The Savannah morning news. (Savannah, Ga.) 1900-current, December 30, 1900, Page 12, Image 12
12
A CENTURY OF MECHANISM.
MinmRKT THAT IU4 tI.TRHKD
( of iifk Foil VAi.
KINO.
Jlif l nrnmolit r and AlrMmiltlp Vlap
llronahl the Fnda of the Fartli
< lose 1 Agrthfr—Kvrry nhrrr Ma
chlnerv Has Hem Nnlitlllnfrd for
the Itnnd—ln floe wee f Electricity
on Progress—Uducatiou by the
tamrra and the Printing I'rra*.
*1 he Flrtalur lie* Oalrallird l‘fip
i.lm t Inn-tome of the I baaira
Hare iwiu*.
Nrtr York. Dee. K-Thla ha* been a
two*: materialistic century, an age of
•necharUm. W# Uv#> progressed won
derfully In otir capacity for luxury, ex
tra vaararve" romlort. A hundred year*
ago oir foret*e*n were cot Met t to live by
hand, at It were, r.ow we live chiefly by
idtnpUraicl machinery. A century of
progress baa creat’d demands which
forced the dormant Invent!va skill of the
Old tityfa of Spinning.
world to put forth 1t best #fb*rta Th#
work! has ma<l< mor? i r .grrs? In material
thing* lt the last huidrtd >ars than It
did In ail Ihe cenlurlr* jr#<e*iing Clvl*
hz’d owns iikml# of r\i>i**n# Ims ben
totally tlterad by the Invention*.
The world baa gun* potent ml In tlu>
Fnitcd States alone tie r# uer# (S3.UG pat
ent* granted In th* sixty two years from
1997 to HS*. luzriig It a exlsterir#, the lat
ent offiev has received more than forty
million dollars In feen. On carriage* and
wagon*, morn than 20.f0 intents have
been granted, on stove* anil furnace*. <
18.9G0. on la rot**, gas fitting*, harveateis, j
bootp and niior* and m'cptai les for stor
ing. 10.090 rwch. The pdal of patents for
the Civilised world f* ea*lty twit's that of
the United Slates. Thank* to the-o hun
dred* of thnuiunds of contrivance*, what
ware luxuriea to our forebears of 1900 are
Modern Rpinn.ng Machine.
com mor4> lore* of cxifttcncA to All
lirh ijhl pn>tr. In 1900.
With the IdfMkUoA of the eteam rrplne,
tin* world wunk l a hound to a twen
tieth of it* forrrv‘r *i*c. He vm( dlntuix **
mud to b** formkhtbtn Where the lum
ber in* stAjc* roaoft or the i>lo*i<iirnr cra
ven took week* the ftyinic expr#® trov
er# the diet a rice In a few hour* The trip
arrow the continent iMid to tie a matter
of life and death. Now It l a matter of
i fK. and take your e**e *t you no. With
out the railroad a closo-knit nation tbouo
•nk of mll*e brood. fuch aa thix courv.
try. would have been an impossibility. In
IKS the rtr*{ eteam rauroad war frt*o*tl
between Htocktoo and Darlington. Kr<w
lavxl AT'y ear later a similar experiment
wu tried at Quincy. Mane., where the
'engine hauled atone tor a distance of four
'tnLi*-a The tir*t pasaeng*r rn.nl In thla
country was the lialtirna> end Oido,
ppetsed In I*3o with a miiewr* of fourteen
ml lea Today there are 210. *O6 mil*a of
railroad in this country; 1C3.216 In Barape; I
First Fulton Ferry Boat.
N.M4 to South America; *1.10! In Ala;
l.* In Africa, and 14.3A4 In Auaira'.la.
