Newspaper Page Text
THE MAN WHO FORGOT.
From the New York Sun.
May 13 before daybreak a well
dressed stranger stood on the wharf at
Rockland, Me., and asked when the
next boat for Boston would leave. He
,uld not remember how he came to
Rockland. A Boston boat had just
tome and gone, fie thought that per
haps he might have been a passenger
on her. Pretty soon it dawned upon
him that his memory was lost. Who
was he? What Wjis his name? He
asked in vain. In his overcoat pocket
was a notebook with the name "C. E.
Frown.” On his collar were the init
ials "C. E. B.” He inferred that his
name was C. E. Brown. From Rock
land he went to West Bath, where he
boarded for two weeks in a farmhouse.
He said that he had been a carpenter
in Roxbury, Mass., and had taken a
vacation on account of ill health. His
memory of events during these two
weeks was entirely good, but he had
no memory of a past any longer than
that. He had some dim remembrance
of having had a dizzy feeling and a
feeling of pressure around the head.
He went to Bath and Brunswick fre
quently and bought the Boston papers
to see if they could help him find him
self. A Brunswick doctor examined
him and declared him perfectly sane.
Nothing was snapt but the memory.
E B.” couldn't recall the assas
s.: ition of Mr. McKinley or the erup
tion of Mont Pelee. Arithmetic, geog
raphy and history were a blank to him.
He could speak and write good Eng
lish. In a barber shop he didnlt know
how much to pay the barber. He
prowled about the shops of Bath and
Brunswick trying to find out what his
occupation was. Stores had no inter
est for him. Building had. He decided
that he must have been an architect
or a builder.
From the descriptions and pictures
of the man in the Boston papers Miss
Anna T. Church of K street, South
Boston, thought she knew him. She
went to Brunswick and found that “C.
E. Brown” was her nephew, Charles
E. Buzzell, a well-to-do dairyman and
deputy sheriff of Barrington, N. H. He
didn't recognize her, but asked if she
lived in K street. Her answer con
vinced him that she was his aunt and
encouraged him to believe that he
would recover his memory in time. It
seems that his father was a carpenter
and he had worked in his father's shop.
C. E. Brown is one of Mr. Buzzell’s
employes. Mr. Buzzell left his home
on May 9 and all attempts to find him
failed. His aunt has taken him to his
family. Whether' he has yet fully re
covered his memory we are not in
formed.
The psychologists*are familiar with
such cases of what is called “alter
nating personality.” A man forgets his
former and habitual self and appears
as another person, all memory of his
earlier existence razed. The case of
Ansel Bourne, examined carefully by
Prof. William James, is_a good exam
ple Like Mr. Buzzdll, Bourne had
been a carpenter. He dabbled
in atheism, but was “convert
ed" and took up the calling
of an itinerant preacher. Jan.
IT, 1 887, Ansel Bourne drew $351 out of
a Providence bank. That day Ansel
Bourne ceased to exist for a time.
IVhpn he came to himself he had been
keeping a shop in Norristown, Pa., for
six weeks under the name of “A. J.
Brown.” He didn’t know where he was
or how he got there. He remembered
getting that check cashed, but he re
membered little else between Jan. 17
and March. In January, 1890,' Prof.
James hypnotized him and got him to
tel! what he had been doing in the
weeks that seemed to him to have slip
ped from his memory altogether.
These lapses of consciousness and
losses of self, this failure of the mem
ory, involve grave and mysterious
problems. The case of Ansel Bourne
has been cited by Mr. Andrew Lang as
parallel with that of Dr. Manette in
'The Tale of Two Cities." Strong ex
citement or grief drove or had a ten
dency to drive Dr. Manette back to
the cobbler's bench, to make him forget
his daughter, his actual personality and
profession, and to make him again the
cobbling prisoner of the North Tower
of the Rastille. His “alternating per r
sonality'' was recurrent or inclined to
he recurrent, thereby differentiating it
self from that of Bourne. Buzzell was
not. perhaps, strictly speaking, a case
of alternating personality. He had
forgotten Buzzell, hut as Brown he was
madly inquiring who and what he was.
He was groping after his original per
sonality and had not devedopel a sec
ond one.
ABOUT CANALS.
How DcLesseps Won Treated try an
l nfcrn.trfill Country.
From the New York Press.
Talking about Panama—if Uncle
Sam should ever take up the white
man's burden in that infernal hole he
will find his work pretty well cut out
for him, seeing that France sank $415,-
000,000 in the ditch. Came high, didn’t
it? Talk about aldermanic boodlers—
why, they were never in it with ‘‘cor
rupt canallers.” The suggestion of a
canal across the isthmus is nearly as
old as Balboa's disopvery of the Pa
cific ocean. In the town library of
Nuremberg is preserved a globe, made
by °ne John Schoner in 1520. The
passage through the Isthmus of Darien
is on this globe carefully traced. The
Tehuantepec, Nicaragaua and Darien
routes were discussed in the sixteenth
century, and the Dutch, it is alleged,
made complete plans for a canal over
200 years ago. But ground was not
broken till 1881.
