiL vV '\\\,
country which is i ,\mh ffhjJiimijjWr m ,
to adorn the pe- f ■TflWt >
destal in front of ’ IfiJIB lip))'
the glorious now if™ j
cupitol o f t h e V //I r
state of Wash- I
ingtion. The statue is certainly the most
conspicuous object on all Wall street, but |
THE MORNING NEWS: SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 2. 1894:
it is a noteworthy fact that in recent
years the financial thoroughfare has been
losing much of its monetary prestige.
This is owing to the dread of the Street
by bankers who do a large business
throughout the country. They fear the
impression produced by an investment
concern in any way associated with Wall
street. The name itself has been given
an ominous association by the stream of
invective hurled against'it. When Grover
Cleveland retired from the Presidency he
would under no consideration retain his
law office on Wall street, and this dis
cretion is imitated by the many states
men who have occasion to open offices
near the financial center of the metropo
lis. Asa consequence, the father of his
country, whose gaze is directed away
from Wall street, sees rows of stately
edifices, whose occupants have deserted
his own thoroughfare for one that is less
suggestive of the dog that was given a
bad name. David Wechslek.
THE WOMAN OF FASHION.
The Predicament the Returned Sum
mer Girl Finds Herself in.
She Has Nothing to Wear —A Few
Suggestions Which Bay Help Her
Out—The Fall Novelties In Dress
Goods—How to Bake Them Up.
New York, Sept. I.—The demi season Is
upon us with all its disadvantages. The
girls are returning everyday in a healthy
brown condition. They went away to re
cuperate; but now flud themselves too
plump and round for the city gayeties.
How to get rid of tan. freckles and the
like is the talk of the hour. Everything
Is being tried, with more or less success
If the cold weather continues most ot
them will immediately take up a course
of training to harden their muscles anc
dispose of the somewhat bourgeois ful
ness of cheek.
But a more difficult problem than the
matter of one’s physical condition pre
sents itself. Most women have absolutely
nothing to wear. The light, pretty sum
mer dresses that were all right fur the
summer resort, are sadly out of place in
the city streets. And the one or two
gowns that served for rainy and chilly
days, and for traveling, and are no longer
fresh and spotless. The serge hasn’t its
old smart hang, out droops here and sags
there in a dispirited manner. And the
summer girl looks rather dejectedly upon
the pile of useless dresses that have been
taken from the trunk, and wonders
whether she will have to sit at home
until anew dress can be made.
There are two or three solutions to the
problem. A simple and satisfactory one
is to purchase a plain skirt of dark blue,
gray or black cloth, covert, cheviot, or
one of the waterproof cloths—since you
will want it for the autumn rains. You
can get one of these for a small sum, just
at this time of the year. Then select the
quietest and best-looking of your sum
mer-waists, have them laundered or
pressed, as the case demands, and wear
them with your fresh, jaunty skirt.
Another, and a perhaps more satisfac
tory plan, is to buy an entire cloth suit.
Just now they cost about half what they
did in the early summer. You would, per
haps, be surprised to see the neat black
suit which vou can purchase for sl2
skirt and fashionable coat, with double
breasted effect in front, cut-away, and
wit h the long, full skirt effect In the back.
Such a suit will last well into the fall;
and then can be bought for even less than
the sum named.
For the maiden with a full purse I
would say, get you anew tailor-made suit
at once. The fall materials are coming
out —a little slowly, it is true, owing to
July’s excessive heat, which dulled the
faculties of the creator of our novelties
to some degree. But now they are com
ing to our shores, and in another week
or two we shall have them all with us.
Those that have come clearly indicate
that some of our fancies of last year have
gone b.v, while others will be revived in
new guise. For instance, the combina
tions of color are seen in many of the new
materials, but combinations much softer
and quieter than of yore.
We also learn from the great importers
that crepons will be among the favorite
materials. And this is not to be won
dered at, when we consider that crepon
appears in so many forms and designs.
Those of this season, thus far, are varied
and beautiful. The greater number of
them show a ground work of one color,
over which are thrown stripes or designs
in raised mohair or soft chenille effects.
One of these latter is particularly beau
tiful. The ground is an uneven stripe of
black crepon and pink silk, then black
and blue silk. Over this is a dotted effect
in cut chenille or plush, In the shades of
golden brown, shading from a delicate
yellow into rich seal tints. The whole is
most brilliant, and soft withal.
