Newspaper Page Text
16
CHURCHES
At the evening service at St. Paul's
Episcopal Church to-day Rev. J. L.
Scully, rector, will discuss the relig
ious significance of the Coronation.
Next Sunday night Rev. Mr. Scully
will conduct a service in commemora
tion of the Coronation. It promises to
be an especially interesting one and
will be attended by the members of
the Victoria Society in a body and
possibly by some of the other patriotic
societies.
Mr. Scully's intention of conducting
this service, announced in the Morning
News a week ago, has caused him to
receive let’ers from other parts of the
country asking for information rela
tive to the service. One of these is
from a clergyman of Orlando, Fla.,
who desires to conduct a service simi
lar to the one that will be given in
St. Taul's.
T.vo meetings will be held by the
local unions B. Y. P. U. this morning.
The First Baptist Union will hold a
"rally” meeting at the close of the
morning service, while that of the
Duffy Street Church will hold an
"Echo” meeting at 10 o'clock, when the
state convention of the society, just
closed, will be discussed.
Methodist.
At Wesley Monumental Church,
services will be held at 11 o’clock a.
m„ preaching by Rev. Ed F. Cook, the
pastor, and at 8:30 p. m. sermon by
Rev. C. H. Carson, Jr. The Sunday
school "ill meet at 5 p. m.; the Ep
wortTi League will meet Tuesday at
8:30 p. m.; prayer-meeting will be held
Wednesday at 8:30 p. m. and Junior
League Friday at 5 p. m.
Regular services will be held at
Trinity Church at 11 o'clock a. m. and
at 8:30 p. m., conducted by the pastor,
Rev. Bnscom Anthony. A song serv
ice will precede sermon at night. The
Sunday-school will meet at 5 p. m.
Special classes for grown people. The
Epworth League will meet Tuesday
night at 8:30, and prayer-meeting
Thursday at 8:30 p. m.
At Grace Methodist Church there
will be preaching at 11 o'clock a. m.
and at 8:30 p. m., by Rev. Charles A.
Jackson, pastor. The Board of Stew
ards. Church Improvement Society, the
trustees, the W. F. M. S., the W. H.
M. S. and the Epworth League are re
quested to be present at the morning
service. The nigjit subject will be
“Earthly Tenters.” The Sunday-school
will meet “4:30 p. m.; the Epworth
League to-morrow at 8:30 p. m., and
erayer-meeting Wednesday at same
hour. ,
At the Epworth Methodist Church,
Rev. J. A. Smith, pastor, there will be
preaching at 11 a. m. and S: SO p. m.
The Sabbath-school will meet at 4:30
p. m.; the Junior Epworth League to
morrow at 4:30 p'. m.: the Senior
League Tuesday at 8:30 p. m.; prayer
service Thursday at same hour.
Episcopal.
At Christ Church, Rev. Robb White,
rector, Rev. M. Campbell Stryker, as
sistant, Fourth Sunday after Trinity,
the order of services will be: Holy
Communion at 8 a. m.: service and
sermon, 11 a. m.; Sunday-school. 5:30
p. m.: service and sermon, 6:30 p. m.
Tuesday, nativity of John the Baptist,
Holy Communion will be administered
at 10 a. m.; Wednesday. 6 p. m.. Lit
any and lecture.
At St. John's Church. Rev. Charles
H Strong, rector, the services will be:
Celebration of Holy Communion at 8
o'clock; morning prayer and sermon at
11. and Sunday-school at 5 p. m.
At St. Paul’s Church. Rev. J. L.
Scully, rector, Fourth Sunday after
Trinity, t'he services will be as follows:
Early celebration at 7:30 o'clock a. m.:
morning prayer at 11: Sunday-school at
sp. m.; evensong at 8:15. Subject of
sermon at evening service will be "The
Religious Significance of Foreign Mis
sions.” Next Sunday evening there
will be a special coronation service.
The ladies of the Parish Aid Society
of St. Paul’s Church have made extern
sive arrangements for the trolley ride
on Tuesday night. The ears are to
leave Fortieth street at 8:30 o’clock,
proceed to Isle of Hope, thence to the
Casino and return to the city. Re
freshments will be served. The moon
will be up during the evening and
the ride is sure to be cool and de
lightful.
At St. Michael’s Chapel services
will be held at 11 o’clock a. m. and at
8:15 p. m., by the rector, Rev. F. A.
Juny. The Sunday-school will meet at
5 o'clock. The Bible class will meet
Thursday at 8:15 p. m. Holy Commun
ion is administered every third Sun
day.
Baptist.
At the First Baptist Church services
will be held at 11 o’clock a. m. and at
8:30 p. m., conducted by Pastor John
D. Jordan. The young people will hold
a rally meeting at the close of the
morning sermon. The ordinance of
baptism will be administered at the
evening service.