Count de Lesseps, the Grand Old
Man of France—that was—who engi
neered the Panama scheme, died of a
broken heart, not at the loss of his
fortune (he lived far above that), but
at the infernal treatment he received,
the base ingratitude of a republic that
sacrificed him to save itself from revo
lution. Sentenced to five years’ im
prisonment at 88, after a most honor
able career! At 80 he looked like 40,
The Curtain Will Rise To-Day at 8-‘OO A. M.
■ - UPON THE SCENE OF THE —— ■
EVER INAUGURATED IN SAVANNAH.
WE REFER YOU TO OUR AD. IN YESTERDAY'S MORNING NEWS.
—B. H. LEVY & BR O. =
Pabsl beer
is always pore
Brewed in a plant as clean as the cleanest home kitchen—always open to
__ your inspection—sß,97l visitors last year.
eyes like a two-edged sword, and lam
bent with intellectual fire! One would
have thought that Lesseps’ Suez rec
ord would have saved him, and it
would in any country but France.
When the French demand a sacrifice
someone must go to the altar. The
sentence was quashed, but Lesseps’
heart was broken.
Great Britain has complete control
of the Suez canal now, and how she
came to get it is interesting. The Khe
dive of Egypt had, I think, a third
share, but he struck a streak of hard
luck and offered his holdings to Eng
land, who snapped them quicker than
chained lightning, as per “Dizzy,” who
was running things then. To say that
France was boiling mad faintly ex
presses it. Vanity Fair had a cartoon
about it. Scene near the canal; pyra
mids and sphinx in the background;
in the foreground a beautiful Egyptian
maiden (little Egypte), with the con
ventional downcast eyes (“I’m so
shy!”), and “Dizzy," in long raglan, silk
hat, bushy, black curls behind, assid
uously wooing her—“swearing she
would ne’er consent, consented;” and
no wonder, seeing he crossed her palm
with a small piece of paper, to-wit, a
Rothschild $15,000,000 check, the pur
chase price! France, as the discom
fited and disgruntled lover, in stove
pipe, tight-fitting surtout, bottines,
fiercely waxed, straight-out mustachios,
in the distance, scowling and mutter
ing; “Ah! Sacre bleu! I would her
win with lofe, but la perfide Albion be
win her with ze leetle check!”
The Panama Canal and the Steam
ship Trust remind Englishmen of Sir
Henry John Morgan, one of the world's
famous buccaneers. After years of
exciting adventure he resolved upon the
capture of Panama, and with 1,300 men
crossed the isthmus, defeated 2,800
armed citizens and 2,000 savage In
dians, and took, sacked and burned the
city. After a residence of a month at
Panama he returned to Jamaica with
$2,000,000. He was knighted by Charles
11, and became commissary of the ad
miralty. He was a maritime swash
buckler of the most approved pattern,
fearing neither God nor man—“a gem
of purest ray serene” to Merrie Itg
lande, but a thorn in the flesh of the
Dons, following them, remorseless as
fate, giving them fits, keeping them in
hot water and on the run all the time.
His motto was, “If they won't fight us,
why, we'll run ’em ashore. “Who says,
“Gallant little Wales, all aboard! Step
lively there!” *
ODD FASHIONS IN FOOD.
AVliales, Grainiinse* and Porpoises
Once Popular as Table Fishes.
From the San Francisco Bulletin.
Foods have their fashions as well as
clothes. For no clear reason we eat
certain kinds of fish, flesh and vege
tables and disdain others which might*
be edible and pleasing to the taste.
Queen Llizabeth ate the flesh of whales
but we, too, today, would turn up our
noses at such a dish. Yet why? Is the
cetacean flesh disgusting or tough or
tasteless? We do not know, for we
have never had it on our tables. Fish
soup, grampuses and porpoises were
daities to the English palate before
French cooks invaded the tight little
isle and imposed the gastronomical
modes of Paris on the British cuisine.
It is not very many years since Eng
lish and American stomaehe revolted
at the delicate legs of frogs; yet we
munch those tender tidbits now with
the steadiest nerves and the nicest
relish of their sweetness and flavor.
What untired dainties are there yet
to be found in the world and introduced
to our bored stomachs hungry for new
! sensations? It is said that the French
in spite of occasional periods of hos-
I tility, revere and love the Jesuits be
! cause Jesuit missionaries first brought
the turkey into France and taught the
cooks of Paris its delicious properties,
tens? Shall we always abhor the flesh
or fat young puppies? Oh, for an epi
curean Columbus to open new worlds
to our appetite! 'Since we do not
Why should we not eat mice and kit
scrupie to eat pork—the flesh of the
filthy hog, and a very palatable flesh,
too —why should we choke at mice, kit
tens and puppies? One dares say that
if the flesh of th? puppy were served
under some French nom de cuisine we
would praise it mightily and call for a
second helping.
