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Mmißg News tliitidltn}; MiminaH btw
WO Ml %% . (M rOIILH 1, IfMHI.
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amusements ami cheap or want column.
hj ctM> a Una. Fourteen Unea of agate
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Letter# and telegram a aboukl be ad
dressed ‘MORNING NEWS/* Savannah.
Ga.
EASTERN OFFICE, rark How. New
York city, 11 C. Faulkner. Manager.
I>DLI 10 KtW IDVLBTISLMtSISx
Ororglu lllitorii .il Society.
Special Noli ■- Hhlp Notice, Wilder 4
Cos Aflenlh: K|. Ihl NoIH-. Il.irmonlr
Uluh Noll-i- o Taxpayer*. ** H llaraee.
City Trr.i-urrr Inter***! Nrat**-. Sivtnn
Department. (lllon. Bunk of Kjvowuh;
InltK -l Not* . Ilermanu B.ink. lntr#-
N011... Havannah llank and Trust t’oin
puny; Inter. M Notice. South, rn ll.ink of
the ikr.tr t.f Georgia; Intern * Notice, P* o
pic’s Savin** and lawn Company; I>r.
F.tlgi- H.. Returned. Ship Nntn e. W. W.
Wi-on. Conugni . . 11111 of Fare, Levan 0
Cafe.
Muxinea* Notices —K A W Laundry.
Hotel*-Albemarl. Hotel. Madison
Bqirare. W.-et, New York
Lentil Not tree—t'Hutton* From the
Clerk of the Court of Ordinary. 1.1 he I for
Divorce, Dooley v*. Dooley.
Washing I'ow.hr—Peart In*.
Amusements —'‘Sherlock Holme*" at
Theater To-ntirht; "The Belle of New
Torif at Theater. Oct. 3.
Kailruad S. tiedules— Plant System of
Itulla.iys.
Cneedu Quartet—National Biscuit Com
pany
Medt. at -Hostetler'* Stomach Bit tel*;
A yet‘a Fill*; Mother’s Friend; Hood’*
Pill*. Horsford’a Arid Phosphate.
Cheap t'olumn Advertisement*—Help
Wanted; employment Wantnl; For Bent;
For Sale. luM<t; Personal; Miscellaneous.
The We# tit rr.
Th* Indlcalknui for tiHlny nr e for fair
weather, ex> opt near Ihe cowl, with light
to fresh northeart to fait wind*.
i ar t i
The convl* 'lon of Jam * Howard ha* not
entirely suits'fled the public mind with re
spect to the query, who killed William
Goebel ?
The ordering of ih- Wilmington from
the Houth Atlantic station to Manila
leave* Admiral m-blry with only two hl|w
und**r hi* command. This 1* mikl to la*
the small* . ..mui.iml r which any flat:
officer exn else* authority at sea.
It is reported that a Chicago club of
owr 10> members, all voter* ha* adver
tised Its aifgicgaM* vole for rale to the
highest bidder. There will probably he no
bidder*. In the purchase and sale of vo***s
publicity l# not desirably for either buyer
or mdier. ,
■ w * —■
Oen. Mile* H'MK never to be able to Bel
to the front, where the lighting te gotna
chi; hut he 1* very successful in keeping
hts name before th* public. etth'-r with an
order saying liow the soldiers shall crease
their ha'*, or something rice of about a*
mm h Inuwluie. Ill* latest order pro
vider that the no,diet* shall sin* patriotic
■ongx and pay at riot attention to tultmn
to the flat!.
A New Jersey tnan has obi iln.-I a <ll
- because hi* write wore bloomer*.
aympathls<d with tramp, atxl won mourn
ing for the Chli jfo anarchist*. A New
York woman has sued her husband for di
vorce because it didn't ralti. They tivi.l
on a farm, and for several weeks no rain
I*4l. The w imiher wan warm Fat illy
■he deckled that II was InsufT, ruble cruel
ty on the part of lier husband to keep
her on the form “to burn up.” when be
might a* well as not provide h* r a home
where It would rain or aalonally.
The United Hlet-s Commissioner of Im
migration ut New York. In his annual re
port recently submitted, says that the
•veratte quality of the arrival- of foreign
or* In this tountry Is deteriorating. The
number arriving fiom Southern Kurope
laal year was considerably larger thin
tbo year ptcetdmg. blit tin* averages of
Intelligence und literacy were lower The
Imraigt a (ton from England and Germany
ditrlng the earn, period of time -how. Ia
falling Off. Kugltsh and <!< rman Immi
grant* bring with them an average of |33
each, while the average for tin South of
Kurope Immigrant 1- less than IS
The attack upon Gov. Roosevelt at Vic
tor. Got., the other day ha. brought that
town Into unplenaant notoriety. Pol.
John T. Irish Is quoted Itt the Hun as re
calling that the people of Victor raised a
fund of k'..<iuo to further a plot for the as
saseibMtton of President (Cleveland, at the
time ha sent his message to Congress rec
oin net g the repeal of the purchasing
clause' of the Sherman act. A writer In the
Jourfiul. by the way, remarks that the
men who ax-xaulled Pol. Roam velt are of
the class that he has hitherto loved, and
quote* his book on "Ranch Idfe," In which
it I* toikl: "They ara nwirh better fe|-
lows nisi pleasanter companions than
small farmer* or arrl.-ultural laborers:
nor are the mechanics and workingmen of
a great city to Ist mentioned In the a■ me
breath.” It would Is- Interesting to Itn-nr
what the -mall farmers and agricultural
laborers and the mi < hunlc* and working
men of tbo cltkta will think of this char-
SclgitsUw by the UepuMktxt candidate.
“|l KKM I OYTO\*FEfl.**
Mr Edward I* Johnson of Fort 111)1,
B. ok tin herald of Cotton
seed," la publishing nom* immphlt la
Which might to have the attention of
plantar* and othera throughout the South
He Ik firmly n>nvln.l that the mofuinti
whose praises he s- ingf la really mor** ben*
etkctnt and powerful than King cot ton,'*
•ml that acknowl* dgntrot of th*
fort will have to b** mud* om* of the*r
ia\ At pi* “ fit. Imftfvrr, “Qu* * n 01-
tonsead" la sadly neglected. And tin
igl‘t Mr Juhiii<on characterizes a** "lh
rinu of Pjo* "
11 to complaint la that th* sd of the
rot lon plant, which "is Intrln-1> ally more
valuable, according to chemical anuly is.