Early In the history of railroading
C salve mile* an hour was considered
tcklessly fast. In January. IW, a train
ki thr Hurllnaton route. In a run from
Wdln* to Arlon. 14 rnliea did the distance
it one minute and twenty Mcondii, nr at
the rata of 10* rotlea an hour. The Km
*4rc State Expres* made a reoord of 111
nil's an hour in May. 103.
t Marine travel did not make eo won
lerful an advance In speed. through the
genr y of steam, ae did land travel, but
he progress 1n comfort and Wy *•>
reater In 17S0 John Fltfh rnnetrueted
H ateamboat—-and era* considered a raving
i Thl* opinion waa confirmed when
Ut* experiment proved a failure. Beven
j, aen ytar* later. Robert Fulton, another
i b-cal.ed vlttanary, hacked by Joel Bar-
Lw and Robert T. Livingston. built the
f leemboet < Herman t. She wee eoon dubbed
* fFutlon * Folly*’ end when eh# eterted
1 or Albenr on Aug 11. Iht7 all New York
fctae out to witness her failure. She went
c • Albany (a Ike astonishing ume of
thirty-two hours, returning In two hours
Icon. Now. a hen a gigantic ocean liner,
with lifeboat* a* large the ClMMBi*
crassr* the Atlantic In h-m than six days.
w read the new* in a Ivored sort of way.
displeased that ateamera should he to
tloar. Fulton't exiwtiment led, year* later,
to the builrtlnt f the Savannah which
a an, y crossed the Atlantic to the great
M -toniwhm* nt of the entire world.
I'ommuni' atlort between mart and man
was a* extensive a it wax slosr In the
old day*. It cunt a shilling to get a let*
t* r anywhere, when ihe century began,
and a •* dllir-g In those I*>* represented
fur more than It now does. Now two
rent* will carry a letter to the Philippines
or around the comer. Then the mall
matter handl'd was too Imignlfbant for
tat let !*%; now tliere are neventy-flva
thousand pout In thhcountry, hand
ling postal matter of ail kind, p* r an
num. of €.STK,SIO,ONO idem
A for “burry ttw***agew“ or "nish" let
ter?. they were unknown. Prior to the
experiment* of Samuel F H. Home. In
ventor of the telegraph, signaling w u
done by tneana of flr*tt on vieojntaln tops
or by waving flag?. *Mor*e revolutionised
this In 1D37, when he announced the atic*
c**-.* of his experiment*. The first tele
graph Uno |n th!* country wtn opened
In 1*44 In IKd, there were ***.*33 ml lea of
wire In use In this country; T 1.998.157 m
were sent that year. Now. we are
on the lhre.<iholl of nil era where even
wires will no longer tie necessary and
alien w* will l*e able to talk or to •**le
graph to Boston or New Oriean* or i*er
even IxwwWm. wltiiout any visible
• mnrethm between tit# reviving and the
tending Instruments.
The year ]WO knew no telephone. A
hutMlnd year* later see* 7T2.9W ml.es of
t* l**phoH> wire in us-. connected with
V*s.l9U stations ntid answ ring 1.231.000.0 uh
Till* n year. When ihe century was new
it tnk we* k* to g**t new* from Ku
rope. T*-day It lakes six second*. To
day there are 170.900 mile* of sui>-marine
■tde* -all Inkl time ihe flrid. < ahld.
lh*ld ■ gr*<at aehJevoment, was laid in
IK7.
Electricity h is come to the ai 1 of steam
in traffic. Edison must be credited with
ihe construction of the first successful
electric road, that which he operated in
10*0 at hi* home nt Menlo Dark, N. J
Sit*.-e then oiertrfe tract ion na* developed
to su*‘h an extent that now there ate
more than ore thoueand ouch afreet car
lino* in <*!*• ration In the United States,
with a capita.tuition of sl.7<v>.on.<** The
hum.* electric power, only dimly known
I cfore tho wonderful <emury. now lights
our cKies. In the United State*, there
•ire half a million are light*, and about
2K100.0® Incadeacent light*—the kit<*r b*~
ir ciulvwioftt In light giving capacity of
J* AM.UJU candle tip* Mich a* they used
j in 2*oo.
While the mllrood* have nerved to dif
fuse the population, from on** end of the
h.nd to the other, another Invention ha*
sorted to centralise It—the elevator. It*
'•uee of it, the huge *ky-*craper. the
■ i nun cnee flat house* and the grrat facto
i riCA, have lem made feaalble Formerly,
wh.-n Hhank*. hta mare. wa the fashion.
l<op)e liad to clinch stair*. Thl* tended
to low building* and the consequent
I spread of population. Tlie elevator haa
rb a lured all that. Huge caravanearlea
teeming with human being*. accommodate
a* many aa formerly could he crowded
Into re*|ectwble town* Tire elevator
makes practical the centtaint itlott of com
mercial Interval* which la the basis of
our great clues.