In our eating, more, perhaps, than In
anything else, we are slaves of preju
dice, custom and caprice. We do not
venture. Our bill of fare does not grow
with civilization. We have a few sta
ples which we disguise and vary by
means of sauces and French aliases.
We improve the kitchen range, but we
do not improve our dinners. Talley
rand said that the English had 24 re
ligions and only one sauce. Since then
the English have multiplied their re T
ligions, but they have not yet invent
|ed their second sauce. As people the
English and the Americans oppose ex
pansion and innovation in their dining
rooms. When forks were brought over
from Italy to London there were stout
Britons enough to declare that to eat
with a tool, as though pitching hay,
and not with the fingers, was to de
stroy the simplicity and manliness of
old England.
The English-speaking peoples have
stomachs, but no palates. They have
not enthusiasm for an excellent truffle,
they do not feel emotions of pure pleas
ure in the memories of good dinners
long since digested. Who but a
SAVANNAH MORNING NEWS: MONDAY. JUNE 0. 1002.
Frenchman could throw up his hands
and exclaim in praise of a certain green
sauce, the recipe for which, alas, is
lost, “With this sauce I could eat my
grandfather!” Brillat-Savarin declared
that the man who discovers -a new dish
is a greater benefactor of his race than
the man who discovers anew planet.
This is a truly Gallic opinion, and is
not shared by our sauceless people, but,
when o#ie comes to think, it is curious
that the only permanent work of the
great soldier-statesman-eccleslastio,
Armand Richelieu, was the mayonnaise
sauce, which he invented, and that the
only idea of the brilliant Cardinal Wol
sey which the world remembers and
still makes use of was his idea—origi
nal with him—that strawberries and
cream would go well together.
LOCAL pIrSONAL.
Mr. H. M. Ashe of Atlanta is a guest
of the Pulaski.
Mr. T. H. Hill of Atlanta is regis
tered at the Pulaski.
Mr. W. H. Barth of Augusta is regis
tered at the Pulaski.
Miss Birdie Smith of Macon is a
guest of the Pulaski.
Mr. E. T. Steen of Dublin was in Sa
vannah yesterday, a guest of the Pu
laski.
Miss K. Bostwick of Montezuma was
among the arrivals at the Pulaski yes
terday.
Messrs. C. H. Sheldon, C. D. Smith
and Wim. J. Tison of Brunswick were
guests of the De Soto yesterday.
CITY BREVITIES.
A trolley ride to Isle of Hope and re
turn via Thunderbolt will be given by
Grace Methodist Church June 17. The
proceeds will be used for the benefit of
the church.
DELAYED 111 A WRECK.
Mnil From tlie North Yesterday Was
Five Hours Late.
Southern Railway train No. 29, south
bound, due at 4:50 a. m., was five hours
late yesterday morning. The delay was
due to the accident in Virginia, which
was reported in the Morning News.
The train carries mail, and its delay
was noticed especially on this account.
Many who wanted letters or papers
from the North had to hold on to their
eagerness, until the train finally ar
rived.
NEW VAUDEVILLE SHOW.
Thunderbolt Casino Hns Reduced
Prices of Admission.
The Thunderbolt Casino will begin
its summer season of vaudeville to
night, not only with an entire change
of programme and performers, but .also
with a reduction in the price of admis
sion and of reserved seats. Beginning
to-fiight the prices will be 10 cents for
general admission, and 5 cents for re
served seats.
The Casino cafe, the able di
rection of Mr. L. W. Nc-iWn, is Increas
ing its patronage and doing an excel
lent business.
Sunday Exeumionn
to
Brunswick and Fcrnandina
via
Seaboard Air Line Railway.
SI.OO to Brunswick and sl.lO to Fer
nandina every Sunday. Tickets sold
for train leaving Savannah 5:00 a. m.,
railroad time, from Cefltral Lepot, and
limited to date of sale for return, giv
ing all an opportunity to spend the day
at these famous resorts. Full informa
tion at Ticket Office, corner Bull and
Bryan streets. Phone 28.
Southern Railway.
Double daily trains to Richmond,
Va. Through sleepers and dining cars.
Leave Savannah 1:15 noon, 12:35 mid
night; arrive Richmond 6 a. m., 5:43
p. m.—ad.
Sunday Excursion to Brunswick, Ga.
Effective Sunday, May 11, and each
Sunday thereafter the Plant System
will sell round trip tickets to Bruns
wick, Ga., on Sundays, limited to date
of sale, at SI.OO. For information see
ticket agents.—ad.