< a food prodi t, jound for fiouud. thou
wheat. i* larg'lv treat***! a* a waste
prodt* t Till “rl fa st and lawl animal
food In agrtculturr** ia < om|oted wih
dh*r nutlerlule, burled In tm ground aral
“mad* to do th* wurk of n. h wrap and
ommonUtal off il o( all l>* rlptloftk*’ In
furnishing i*lant fo<al for the growing of
ruor*cotton, "whil* atutitrd. hungry, tia f
flarved cattle'* room th di AU<l and fl l*b
in Mureh of fs*.*•!. It imrt. that which
would make eaftlt* I* *k. fat and valuanir,
fit** . **l uf the eottofl, ta l*‘l Urol
fertiliger, when only an inhnit*irnui pro
jHirtlori of i! real value *an In w uml
in that manner **IV talk aloui the
*f rim* of '73,' ** royn Mr. Jotinpon, “we
get up on mir hitwi I* ** and howl for tr*
silver. w ahed tear* of pity for the tn-
KOfte< to FillipitkO* w- fulmlnot* g.in*t
tiuaiK, w.- r.- k our hr aim to rai.** more
• otion than the world wunte. and w
never give five minute*' thought from
yeara end to >*ur' end to the ot
tonaeal a* a primary agricultural pro.
dud. although it eland.** ready, if given
half a khow. to poor into th lap of the
houth |Ji,(IOt>.MO year."
It la Mr Johnson opinion that the
cotton H* e* klhmiM t*e th- by-;r*lu< • of
the plant; that the greater valu i to
found in the eeed. There Ik more
money In t. ottome* and. he waya, than In
otton, or corn, or wheat And h b*
ll#*v* that If farimr* cvuld Just l*
brought to tin* fioint of tawing all the
good qtulitity ot th* ee***| and their pro*
duet*, it would not b* many year* befor*
they would Im rai-lng tvtton for tm- e*t*d
and thanking the l#rd tiiat the cotton
brought enough to pay for the pk king
the ae da and raiding the * roi" Mr.
JotiiiKon thlnkK tiieie would be no difll*
culty in making th** reed of * h pound
of cotton ral*d in the South worth four
to four and a half *>ntK. or approximate
ly a total of $300,400,000 for an avt rage
crop
Not enough nttentlon. Mr. Johnson wayr.
ha heretofore been t>aid to tm*
itlea of the rot I ohm** and It Ik only within
the resent imut that any ui*e ha* b**en
made of tiw iHt| at all, except in the
home manufacture of fertiliser*. Now a
great bUfIMW in cotton oil hi* been built
up, and |w*ipk- are slowly learning the
\ a In** of the rn* til c a c.ittlr* and alia k
food Hut the Federal Department of Ag
riculture ban never taken up the cotton
eecd and at udted It according to It* de
e#-rta. nor have the farmer?*, or th* chem
-I*l*. or the manufacturer* given It th**
thoughtful study which its merits war
rant. Mr Johnson hopes by mean* of h*
pumpht*! to awaken Interest In the mat
ter, and to enlist great army of worker*
under the banner of "Queen 4'oifonweed “
PIMIIMi orr Tl IT IT I* %% I**l K.
Although the Republicans are denying
that there Is anything In the trust I*sue
ami r** frying to belittle it in every way
they can. they are net ini-mg any *p
port unity to lessen Us forte. We culled
Mllcntlon the otiier day to the fact that
th** government had sent !*rof. J* nk t•
Europe to gather statistic* regarding
trust*. Since his return he has made the
si.itement that there are mor** trusts in
England and on the continent than in this
country In proportion to the business artel
IKipulalion. He has also asserted that
trust* seem to lie demanded by the busl
n*-- conditions of the age—that they are
the product of natural business evolution
The Republican* are also saying that
without industrial combinations, to which
there Is so much oppo-tMon at this time,
this country would not be able to compete
In the markets of the world with other
commercial nation*, anil that Ilieretare
It would have to curtail produc
tion or endure Industrial depr.■.■loti due
to overproduction.
It Was to be expected that such argu
mehls wouhl be advanced by* the Repunll
i an*. They arc hound to defend trtiats.
The whole country regard* the Republican
party a* the friend of trusts. And. a* a
matter of fact, h Is their friend If the
truth were known It would doufette.-r. ap
pear that the greater part of the ampalgu
fund of tho Republican party I* being
provided by the trust
li seems that Mr Parroll ft. Wright.
I’nlteil Htates Commissioner of Ltlxtf, has
been Induced, doubtless by Repuhllcnn
campaign managers. to make a statement
to the rffoct that better wage are jkil'l
by trusts than were pint before these
i omblnotlons were formed. He states that
not only are better wages paid since
trust came Into existence, but that the
number at laborers who arc afforded -m
--idoymenl is greater. According to .Mr
Wright, therefore, a trust Is a blessing.
But neither I’rof. Jfenks nor Commis
sioner Wright will lie able to convince the
lople that a trust IS a good thing for
them. The evidence I* abundant that a
trust will put Us hand* In Ih*- puckel.- of
the people whenever It can do rO. Hid
that It will pul them In Just a- deeply a-
It i an. It hasn't any more coir-cb a .
than a train robber. The sugar trust kept
down the price of sugar is long is It had
to tin so—l ha I is, .is long as it had op
position—but Just as soon ns it got rid of
opposition It put up the price to a point
where it will be able to nuke enormous
dividends.
ft would no doubt pul the price still
higher It it could, hut If It were to do so
the tariff would not protect it. and refined
sugar would be Imported. Ah Mr. Bryan
said the other day. the tariff n. *1 - re
vising. If th<Tr were les- protection to
rcflnrd sugar the tirlcc of that artleh
would lie leas, urxl the sugar trust
would still be able to make a reasonable
profit.
The *af> return of the lluke of Mit I bor
ough from the war In Mouth Africa so
Mr W K Vanderbilt, father of
the tluclh ss. his wife, that h. s. tit her a
check for half million dol.ars a* a
thank-offering The half-mtltion will h
spent. It Is understood. In the decorating
ami furnishing of anew house which the
Maiborough* mi tuning buiil In Mayfuir.
THE MOHNJKG NEWS: MONDAY,’ OCTOBER 1. 190(1
stiff** WITHOiT me*.
