The Savannah morning news. (Savannah, Ga.) 1900-current, December 13, 1900, Page 7, Image 7

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I III* It IMSITOI.. \ .eknt—Tradr on n Train HI liar UifrroH Nerave. i '■ . Dec. 1!.-Sharif* T. J ,n leaves to-morrow morning (or , ii where he goee . wllnrai I my Grlffln. the negro charged u, m* I'onSuctor Latilniore o( the .m some months ego. Sheriff U>* , iu. succeeded in securing the re. 1 1 wuich the shootm* wait don*. I F Taylor, from near Beach. Ihl* I! in u*ht In a badly wounded ne. u turned him over to Hherlff M>- * , who locked him up in th# county m Tueaday night the wife of hit , Mr Sessions, t awakened one In the room tugging at her Sne -it once nr need her hue • • no >■ trlgntened the iniruU , i ,i -scaped through Ihc back morning Mr S- ealone and Mr. ,•, i t to investigate. They found „ o' someone In lua eock feet, and -n-looted an old negro who had vriking about the place Going to ,i ■ they found him with a palt ks on hie feet Telling the ne. ha had Ii tppened. they asked hint • r k the prowler down At Mr w , examining the tracke. the ne. plenty grabbed an ax and etruck i fi. blow na dodged, when the . ,i> w.m thrown at Mr. Taylor s It, negio star’ed to run. fol i number of puraoerr. After . him about seventy-live yards ne tired at the negro striking him ft leg si ll a load of No. 3 i-hot. , . charge brought him down, when ipilirrd and h-ought to this city. ~>wde <ame In from all dlreclione >,v to take In the show Last ,i. the west-bound R. & W. nae crowded with retum chl-eere. A dispute arose iu one ’ cars. and serious trouble ~, .■ rowly averted between the crowd , . Wareeboro, and men from farther ,is road. The timely arrival of the at that little town Is ptooably oil prevented bloodshed , the train pulled out from the station . ~r. on board fired his revolver Into Wuresboro crowd A small n*gro c pnot In the stomach, receiving , i(d which w-ae pronounced fatal. It ki own who did the shooting, but ,r ure Investigating the matter .. v oUCtor’s books (or Ware coon i lose on Thursday. Dec. 3D Al-out t • st.il remain uncollected, and Mr. . is beginning to stir up (he delln- <oI.OUIIIA> HKVOLI TIOV liripemif Flic Minis r.nlta on In >frly K*cry Mate. w York. Dec. 12 —Advice welvwl to 'rnm \nriou* part* of ColomW*. and • ir.ed by ppeornfier* who trrlvad from : if II r,( de*prratr. fighting in ner- I ry t-tatr. Thu government troop* - r * poor physical condition. *n<l *uf -4 from several forms of tropical fav i r Brigart. t’olombian consul general ity. haa been ordered by hla gov. to purchase and ship immediate y a <r4< quantity of quinine for the ue rf ilie army. *■ moat desperate fighting i now' go * ,1 the lepartrnent of Bolivar In fought at Tolu Viejo, on Nov. 2ft r* vo nitoniM" lof, among ion killed wounded. two able oAran, I* Camacho and Col. En- I'uiedo. The rebels took two I . i prisoner*. besides which the gov. • m*nt Pr e lost one hundred in killed. at . <*n were also taken by the department of Magdalena * t "ws that Gen Vargo* Banter. • <*' t;’ f th*- revolutionary govern. ' v tn his force, has arrived at the • Hio Mach.t and established hU* t ; men! there. rive FAVORITE* won. v •n r Miirinrr Un the Only I.nin First I htilrr. ’• ttrleai T)e - 12— Master Mariner ? ‘ne only hrateci favo’lte. Summaries: HM Race— Selling, one mile and twenty Mitt Boykin. 7 to 2. won. with • < * ;rdd 4 to 1. second, and Yoloro. 4 third Tim* I:4Hi. '' nd Race—Five furlong" 7 Money . to won. with Admiral IVpper. t • . and Fake, ft to 2. third. m . J (* ■'l Ttarr—flix ftirbvmr*. Charlt* 1 t I*l in io 1 woti. with M.i*lt*r M.rtn • in ' ss.ond, ainl Air*. 11 to S. M Tim. 1:13. fth R.o—Oil. an.l on. rtxiwnth bandl-tp. oii Mart tjary. 7 to w with lila LaM ford. 5 to 1. second, i Mint Matte*. !i to 1. thlril Tim* l:# 1 ; >h ItaoM—On* mil. and twenty ynrd*. I rr Admatus. 2 to 1. won. with Pe ’ Mi tre, tto 1. second. and ElndenellA, 1 thin! Tim. 1H 1 .. 'lxth Its. *— Raven furlong* Tom dslrv. 7 to 5, wnn. with Dick Ktirher. ■ 1 second, and Caetlne, *0 to 1. thirl 1 *n. 1.3. wtirntm yon fighter*. 7" tti- xrrird on Mr Govern anti tiana nt 111. Ring.lift*. l;i *o, Dec. ll.