■ ♦ ■
Cheap Slimmer Expurnionii.
Summer excursion tickets are now on
sale via Seaboard Air Line Ry. to Flor
ida Coast resorts—Atlantic Beach,
Pablo Beach, Mayport, St. Simon's
Island, etc., limited fifteen days from
date of sale. Full information at Tick
et Office, corner Bull and Bryan streets.
Phone 28.—ad.
PROPOSAL* tVA.VIED.
FORT DESOTO, FLA., May 23, 1902.
—Sealed proposals in triplicate will be
received here until 12 m., June 11,
1902, for installing sewer system and
constructing lavatory here. United
States reserves right to reject or ac
cept any or all proposals or any part
thereof. Information furnished on ap
plication; envelopes containing pro
posals will be endorsed “Proposals for
sewer system and lavatory.” addressed
FRANK S. LONG, A. Q. M.
CLASSIFIED AUVtHRSEMEHTS.
PERSONAL.
"^wig^^for^comvSncements^
charades, tableaux, fairs, theatricals,
detectives and private use. By the
Georgia hair expert, Fegeas’ Hair
Jewelery and Shaving supply house.
Mail orders promptly filled for any
kind of make up. Hair colored any,
shade desired.
OUR COLLARS AND CUFFS WILL
not wilt under ordinary perspiration.
Georgia Steam Laundry.
GAMES—PING PONg7soc. Td $6.00’
Ouwija, $1.00; hammocks, 75c to $7.00
each, at Oppenheimer, Sloat & Co's.
"our stock taking sale-in
cludes every article in our establish
ment at reduced prices. We have
many things that are good. Miller's,
207 Broughton, west.
TRY SCHWALB'S LAXARETS.
The best vegetable cathatrtic known;
for all troubles of the stomach, liver
and bowels; cures constipation. Price
10c. Phono 931.
WE HAVE AT LAST FOUND A
perfect water purifier; washing of
blankets, woollens, silks unsurpassed.
Georgia Steam Laundry.
"visit MILLER'S STOCK TAKING
sale; buy now; prices lower than ever.
207 Broughton, west.
SCHWALK'S I.UNG AND THROAT
Balsam for coughs, colds, whooping
ccugh. croup, 10c. Phone 931 for it.
YVE RUN TwAGONS REGULAR,
and keep 2 boys with wheels to carry
hurry orders for milk, cream, butter,
etc. 'Phones, Bell, 23, 44; Georgia, 1138.
Try us once and you will not regret It.
Springfield Dairy Cos.
NEW INGREDIENT FOR "PHE
serving colors; colored work intrusted
to our care will not fade. Georgia
Steam Laundry.
BASEBALLS, MITTS, MASKS,
bats, and all other sporting goods and
athletic goods at Oppenheimer, Sloat &
Co'3.
OFFICE AND STORE FIXTURES
In ash, oak, cypress and pine. A. S.
Bacon & Sons.
FOR - THE NEXT THREE WEEKS,
everything at reduced prices. The rea
son why is stock taking July 1. Our
floors are just teeming with summer
goods. Miller's, 207 Broughton, west.
ORDER A HANSOM FOR THE
german, receptiop or theater; special
inducements for these occasions. Sa
vannah Transfer Cos. Phones 364.
STOCK TAKING BEGINS WITH
us shortly. We want to reduce our
stock. So we are now offering our
entire stock of furniture, floor cover
ings and complete house furnishings at
big reduction. Miller’s, 207 Broughton,
west.
HANSOM CABS. 25c SINGLE RIDE.
SI.OO per hour. Phone us your order.
Savannah Transfer Cos. Telephones
364.
CEILING, FLOORING. WEATH
erboarding. mouldings and all build
ing mate'-ial. Cypress shingles. A. S.
Bacon & Sons, office Bryan and Whita
ker streets. ___
_ THE GEORGIA DAIRY, 343 ABER
corn street, will furnish you with
everything handled by a first-class
dairv; orders also taken for ice cream,
sherbets, and charlotte russe. Georgia
■phone 627; Bell ’phone 1116.
TELEPHONE SAVANNAH TRANS
fer Company for a hansom cab. 25c
from point to point, SI.OO per hour.
Both phones_364.
MILLER’S BIG HOUSE FURNISH
ing establishment; everything for the
kitchen to the parlor; cash or instal
ments; you save money by buying
everything at Miller’s. 207 Broughton,
west.
"TRY SCHWALB’S COLD AND
Liver Tablets; remove colds, cleanses
liver, 25c. Phone 931 for them.
SASH, DOORS AND BLINDS, WlN
dow and door screens. We manufac
ture them. A. S. Bacon ft Son.
KIM B A LLS A NTI-RHEUMATIC
rings, a sure relief; send for circular.