I Congress has been fairly liberal In lf
uppropr lations for th* building of a for
m.d.ible war fleet AH political parti**
ogres that ll Is d* slratolt* to have a strong
navy, however troy ma> differ with re
• i to the -u of the standing army
i Thus it o urv that there are at this
| *im* • enty a- i* l , ranging from bat*
! 11* stnptf t * torpedo Mnits, under < wfistiuc
, tun or author la* 4 for the navy
Rut, singu arfy enough* f'otigrea* seem*
! to have over nuked nljrely th* . fact that
Hhlp.** arc no good without men. la it
! pftfubU' that th* *i*tut< uf**en* i ex
l** t-d the ships to b> automatic m tchine*,
apahh* not only **f navigating them
elv* , but f * nt i their own gone in
i • of n*re*.*tty? That, of course, in t
viol* tit suggestion; ntiil. if the atateamen
had expected Just that ami nothing else,
they would probably have governed th*m-
Hve* i*r‘isely a- they havi done In
h*rt. while they have provided money
tor i hips, they have tH gb <u and to provide
men to run them. The present naval ships,
vei, nr* short-handed. Imb ed, koitv if
them are out *f > *>mrol- lon tat aus* they
lack cm wk. which are hot to la? had The
reconstructed cruiser Atlanta, for in
stant* has Im n ready for service for
more than a y* r, but -h** I. tied up at
a dock and ru ting, be a use there are
no insn available to put Into her,
Th. lack of enlisted men. by the way. is
not th* chief troutih fly th*- passing of
an a* t half a dox* n lines king Emigres*
i an provide for the enlistment of a suf
ficient number of tntti lo man all *f tin
\•. ols Him e the duv of tall spar sand
many rof • - mi war &hiptf nave laimtd. a
inari-o-war’s man doe* nut necessarily
have to tie a sailor. Enlistment in the
Interior, us wall as at th*i ports, may
quickly lilt the forecastles with first-class
material Hut wher* *r the offl*rs to
come from? That qu* * tion embrace* th**
chief difficulty. Four hundred of tiwm
would Im n*ed*d during th*' next f w
moiiHe if th** new /hips wer put into
commission as they were finished hy th*
bolldk rs; and in four year* there would he
teed for I.oft) officers for the quarter
decks.
Tha kimply of ofttrrr* for th* navy has
fp*tofor*' lMt*n ir.iwn from th** Naval
A* k 1( my, but that aourn* no l.aiK' r m*
th* <l*mar)(l. Whll** fho navy ha* Iwnbo
growing. tFi*‘ acatlfmy h.*l* not. at l-aat
not In Kinitlar i>ropnrtlon. The* m idroy I?*
now barely turnUitiinK ortb**ra enough to
tak*' the pin ph of thcM**' who lt* or are
r* tlrl from th*- **rvlr<*, and there la no
)nKtbiiity of inereaainif lt capacity in
tim* for an additional number of M* grad
mtti to be comnilMKlncu l fog tt*e uhlpw
now tn courae of con at ru< tion. In *on id*
• -rime the mat* rial aide of th* navy < ’*?n
--ktc-h ha* lo>*t eight of the neccaalty of
providing brain.** to run it. It han placwl
thi* ahip b for* ihr man, ami now fltup* t
wlf with a numlM r of Khipa in KiKht am)
no men to niak** them effect!w.
The matter will no me before Cofi||rej*e
at it** next memmon. Dome way out of ttic
difficulty will, of i ountc. he foun*! It Ik
likely that tF r* venue marine ami mer
chant marine will he drawn upon for a
numlxr of officer# That to lie
about the moat feasible auaxeatlon tlmt
hu*< yet been nude. Following the
Inj? of ati act to provide for tie* emerjfen
•y. t’onitref will he aaked to enlariro the
4 ij .• Hy of the Naval Academy; and if
we are to • onttnuc navy butldimc. It
a-<ma that thie will have to be done
thi: mi icu: ••mum;
The Washington I’oet no tee that the
number of bicy 1* e ridden In and ato**t Ita
city hui* leehn*<l very greatly during the
past few Mar- "It I* w.tlmate*l by meh
and ;ta are available." aave the l*oat,
“that tin number <f li**vcl# > now in
1 lena by more than one-half than the
total of a year ago If that m approxi
mately orrret. the decline in the hint
thre.* year* must have been about 75 p*r
cent." Condition* affe *!og the bicycle
mitKt be very different in Washington
from what they arc In Savannah In this
city < omi aratlva*!v few wheels ar* now
ridden for pleasure alune, but a greatly
itu rcaied immu r of them are ridden for
business. Th* re are probably more blcy*
bs in tl.illv use in 8a vac no h now,than
ever before In the history of wheeling.
The fact s<. to* to U that th* bicycle
!•* just now
getting Into its prop r place among every
day utilities tip plac* which it must
hencetorth occupy. Five or six years ago
when, with the t ornm* ncrtncnl of some
thing lik** (Mptilar prices, it made its phe
tioirt'iia! sprint Into |K*pularity. it was
a fa*l People rode it for the novelty of
the thing. They grew enthusiastic over
It as th*y do over other fads, because
it <fordd new sensationn and new
themes of discussion. Then there w r*
bicycle clubs. hi< y< le parties club runs
and various .- tal functions havitig their
ilunt f-atur* in blcycb riding. Now all
of that is past. There is no mor*' need
fora bicycle club thin there Is for u buggy
dub or a horseback i lub or a street car
ub The wind ho* cc.is* and t Is a f.ul
and has become a vehicle of common use
It Is carrying men and worn* n—derk*c
stenographers, mechanic** and laborers-to
thrir work of mornings and to thdr honv a
of evening 4, and is performing th** ser
vice more satisfactorily and economically
than any other method of conveyance.
The reduced price of th* bicycle has plac
ed good machine within the reach of
practically every on* physb ally abb to
ride. And In and ai*o it this city, reason
able pri* * s an I good roads have made
thousand** of §■ rsons r dcr- Hicyclea have
contributed In m small degree to the
growth of the suburbs.