—Warrant* will he aerv at the ringside In Uattrrsair* to-mor evenlna on principal, aivl promoters • i McOovern-Oana flfht. Have, of the Thirty-fifth street station aay* Terry McGovern and .at.a will ho arrested charged wt'h a ' since of the peace. B M Wlr.ftton, r.t .f the building: laouls M. Houe ihe cluh matchmaker, anti Ram manager of McGovern. will bear -1 on the charge of engaging In car - on a boxing exhibition. ■ let up In hla work thl* evening. he i pound below weight. He nvi he conge hla work by 'Perrv *. He Ag howevar. that Terry will come at n* la hi, custom. and will be prepared him at hi* own game Betting on 1 * r.-ult I* heavy. The big bettor* want i end at even*, or they will bet one ■ i*o ihat Terry ecore* a knockout. I HURT WOMEN WERE M'RNED. °>*e Mm |>|r and Two Are berioaaly Ininred. ago. Doc. 12.— Three women, molh • nughler and granddaughter, ware :; r y burned to-night In trying to ex ' • i!h a blaze and *ave one another "> death. The Injured. Hrouaek. Mr*. Katharine. (ft year* old. 'i Mi*. Marousek, Mr*. Fannie. X year* may recover: Marouaek. Mtea L*na, •ora old, may recover. •* the grandmother wa working at kitchen *tove, her clothe* took Are. other ttvo women. In an efTort to her, became enveloped In the and all would have perished hut 'h- tlmelv arrival of nighb<>ric^^_ To those living malarial districts Tutt’s Pills indispensible, they keep the ' tem in perfect order and are an absolute cure 1 r sick headache, indigestion, n * tlaria, torpid liver, constipa -1 n and all bilious diseases. butt’s Liver Pills f,.r Infonts inii Children, Tho Kind Aou lime Always Hoiight Inis Imrne the si|;tui> turw of ('has. 11. FloU’hnr, and haw hern niitdo tintlcr Ii in personal supervision for over .’Mi years. Allow no ono s to deceive you In this. CoinitcrtVits, Imitations and “Just-iWsgnod" are but KxperimeMit*, and cudaiiKcr the health of Children—Kxporlcuce iiciiinst 1 Apcriinciit. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of In Use For Over 30 Years. ■ - ■ COFFEE is TOOSPBHOVS. I Good Iseres.e In Copulation—(Miter Iloualns News. Douglas, Oa„ De- 12—While other counties In the slate are boasting of their increase for the |st ten years, ruff. • comes In with an Incomplete census, with an Increase of AS per cent., with all her farmers out of debt, and prosperous Douglas has Increased IDA per cent In population, and increased her wealth ten fold, and ha* on* of the brightest futures of any city In Wlregrass Georgia Th* Waycross Air Line liailma-l will noon,be completed to Fltigerald. The An gtista and Valdosta Hallrnnl Is sail to br an assured fact In the near future, and will rrose the Air Dine at Dongla* Rev. F. H. Poston, formerly the able pe.-tor of the Doticia.% Baptist Church, with his famtlv, left yesterday and after a short stop with relatives at Conrlele, sill pro 'red lo Scout h Carolina to All a cak In that state. Mr W. A, It Davis, whose life, for many days ha* been despaired of. Is now pronounced out of danger Mrs V V. Comas has accepted the po sition of assistant postmaster at Douglas vice Mlsk Lllah Adams, resigned S|erial Agent Arnold of the Poetofllea Departmen*. will be In Dougla- this week to Inspect the route* for the establishing of a rural delivery system for (Toffee county. Enoch llall. whit* who has alrradv don* two term* in < offer county's gang, was arrested in Lowndes county, under a bench warrant charging him with lir.enjr from Ih* house and lodged In Coffees jail yesterday. Free Mnll Delivery. Wave roes. Ga . Ded. 13.—1 tIS asserted positively that Waycross. will have free delivery, beginning with Saturday. The carriers r learning their routes to-day. Mr J. W. Baxley th white carrier, will have the route from the Court House to the Sattlla Manufacturing Comppanj plant. In Old Nine, and Francis. Jane and Elisabeth Mreets. Will Co-pet will have the route south of the Plant System main line, and Will Brown Ih. city north of the Plant ttyst-m mam line. Two dellve-rie* and two collection* o* mail will he made every week day On Sunday a window In the portoHl. < known as the "carriers-’ window will h* open an hour In the morlng and on hour In the afternoon, and cltliens can get their mail by calling for It. On Sunday there will be one collection, hut no delivery. Oxford Ileal Fan,bridge. I.Olid.