The selectee of applied mechanic# has
reached a stage where further Improve
ments seem impossible, yet every day
n> w invention* and improvements on old,
are recorded at the patent office. In oth
er times they built houses of wood and
brick. Now they construct them of steel
1 nrtd iron. Al ■o carefully are the plant
developed, that tha architect can say how
muny bolta will be required In tha con
, struetton of a *ky-*cr#pet—how much
each beam can aupport—where each piece
of Iron belong! Wooden bridges have
been supplanted by hug* steel structuree
Even stone tower* are being abandon*-,
for the lighter eteel. Tha age of eteel is
Iter*
Our vast factory system# employing
thousands of workers and furnishing neev
es-anm and knurl e* alike at gricta that
TBE MORNING NEWS. SUN DA V, DECEMBER 30.1900.
FIFTY TONS OF CANDY
Have Been *ent to Our koldlers la
the Philippine Isjnads by
the 4.0% eminent.
Fifty ton* of candy have been sent to
the aoldlera in the Philippine lidanda by
the cororolrrnnr department <f <he army
duri?!£ the last three month* and Ur* *
•mounts to lire soldier* in Fula and Por- ,
to Rico.
Thl* l* done upon advice of the mel.<al
officer* of the mmy, because It 1? a phy
siological fact thnt a nder;it in>nj*uin|>*
Utiti of confc< turnery pr< mote* health and
satisfies a natural craving of the storo
sen.
Candy was never furnl* •*! to the I 'nit -
m) State* army be for* although It la*
b#m reniftKitilv uwti a* a ration by the
French and British tro>| R In Ihe tropic*.
Thl* explode* another old fashioned
theory that sweet* wr* Injurious to the
digestive organs, while • moderate u*e
of sweet* I* actually le rudhial
Very few thing* !• injurious and the
food crankh wh advocate th* u.*e of a
few grain* and vegetable- and d* ry the
u*e of sweet* and meats are In error. *
a wholesome variety of meat and vege
table fo**| I* absolutely neees'ui ry for 4he
maintenance of the high* t condition of
| health
The be* mle to follow Is to out wht
the apt* tit** crave*, and If there 1* any
discomfort or tr- ul*h in dig* sting m at
and sweet*, the difficulty can I* readily
cvercome tiy the regular u*c after m ai*
of some safe digest tire composed of i*'p
*ln and diastase which wlil a-"dot the
stomach by tncr*w*lng the flow of gastric
Juice ami furnish the natural peptone
lacking in ssk ptotnach*
The hc*4 pr*iirutl<n *f thl* kind 1*
probably Rtuart’s Tablet*
which may N* found at all drug store*.
Year* of use have the
value and effectlvene.-s of Htiiart s Dys
pepsia Tablet* in all ca<-* of lm|*tired
digestion.
would have made the cttlsen of I*oo gr*p
with am.** m* nt, have grown on: of the
substitution of machinery for the hand;
the sewing machine, the *tnm loc.ro. the
ring frame, ami hundrd* of is her Inven
tion*. We do not yet grow crop* by ma
chinery. but no sooner has th fruit of
the eerih r*• hd maturity than it 1* tri
the grasp of steel and steam, to !*• turn
ed to human ncd. almost without the
tonedi of huniai hand*.
Photography. Is a product of the last
hundred year*. To have one** picture
“took” in ye olden time*, required con*
slderable mom y and more iMiierice, for
It took some time to paint the |nrtrait.
Daguerre’* ilagucrreotypo, tin* foreruimer
of the photograph, h* mI the way for
the development* In this line, of the lasi
ten year*. Photography and color taint
ing together have been among th* mtght-
educational Influences the world has
ever known. Appealing to the brain direct
through the eye they have taught more
swiftly and more widely than I* possible
•o any other agency. To science their
aid ha* been inestimable.
No man can Judge of the Influence of
the printing press, which did not reach
any .tmelderabio development before ]tW.
In I*9o, the principal daily |t|M -m were
published In Boston ami Near York city.
They were marvels of staid conservatism.
They permitted no new* younger than a
week to creep Into their column*. A*
for the paper on which they were printed,
respect for age prevent!* a description.