At the Duffy Street Baptist Church,
Rev. R. Van Deventer will preach at
11 o'clock a. m. on "Charity Which
Thinketh no Evil,” and at 8:30 p. m.
on "A Better Altar." The evening ser
vice will be preceded by the usual
twenty minute preparatory prayer
meeting. The devotional meeting of the
B. Y. P. U. at 10 a. m., will be an
"Echo meeting," at which the state
convention will be discussed. The Bible
school will meet at 5 p. m., and the
Junior Union at 4 p. m. On Wednesday
evening the regular prayer meeting
will be held and on Thursday evening
the Teachers’ meeting, both at 8:30
o’clock. At the Berean Mission of this
church, the Sunday-school will meet
at 9:30 p. m„ and on Thursday even
ing at 8:30 o’clock, the regular prayer
meeting will be held.
At the Southside Baptist Church,
Rev. D. S. Edenfleld, pastor, regular
services will he held at 11 o'clock a. m.
and at 8:30 p. m. The Sunday-school
vili meet at 5 o'clock. The usual song
service will precede the night sermon.
The B. Y. P. IT. devotional service and
ting, will t ik- place Wed
nesday night at S;3Q subject, "True
Humility.”
■'rent*> terlnn.
The usual publie services will be
conducted in the independent Presby
terian t’hureh by Rev. Dr. J. Y. F*(r
at II o'rlmk a. rn. and at R. 30 p. m,
The hu(stnr*e'iiij| h||| meet at 6 p,
m. i lie other awrvll-ea will lie held aa
*■*' ***** player masting, which
will be held Thursday afternoon at
O < lock
tkl* V*.* ri>>l •'"’•hytertan iSiurefc.
**• sbasnes of tb* pastor, Ji*v. tr,
William P. McCorkle, Rev. C. H. Car
son, .Tr., will preach at 11 o'clock a.
m. No service will be held at night.
The Sabbath school as usual at 9:45
a. m.
The services of the Westminister
Presbyterian Church will be held at
11 o'clock a. m. and at 8:30 p. m. in
the Lawton Memorial. The Sabbath
school will meet at 5 p. m. at lecture
room, Barnard and Anderson streets.
The Christian Endeavor will meet to
morrow at 8:30 p. rp., and prayer meet
ing Wednesday at same hour.
Lnt hern n.
At the Lutheran Church of the As
cension there will be preaching by the
pastor, Dr. W. C. Schaeffer at 11
o’clock a. m. and at 8:30 p. m. The
Sunday-school will meet at 5 p. m. The
Normal Class will meet to-morrow at
8:30 p. m., the Luther League Tuesday
at- the same hour; prayer-meeting
Wednesday at 8:15 p. m. and the Mis
sionary Society Wednesday at 5 p. m.
At St. Paul's Lutheran Church, Rev.
M. J. Epting. pastor, public services
will be held at 11 a. m. and at 8:30 p.
m. The Sunday-school will meet at 5
p. m.
Christian Church.
At the Christian Church, Rev. P. H.
Duncan, pastor, the services will be
held at 11 o’clock, when the subject of
the sermon will be “Our Work,” and
at 8:15 p. m., when '“Our Position”
will be discussed. The Sunday-school
will meet at 9:45 a. m. Mr. John
Banks, tenor, will sing at morning
services. The congregation has just
placed-a handsome new organ in the
church.
Homan Catholic.
Services in the Cathedral of St. John
the Baptist will be: First mass at 6:30
o'clock; second mass at 8, and third at
9:30. This mass will be followed by
the benediction of the Blessed Sacra
ment. There will be neither high mass
nor vesper service during the summer.
These services will be resumed about
Oct. 1. A roiass will be said each Sun
day at 9:30 o’clock at St. Michael’s
Chapel, Tybee.
Services at the Sacred Heart Church
will be: First mass, at 7 o'clock;
second mass and sermon, at 9:30. Bene
diction immediately after this mass.
Swedenborg inn.
Morning services with sermon at the
Park New Church will be conducted
by the pastor, Rev. Alexander Henry,
at 11 o'clock. The Sunday-school will
meet at 10 a. m.
Christian Science.
Services at the First Church of
Christ, Scientist, will be held at 11
o'clock, when the sermon will be on
“Is the Universe, Including Man,
Evolved by Atomic Force.” The Sun
day-school will meet at 12 m. The
Wednesday testimony meeting will be
held at 8:30 o'clock. All services are
held in Metropolitan Hall, where also
a reading room is conducted, which is
open daily from 4:30 o'clock to 6:30 p.
m.
. Y. M. C. A.
The speaker at the Young Men's
Christian Association meeting this af
ternoon will be Rev. Dr. W. C. Schaef
fer, pastor of the Lutheran Church of
the Ascension. The service com
mences at 4 o'clock.
Thunderbolt Villon.