*! Dec. 12 - The annual Itugby fcothall between Oxford aivl Cambridge took place to-day nt the Queen’* Club A magnllleeni game wa- won by * txford by Iwo goa i* to a mail a tvi a Ir> . 1 here w a h targe and faahlonable attendance. f amrslf igiitn*! 'I tfh tj . Now York. Dec. 12 -The Trlhtm- will , to-morrow publish a letter from Andrew I'arnegm favoring an Isthmian canal, tow I opoelng any treaty ith England upon the subject _ CARLOADS OF MOLTEN IHON. 9 ~ He tiled for Mile* for Immediate Con version Into ateel. From th# New York Tilbnnr Tlie construction of o new bridge acrot.. the Monongahela to be opened for serxlca within the next few dave, direct* a.len lion afreah to a striking feature of mod ern metallurgy The usual way t make eteel lw to melt up cold pig Iron to which other material* are ad-ted ,nd then purl ly the. mixture by burning out certain ur. desirable elemenl*. Pig Iron, however. 1* Itself the product of a previous heating prxx:e*. In which the ore I* m< Ited up with carbonate of lime* to rcmnvi th'' oxygen. I' occurred to romc ‘M.-nlou- Yaßkee a few year* ago that If the pro duct of the n.ast furnace could he con verted into Stael before It had cooled *en ,li,ly , great economy In fuel wou.d be **The n*w bridge Just menlloned ha* beer, built for the Carnegie Company, and will be uaed to convey molten iron from th, Parrta furnace* to the Homestead fteel works nearly a mile off At the present tlma Homestead obtain* molten metal from Duquesne.about four and a half mile* away! Th new route h#> been laid out an a to sav* time and distance, and. poe ilbty, caloric, too. There ha* been <<■ aoroe time one hot metal" bridge across the Monongahela. controlled by the Car negie Company, and besld* th new one about to be opened a third 1* In prce* of erection f*.*r the Jon*.* & MvLdJtighlin Interaat. It will thu* be perceived that tha practice ha* proved o auoceaaful Ihat It la being rapidly extended One gefi a vivd Mea of thl* remarkable procedure when he read* about the pre caution* taken In the construction of th nMr bride- to prevent harm In ca, any of the melted metal leak* or slops over while In transit from the iron furnace to the Meei work* The tpaces between the two are to be Ailed with sand, so that | no Iron may fall to the deck* of pawing steamer' The tie* will be of wood, but to be protected by a coveting of ami On either ftie of the track there will be raised a <Teen of heavy metal plate*, faced With Are brick and reaching to a hlght of four feel. An extension of thin- ‘ ner plate* will bring the acreen up Mx faet further. The car* are iadl*-*heped. and the molten mceal run* directly into them when the furnaces are tapped A locomotive then draw* the train to the steel worke at a moderate pace. The glowing freight la *llll In a Auld condition when It reaches he mixer* there, if It were not the car* Would be ruined. _M. Duboie. who operate* the mail wagons of Pari* by contract, i* about to eatabUti 1 self-propelled vehtoles In that service To perform tho work re quired of them thoee wegon* will be compelled to average about thirty mile# each per day. _ —The late Bernard Miller, who wa* a clerk In the Chicago Custom llou*e for twenty-Ave year*, wart a brother-in-law of Carl Achtir*. and wa* appointed about the . time the latter was Secretary of the la- j terlor. THE MORNING NEWS: THE USD AY. DECEMBER in. inoo. HOTEL GIBST*' ftIPKIMTITIOft. The Nil in lir r Thirteen and *ulcfde’ From flic New York Po*t New York'* Kr'at hotel* mi* hi rot luiQ, at flint blush, to Ik; favorable plate* f>r firxl UK Inaltn • * of human supersti tion, but a brief tour of tom*' of the most Important ones Htifflc* i show at onc that th*rc may be quite as much r**.irri lor ‘ sinus" in a gnat city as h**re Is - ornniirtily >upposM to bo in th** rural districts. Th*> vitality of the IS "hoodoo"* is the first skgn th** inquirer meets It 1s an In* UTorting f* i that very f< w. if any, of th#* imion*iit h<tcis have any rooms with i ' IS" in the number. "\V have no *IY room*,’’ said rh.