Another crepon has a dull heliotrope
ground, with a black chain stitch in
mohair, forming a stripe.
Another produces a block effect by
stripes of dull sage and dull plum color,
with another stripe, crossing these, of
the curling mohair effect in black.
A most dainty silken puckered novelty
is shown in clear, golden brown, with the
fine puckers formed by small open stripes,
more like eyelets than anything else, that
run closely between.
A rich, dark blue has curving, dashing
lines thrown over in raised black. A
brown, all of one rich, dark tint, is made
of stripes in long undulations, each being
about two inches wide. The alternate
stripes have a lustrous, satin effect, as
contrasted with the plain crepon be
tween.
A black and olive blending form the
ground work of another, and its raisi-d
design consists of regular, close- polka
dots of black.
A queer material, known, however, as
crepon—for lack of a better name. I sus
pect—is made of fine lines of dark green
and dull gold—the latter being actual
gold threads—closely interwoven. The
whole is woven so that it falls in snakv
curves, producing a fantastic appearance
as it lies in folds.
A reminder of the spring styles is a
dark brown, whose surface is covered
with twisted threads in true harlequin
tints.
There are also a few novelties in camel’s
hair, notably a rich blending of peculiar
green and grayish tints, which would
make up into a most stylish costume.
But these fanciful, expensive materials
—they cost from $3 to $a a yard—will not
be worn to any extent. A few of the
fashionables will make them up for this
peculiar demi-season, but by far tho
greater number will wait untij the seasuu
advances.
What is now being sold to great extent,
in the shops, is the satisfactory, enduring
English cheviot. There are some beauti
ful varieties in iron, silver and bluegravs,
and a suggestion of the pinkish tints is' in
some. This material is fifty-eight inches
wide, has been thoroughly shrunk, and
costs $2.75 a yard. It takes five yards
and a fialf for a full suit-admitting of a
• A Dashing Pall Style.
long coot and full sleeves. It is of very
close weave, thick and warm, aud wiil
last through more than one season.
Satin-faced woolens are also shown—a
noveltv which consists of twilled wools
so lustrous as to fully deserve the name
they boar. They i>ossess an advantage
over the cheviots, for this particular time
of tho year, in being of somewhat lighter
weight. Some of these are double-faced,
with the one side of a lighter tint than
the other, and showing the twill more
clearly. In such cases one side is utilized
tor trimming the costume.
There is but little difference in the
September suit. The coats are a little
shorter, the sleeves very wide, and the
skirts clear the grouud and aro well
stiffened at the back.
A Jaunty Paris design shows a Jacket
which stops short at the waist line. Its
revers are broad and pointed, and curve
inward and down the front, narrowing to
the waist. A large button fastens them
to the bodice, and another button trims
each side of the Jacket, below Dainty
pieces of cream lace relieve the plain,
broad vest of the material, which shows
between the revers. A ribbon belt, just
in front, falls in a short bow.
The other is fsr simpler, and more to
the American girl's liking. Itsskirt has
four divisions in front, Joifled by narrow
bauds of black passementerie or braid,
which also edges the bottom. Its jilain
bodice opens all the way down, although
narrower below the bust, to admit of a
white front. I.ong stole revers, starting
from the shoulders, lie flat until they are
caught over the bust, beneath a largo
button each side. Two other big buttons
finish the jioints of the bodiee, which run
slightly below the bell line, in front.
A Parison Fancy for tho Fall.
BAHRIED A SPOOK LOVEB.
It Bust Be So, for Bay Bangs Herself
Telle the Story.
From the New York Sun.
Onset. Mass., Aug. 25.—May Bangs, one
of the Bangs sisters, materializing
mediums and independent slate writers
of Chicago, was in the cabinet room of the
Happy Home Cottage at Onset Bay at
4:30 last Tuesday afternoon, when she de
clared positively and without any provisos
that a iierson of flesh and blood in this
life couid be married to a materialised
spirit. She declared that a woman from
the west, a woman of wealth, had been
married in tho very room in which she
sat.
“I materialized the form,” she said,
“and the lover came out of thecabinet at
tired iu the uniform of an army officer.
The premises had been previously ex
amined to prove that there was no mortal
about. The materialized spirit asked
that the curtains be drawn for a while to
shut off the front parlor. The bride
wanted him to put on her slipper, and he
did
“Only a faint light shone through from
the room where the minister and others
were, waiting. He kissed her numerous
times. The bride was in anew wedding
dress. Then the materialized spirit lover
requested that ’lie marriage ceremony be
performed, and the request was granted.