The type, hand-made and hand-set. leaned
either ail one way, or in any direction
most comfortable. It may have been su
perlative work for those days, but now
adays, new type Is cast while being net;
paper cornea In roll* from two to four"
miles long; pressure run dff 90,000 complete
newspaper* an hour. The press, which
la the moat powerful agent of progress,
la In Itself typical of the advance of the
century.
t M>i:i<.ltOl Ml POliK.
lVatrr Ikig* Arc Ifideona, haf 1 aefnl
Creatures.
Though the water-dog's service* have
not been so fully recognised by the wise
men. rural folk believe the world owe*
him much He 1* not a beautiful benefac
tor. His head Is round and flatfish, his
mouth wide, hi* feet lumpish and clum
py, h4s slimy coat muddy brown on top,
dirty white underneath. If he has ♦'yes,
they are Invisible. In motion he is ag
gravating!}' slow. lie Is dimpl'd some
thing like n very clumsy lizard. with
greater ma*a at the ah*adders, and a
sharp, almost rat-like, toil. Nature pos
awe >■■■■*
Bio©hen*o n' "Rocket.**
slbly matte him so much for use h*
thought beauty would tie wasted on him
tie lives, moves, he* his being, and
works in the deepest darkness. Ills work
la to keep open the water-veins which
supply sprlna# and wells, i tcnaslonally,
very occasionally, he i-rnirts himself the
diversion of coming to the light. oi*nlng
his mouth as though gai-.:i at the • tnpty
width of things, then dropping Inert.
Commonly be chooses the lime of a
freahet. when the wliolr earth Is s-si
de n. and water seep* everywhere. Then
he may scramble through a very narrow
crevice, deceived Ist loubt Into a lidler
that there I* more waUsr-tartlbtry.he must
map and survey. Boroetlme* he Is drawn
ttp In the bucket from a well in which
the water Is low Well own* rs always
lower him carefully to the bottom, re
joicing In the belief that he ha* come to
open the water-vein* afresh, so as to re
new the supply. To a man. they have
faith that If the water dog were maltreat
ed. the welt we.uld dry up. #,nc* hi* kins
men In revenge would leave the veins
to choke, or lead oft the water Into new
outlets.
Wells dug tot the ltmeatone land* of the
Middle Bouth Often harbor eysle-e flah.
exactly like fhoe* caught In the streams
of the Mammoth Cave. Borne geologists
are o£ opinion that the whole central vai
Foye & Eckstein.
FURNITURE.
N|irrlal n f ten I lon Is called to a
new •• led it of very choir#
Bedroom Suites
In all f)le* of mooda-hlshlf
polished—Ocala (IN simply lovely.
BRASS and IRON
!!e|*fettd* In single and dnnhlc.
Prices mnrkril very ailrndlv#.
MRS.6OLOEN
nt the Mllluu r> I'rrlor on the
■fcnntl floor will be pleased
to see nil the ladles, and will
serve them to their satisfaction.
At Short Notice
Mourning (until* complete—-also
l*rlestley*a Mourning kill* Veils.
SHOES.
,% n nllraeflve line of fine Slippers
for Kvenlng wear—•% cry style.
Special.
A 92.00 Shoe at...'.51.50
A 92.50 Shoe at.... 52.00
See “The Ultra” shoes.
Our Children's School Shoes are
noted for their wearing qualities
MEN'S
Hi oler Kill* Neckwear, all the
nru shape* and rolnM at She.
Men** l.ltten f'ollars, nil (lie new
II.A W.sknpea, u*iaul I.V, now toe,
Wien's I ulaunilered %\ hilr Khlrts,
n grenl bargain. .1 for a dollar.
Men’* Warm I nderwear, everf
slse, at greatly rnluced prices.
FOYE & ECKSTEIN.
ley from the Great lakoo to the Gulf
has underbrntifid a gnat sheet of fre*h
water. If thl be true, the cyele** fish,
no doubt, InhahM the big uhterran*an
lake, and swim out of It Into the under
ground running* which thread the upper
limestone formations.
Air give* to the earth dentsene quit#
a* wonderful a* those that swim in the
waters under the earth. The sand wasp,
for example, which digs n **iMle bur
row' for eai h of its many egg*, stock*
• h burrow plentifully with Insects, de
posit* the cxg*. seals the burrow, and
goes to work afresh. Often she drag*
into the burrow caterpillars or graashop-
pers twice as large a* hereelf. Bhe doe*
not kill them, hut paralyse* them by
sting hack of the head, tind leaves them
laart to await the naada of her young.