It Is true tha! at present few bicycle
partb are se*-n on out-of-tow'n roads, but
in the a ity of morning* great stream of
hi- yd* rbiers may be seen (touring Into
the business s*a*tlon. and In the even
ings a similar stream may h seen pour
ing away from the business -*ctlon. The
bicycle, the "poor man's horse," Is an in
stitution that has tome to slay Th* leis
ure class* 4 may discard It for some oth
er form of amusement, but the working
mas s will cSlng to It as a friend In nr* and.
which, oa the proverb says, is a friend
Indeed
In )*irs gone by the city of ?t.*n <ago
Cuba, was r*gotde*l an the especial hot
tv *) of yellow fever hi lh* Islam) Not a
summer season parsed without an rpt
demic. and ofiener than otherwise the dis
ease lasted practically the year around
M present, however, according to the re
ports, there is not a ease of yellow fever
In Santiago. This desirable -ronditl n Im
. ltd to be* due t> th* us** of tons of ho
ri*le of lim arid thousand- of gallon- of
* irboli* acid, under the supvrvUlou of
A'-is. rix.au aardtary ofllctn
Many n* w(Mper* refer to the <#aive*ton
di-aatar as the ‘Texas dlaastar." and con
do * with h* slat** Hn It They have
probably lo*t right of the vtrt extent of
TANARUS xas It Is bigger than the Germ.*? em
pire, and France could be ■*. t down In*
5” of It Flva states a 4 tig as New
York or six the *!*e of IVniisylvania auld
he carved out of T*ai, and then there
would b* HMD* kind to qwr* It contairui
more than a quarter of a million -quart*
rnlles rf territory. The rtorm torn hwl only
1 mall portion of it Texas, a u tat**
was not ev* r agg* rod by the blow,
heavy as it was upon the unfortunate
city.
•'EM*I A % L.
-Joseph Jtffrrson has given SI,OOO to
U . (lalvt ton relief fund sl* attamlad
tool in Galveston when u mere. boy.
Mrn* Hlchb r. ti* daughter of M* y
• tlwer. the composer. t.i Jus* presontad
tier father ?* piano to th< Royal Museum
of Her 1111.
Rob* t* Hoe. the m intifuctiifw of
I rinting pr *e. Itaa had am- iai d* - ign
• and to commemorate th* live htindr* dth
irmlver r> of the birth of Guttenherg
The kite I * dx Gabrbl Marchaiel. th**
pr me minister of the province of Qu**-
br. wh*> died th* other day, w 1 *!• •* I
of h Cana liar regiment w hich * rved
ug tins! the Fenian raiders In JBT.
The Intlspemlcnce Ihdge ref* rs to the
fact th* the young Hi fig of l’al>. Ilk*
his Queen lu p. imi*l> fol and f mu * .
and in that nsp * t tqk* after hi- moth*
. r Queen Marghwita. “He ia. |** rhaps."
s the joum.il, "the only Prince of the
• louse ot Havoy who iia< * v r shown a
leaning toward the mu l il art. and In
this conm **tlon Is re* *Hed the saymg f
his grandfather at Kolfer no who. hearing
Ihe cannon, ranmrknd, ‘That It the oni>
mu.-l' l ever understood.* "
—*M Gaston Daschamps. literary crlti*
**l lh* Paris T* mfe*. has been engaged by
the Orel** Fraural*, of 11 trv.trd. to give
eight h-rttires, I** ginning February 20. on
•The < onu mi>rury Hi age." M |ick
rhumiM was an ardent |eirtlan of lr*y
tu* in the late tn.il. and as all the
pi • French lectum hava bsen
untl-Drevfusil* s Ids coming **x ltes nn
u-ual Inure.-1. M Deschgfnps * an au
thor of considerable na**. n*l hse done
much exploring In Qr*e. ami Asia H
will sail for America * rly in February.
Rabid Henry lliowixl. of the Adath
J shurun t'ongreg itmn. of Philadelphia,
who has de* hb and to retire. I* well known
a* th** author of several liook-. among
which are “Hoi," i po**m: "Hercwl.” •*
trag<dy In live acts; "Jo*M*ph," drama;
"The Quest of t'olumbus." an epic poem.
In twelve rard**-; "Jewish Dream* and
Realities." Haul." a Htblical tragedy;
"From Morocco to Minnesota," "Hkatch**
ot Life in Three CacititH nts." "The Feast
of Lights." and *ln the Pale." re* • -fitly
puhtUhel l>> the Jewish Publtcalioli B
<iry of Arm ri* a
lilt It.H I HIT*.
—Dick Wlttlngton "I irtlnr you have
no idea how much I love you! * "Hut I
am willing to learn."—Lift*.
—ln Need f I tc.itm *nt —*• Yi my daugh
ter plays entirely by ear." "Well. tna<l
ame I can recommend ;wi nrdlait au*
ri*t."—Pidlad* Iphla Evening Huftetln.
—ln the Attic.—" How do you Ilk# your
room at your n**w boarding-plac**?" a-ke|
Van Braam "Well," replied I>inwii*ll*.
h* eitatlng.y . “it's tip-top."--Fill-burg
i’hfWdcie-Telegraph.
—Only Half Itight.—Penelope—"Mr
Spooner Is going to teach me how to
swim ” PertHt* "I thought you had been
taught already." Penelope “Not by
him ' Harper's Ilaxar.
Gardener—> M I keep this gun loaded, but
11 Is very seldom I discharge It. I call It
mv magazine riff**." Farmer—“ Your mag
axlne riff*!’' Gardener—“ Yes; you sc
when any (lung g*w*s Into II there Is no
telling how long h will t>* In fore It * omen
out."—ltoston Transcript.
Squlr** (who has got up a concert—with
refreshments-in aid of the war fund)—
"Well. Kobert, liow* did you enjoy the con
cert last evening? Weren't the quartets
*mm)?“ Robert—" Well, now. Squire, Oi
doan’ belb ve Oi <Msi*d un; but they cut
lets was proinn*!"*-Punch.
—ller Dearest Friend'* r*momcnt.—"He
suggtsted that poodbiy i might learn to
love him." said the spinster. "Ye, of
course," returfie*! h**r dearest friend.
“Doubtless ho realize* the truth of the
miyin, tLot ‘one I** never too old t
learn.* "—Chicago Kvcnlng Post.
—ldhelloua—"l want to know.** angrily
demanded the celebrated London music
hall star, “why you an billing m* as
the peert os "Why, what's the
matter with that?" asked her American
manager “Matter? I wnt you to know
1 had as many pc* rs chasing round after
me In London *s any of the other girls."
—Philadelphia Pr*m.
IIHHBVr COMMENT.