Ho placed a ring on her finger. They
were together a long time that evening.”
The reporter, who investigated the
spiritual marriage, had heard from other
sources of such a matrimonial event, and
from two different persons he had heard
that the woman in the case was from toe
west; that she was wealthy, well edu
cated and a woman of refinement. She is
said to be a firm believer in sniritualisin
and has long known the Bargs sisters,
Lizzie and May. She is about 35, short in
stature, plump in form, and dresses ele
gantly. Another account of the wedding
from the lips of one who claims to have
possession of facts is this:
"On the night of Aug. 8, which was
Wednesday, everything was ready for
this strange ceremony, and tne wedding
party, consisting of about half a dozen
persons, was within the walls of Happy
Home’ Cottage, the home or the Bangs
sisters, which is but a few rods distant
from the grove where all the big spirit
ualistic meetings are held. Miss ,
who was to be married to the one who
had passed away, had purchased flowers
and with her own hands had decorated
therooms. Curtains covered the windows
just as at a seance. A single dim light
was burning in the parlor, just a candle
in a box. the tiny flame being subdued by
bl ueglass.
Lizzie Bangs and the minister were to
be seen in this front room next to the
street, surrounded by the floral display
of ferns and lilies. A cheese cloth had
been hung across the double doorway
which led into the cabinet room behind.
May Bangs tame tripping down the
stairs and entered the dark little apart
rnent where the spirits first made their
appearance. She was followed by the
bride, who took a seat in the cabinet
room and awaited the appearance of the
spirit who was to become her husband.
May Bangs materialized the form of a
late captain in the army, who, when in
life, hailed from Maryland.
An ordained minister then went through
the marriage service, and at the close de
clared the couple to be husband and wife.
When the minister, who is a woman, at
present in Vermont, finished, she was
heard to say that she hoped it was really
a materialized spirit that was married,
for if it was a man in earth life he was
married sure enough.
It is rumored that when the Bangs sis
ters start for Chicago on Monday two
young men will go with them. One of
these young men, who struck Onset with
\ • ' bmPcY*' JBtML
%
um
1
WSBy j> ?
only *2 in his pocket, has been spending
j money lavishly of late.
“I’ve struck a snap,” he said to a re
. porter. “1 am going to Chicago with May
Hangs, but I’m going to get srtO in mv list
j before I start, or I don't go. I’ve had a
promise of $l5 a week and my board bills.
, Have you heard of tho spirit marriage?
j 11 took place all right. The spirit groom
| was George—Capt. fleorge—Somebody.
1 Thev wanted me to put on a uniform and
; represent the groom, but J was out with
May once, and Miss bobbed up sud
denly, and May had to introduce me to
her. so the girl knew who I was.”
The strange mariago has been the talk
of Onset for some time, but as most of
, those there are deep-dyed Spirituuiists,
: they think it nothing unusual.
i This peep show recalls with a differ-
I ence the famous spirit marriage in the
family of the late (leorge D. Carroll, once
of Dempsey & Carroll, stationers, who
wasted much of his substance on a me
dium named Fanny Stryker Carroll
had lost a young son, and though the
medium never materalized the youth for
him. she did act as priestess in a “spirit
marriage“ between the boy and “Bright
Byes,” a ghost with no family name.
Elaborate engraved invitations for the
ceremony were sent out,and the priestess
officiated in white uncut velvet. The
elder < arroll died recently in compara
tive poverty, and tho medium buried him.
Illnks—My wife asked me this morning to
engage a new washwoman. Whero does
yours live?
Wigwag- I don't know whero she lives, but
she hangs out in our back .yard.—Philadelphia
Itocord.
RAILROADS.
PLANT SYSTEM.
Charleston & Savannah R’y. Savannah, Florida & Western R*y.