* clerk of a large Broad way hotel, to-dsv, "and w.> never hav< had any. \\ #- have no 13. tv Ih*. no 21.1. and I know i ihc general pr* 'ih'c of manafrer* to leave out all thoe** numbers. It looks queer that such a course nor eusury, but there’s the fact: few people will sleep In a room numbered 13. If they oan help it. No ma*t*r if the room Is in a corridor, and follow room 12—put a fourteen on It and the hoodoo* Is sone The strange thin* about his 13 business Is the Inconsistency people show in regard to lt Wiifui t long ago. for instance, that a man whom 1 knew to make light of sitting with thirteen at a table, re fused point blank to take room 113 in hotel In a neighboring city The clerk there, who i; an acquaintance of mine had his wits about him. however, and though there were only 2v> rooms in th** house, he promptly hud room 111 changed to room 311. and the trouble was over In an Instant." "You must have come to take that ilea vary lightly by this time " suggested the reporter. The clerk laughed but with h tinge ef enilHrmsment In his manner "Well, he Admitted. “I suppOM it s nnni*ens<\ but I haven't slept in a room 1 h<* far.** A more s üboorn perjudb-e exists amor.g hotel guests against n upving roonx which there murler. "I don't think our guest- know Mijout such happening; for ths rmst prt. said the clerk of another large ho'el Murders ami suicides occur In the best reguluted houses quite as often as on the Bowery, but In spite of all the details, room numbers and all, sprand out • I newsj>**ierH. such thing'- appear to be very quickly, forgot >en. (ienerally the room where any such thing happane I Is shut tip t>r two or three wer-kn until the : torv i.- too old to be re ailed, and then r* opened It i uncommon for any guest to remember the affair, but now and then we find some tiers'll who |h a 'fiend* on murder stories, ml remembers a good deal more of the pub'lshed stories than t** good for him. If lie gets Into the room where ‘Josiah <;nger. a Western cattleman.' killed him- If and happens to remember the story, there Ih very likely to b< trouble These instate ea are rare. ( 1 have said, but when they come they nr* vwy ( onii' - ,1. "Avery funny Instance of this sort of thing occured In a \t-’ern liotel tvr. I had my Arst position as clerk <>!> right there was • sudelde-a woman killed herself with strychnine, whim -snsacs acute .utirtty Rhe didn't take oulte enough to do the work at once, and the result was a borrthle scene and no nd of uproar and excitement before the woman died Of ourse the r~|M>r* got hold of it. and. like nearly all Western palters of thoee days, they made their Mori?* even wof*<* than the f*ct, \N# N we shut up the room for two week*, hut e\-n after it was open. I didn't dare to put a guest there If therr w.i* any other place for him "One night a travelling man. new to m i ame in. and I gave him room IS h suicide had been In W.' After dinner this man hung round the de-k and I soon found out hr modi a *i*< laity, for antusr ment sake of retailing account* of murder* and suicide- lie knew about our little affair, and went over It from be ginning lo end *n l btek to the beginning again, until 1 was gla.l enough when he went to la-d But that wasn't the end A little gfler midnight the hell for room IS began to ring a* If It ’■** wound up for all night. Then 1 heard a shout up stairs, and rushed up to se<- what was wrong. It * >be murder .nd suicide expert lie we a. big man and he ear rushing up and down the corridor In hi* night clothes, pale, trembling, and trying to swear lie goibbe.l me a* soon a* T got near butt, and .puttered away about my putting him In Ihat suicide room I could see her,' he yelled, ‘and 1 herd her .