Th<* <’hlrao Chronicle HJiys:
**Affmltttnir that th* rvmocntl<- party In
r* * **n• ywirji ha* given support 10 Home of
the fstlne n*l tUn*erou ilocirln* * of
Poputipm. tlK' fan rematnn that It
htntulH f.thftilly for the defence the
foundation prln.lplen of nil free covern
ment when they nre threatened with over
throw It Im ffret neret**surv to eri\* fhoee
principle# —o nave the republic lt*elf
from Ihe deadly JiaeaultP of lm*> ri.ili-m
before hirhUiu: over queettomi of giollcy,
hour ever Important *’
Th*' Houston (Tex.) T*oM (Hem ) nn ye;
**From the day .Mr. McKinley wa* inauKti
ratel the prime object of concern with
him hae been to fortify hte own Individual
ImereM* and t hone of hie frtende upon
whom In relied chiefly for hie party
rt.iwlinK and hie (umpaien re*ource
opportunism, favoritism, iieraonnl and
i laRH obJ * ti*. i vfiMion of duty or division
of rep pom s l bll it ten ad tin* arts and prac
tices of the pchetnltiff politician—these
have I'onitltufed the diseiriKuidhlnpr char
aetcrUitlc# of Mr McKinley’s adminiptra-
Hon.”
The Baltimore Hun (Hem,) pays: “Mr
Ilryan has emphatic.illy euliordtnated sil
ver and stated that It sinks info Insignifi
cance when compared with the necessity
of preserving our free Institutions ami re
publl in form of government. It Is h*
impcriaUstf who an trying fo make silver
m issue In order tha-t thc> may acquire
foreign tcrrltorj*. hold millions of Asiat
ics as "subjects,** leap favors upon the
trusts. vo|e - * pls Id les to ship-owner*. leg-
Itlnte for prlvll. g* and classes and hand the
country over to the plutocratic elements
w hich have been * xploldng ir during the
ad min is> fat ton of Mr McKinley."
rommerdlng on the Increase in poverty
and Illiteracy among immigrants ilurlng
the year r * fitly ended, the Phila
delphia Times tlnd.) says: "It |s evident
that our immigration liw* furnish a very
Ineffective barrier to Ufv!#*|nihi*> Immi
gram*. (*ongr -slonnl legislation on this
subject ba* promised a great dm! which It
bus failed to perform, ond the report of
the Commission of Immigration for the
year I***' l should eonvlnc* Congress of the
necessity of laws that will rcolly ev lude
those who *fe mofc likely to hronm# de
pendents than Intelligent, tviX-supporting
citizens of the republic.’* 1
••ItMb It on Mbiml."
Hp aklr.g of "Camilla.** 1 am reminded
of a trifling little incident that occurred
In h third apt—or age art—on* night
in New York; n Incident mat show-* whgt
community of thought, what |* rfect un
br- rtndiug often fiiats between tlw? au*
d* me and th* actor, •* well as that
quality of alertness, that rcadlnesa to
f h *n," always s*j marked In an
Am- n (tt crowd, writes Clara Morris In
the Critic.
into t hr b ightneaa and happiness of the
tii t C * t th*' father of Artnand
omtr. IL 1 grc t*d with tratnulous love
Ir, I hop* but the cent which follows
change* all that, and when eh** sweeps
him her farewell urlesy. renunciation
and *th ar* stamp'd ujoti h-r facta
Now. 1 sutipo-t the "world an*i his
wlf* knows the old sup*miilon about
th. "it King of t . hands." The right
hand tteh#that Ik u Ign you *re g>ing
to meet a frbnd-th* left haiel Uchas.
G a sign that you ,*r* going to r* *iv*
(u ii* y w hib* most i * ple <1 found out
till tilghti k.**w the nursery w that
prescrlttcs the proper treatment for a
palm so affected. ** "Rub It on wood—
It’ll come to go4*d!"
Now th. lose of mv bright seen*.
when N.nnlrte hid ant •uncetl that a geb
tlrman wi*h dto • rne. and I had told
her to show- him In at once, in that mo
ment f waiting, a -a i len violent itching
cam* into mv hand An I rubbed it with
my handkerchief, I noth ed it was th** left
one, and like a fl*i*h thre came into my
mind the old saw Rub t oil woo*)." arid
I started to tub my hand on the **lge
*f the table at mv aide, but that was
marble I drew back, started to rub It
• ti the t p of ih* chair near me. and that
was upholster** I Quit forgetting where
1 was. I walked across the stage and plac
ing my palm on the top of a wooden
chair. I began to rub. when I was star
tl'd h\ one great Jolly hurst of la tighter
that Include 1 even the musicians In the
orchestra
One moment I ga****! at the laughing
, rotvd suipldlv, then I understood nd
lUgls.d with th*m and though hearty ap
pi a use followed. I nevertheless saw In
th*- affair a Icaon and a wartiing-never
again t* allow myself, even for a mo*
nnnt. to fall out of*th. charactar or to
get outside of tbo picture-, as one might
nay.
Mr. H***th Is 111-
Slorl— of Iho ln’.mpor,ti> hWf* of lb
. I<|. r Jiinlu. llrulu
i-otnmon. .ys .* writer lo Utppincot! '
nr<l hrro l * < hurnrterlxtlc ono:
During in •■uKHKonu.ii th< lwin< ** n*i
.;*! mlO iK* rr h i.l to Koop an eye on
him n!ht am) *fc*y. am) >‘ c t ho very oft'n
siH.o-h.l in outwllllns thorn <m oiu
iv .11 don. uf***r an unusually sorlous ao.l
prolonyoil oultironk. tho m.lnaaof lo k*-.i
Uuotti lip In hi* ilro.|OK room amt pur
.h.- key of th> door in im own pookot.
Tho 1 oar of lh<- Thr-ater. Mko that of nl
nK.l ill Tho-Itor*. op.-n) on un unfro
il*>ont..| alloy, am) *ho kimii a* ’.or * •trr..-
inc room a'.is on ,ho itrountl floor. Now.
"frt*Ht*a dlro'*tly into thl* alloy was n
J**nr. hut 111 to thwtr was also *orko.| nml
fho k*-y n i*oo,i in <ho manaicor * jus kot.
M't.t<<l lo his dl*o.i) thirst, hotv
ovor, on alm**>t *h-villsh • unntiwr. an*)
ho „>!> <l* vis*.l t plan t>> which ho i-ould
oh:.*a 1 tin* Ihfuor (or whhh )*o cravo*)
lastonlntr at tho tkstr which opotns) Into
Iho all* \ way. ho soon hoard passtna f*s>t*
am) softly rnpio.l on th*- istnol. Tit*
footstspe*. liiftkoit and l tion at of >(***). What
is If?" sold a voire.