Madame Itumhle-Bee Is another earth
nester. Madame 1* written advisedly.
As In the case of most llymenoptere*.
only fertile female* live through the wln
i irt season. hllternatlng where and how
they may. Awake In spring, Madame’*
tlrt care Is to seek a sunny spot away
from prying eyes, tunnel Into it a few
inches, and shop- a round chamber at
the end of the tunnel. Then she builds
two or <hree ct ll*. Itll* them with honey,
and lays a worker-egg In each. While
these egg* hatch *he give* her whole
mind and strength lo turning out new
cells, hut does it slowly, so as not to ex
haust herself. When the worker* tako
wing the nest grow* rapidly—they build
and fill the cell*. *o she ha* time and
strength for egg-laying. Toward* mid
summer she lay* egg* that will hatch
out perfect Insect* of both texe* Then
her mitilon accomplished, she fold* her
wing* and dies. The male* die a few
dv* after they com# to maturity, the
workers of all brood*, and th* weaker of
the young queen*. p*rlh In front, leaving
the stronger to survive and keep up hum
ble-bee tradition*.
Th* miner-bee baa much tha eama
w. Will ** on Hondar • b-nnlHol line of Sew Embrnldeele.. em
prl.ln, Rdalnan. In.eellon. nnd Allo.ee.. The de.lan. ore enllrelr
newwthe material, are on Combrile, h.ln.ook, Imlh nnd Mnll^
THE NEW CENTURY
EMBROIDERIES.
A Special in Lmbroideries, 5c
A Special in Embroideries, lOc
A Special in Embroideries, 15c
A Special in Embroideries, 19c
A Special iii Embroideries, 25c
The ALIATnN are In E.qol.le le.l*n. and linlnly F.flfeel..
on One mnlerlnl.. IVe Inrlle an enrlr In.peellren and yon will
And Ihe .election .eennd to none. PRICK* THK VK.IIV MIW BST.
GREAT SLAUGHTER
OF ALL WINTER GOODS
A SIO.OO Tailor-made Suit $4.08
A $7.50 Snow White Blanket $4.98
A $3.00 Seal Plush Cape $1.69
REGARDLESS OF VALUE.
20 cents Fancy' Dress Goods 12y£c
$1.25 Flannelette Wrappers 79c
$1.50 Misses’ Flannel Reefers 98c
$2.00 Seal Plush Capes 98c
10 yards Cotton Diaper, piece 39c
12 yards English Long Cloth 98c
SATIN CHECKED NAINSOOKS 5c
25 cents Sheer India Linnons 17c
habK. The queen* perforce do all the
work, since the males have feet unfitted
for tunneling. Hut Instead of waxen • ten
cell* the miners "puddle' 'their nest walls
with flnHy chewed earth, then fill the
whole snaca with a mixture of hone,
and pollen, in w'htoh the agg* float until
they hatch. YJk>w jackets, or fruit
wasps, among which, also, only queens
live over winter, dig out a chandier In
earth very early In the *i>riig. then build
within K paper nests, such as the red
wasps build above ground. The combs
are awning one to another as the nest
Increase*, and Inclnaed In a w all of course
laper half an Inch thick. If at the end
of summer there are larvae In the cell''
the old wa*f>* match them out. and fly
with them to the earth’s surface, where
they leave them to be devoured by the
birds. Instinct warns them against leav
ing the grubs to starve—hence they
choose for them a quicker death.
Martha McCulloch William*.
■— ■—■ 1 # * —i
—"The British forces who are chasing
pe Wet have Just executed another
cotip."
"And. as usual, the wily Boer flew it.'*
—Cleveland Flaln Dealer.
HOKI.KVi LEMON n.mn
A rira.nnl 1.r.rl Tonic.
Cur** Indigestion, headache, mnlarta
kidney dimip. fever, chill*, toes of ap
petite. debility, nervous, prostration, heart
In:.me and appendicitis by regulating the
Uvr. Stomach, Bowel* and Kidney*.
MtiZI.KV* LEMON ELIXIR.
Cured me of lndtgratlon. I had suffered
for ten year*. I had tried almost every
medicine, but *ll failed. Since taking
Lemon Elixir 1 can eat anything I like.'