-•reaming! I won't stand It' I won't stay in that loom’ I'll have you A red before I leave to-morrow" "I tried to i>er*tnde him ’hat he wa* wrong and told him the truth that room s wag ad right. But he wa* wound up to go and Anally I pm him In It. the sui cide room, and the only other vgcanr room In the house tie ring up the bar. swore it me for a while, and then went • almlv to sleep, and mt-*el hl 'rain In the morning T didn't tell him the fa t*. md I suppose he never knew Mint he reversed l In hi* nvnd md ma t* himself ar<t me a lot of needles trouble "Men In general don't make so much account of these things as women, but It'* aurprlslng to see how many men, not tn the least superstitious in the ordinary sans" „f the word, will confess that they'd rathsr wit up ah night than sleep In a room where they know there has been suicide or murder done. Why. I know one man. at le.iat. who more lhan once ha* made not the slightest objecllon to sleeping In the same room with a dead lustv, who wouldn't for anything sleep In a suit Ide room If he knew about It." "All thl* experience must have kno ked that nonsense out of you." ald the re porter. •Oh well. I auppO* It !• nonsense. I don", tare a rap for the TJ' bu-lne**-no m'i-s* in this house, by the way; but I'd confess that 1 shouldn't wholly like to occupy * suicide's room That Just a mere preference of mine " * FOR THE MSCHOOL. A 801 l fn Its Meneßl to Be Gives b> the H. . H. Dee. 31. A ball for th* beneAt Of the Mission Jtchool of the Council of Jewish Women will be given at Atmory Hall. Dec. It, under the auaptces of the H. G. H. The rau *,. I* a worthy one. a tut there I* no doubt that the affair will be wall attend •and, and wtU be quite a success* JAPAN’S NEXT RULER. THIS ioi %• m%> who e.u 1001 Tot N TUB 11 UHI.D. •• lot n Son of the Ivnt |r*s— lit* Mother Was One of the Htkado'a l-aira W isro—Hl* I'opitl m rtt * ntio I t'utin*** for apart- MU • miter's %*l%mteel |lts. From the Naw York Mall and Express Humors row come afresh that the Ml* ksdo <if Jaintn will Isaxe Tokki for % four of th* world bfcr<* the cherry hlo*onu ")nu next >ear > The rumors arc ixrnlit ent, but those w lie know tt,.> habit* of the man sho rale* in the I in<t of tbs UiictiK dun have doubt* .i to hi* leaving home ho poor The Mika i * lr eminently .* man of aft lr** H Ih d**-pJ> . *n- meh In all that afTc<‘lti the welfare <f far Eastern oouiHrirt l.’spec.ally list he in teresiesl himself in ldiot, ami. until ho ft cs R**mrthing approaf tuna .* iru-tworthv government c*tabHahel there. It i- tin likely he will allow humelf the Journey lie longs to take Maru-no-miva. the i*rown Prince, mu' oitu In hi# father * stead, howevar. He has longed to come over ever sln< e lie heard tin re wms a West to com* l Haul* n -mly* w > born twenty r ig. atsl. a ■ ord.ng to .lapatK - >ui ting, his age Is 21 Th* i alendur year oi a child’s birth In Japan Is hi?- first year, and the neat calendar year ih his se< nd > ear. I'nill he was ten years old Ham-no mi > i thought he wa*< the mh *f th< F.m~ pre Then some chatter a bom the pal ace at AovumM t<Hli birr, who t>l w mother w.•#*—. pearesa. one of the four supemu merary wives of th** Mikado The** ex tra wives are all* of Huge fumlHes the ancient court nobility descended from younger sone *vf Mikados. Haru-no mlyo s mother i* a countess of imperial any very ancient blood F'mprea* Never Hail Child Hsru-no mba s mother had her home within the Aoyama paixce gr.nn.de a complete estaiilishment in its own house and garden, as had the three other •>oun t* rst h By these Mik.do has had some fifieen children, but Haru-no-mlya - is al most ih** sol* survivor, the Empress, whom he so long thought t< ie his moth er. liwh not horn#* a child. This has ssV d*ned her life but nut embittered It. for in J *ixin, where woman’s trials never end. such things make f<r sweetness and hu mllHy. Hit re hi* discover v. I lam - no-miya h c se**n his i#*al mother at stated Intervals Hhe had a hand In tl* dif'ovwry. perhap*. for even a Japan** ' woman’s e*lf-P neg* tion may gi\ way ill ten >< lr*' time Th*- Empress, too. had felt herself in a false position throughout all that tim** So there wax relief for both h** real and the official mother when Marti found out whose son h<< really nis Probabh he could hardly sav which of the two women he loves beg ter—vwnsrates would be more in accord with the Japanese Idc* They may both be hta subjects on* day, rh , ii he •nv love them. now. being hkmself a sut Jeci. filial piety dictates