Oppenheimer, Sloat & Cos., 12 Broughton
street, east.
OLD NEWSPAPERS, 300 for 25 cents, at
Business Office Morning News.
MEDICAL.
HOW ARE YOUR FEET? IF YOUR
feet are troubling you, call on me and
I will give you relief. I care ingrow
ing nails, corns, and all diseases of the
feet without pain; charges reasonable;
can give the best references In the
city; patients treated at residences;
orders can be left at Livingston’s drug
store. Bull and Congress streets; tele
phone 293. Lem Davis, surgeon chirop
odist.
PHOTOGRAPHY.
"YOU CAN’T LOSE WILSON;” HE
leads the whole procession; makes
more photos, larger photos and by far
the best photos of any in Savannah;
all sizes photos; all prices photos; all
styles photos that are good can be
had at Wilson’s; no shoddy “cheap
stuff” to insult your friends’ finer
taste with; a “Wilson” photo is al
ways good and acceptable. Wilson’s
Studio, 41 Bull street; P. S.—" Unvei
ling scenes” now on sale.
H ELI* WAX TED—VIA Lie.
WANTED, A GROCERY CLERK
at once; must bring reference. Apply
J. T. Kaiser, No. 1511 Bull street.
"WANTED. CARPENTERS, keep"
ers, saw mill and planing mill hands,
colored. Call Monday, 12 o'clock, 126
Bay street, west.
WANTED. TWENTY COLORED
hands to work at saw-mMI and on
tramroad. Apply at Aimar’s Planing
Mill, Wheaton street, Monday morn
ing.
WANTED, A FIRST-CLASS
planing mill man. with family; steady
employment. Hart Lumber Company,
Heartsease, Ga.
“traveling" ' SALESMEN; ALSO
advertisers; salary cash; answer if you
want business; otherwise don’t. Tri
umph, Dallas, Tex.
HELP WANTED— FEMALE.
SMART YOUNG HOUSE GIRL;
one who understands dining-room
work. Apply at 25 West Perry street.
A WOMAN FOR
housework and nurse. Apply No. 117
Waldburg street, east.
EMPLOYMENT WANTED.
coal
petent lumber inspector; thoroughly
familiar \vith rules of Southern Lum
ber Association of 1583. Address T. B.
Miles, Summerville, S. C.
DOOMS WANTED.
WANTED, 3 UNFURNISHED
rooms, with bath, suitable for light
housekeeping; no children; state price.
Address Mgr. the Parker Ry. News Cos.,
Savannah, Ga.
BY GENTLEMEN AN D SISTER*;
connecting rooms within radius of four
to six blocks Union Depot; hot baths.
Address Ho, room 2, Union Depot.
FLATS WANTED.
WANTED, FLAT OF THREE OR
four unfurnished rooms for housekeep
ing; central location; must be reason
able. Permanent. News office.
YV ANTED— MISCELLANEOUS.
of Mexican June corn. B. A. & F. S.
Norton, Boston, Ga.
IF YOUR PROPERTY IS NOT
managed properly, let me attend to it
for you. Reference, any bank or citi
zen in Savannah. Robt. H. Tatem, Real
Estate Dealer, 7 York, west.
WANTED, FIVE THOUSAND
cords of cottonwood and poplar wood,
sawed in four-foot lengths; may be
delivered either by water or rail; write
for prices and specifications. Pierpont
Manufacturing Company, Savannah,
Ga.
"DO YOU WRITE ADS? SEND AI)~.
dress to-day on your business station
ery for invaluable information free.
Harper Syndicate, ColumbtA. O.
IF YOU WANT TO BUY OR SELL
property, call Georgia ’phone 1360.
Robt. H. Tatem. real estate dealer, 7
York street, west.
_ IF YOU WANT A PLACE TO DUMP
earth, dirt, sand, manure, etc., free of
charge, just at city limits, hauling over
hard road, write or telephone Brown
Bros., corner Anderson and East Broad
streets.
FLATS FOlt KENT.
FOR RENT. DELIGHTFUL FLAT
of four rooms In southern part of city;
southern and eastern exposure, with
use of piazza and bath. Address Home,
News office.
"for RENTPARLObTfLAT SUlT
able for housekeeper, furnished or un
furnished. 112 Liberty, east.
FOB KENT—HOUSES.
”~TO rent! for summer
months, furnished house, well located;
terms moderate. Address Z., General
Delivery.
""for rent Ta - tybee! desir
able cottage, five sleeping rooms, large
dining room, kitchen and servants'
quarters; newly painted inside and out,
in first-class condition. Apply to F.