W. A. Oeimth.
Rcevcevlilo, 3. C.
5407.1.FVS LEMON ELIXIR.
Cured me of indigestion and heart dts
eae. efter years of suffering when all
other remedte* end doctor* |,| foiled.
N. l>. Colent.m.
Beulah. 8. C.
MOZI.RVN LEMON KI.IXIR.
I have been a grewt sufferer from dyejvt*-
et* for about tlfteen year*, rnv trouble
being my liver, stomach and bowels. wl,|,
terrible headache*. le-m. ii Eltx.r cured
me My appetite I* good, and lam well.
I had taken a bsrrel of other mcdlckxx
that done me no good
Charles Olhhard.
No. 1515 Jefferson etreet. Louisville. Ky.
MOZLEFI LEMON KI.IXIR
(Vfwd me of ententes liver, nervnoa In
digestion and heart disease. I waa un
able to walk up stairs or to do any kind
of work. 1 w* treated by many physl
otan*, but got no better until I used
Lemon Elixir. 1 em now healthy and
vigorou. C. H. Baldwin,
No. 9* Alexander etreet. Atlanta, Ua.
MozLßvt udmon hot mi or*
Cure all Coughs. CoM*. Hoarseness,
gore Throat. Bronehltle, Hemorrhage and
all throat and lung diseas- Elegant, re-
I table.
Hr at druggist*. Prepared only by Dr.
H. Moxley. Atlanta, Oa —ad.
-
Mr. Ilrnt Nays,
•'Orsybeard has well nigh cured me of
TOwumattsm from which I have t>. .-n a
great sufferer the last fifteen years.” Mr.
Dent's postoflb-e is Bt. Simons Island. Ga
Rev John Christian of Pierce. Ala
says: "Graybeaxd has cured Mrs John
Childress of Baldwin county of rheuma
tism. In February before she began to
rake Oraybeerd she w*a given up to die
•be I* now sound and well."
Greybeard Is mad* only by Reapers
Drug Cstnpsry. sol* owners, end sold by
druggists for B. a bottle. Every family
should have a box of Oraybeerd Puis end
Urey beard Ointment.—*d
OCEAN STEAMSHIP COMPANY
FOR
NEW YORK. BOSTON AND THE EAST.
Unsurpassed cabin accommodations All the comforts of a modern hotel. Elec
trie lights. I n*xe#ll*d tabl# Tickets Include meals and bertha aboard ihlp.
PASSENGER FARES FROM SAVANNAH.
TP NKW YORK—First Cabin. 139. First Cabin Round Trip. IS2; Intarmedl
*t* ( nbln. Ue.OO; Intermediate Cabin, Round Trip. $24.00. Steerage. $lO.
iym°i B P 8T Fl ™' 122 • K,r * Cabin Round Trip. $26. Intermediate Cabin
111 Ot). Intermediate Cabin, Hound Trip, 12*00 Steerage. |1! 75
The express steamshlpe of thl# line ere appointed to sail from Savannah Cen
tral (90th) meridian lime, as follows:
SAVANNAH TO NEW YORK.
CITY OF AUGUSTA. Capt. Daggett,
TUESDAY. Jan. 1. 2:00 p m
•CITY OF BIRMINGHAM. Capt. Berg,
WEDNESDAY. Jan. 2. S p. m.
NACOOCHEE. Capt. Smith, THURS
DAY, Jan. 3. 3.30 p. m.
KANSAS CITY. Capt. Fisher. SATUR
DAY'. Jan. 5. 5:30 p. m.
TALLAHASSEE, Capt. A-klne, TUES
DAY, Jan. 8. 7:30 p. m.
CITY OF AUGUSTA. Capt. Daggett,
THURSDAY. Jin. 10. 9:00 p. m.
NACOOCHEE. Capt. Smith. SATURDAY.
J.tn. 12, 10 3o p. m.
•CITY OF BIRMINGHAM. C&pt. Berg.
MONDAY. Jan. 14. 12:00 noon.
KANSAS CITY. Capt. Fisher. TUESDAY.
Jan. 15, 12:30 p. m.
•NOTlCE—Steamship City of Birmingham will not carry passengers.