Booth know the voice. It was, as he
hart <l* bancor-on about ho Th.-
a tor. the sort of young man wo would
now call a touch.
’’Liston," sasl tho actor *‘l will thrust
a bunknofo under the <hr. ami I want
you to no to th.* tavorn at tho oornor and
buy .1 hottlo of Wiilsky and * lonc-stom
m*.l lay pip* . When you return I will
toll you what I w*nt dono."
Tito younc touch tlopttrted on his or*
rand and qui kly r*a*trn.l Thon he was
instrurto.) to thrust the ton* etem of th.
pip** throoch the k\hole uf lh* loor an*l
slowly to isuir tho whlaky tnto the how*
A a result of this easy etratac- m. tho
bewildered *!*• man#cor fouix) the fam
on* art or In n drunken stupor when lie
imo to release him In tho evening, ami
was forced once more to .)pt* - ar before
ttto curtain to say:
"Isuil.s and contlomoth 1 n ttrot to an
nounce that Mekloo and eerloua indl
porHton will prevent Mr Boot h from ap
pearing flh th** stage to-night
Hilling a Wan Not <*f Muoli Motneal.
Oliver Herford. tho artlat nod verse
maker. lats olover t>rother. who lives
out In Montana, where ho Is proeeeuiln*
attorney, r*‘ldtcs the Washington Post.
There * am*, a young Englishman to thit
I'otttity once upon a day. on*l the chief
bully of the little town undertook to have
some fun with him The Englishman
was unarmed, uni at the |>olnl of the bad
man’s revolver he *ll*l all win* of funn>
stunt* and the performance ended wltn
a threat fiom the bully to shoot hi* vic
tim on sight at the text meeting
Th. Englishman’* frtemle Insisted on
aiming him, ami when th<t <h"<peru<V> mot
him and drew a gun It was tho Briton
who had tho drop. The tosvn terror wn*
1* dead as It Inst year’s flirtation Th
voting Englishman prrpttrert at os- tor
tltght He had kilhsl a man In w hat onl>
hy the greatest stretch of the facts could
he called self-defense, an*l he didn't want
lo swing for It. Jack'' Herford was tho
man to whom he i-onflded his troubles
Mr. Herford .Wised him to stand trial
oiin't help von now." said ho. "but I
may h*> able to do something for you
when the thing romu t> trial. Your bed
plan Is to give yourself up. That will
prejudice the public in your favor. I’ll
go with vou to the Justice."
do together they sought the Jtisßoe. H
was engaged in writing an Important let
ter. ami It wit* his busy day. He nodded
a- they mm. In. and wont on with hie
work. The Englishman nerved himself
tor a confession that might coat him hi*
life.
"Mr Justice," he began
"Ain't got time to talk." was the an
swer.
••But," snid the Englishman. ‘Tve Just
shot a mun ”
The Justice did not look up
"Kill him?" he asked, absently.
“Instantly.’’
The Justice's face clouded tn mild an
noyance.
■•Oh. well.” said he. "eome ’round again
about 2 o’clock. I r in't he bothered about
I; Jtmt now."
The Hoy Who t.earned the Way.
He wa* very young—about IS—this hoy
who peni most of his time in the studios
watching the artists draw nml palm, ynd
wishing he could da the same, says a
writer In Success.
"What kind of pencM* *lo you )***?’’ he
said, one day; and they gave him one
of ihe kind. Tha night he tried to make
i figure he toad seen .me of the artists
draw-It seemed so easy. But he could
not do th*' sum.- kind of work.
"Perhaps I haven’t the right kin*) of pa
per," he reasoned. "1 will get a piece
to-morrow." Even the right kind of pa
per did not help him any.
"1 n*ed a studio nml an easel," were
his next con Inf. .ns. "I have the deeire.
surely, all I new) now are tho necessary
surroundings."
A few years of Impatient w ilting passed
before he secured the "necessary sur
roniiillngs;'’ find, when he had them nil.
and still found It lm|*isslble to draw, fhe
truth downed upon him.
••I know now what is wrong." he. cried,
throwing down hi* pencil; "| know noth
of the principle* of nrt. I must learn
them first."
He war still young when his nams as
* great painter whs known on two eon
♦lrtetHs. He had learned the "principle ’’ 1
A hit Of brown paper nnd a burnt match
would then enoble him to draw as easily i
as all tha art eesenUala. —— I
ITEHb UF DTKHKST.
—A native privet say* of the Chinese
article* of religion: "The men believe
them Ihe vpjmcn don't. There Is no
tdtgiun in Chins "
—ln th* p* t year, accordlnc to author
lly. Harvard, Yale. OMumota. Princeton.
Pennsylvania and Cornell Universities ex
pended k>.|..’i; on athletics.
—Free lee tur* - given urtder the aurpkvs
of the New York city department of ed
ucation snow an Increase In attendaiKi of
15.*73 during the last winter and spring,
a* compared with the some period of a
year before,
—Pouisen. the Danish inventor, has pro
duced a successful I* iephonograph. Il
records all messages reielved during Ihc
Btjsence of a subscriber and gives them
out hours or days afterwards, witeri he
lioids the trumprt to his ear.
—A Viennese dentist, while exfwrlment-
Ing at the Hygenk Institute at Wurs
l*urg. claims to have discovered the sue
.. cdul sppli. allot, of elertrlctty for the
destruction of bacteria It I* said that
the treatment Mi very simple.
-June 31, 19ut>. there were seventy-two
war-ships under eonstruetlon in the United
Kingdom, fifty-four being for th* British
government. Uuncn of the ve.-sel* are
Islr.g built In royal dockyards, aral the
remaining filly-six In private yard*.
—The British government has suppress- •
e*l the district messenger companies and
transferred the business done by them to
the postofflee, on the ground that the
• omitame* are encroaching on the tie- pre
rogatives of the slate, which claim* a
monopoly of the conveyance of messages
by letter and by wire.
—Marie Ronge. a Herman lady, who was
born in London and now resides in Wur
temberg. has found an original way of
irtlllitng her fine library Hhe writes to
school teachers, especially in rural re
gion*. to ascertain their tvtc In the way
of reading and then send* them panels
of her hook*, to be returned at her ex -
penra lifter they have been read.
—The famous professor of Jurisprudence.