W. Storer, ’phone 914.
""FOR RENT, TWO new" HOUSES
with all new improvements on Aber
corn, between Huntingdon and Hall,
ready for occupancy Oct. 1. Address
F., care News office.
lIOtJSE FOR KENT, 2211 BAR
nard. Apply W. R. Fulton, 1212 West
Broad street.
FOH KENT—STORES.
~7!maix'store~for rentl in
State, west; sls per month; can be used
for repair shop, store or office. W. M.
& W. E. Conev.
FOR RENT—MISCELLANEOUS.
FOR RENT. 3-STORY WARE
house, 310 Williamson street; will rent
as a whole or part. C. Mendel, 16
Bryan, east.
FOR SALE —REAL ESTATE.
TTesTdENCES~AT AUCTION TO
day (Monday), June 9, at 6 o’clock p.
m., Nos. 509, 510 and 511 38th street,
west. Beautiful homes. Examine them
to-day. The auction will take place at
the houses. Terms, S2OO cash, S3O a
month, 7 per cent. Interest. John L.
Archer, Auctioneer. ,
~ RESIDENCE AND OFFICE OF
late Dr. William Duncan, No. 224 Ogle
thorpe avenue, east, fronting Colonial
Park. This is one of the best known
physician’s office in the city; Is an ex
ceedingly well built house and pleas
ant residence. C. H. Dorsett.
a Block of sixteen lots.
just south of the city, in the line of
the growth of the city. This is the
kind of property upon which money
has been and is being made. This is
the property of a non-resident, who has
ordered it sold. C. H. Dorsett.
"63 JONES, EAST, TWO-STORY
seven-room residence; convenient *to
S., F. and W. Railway. C. H. Dorsett.
COTTAGE RESIDENCE"ON WEST
Broad, near Duffy, S3OO cash and sls
per month. C. H .Dorsett.
RESIDENCES AT" AUCTION To
day (Monday), June 9,. at 6 o'clock p.
m.. Nos. 509, 510 and oil 38th street,
west. Beautiful homes. Examine them
to-day. The auction will take place at
the houses. Terms, S2OO cash, S3O a
month, 7 per cent interest. John L.
Archer, Auctioneer.
“FOR SALE, ON WATERS ROAR
between Thirty-fifth and Thirty-sixth
streets, two-story house on lot forty
two by one hundred, for twelve hun
dred dollars; electric cars In front of
property; terms two hundred cash,
twelve dollars and a half per month;
also three lots near above, each thirty
by one hundred and thirty-six feet;
price one hundred and twenty-five dol
lars etch; cash or easy terms. C. H.
Dorsett.
FOR SALE—HEAL ESTATE.
day (Monday), June 9, at 6 o’clock p.
m., Nos. 509, 510 and 511 38th street,
west. Beautiful homes. Examine them
to-day. The auction will take place at
the houses. Terms. S2OO cash. S3O a
month, 7 per cent. Interest. John L.
Archer, Auctioneer.
A BLOCK OF ELEVEN LOTS,
just outside of city taxation, for $2,-
250, either cash or time; Just the in
vestment for young men to save and
make money on. C. H. Dorsett.
""RESIDENCES "AT ' AUCTION-To
day (Monday). June 9, at 6 o’clock p.
m., Nos. 509, 510 and 511 3Sth street,
nest. Beautiful homes. Examine them
to-day. The auction will take place at
the houses. Terms, S2OO cash, S3O a
month, 7 per cent, interest. John L.
Archer, Auctioneer.
FOR SALE—MISCELLANEOUS.
RESIDENCES AT AUCTION To
day (Monday), June 9, at 6 o’clock p
m., Nos. 509, 510 and 511 38th street,
west. Beautiful homes. Examine them
to-day. The auction will take place at
the houses. Terms, S2OO cash, S3O a
month, 7 per cent. Interest. John L.
Archer, Auctioneer.
FOR SALE, TWENTY POUNDS
best rice, sl. Evaporated cream, quart
cans. ’Phone 93. Southern Grocery
Company.
—POK* SALE, COMPLETE SET OF
silver-plated shoes window fixtures at
41 Drayton street.
"FOR SALE, WIRE AND. Sup
plies for an installation of 15,000 in
candescent lights; details furnished on
application; the South Carolina Inter
state and West Indian Exposition,
Charleston, S. C. Address, G. H. Au
brey, general superintendent.
~A FEW pickles! SIX JARS. 25C.
A few preserves, fancy jars, $1.25 doz
en. Southern Grocery Company.
WE MAKE aT SPECIALTY OF
cream, keep boy and wheel for hurry
orders. Jersey Dairy. ’Phones 582.
OUR PRICES ON FRESH MEATS
are within your reach. Only the best
meats kept. Southern Grocery Com
ENGINE FOR SALE. STRAIGHT
line engine, about 60 H. P.. In good
condition: can be seen at our factory.