Steamship City of Macon. Capt. Savage, will ply between New York end Bos
ton on the following schedule:
Leave New York for Boaton (from Pler|Le av B„,ton for New York (from Lewis'
612 19* RlV * r * “* 12 00 J“h | Wharf) at 12.00 (noon), Jan. 2. 9. 16, 0.J9.
This company reserve* the right 4o change Us sailings without notice and
wlthoyt liability or accountability therefor.
Sailings New York for Savannah Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays, 8 p. m.
W. G. BREWER. E. W. SMITH.
City Ticket and Passenger Agent. Contacting freight Agent. Savannah. Go.
1(7 Bull street. Savannah. Go. WALTER HAWKINS.
R. O. TREZEVANT. Genera! Agent, Traffic Department
Agent. Savannah. Oa. 224 W. Bay Bt., Jacksonville, Flo.
P. E. LKEEVHE.
Manager,
New Pier 36. North River. New York.
FACTS ABOUT PRINTING.
The three essential element* in a good Job of printing are;
The best press that money can buy. ■ ,
♦
The beet printer which money can hire. •
The beet Ink* that good Job* require.
That one Job looks better than another almost v*rv man can tell, and her*
It end*. They do not reason that one cost* more than another. Or that acme
printing houaes make their living by turning out chmp Job#, while others make
their* by getting out high class work
A *SOO press dor* heller work than a ISO press.
A non printer does better work than a Jio printer.
A S3 Ink does better work than a 0 cent* Ink.
When the Morning New* tlgure# on your Job It calculate* that your work to
to go cn the heat pree* that money can buy-lhat th* bet printer open for a Job
•hall print It for you-and that the beet taper and Ink shall be u*d In lu And
if It should strike you that the estimate la higher than the cheap Job man. con
sole yourself In the fact that the work will be better than the man’s cheap Job.
The Morning New. I. turning out now from He lithograph room* end It* Job
rooms some very high clan work. If you ar* Interested in office stationery It can
•how you the best work you ever saw for the money.
No troubl* tor u* to submit tempi**
All Inquiries cheerfully answered. Address
THE MORNING NEWS JOB DEPARTMENT,
J. H. Estill, President,
Savannah, Ga.
SILKS
A tine lot off W.l.t fltlka for
Mreet nnd Ktr.ln* wear t*
4 yard, length, at hl.tll and +\<K>.
POPLINS.
glreet and Etrnlns shade# la the
Popular Color# and fine finality.
ART GOODS
Itercrtln. In Cine Table I nrrn.
11. run In. In Mre *fn Plllnwa.
11. run In. In Mantle lrn|ierle,.
liu run In. In < urialn Inlun.
HANDKERCHIEFS
There I. n .mail lot >f very alee
llandkrrelilef. a little mua.ed
from the ru.h nt holiday trade
nblrh we rln.e nnt tery ehenp.
FANCY GOODS
Tl# balance c*f (laid Belts, Neck
Huff!***. I*aekelbooks,fllt I'rnsne#,
Jewelry and other fancy articles
must he •old— I They go very cheap
CORSETS
Fvcry well known make t# here.
AA e are prepared t Ilf every sire
figure and every sl> Ir In demand.
Popular price* froai 89c to F2.V>.
WAISTS
game very nice French Flannel
\\ slut* still In stuck. Prices much
reduced to close out quickly.
ORDERS
by mall are solicited, and will
have oar usual prompt attention.
SAXONY
and Germantown Wool.all colors.
TALLAHASSEE. Capt. Asking, THURS
DAY'. Jan. IT, 2:30 p. m.
CITY OF AUGUSTA. Capt Daggett,
SATURDAY. Jan. 19, 4:00 p, m.
NACOOCHEE, Capt. Smith, TUESDAY,
Jan. 22. 6 00 p. m.
KANSAS CITY. Capt. Fisher. THURS
DAY. Jan. 24. 8:00 p. m
•CITY OF BIRMINGHAM. Cap - Berg.
THURSDAY'. Jan. 24. 8:00 p, m.
TALLAHASSEE. C.ipt. Asklns. SATUR
DAY, Jan. 26. 9.3) pr m
CITY OF AUGUSTA. Capt. Daggett.
TUESDAY. Jan. 29. 12 30 p m.
NACOOCHEE, Capt Smith, THURSDAY,
Jan. 31, 2:30 p. m.
W H. PI.EABANTB.
General Freight and Passenger Agent,
New Pier 35. North River, New York