Senator Pessina, who Is regarded a* the
foremost living authority In Italy upon
criminal law. dkl more than any of his
con temporaries to secure the total a to!!
ion of capital punishment tn hi* f.i'her
l.tnd But the renowned scholar has been
so deeply movd by the recent isslna
tlon of King Humbert that he has Just
published a ’recantation" of his former
opposition to the death punishment In all
cases.* and advises that It should be
a.topted In the case of "political murder
ers."
—lt is a pretty hard story to swallow,
sty* the New York Time*, yet one of th*
buyers for a ilrm In the Broadway mil
linery district vouches for It and feel*
hurt If you do not believe It. This ro
mancer ha* It that there Is a butchery
In Northwestern Pennsylvania—Brook
vtlle Is the name of the place—wher"
crows are hatched out In Incubators. Just
as Spring chlkens are produced here
abouts ail the y. or round. He claims that
the young > rows are k*pt for eight weeks
at the end of which tlm- they are decap
itated. and their heads sold to the millin
ers here for use In the decoration of wo
men's hols and bonnets. He doesn’t say
where the crows’ eggs are gathered.
—Some mteresling comparison* as to
the fatalities of war are deducted from
the literature of the subject. M. de Bloch.
Ir. hi* hook, eeslmate* that, taking the
effectiveness of the rifle of ISH a* Kb
th* efllcieney of the present French rifle
ir 433, that of the present Herman rltle
471. and that of the newest Aroericau
rifle 1.000, This assertion that the Krag-
Jorgensen Is more than twice as effective
os the Herman and French rifle* Is unex
pectedly complimentary to our ordnance
arrangements. But there |* no doubt of
the main point—the Immense Increase In
r ing*, and rapidity of tire—over the rifles
of I*7l. wht.-h. In thetr turn, were revo
lutionary as compared with *he muskets
of the first half century.
—"lJownfown yesterday.” say* a Nome
correspondent of the Boston Transcript, “I
found a sad-faced individual clothed In
spotless black and looking wearily on
while the Shutters were bemg put upon
his establishment. T am an undertaker.'
lie end. 'and l am done up. Why, I
would have more huskies* tn one little
town In lhe stales In one month than I
have had here In three. Why. Nome Is
the most miserably healthy city for lie
slxe |n the world. There hove been Just
dilrty dew!h In the city of Nome, young
man. Just thirty deaths all summer, and
live undertaking establishments up against
them What do you think of that? Oh.
I tell yon. the place I* an Infernal swin
dle. ami i am going out wtdt.- I have
money left to get out on ’ The last shut
ter went up with a click mid tho sad
fared man plodded wearily down the
street through the mud to get hi* ticket
on the next outgoing steamer.”
—Owners and captains of steamboats
plying In the Ohexpotk* Bay and the Po
tomac river are In a quandary over the
application of the Virginia separate coach
law. Till* statute. wM h requires that sep
arate but similar accommodation* he pro
wldi and for white and colored passengers,
applies to steamboat.- as will as to rail
roads. On the railroads the discrimination
is readily made hy furnishing separate
cars or hy building a partition In the
cars, but how to separate the races on
a steamboat, and to give one race as good
a place as the other. Is a problem to
which the Virginia lawmakers probably
gave no thought, and which the steam
boat mm ore disposed to turn aver to
the courts for settlrment The question
raised for the courts to decide Is this:
'('an a steamboat company, running
steamboat* In Virginia waters, he pun
ished for disobeying a law which. In the
nature of the construction of steamboats
ef tip m >#t modern build, cannot, from a
physical standpoint, lie obeyed?" Thie Is
not all. Hinomhoat* oft the Potomac touch
alternately at a Maryland landing and a
Virginia landing. <>n the Virginia side the
law requires that the races be separated,
on the Maryland side obedience must he
shown to a law that no’ dlscrlmlnwlton
shall be made between any races or col
ors hy a common carrier. Here Is argu
ment Indeed for uniformity In legislation.
—At the various aluminum works, In this
country at Niagara Kails, at Foyers in
Hooiland. at Greenock In Ireland and at
ether places In Kurope. there were pro
duced last year over 5.000 tons of alumi
num, worth 13.300,0dt. The metal Is ex
tracted by electrolysis. Hlmlktrly electric
ity being empl tyed largely nowadays
In getting pure copper. In If&i the world's
consumption of aluminum was about one
and a half ton*, at a cost of about SX a
pound In I®3 the cost was an cents a
pound Hem* 2.500 tons are used In the
French steel works, the remainder finding
various u.-*s. As to Its use* the Engineer
Ing and Mining Journal says: "Aluminum
has lx en substituted for several other
metals tn *|>*olal application* and It cer
tainly play* an important part In the
production of alloys, while Its general
use for overhead electric conductor* can
he looked forward to In the not far dis
tant future. In fact. Its conductivity for
equal sectional areas ta |er cent, that
of copper, and comparison of the den
allies will show that an electric line In
aluminum wlil weigh for equal conductl
blllty half that of one In copper Alumi
num. therefore, I* more economical even
at It* present price, which I* likely to
he atiu further reduced, and that 1* not
the only advantage pc**r**cd by this met
al. a* a comparison of weight* and resist
ance to tensile strain shows that It* use
permit* the u* of longer starts in a line,
thus reducing the number of posts or
Other supports,'’ - ■—i
Ocean Sieainsnip Go.
-ro 11-
IMew York, Boston
-AND—
THE EAST.
Unsurpassed cabin accoramodnllona All
the com torts of a modem hotel. Electr.g
lights. Unexcelled tabla. Tickats include
meals and bertha aboard ship.
Passenger Fares irom Savannas.
TO NEW YORK-FIRST CABIN. *2O.
FIRST CABIN ROUND TRIP. *32. IN
TERMEDIATE cabin, *d. interme
diate CAIIIN ROUND TRIP, 144.
STEERAGE. *lO.
TO BOSTON - FtnST CABIN, *2;
FIRST CABIN ROUND TRIP. *M IN
TERMEDIATE CABIN. *l7. INTERME
DIATE CABIN ROUND TRIP. *2Xttk
STEERAGE. *ll 7*.
The express steamships of this Una re
appointed to sail from Savannah. Central
I’JUthJ meridian time, as 'ollowa:
SAVA.W4H TO kStol YORK.
NACOOCHEE. Cupt. Smith. TUESDAY,
Oct. 2, 11 ;IW a m.
KANSAS CITY, Copt. Fisher. THURS
DAY, Oct. 4. 1:00 p. m
TALLAHASSEE. Cap! Askina, SATUR
DAY. Oct. , *.(*) p. m
CITY OF AUGUSTA. Copt. Daggett,
TUEDSAY. Oct. !<. S-00 p. m.