GOING SOUTH KKAU DOWN] TIME CARD | GOING NORTH-READ UP
*> I & I 3 1 ti J IhEffect July 29. IR4. 1 32 > 78 |
XOipoi 9flumiLT No* York ... .Arl 123 pm *s3am '
1203n’t>ll 4'TamLv Philadelphia Ar 1046 am 345 am
i 2 50am 2 13pm Lv Baltimore Ar 8 20arajl2 48m
| 430am1 S3opmjLv Washington Arl 7(Mam'll 10pm
j ttOSamj 711 pm Lv Richmond Ar 340 am 6 43pm
; S4optn Lv Wilminfrton Arj 11 10am
.l 4 35pm|12Mam|Lv Fayetteville Ar' 0 30pm|10 23am *"
315 pm 11 3t>pni! 507am,Lv Charleston ”...Ar 4 30pmI 3 15atn 1250 pm
1 I ILv Augusta Atl_ 1245 pm
12 32pm Lv Beaufort. Ar 343 pm 10 mam
441 pm[. . —| 6 09am 1 1, v Yemassee An 130 pm | 9 loam
■ 330pm| 223 am: 7 35am[Ar......SAVANNAH Lv 1202 pm 1 noopm 7 20amI
*; >-V >m 2S pm ISs“>|Uv. SAVANN AH Ar il (Jam Mpra TOOaro
} 35am : 923 am Ar Jesup. .. Lv 10 13am 733 pm 4 35am . rf...
603 pm 1020 pm 5 50am 10 22am Ar ... Waynoss ....L" 1 008 am! ® 10pm SOOami^T.,.,
*** om l:- • 750 am Ar Brunswick . L th 7gVpm
l-lam 104.5 am ... Ar ... Albany ... n liK-.n, ..J 4uOpm
8 40pm .... 8 10am; 12 30pm Ar..... .Jacksonville i , i3 2Cvpm 7 00pm.. .
Jn 1227 pm Ar Valdosta X IBP R' 3 52 pm 11 32pm
3 39am 150 pm Ar Thomasvllle ... L\ > 2 30pm 930 pm
9 25am | 4 30pmiAr Montlcello Lv . .77 1130 am 5 30pm
5 ;>oam i 3 17pn: Ar Hainbridge Lv 102 pm 7 00pm
3oam 1 25pm; Ar Gainesville.... Lv 10 35am 0 15pm ...
251 pm Ar Ocala Lv 9 47am 4 15pm
350 am 2 oup.ii l 5 !opm Ar Sanford Lv 1 15am 1020 am
103pn; 655pmj 9 45pm Ar Tampa Lv 8 o<,pir 6 30am 1215 pm
l4spm 736 pm; to2spmjAr Port Tampa Lv 7 20nm 0 00am 1140 am
4 25am 4 20pm Ar Macon Lv 1100 am 10 45pm
J‘™m 7 50pm Ar Atlanta Lv 7 30am 7 30pm
< 00a ] n 500 pm 8 55pm Ar Montgomery Lv 7 30pm 7 18am 8 00am
1 225Pm 305 am Ar Mobile Lv 12 20am
5 00pm 7 35am|Ar New Orleans Lv 7 50pmI .
4 \ un <lai &: T rain 12 Kavenel daily except Sunday at
45 p m for C harleftton 1 rain 11 leaves Charleston daily except Sunday at 8a m tor Ravpiipl
Trnln leaves Charleston 7.35 a ... Sun,lays only and amvl e |avann“h H:o?ra Traffi 10
stsp at afi stations P m SunJayß ooly an, ‘ arrlv ® Charleston 9p m. Trains 5, , v and 10
SLF.EPING CAR SERVICE AND CONNECTIONS.
Tr ? r . al £i* a2 „‘s nd3ft „ carryPu , l , lman s‘eeping cars between New York and Port Tampa.
Trans and 78 carry Pullman bullet sleeping cars between New York and Jacksonville
rimlw.iSn Car nl2fi^ , i 1 * Bleepi , n K car Waycrosa to Montgomery. Nashville. Louisville and
(.m In.iatl. T rains 5 and carry 1 ullmun Buffet sleeping cars between Savannah and Ocala.
Trains ti and 23 carry Pullman sleeping cars between Savannah and Jacksonville Passen.
gers for Jacksonville by train 23 can enter sleeping car at f> p. m Trains 15 and 35 make
close connection at Way cross, for Mobile. New Orleans and the Southwest
„ s ,m d .,'? a 1 IX,iDtB a “ d Blte P‘ n ‘'ar berths secured at passenger station, and ticket
C 's^lDt'r D t I S E S ; R FLEMING wM. DAVIDSON.
X F, . s C y rs Supt 8 • K & W R y. Gen. Pass. Agent,
Charleston. S. C. Savannah. Ga Jacksonville, Fla.
the tropical trunk LINE. J
Jacksonville, Tampa and Key tA/est Railway.