A. S. Bacon ft Sons.
WE CAN SUPPLY - YOU WITH
sweet m Ik, butter, buttermilk, clab
ber, cream and curds. Jersey Dairy.
’Phones 582.
, ~ ■ ,4
STRAYED.
STRAYED, TO GROCERY STORE,
corner Wilson and Jones streets, hound
dog; black back; blue speckled breast,
white tipped tail. Owner can get same
by paying for advertisement.
HOARDING.
YOUNG MAN CAN OBTAIN BOARD
in private family, $3.50 per week, at 720
Habersham street.
Ml MM Fit RESORTS.
~IimEVAnDr~N~U WOULtT ISE
glad to correspond with persons de
siring board in mountains; beautiful
scenery, delightful climate; one mile
from town; large shady lawn; no small
children taken. Mrs. W. W. Allison.
GEM OF MOUNTAIN RESORTS;
altitude, 3.817 feet; peaks nearby 800 to
1.200 feet higher; lithia water. Address
Satulah House, Highlands, N. C.
I'Ll/91 111 A
PLUMBING: FOREST CITY
Plumbing Cos; Estimates cheerfully
given on all kinds of plumbing steam
and" hot-water heating, all kinds of
large pipe cut and threaded to order,
and a specialty of large fittings, repair
work a specialty, office and shop 430
Whitaker street, Georgia 'phone 624,
Bell 1126, W. A. Slaufer; manager.
PLUMBING. PROPERTY
let Wiggins, the plumber, give you an
estimate on your plumbing, as I can
save you money on any kind of work
in my line; so. call me up and let me
tell you how you can save money and
have your sewer connection made with
out the cash. Call up 807 for Wiggins,
the plumber.
L. L. BURPEE, THE PLUMBER,
at 20 Bryan street, west, will repair
youf pipes and make your connections
promptly. ’Phone, Georgia, 934.
IHSINESS CHANCES.
RE
sponsible houses desiring to manufac
ture first-class non-alcoholic drinks,
paying large profits, address Expert,
107 Murray street. New York.
MISCELLANEOUS.
NEW DOMESTIC SEWING MAi
chines; received the highest award at
the Buffalo Exposition; sews with one
or two threads; two machines in one;
ball-bearings and improved attach
ments make it the best sewing ma
chine on the market; sold on easy
terms; we repair all makes, buy and
sell old machines; needles and supplies
for all kinds of sewing machines;
thirty years experience enables us to
give perfect satisfaction in our line;
repairs for poor people free. G. O.
I’enton & Son, under Knights of Py
thias' Hall.
TRUNKS! TRUNKS! TRUNKS'
We bought the entire stock of trunks
from the Southern Trunk Factory
which we are going to sell less than
the manufacturers cost. Now Is ybur
chance to get a trunk cneap. We have
moved our retail department on the
ground floor, lately occupied by Hol
man & McCorkle, 30,8 West Broughton.
S. Bernstein. Georgia and Bell
'phones.
FOR SUMMER HOUSEHOLD FUR
nishings look through our big stock
and save money. J. W. Teeple.
T L. L. BURPEE. THE PLUMBER,
at 30 Bryan street, west, gives you
prompt service and the best work.
'Phone. Georgia. 934.
REFRIGERATORS—THE B E S T
manufacture; bought at close price;
cheap this week. J. W. Teeple.
Piano
Bargains
We are offering some splendid
bargains this week in PIANOS,
and if you want one now is the
time to buy. We have six (6)
Pianos in good condition, being
slightly used, which we are go
ing to sell at a sacrifice as we
are badly in need of the room
for new stock. These Piano®
range in price from S2O to $l5O,
and they are big bargains for
the money.
If you will favor us with a
call regardless of your desire
to purchase, we will take great
pleasure In shewing you these
goods.
MCARTHUR l SONS CO.
EVERYTHING MUSICAL.
AUCTION SALES THIS DAY.
nSo^DArsTuCTIO^
STORE AND FAMILY REFRIGER
ATORS, CROCKERY, ETC.
C. H. DORSETT, Auctioneer,
Will sell MONDAY, 9th, 11 o’clock,
very large Ice Box, suitable for store
y hotel, family Refrigerator. Parlor
hVs. Gas Stove, large lot of Crockery,
and Restaurant supplies. Wardrobes,
Chairs, Extension Tables, Lounges,
Bedsteads, Chairs, Mattresses, Pic
tures, Matting, Tables. Claret Wine,
Chiffonier. Cherry Table, and a large
lot of odds and ends.
MISCELLANEOUS.
OUR STOCK IS NOW REPLETE
with the very latest designs In spring
and summer fabrics, at prices that ap
peal to the most humble. We guar
antee a perfect fit or no sale. The
Royal Tailors. 115 Broughton street,
oast. Cleaning, dyeing and repairing.
Ring Ga. 'phone 978.