veneration as the uttHude xpriijc Haru-no-miva married a bright young graduate of th** Princesses’ School in Toklo Bhe will be the on#- an*l only wife of th* next Mikado, if bo’h she and her spouse have to ascend the thron**. vhrreas the present Mikado has four | Hi* father. Kotnei Ten no had twelve. I i*e Sides th* l-smr*ress. as had been the 1 u?om f>r ages. Indeed. the tHl<* of Ihes* extra wives signifies “one of the t waive " Many wive- were for the purpose of in suring an heir. for. according to th# old Japanese idea it was s grleyouw thing to leave no son to keep one memory* green Tan lam and Confucianism, and Shintoism teach as the supreme virtue reverence of an *estors Should a m *n, the head of a house die without a son. not only would lie !oe honor himself, he would also be guilty of ill-in ding the whole line of his ancestors; of Irrever tt r and imple*y. jr. the eyes of hi* fellows lie would be * one midieted to a rllegc and blasphemy. It bar been the custom in Japan, th* n. for tlmac that could afford It. to have an extra wife, and where it wa.s particularly Important in have an heir, to bring home >e\—ral. In the instance of supreme Importaiu • • the need of a frown !Mn •• of lint*# ri >1 blood-custom from time lmni-m*>( ial fin a allotted twelve. But new Japan say a one. I'rlnrr HrgsrdrU as Divine. If.iru-no-miys Is an ex eedmgly popular l*r!n*c. eldest son of th#- Hon of Heav en. he has a prestige In th.* eyes of the Mikado's subjects that is divine. The di vinity of the reigning bouae in Japan Is a f.i I In Japanese lives No one que-tlons It any more than he doubts that fir* glv* * out heat. Not u prime in Europe the**e days has such devoutly loyal subject?, for loyalty to the Mikado is part of the spirit ual life of Julian lluru-no-miVH is the first heir to the Mikado's throne tho Jap an# *e have ever been penult led to *♦*.*. and they have seen nimli of him With some two of his Chamberlain* and a mil itary attendant, he has been about the capttol on all occasion* of public Interest, and. like other youngsters of good birth, he went to the Notde’s school six days in tho week. Herr h# became the familiar friend of Ihe best of Japanese youth Eikc hi* august fat.ier. Haru-iM>-ml>M fond of hrses. and when the ra • ! are on at the beautiful course round Me |otig pond In I,'cno Park, one may surely flnl him th re. Even a* w youngster in abort Housers he knewr tho hors* and some thing of Ihe rider., too. lie seemed to take par icuUr intereat In ihe horse.-' for- CATARRH Catarrh has Income such a common disease that a person entirely free from thia disgusting complaint is seldom met with. It iscustomary toaprak of Catarrh as nothing more seru.ua than a bad cold, a simple inflammation of the noae and throat. It is, in fact, a complicated and very dangeroua disease; if not at first, it very soon become* so. The blood is quickly contaminated by the foul secretions, and the poison through the general circulation is carried to all parts of the system. .salves, washe* and spray# are unaatia factory and di*ap]<ointing, because thev do not reach the scat of the trouble. 8. S. S. does It cleanses the blood of the poison and eliminates from the system all catarrhal secretions, and thus cures thor oughly and permanently the worst case*. Mr P 11. MrAllitter, of lUrrortbnrx Ky., writes " Having been s terrible sufferer from Catarrh, and being now Him. round and well, the (lon often pot to me la, f ■k ’ Will cured you ' In an a awer I feel J 1 my duty to f _ JSS abate that Swift • Speethr imrfew ■ la the medicine lam WFL auch a true believer is the ti, *J/ efficacy of Swift a Spei that I can hooeatly and KX tf conadentloualy re com mend It to any one suffer. ,* ing from Catarrh Have MdKY • ' ' recommended ill . ci.nv. tp-c --ind am h.pr>v t **> <•>■* ' those whom 1 hawfnduc •d to uae 11 can bear meonl In thretatement that 11 will cure any cnae ef Catarrh If taken accord lag todirectloua. • agtak jBHa, is the only purely vrg e table blood purifici known.and the greatest kXLffiklof all Wood niedicir.ra and tonics. If you have Catarrh don’t wait until it becomes deep-seated and chronic, but be i(Mt at once the use of S. 8. 