JOSEPH H. DURKEE, Reoeiver.
THE FLORIDA SOUTHERN RAILROAD CO I
sußsMS b l£m wortS railway; r B - CABLE - General Mana *" r -
—SOUTH— j l ime T ihie T -NORTH- “
12 !2 *>• - s - ex**- K? Hw S2T
lilE 5 !fs Its SSb
11.15 pm -30 pm; 10 50 am Ar Palatka Lv 4SO am 103 pm 510 nm
112?“ 3a ‘ p “ IJWpmAr . Seville Lv aO3 am II Mam 105 pm
15s am 407 pm 1.40 pm Ar DeLeon Springs Lv 223 am 1123 am J2OB L
450 pm 132 pm Ar. t , , i Lv loaonm
........ 350 pm 12 35 pm Lv. f DeLand > ,V aS ““
258 am 434 prn 122 pm Ar Orange City Junction Lv 150 am li>s6am
t 5 IS pm Ar Enterprise Lv 410 20 am
3.V) am biOpm 2TmvAr 5anf0rd.......... Ly 11& am~[(TMam"io 80 am
iM&f j:£:::::::::: }?SS
555 pm Ar Pemberton Lv 7110 am
84b am 15 pin 813 pm Ar Orlando . .......Lv" 11 40 pm FlViam = '
512 pm jJNNP'nAr Kissimmee Lv 10 50 pm 84:1am
10 50 am 746 pm 106 pm Ar Bartow Junction.... .Lv 948 pm 765 am
1 05 pm| 9 45pm 685 pm|Ar Tampa Lv 800 pm 630 am "
{ pm l£ ir Bartow Ar t & llTpmTslß pm
tDaiiy except Sunday.
TralnH 35 and ; carry through Pullman Buffet Sleepers dally between New York and
Port Tampa, connecting at Port Tampa on Mondays and Thursdays for Koir
West and Havana. *
INDIAN RIVER STEAMERS are appointed to perform the following service
Leave Titusville 7 00 a. m Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays for Rock ledge Melbourne
and way landings. Returning, leave Melbourne at 7:00 a. m Tuesdays, Thursdays and
Saturdays.
Leave Titusville for Jupiter Mondays and Thursdays at Bp. m.: due Jupiter 7pm the
following day. connecting with J and L. W. R’y for Palm Beach and other points on Lake
Worth. Returning, leave Jupiter Wednesdays and Sundays, 5 am.; due Titusville 8 am.
morning. ' '
G. D. ACKERLY General Passenger Agent, Jacksonville, Fla.
Florida Central & Peninsular Railroad Cos.
(fIOTR MERIDIAN TIME.)
Time Table in Effect Aug. 27. 1894.
NORTH BOUND. T ™ ln T J aln | SOUTH BOUND. Train Train
Lv Savannah... 1136 am 925 pm I Lv.. Savannah 5 50“ am '450 nm
Ar.. Fairfax. S. C 133 pm 1122 pm Ar Everett 733 am 850 nm
Ar. Denmark. S. C 222 pm 12 10 am Ar Yulee "9 23 am 847 nm
Ar Columbia. S. C 405 pm 210 am Ar . Fernandlna 1130 am
Ar..Spartanburg, S. C.... 810 pm Ar Callahan 925 am V
Ar. Asheville, N. C.. . 1120 pm Ar Jacksonville 10 20 am 9"snm
Ar.. Hot Springs, N. C.... 12 50 am Ar St. Augustine
Ar.. Charlotte. N. C ~8~3d _ Dm A4O am Ar . Palatka ..j.™
Ar Salisbury,N.C 949 pm 828 am Ar.. Lake City 1145 am *
Ar Greensboro. N. 0 1109 pm 10 05 am Ar Live Oak 12 31 nm
Ar.. Danville. Va 12 27 am 1145 am Ar Monticello 245 pm
Ar. Richmond. Va 820 am 450 pm Ar. Tallahassee 335 pm
Ar Lynchburg, Va 218 am 200 pm Ar Chattahoochee 512 Dm
Ar Charlottesville, Va. . 400 am 407 pm Ar. River Junotion 515 nm .'.'.'.'.'.'..'2
Ar . Washington 713 am 830 pm Ar Pensacola 1100 pm
Ar BalUmore 823 am 1135 pm Ar Mobile 306 km '.. *
Ar . Philadelphia 1046 am 300 am Ar New Orleans 785 am
Ar. .New York 1 2.1 pm 623 am *r WaMn ,n '
r 'a?r t w""v"i.’“ H: *” ,,m 300 Ar 1B SS
No3slvs New York 12 15 am, N037. 4 30pm Ar. Cedar Key 800 nm
" ‘‘ Philadelphia.. 350 am, “ . 655 pm Ar.. Silver Springs 236 nm
.. .! Baltimore.... 81 am, “ , 9 20pm Ar Ocala 251 pm ’s’aj'ani
* Washington.il 01 am, “ .1043 pm Ar Wildwood 853 pm 425 am
Asheville. 7 00 pm v- —r ~ -
“ “ Spartanburg 10 06 pm Orlando* IS
” “ Columbia 125 am, “ ,12 05 pm Ar pm
Wo3sar Savannah .... 40am, “ 4 40pm |Ar Utki Charm " 7M ££ ""i
Mo 85 ar Savannah... 915 pm. No 38 11 25 am Ur. .Lacooehee ~6ot pm ~r<ii am
From Jacksonville and all points in Ar Tarpon Springs *9 00 pm . .