NACOOCHKE. Capt. Smith, THURSDAY.
Oct 11, 7•. p. tn
KANSAS CITY Capt. Fisher. SATUR
DAY. Oct. 13, 900 p m.
TALLAHASSEE. Capt. Askina, TIES
DAY. tret. IS, It m a. m.
CITY OF AUGUSTA. Capt. Daggett.
THURSDAY. Oci. I*. Ino p m
NACOOCHKE, Cupt Smith, SATURDAY.
Oct. 20, S Of* p. m.
KANSAS CITY .Capt. Fisher, TUES
DAY. Oct 23, 4:30 p m
TALLAHASSEE Capt Asklns. THURS
DAY. Oct JR, R3O p m.
CITY OF AUGUSTA. Capt. Dagge.t.
SATURDAY, Oct. 27. 7:<b p. m
NACOOCHKE Capt SmMh, TUESDAY.
Oct. 30 10un p m
MAI YORK T 4 BORTOV.
CITY OF MACON. Capt. Savage, WED
NKBDAY. Oct 3. mn.
CITY OF MACON. Capt. Savage, MON
DAY. Oct 8. noon.
CITY OF MACON. Capt. Savage, FRI
DAY. Oct. 12. noon
CITY OF MACON. Copt. Savage, WED
NESDAY’. Oct 17. noon.
CITY OH* MACON. Capt. Savage, MON
DAY. Oct 22. noon
CITY OF MACON. Capt. Savage. FRI
DAY’. Oct. N. noon.
CITY OF MACON. Capt. Savage. WED
NESDAY’. Old. 11. noon.
This company reserve* the right o
change Its sailings without notice and
without liability or accountability there
for
Sailings New Y’ork for Savannah Tues
day* Thuradav* aral Saturday* 800 p m
w. O HRBYVKR. City Ticket and Pasa
enger Agent. lOT Bull etreet, Savannah.
Oa -
K W. SMITH, Contracting Freight
Agent. Savannah. Ga
It G. TREZEVANT. Agent, Savannah.
Ga
WALTER HAWKINS General Agent
Traffic Drp’t. 23) W. Bay street, Jack
sonville, Fla
E If HINTON. Traffic Manager. Sa
vannah. Oa
p U T*H FEVRE. Manager. New
Fler 3u. North River. New York. N Y.
Merchoßts S Miners TfnesDorlotliHi Cos
Steamship Lines
Savannah to Baltimore & Philadelphia
Ticket* on sale at company's oftlce to
the following |Klnt* at very low rates:
ATI.ANTIC CITY. N J
BAI.TIMOHK, M BI'FFAKO, N. T.
BOSTON, MASH.
CHICAGO, II.U (’LEVCTANT), O.
BRIE. PA
, IIAGKUSTt )WN. PA IIAItRUBCRO.PA
HALIFAX. N. 8.
NIAGARA FALLS. NEW YORK.
PHILADELPHIA.
PITTSBERO PROVIDENCE.
ROCHESTER.
TRENTON. Wi-Md NOTON.
WASHINGTON.
First-class ticket* Include meals end
bertha Huvunnah to Baltimore and Phila
delphia Accommodation*' and cuisine
unrqualed.
Freight capacity unlimited; careful
handling and quick dispatch.
The steamships of this ompany are ap
pointed to nail from Savannah as follow*
(Central Standard Time):
TO BALTIMORE.
TEXAS. Capl. KkJredge, TT'ESDAT,
Oct. 2. 12 noon.
I). 11. MILLER. Gapt. Peters. THI’RS
DAY. Oct. 1. 3:00 p. tn.
ITASCA. Capl. Billups. SATURDAY,
Oct. 6. 4:00 p, m.
DORCHESTER. Capt James. TUES
DAY. Oct. S, 6:00 p. tn.
TEXAS. Capl. Eldrclge, THURSDAY,
Oct. 11. 8:00 a. m
D 11 MILLER. Capt reters. SATUR
DAY, Oct. 13. *OO p. m
And from Italtlmore Tuesdays, Thurs
days and Saturdays at 1:00 p. m.
TO PHILADELPHIA.
ALLEGHANY'. Capt. Foster. SATUR
DAY. Oct. 6. 4:00 p. m.
BERKSHIRE. Capt. Ryan. WEDNES
DAY, Oct. 10. 6-00 p. m
ALLEGHANY. Capl. Foster, MONDAY.
Oct 15. 12 noon.
BERKSHIRE. Capt. Ryan. FRIDAY,
Oct. 19. 3:30 p. m
ALLEGHANY. Capl. Foster. TUESDAY'.
Oct. 23. 5:00 p, m.
BERKSHIRE. o|d Ryan. SATURDAY,
Oct. 27. 7:00 p. m.
ALLEGHANY, Capt. Foster. WEDNES
DAY, Oct. 31. 12 noon.
SAILINGS FROM PHILADELPHIA
EVERY FIVE DAYS AT no P. M
Ticket Office No. 112 Bull atreet.
J. J. CAROLAN. Agent
NEWCOMB COHEN, Trav AgL
Savannah. G.
W P TURNER. G. F A
A D. STEBBINS, A. T M
J, c. WHITNEY, Traffic Manager
General Office*. Baltimore. Md.
atltOOLS AND COLLEGES.
THE SAVANNAH PREPARATORY
SCHOOL. MILITARY.
Ormond B. Strong (Cornell). Head Master
A school whose Instructor* are univer
sity men familiar with modern method-,
and nun who have demonstrated their
sucres* as teachers In preparing boys for
college and business. A school whose dlpl -
nix I* accepted In lieu of examination by
many collegia, and whoae hevdm i*trr
hae the highest endorsement by the presi
dents of Cornell and of the University of
California. A school whose directors ara
among Ihe most prominent men of the
state. A school where your boy would
receive personal supervision and en
couragement ; where he could obtain
thorough and systematic training In body
and mind; where he could prepare hi#
lessona for the next day under an In
structor’s care tn the afternoon Jnat as ha
would at the best hoarding schools, and
where you woukl have no ww 2 *"J U|
his associate#, A onOVYINO SCHOOL.
DONNELLY DRUG C 0„
savannah, oa.
DRUGS. SEEDS. ETC.
Mall orders solicited. Ball phons *7l
P. S —Sand for trtm numpla ’• * ”•
Dyspepsia Curs, * . „