CALL UP BELL ’PHONE 1124 FOR
estimates on cleaning carpets and stor
ing your furniture for the summer.
Perry ft Benton, 120 State, west.
WATER COOLERS—ALL SIZES
and qualities; can’t be beat in price.
See J. W. Tt eple.
X* L. BURPEE. THE PLUMBER,
at 20 Bryan street, west, will do your
work well and guarantee It. ’Phone,
Georgia. 934.
PERRY ft BENTON, 120 STATE
street, west, will move, pack, ship or
store your furniture at short notice;
also renovate your old mattresses at
little cost. Bell ’phone 1124.
ADVERTISEMENTS SET IN CAP
ITALS WILL BE PRINTED IN CLAS
SIFIED ADVERTISEMENT COLUMN
FOR TWO CENTS A WORD: NO
ADVERTISEMENT TAKEN FOR
LESS THAN THIRTY CENTS.
LEGAL NOTICES.
ARREARS FOR GROUND RENT.
City of Savannah. Office of City
Treasurer, June 2, 1902.—The following
lots are in arrears for ground rent,, of
which owners are hereby notified.
C. S. HARDEE, City Treasurer.
Brown Ward —East % lot 24, 2 qrs.;
west half lot 25, 2 qrs; lot 51, 2 qrs.
Calhoun Ward—West one-third lot
7, 2 qrs; east V 4 lot 25, 2 qrs; lot 48,
2 qrs.
Charlton Ward —Lot 1, 2 qrs; lot 2, 2
qrs.
Chatham Ward —West Vi lot 10, 2
qrs; east V 4 lot 29, 2 qrs.
Columbia Ward—Lot 16, 2 qrs; west
V 4 lot 20, 2 qrs; east part lot 21, 2 qrs;
part lots 29 and 30, 2 qrs.
Crawford Ward—Lot 32, 2 qrs; east
1,4 of west >4 lot 36, 2 qrs; lot 38, 2 qrs:
east 14 lot 67, 2 qrs; northwest part of
lot 68. 2 qrs.
Crawford Ward, East—Part lot 15, 2
qrs; lot 16. 2 qrs.
Elbert Ward—East V 4 lot 11, 2 qrs;
lot 12, 2 qrs: south V 4 lot 16. 2 qrs; south
V4_ of north V 4 lot 16. 2 qrs; west part
lot 24, 2 qrs; south part of lot 24, 2
qrs. ,
Franklin Ward—Part lot 21, 2 qrs;
east *4 lot 27, 2 qrs; lot 34, 2 qrs.
New Franklin Ward—Lot 17. 2 qrs.
Greene Ward—East >4 lot 3, 2 qrs;
east part lot 4, 2 qrs; west part lot 4,
2 qrs; east V 4 lot 6, 2 qrs: south 14 lot
16, 2 qrs; .north V 4 lot 22, 2 qrs; lot 34, 2
qrs.
Jackson Ward—West V 4 lot 13. 2 qrs;
east two-thirds lot 19, 2 qrs; lot 31, 2
qrs.
Jasper Ward—Lot 1, 2 qrs; lot 43. 2
qis; west 14 lot 46. 2 qrs.
Lafayette Ward—East 14 lot 43, 2
qrs; lot 44, 2 qrs.
Liberty Ward —Lot 4, 2 qrs; lot 8, 2
qrs; lot 9, 2 qrs; lot 10. 2 qrs; south V 4
lot 17, 2 qrs; north !4 lot 17, 2 qrs; lot
2J, 2 qrs: lot 35, 2 qrs.
Lloyd Ward —Lot 52, 4 qrs; west ’4
lot 62. 2 qrs.
Monterey Ward—Lot 1. 2 qrs; east
one-fifth lot 9 and west one-flfth lot 10,
2 qrs; east two-fifths lot 10. 2 qrs; lot
27, 2 qrs; lot 28, 2 qrs.
Pulaski Ward—Lot 18, 2 qrs; south V 4
lot 23, 2 qrs; west part lot 31, 2 qrs.
Troup Ward—West *4 lot 2, 2 qrs;
west part lot 25, 2 qrs; lot 40, 2 qrs.
Warren Ward—West Vi lot 10, 2 qrs;
lot 16, 2 qrs.
Washington Ward—North 14 lot 42. 2
qrs; south part lot 8, 2 qrs; lot 13. 2
qrs; east 14 lot 14. 2 qrs; lot 23, 2 qrs;
west 14 lot 40, 2 qrs.
Wesley Ward —East Vi lot 11, 2 qrs.
All persons having Interest in the
above lots are hereby notified that If
the amounts now due and not paid to
the City Treasurer on or before June
12th, inst., I*will proceed on the morn
ing of June 13th to re-enter according
to law. HENRY E. DREESON,
City Marshal.
3