South. Middle and Western Florida and New! Ar St. Petersburg .. *IO3O nm
Orleans by the Florida Central and Penlnsu j Ar Plant City 626 pm 7'am
lar Kallroad. II Ar. Tampa 720 nm 900 am
*Notk— Dally except Sunday.
Vestibuled sleepers on trains M and m via Richmond and Danville railroad *-
ir ee !!i Ta ! l ’ pft ' J “‘i* csonv die and New York, connecting with Colonial express solid tram
WaßhinKion and Boston without chan#*’ v „
To Florida-New York sleeper on No. 37 to Tampa, No. 35 to Jacksonville.
Pullman sleeper between .Jacksonville, Asneville and Hot Springs on trains 38 and 85 d*M*
Sleeper to New Orleans on No 35 from Jacksonville. *
Ul u-?r';T, R n l^? P rf ly i 0 ti ° MAC DONELL, O. P. A., Jacksonville Fla,
N S. PFNNIN(ION. Traffic, Manager, Jacksonville. Fla.
All trains arrive and depart at Central railroad depot.
D C c e lL o LEN e CHy n TlcUet l Agcn? ryan StrMU Da
IRON FOUNDERS. ’
KEHOE'S :: IRON :: WORKS!
WM. KEHOE Sr CO.,
Founders, Engineers, Machinists, Boiler
makers and Blacksmiths.
All kinds of repair work promptly done. Great reduction In price of d&SaBnO
-SUGAR MILLS AND PANS - Hi
ESTIMATES PROMPTLY rUHMSIIKD.
Broughton Street, from Reynolds to Randolph St. Telephone 268, Savannah, Oa
NOVELTY IRON WORKS.
y JOHX koT’k
j| if Iron and Brass Founders and
Blacksmith* and
Boilermakers.
SAMSON SUCAR MILLS AND PANS.
Steam Engines, Injectors, Steam & Water Fittings
V • CORRESPONDENCE SOLICITED—ESTIMATES GIVEN.
Nos. 2, 4 and 6 Bay and I, 2,3, 4, 5 and 6 River Streets,
SAVANNAH, GA.
MEDICAL. 1,1
Chichistir b t holism. Red Chou Diamond Brand A
rENNNStONBdi * r\\l\lS
THI ORIGINAL NO QCNUINI Thr tfU |, **ar*-. and rtUaU* Pill for aale VV?
I.tidlta. uk Orufffial for (%tehe*trr Krttflitk Ihamond Brand tu K<l sod Gold matallle \y
boiM eaalad with blue- ribbon Take no <tk-r kind. */W -u biHlrAtumt and lmu attorn. v
All |>lll In board baa, {dot wraj>pra, kr< iUngt-rau <><>Hni*rfdtA. At l > rug*! au. or mb4 m
■lr. ID •va’M|>B fur |i articular* laatlmonbda. and “lirltaf tor laillra," mloUtr, by rat am Mali
] H.OtHJ Tet| motiiaia hams Paoor. QHICH KSTIR CHtMICA L- CO„ _Jfa4l4*
Said bjr ail Lci VriicftilA l*ttlLA DtLFruiria
15