8., and send for our book on blood and akin diseaaa* sod write our physicians about your c.taa, TNI (WIST tetCiriC Off* ATLANTA. A. Dyspepsia (ravbeard cured me of Dyspepsia Nervous Dyspcpt-ia. I did not suffer continu ally, hut had four or five attacks every year. At such times my suffering was intense. I almost de spaired of life, though the doctors did what they could for me. Last spring 1 began to take Graybeard. I improv ed from the first and have had but one attack since— that was the I ever had. Graybeard is the only that has made me feql like mvself. Mrs. S. E Clary, Greensboro. Ala. 91 • hotflr nt rfrtin tlorri 111 AI EU Dill • CXI.. Rolr Ownrri. IT’Sfl CERTAINTY THAT Smith’s Chill Tonic A TRADE MARK WILL CURE Dengue. Typhoid, Intermittent, Malaria, And All Forms o( Fevers. Al.I. DRT'GGISTS SELL IT ON A GUARANTEE —Maniitaclurral Sy— COLUMBIA DRUG CO., SAVANNAH, GA. f>ign*ts pometltTiHa hwl f *v#rv o|>|*orlUfiHy wotikl i-k h*|r owners xbniii d# m !!• had •* h a charming man n*r. mll>| su#’h gamikic • a*-rii ** lo l<ari iltMi on#* wonkl do anylhlng fhan dr• appoint him Everything tm*!, foreign h: •# us*l #xd(4 hid lnt*r#-~t A por telat#* of xtashaN** whit#* •xr-f that had com#* !<* him as a pr#t##*ni caught his fancy. H< ha*i n#‘\*r s* n o whllr* sla*# hsfon-. and It pl**a , <‘<l him lo Imvs ono h# could tif-e over and over figHtn It Is hi* k* #*n dr- ii#- to a.<julrr know 1 #N|g. . iihm i*artl< alai 1y th#- kioiwlrdgr that has glv i \V-*t rn . otinfri- - their rlvl’txatlon. that ho* mad# a 11 lg> abroad so dcslrahl#* f*r lit** fioprii ITinc# The JllkiduV >un< lll<* h*l n lvhM’d ti s*• H*#n a*> Hart*-no-miya t*h>Ki!d hav< mar rlrd and <--tabllh**#l himself. l-*t May mw the nuptial ccremonlrv. With thr* an iiotlficrmcnt that til#* h**lr apparent hi* a son, plan.-' for a tour of th** West will take eff# cl. The Mikado la w<*ii t f ui.y frrr |rom prrjndi r#< and wishes his subjects to b#- ns enlightened as ar* the best of foreign ers. There is an entire abnen* * of haugh tiness in hi** demeanor. ll#* ha- ir#n frequently at jairadep and at tlic ra os. somotlmes on foot anil sran*tlmo<* on horsebs’ k. chatting null offl <r of the rout t. JO Ik OF IPI’LK rilv. Other flra Havr Their Vf*tm 1 hnl Apple | Mottdard Harvey Sutherland in A.nslee’s "Hut appleii! You tako good, sharp. Juicy winter apples and |Mrr h#tn and quarter and core them and •'lire them and strew them on the w*U-workeift and well shortened undervrutt, made out of goml winter wheat flour, and put tn a little sweet butler and Just enough sugar and a clove or two and nutmeg and cinnamon and maybe a little lemon peel and then tlx on the cover and take a < aseknlfe and trim off the fcuperfl'iour dough around the rim and pinch up the edge with your thumb and Align all tround to look presty and gash the top romething like a leaf so as to l-’ out the ri#am and then s# t |t in an oven ha( hak.* ju t right, top nl bottom, and let p stav there till |t browns th** rlghl shad*-, and I tell you you’v# git < pie that Is a pl- And when ma opens the oven door to see how it is getting along, there ts such a nlt-f m # ll all through the house—wait •* ►#-.-cm 1 till I swallow I'm 'moat choked— and It s#H.-me a If you Just <ou!dn’t watt tin dIUMr tim ohm a-' oh i fiM warm apple pb* ■- about right. And cold apple pie .an b< g**t do win. especially If there U h plec. of r.heeaa on the pUte beside It, this kind of < hecse that Is all crumbly and has about a million little Mil kers in It. "Appla Pie Is always in style <io Into a restaurant ond ask for a ‘cut of stand ard/ and the waiter will bring yon i piece of apple pie He knows w-hat stand ard pie Is There ar< times In the. year when other km#b make a spun and run on ahead a little, hut apple pie keep* Jog ging on. and by and by It overtakes them This month mince pie is In lha lead he cause It Is near Chrlatf—s, and that la an orthodox Chlixtmaa article of diet. Last month pumpkin pie had the call be (-ouee rt wae Thanksgiving tinw. Next spring whan pie-plant ' omes In —oome peo ple rail M rhubarb, but that always sounds atuck-up.and like you were trying to show off—everybo*ly will p|e-p|ant Imtsdc* It la good fo the binod In the summer |H will forg* away lo the fioni, and ITI never 101 you *by. But’ LINDSAY & MORGAN Arc Headquarter** for Furniture, Carpets, Draperies, Vestibule Lace. Folding Door Portieres Lace Curtains, Silk Lambrequins, China Silks, Inlaid Linoleums, Straw Mattings, Carpet Size Rugs, Window Shades, Table Covers. BRASS BEDS. Have Just rfrrltfd aontf lrgm *•••■ with ono|*lr. Worth looking • t Mra If yon do not want to buy. \\ on'l rliargr •ou m rent to look. DINING ROOM FURNITURE. Wf hove ■ display thr brat nartniriil of Hide boards, f hlna rim. eta. Fitraalon Table* and 4 halra that you will ever bn a r thr rhaaee to look at agnln. Buck’s Ranges and Stoves. 2fl PKII rBKT. OFF thr regnlar prlt-ea tbla week. Kntblng off tha f rial Ity. %Vliat wr any nr do-—wr fin DO, and nr aa f that ear aril oar good* *‘\ot lion cheap kind, hut how good kind," at the aantr price and often Iraa than yon art thr Inferior arnd- at other atorea. BEWARE OF BAITS. Oar thing cheap, aad make It np on the uest tlalna you hay. Wr da not sell good* for coat. t an't pay etpenaea If ear did. %n oar elae caa either. Her thr potatf If yon don’t, come and are na and eve will ea- IlMl'trr yon. NEW STORES, BROUCHTON ST. JUST RECEIVED, Fire-Proof Safes From the tuoat celebrated manalartvrtry, both fire.proof aad hnrglar proof aafea and eanlt dnnra. We carry aa Inaaveane atock of Fire-proof Hafea. Oar atock ena hracea a eery elegant line front 7n> to 4 t tMMl ponada, laeluetea, alaglv aad donble doora, and a elalt to our establishment to la ayrft these elegant aafea eelll he a soarce of aach profit and la atrnrtlon to our friends. Thr price eelll be aa loee aa any really F!re*proof file can ha made, and oar motto la Quality and Hafety of the drat Import ance. •end or call on ua for farther particulars, ratalopac and prices. LIPPMAN BROS., Wholesale Agenta for Manufacturers of Fire-Proof Safes. McOOAOLGH & bALLANTYiNE, Iron Founders, IVlachinists, II lark ami (Its. Ilotl-rmn kra. aimalarlarfra of aiatlon. rrr anil Corlable F.nsln-a, Varllral and Top Hnnnlaas < ora Mills, -user Mill aad i'aaa. aha ftlaa, FMltaya, ale. TELEPHONE NO. 123. Jiiat as I say. applo pie ka-pi: Joffsin* on and In the lon* run wins (he rai” I mean th rihi kind of an *ppl' pie Oiua In n while yen will m-*t somehody (tiat I- mlw-hvs trying U> tv different from any body also and he will go on about English d—n apple pi-, and how much superior It la to the common, vulgar Ihlng we **( because we don't known any belter. Well. English deep aprl- ll I- good: I don't deny thal. It can't help being good. You cook apples almoM any way, and they're not bad eating, but law me- when you |ei( them In a crock and (urn a little cup iifMt.le down In the mi-Hl- of them ,tn,| cover It all over wlli a lUI of paatry, that Isn't a pie at all it's Jusa stewed ap ples. Don't you see that you rnuat have a bottom of pastry and thal there a just proportion of crust to tilling thug Carbuncles J. W. Williamson of Cairo, Ga., writes: ”1 thought for some time I would write to let you know wbat Graybeard has done for me. 1 was troubled with rising or carhunclen for eight years and noth would do me any good. I have lost as many as .15 davs with only one of these boils. I had a bad one when 1 began to take Graybeard, and two bottles stopped it, and I have not had one since, ami this has been .1 years ago. The last year I had one, and before I began to take Graybeard I lost a third of the year from it. • boftl* • I drag mt ores. nmnaft* hum* go.. , ; !)l# Owner*. muet not he deviated from on* lota of your pi' l 1* Inartlatto and on oltenee ■xwlnat the law* of taete?" TELEGRAPHIC MARKETS. (Continued from Ninth Face.) .-orn, J7yc: No X oat*. No. * white. ISViWc; No 2 white. atrfjtc; No. 2 rye, 4®SO'; good leading barley f ilr to choice malting. W®gDc, No. I flax -eed, ll.til; No. 1 Northweeaero. 116; me." pork. tier barre!. til 2MJII XT'*, lard, per 109 pound*. 771Mi7 174; hort rl*a ride* donee). H r<(r. V); dry ealled ahout dara tboxed). . abort (tear eldea (boxed). * o©.7u, whleky, l>aela of high wlnea, |1.27. , 7