At the Thunderbolt Union Church
services will be held at 8:30 o’clock
p. m. The Sunday-school will meet
at 5 p. m. On Thursday night there
will be a short prayer meeting, after
which final arrangements will be per
fected for the dedication of the church,
June 29. Every one connscted with
the church is expected to attend this
meeting.
Colored.
At the First African Baptist Church
the services will be: Early morning
prayer meeting; Sunday-school at 10;
service at 11. on "The Sins of the
Tongue,” by Rev. Dr. Carr; B. Y. P.
U. at 4:30 p. m.; sermoi#at 8 p. m.,
on "The Bow of Promise.”
Hound Trip Hntea to Washington,
J). C.
Effective May 15 and continuing to
and including Sept. 30. the Plant Sys
tem will sell round trip tickets to
Washington at rate $28.40.
Excellent sleeping and dining car
service. Train leaving Savannah 2:05
p. m. (city time) carries sleeping and
dining cars, arriving Washington 7:39
a. m. the following morning.
Washington is an ideal tourist re
sort.—ad.
■■•♦ - ■ |
Sunday Excursions >•
to ■ i v
Charleston. •.t{s''V’l
Via
Plant System.
Round trip tickets SI.OO, limited to
date of sale. Trains leave Savannah
at 8:00 a. m. (City Time), arrive
Charleston 12:30 p. m. Returning
leave Charleston 8:00 p. m. (Eastern
Time) Tickets good also to return on
train No. 23, leaving Charleston 11:35
p. m.—ad.
Sommer Resorts of the Sonth.
Southern Railway has ready for dis
tribution its summer homes folder
for the season 1902. This is a beauti
fully illustrated descriptive booklet
containing complete information re
garding the various summer resorts
of the South, with list of hotels and
boarding houses, their proprietors,
rates, accommodations, etc. A
copy may be had by calling on or send
ing two cent stamp to E. G. Thom
son, City Passenger and Ticket Agent,
141 Bull street.—ad.
C2S.JO
Kunnil Trip Savannah to Washing
ton. D. C.
Effective May 15 and continuing daily
until Sept. 30, the Seaboard Air Line
will sell excursion tickets either all
rail or via Norfolk and the N. and W.
S. B. Cos., Savannah to Washington, at
the rate $28.40, limited returning until
Oct. 31. A splendid opportunity for
reaching Eastern cities at a small cost.
Full particulars at the city ticket of
fice, corner Bull and Bryun streets.—
ad.
Sunday Kirn minus
llrunswli'k and Kr r tin iidlna
via
keahoard Air l.tnr Hallway,
•1 CIO to Brunswick and sl.lO to Ker
nandlnn every Sunday. Tickets aold
for train leaving Savannah $ on a. m .
railroad time, from Central Depot, and
limited to data of sab- for return, giv
ing all mn opportunity to spend the day
s< th**o famous resorts Full Informa
tion at Ticket Office, corner UuU Olid
ilryan streets, phone
SAVANNAH MORNING NEWS: SUNDAY. JUNE 22. 1902.
MILLIONAIRES’ HORSES.
OM.Y OYE DESCENDANT OF COM
MODORE VANDERBILT A DEV
OTEE OF THE TROTTER.
Hr I* Frederick W., hilt Unlike His
FnmouM Grandfather He Doesn't
Like to Display Himself or His
Horses to the General Public*—Oth
er Vanderbilt llorti men-The Pres
ent C ornelins Not a Horseman at
All—Ur. Seward Webb, a Vander
bilt Son-In-Law, Has the Finest
Harness Room In America—E. D.
Morgan's Harness Room Conies
Next—His Eighty-Year-Old “Con
enrd" Conch and Its Famous Pas
sengers—William C. Whitney, King
of tlie Millionaire Horsemen and
His Son Harry Pnyne Whitney Who
May Properly He Termed the
Crowned Prince.
Copyright, 1902, by Paul Danby.
New York. June 20.—N0 Vanderbilt
since the old Commodore has been his
equal as a horseman, and only one of
the members of the family now liv
ing, Frederick W„ is devoted to the
trotting horse. Frederick W. loves the
sprightly steppers quite as fondly as
either the founder of the family or his
son William H., to whom “Early Rose"
and the peerless “Maud S.” were as the
apples of his two eyes.
Mr. Frederick's fondness for the trot
ting horse is of a different brand from
the Commodore’s. He undoubtedly got
ns much pleasure in making a public
show of himself and his horses as he
did out of the act of driving. Conse
quently, he used to speed his steppers
invariably in New York, where he
could see and be seen, where both he
and his nags could receive the inspi
ration that is furnished by an admir
ing, cheering crowd. Frederick drives
his horses solely for his own pleasure
and that of his friends. He doesn't
care for the applause of the ground
lings and virtually never shows him
self behind a speedy trotter except on
the secluded roads near Hyde Park, his
Hudson river country seat or in the
vicinity of Newport. He has rarely
been seen driving in New York of late
years and.it is doubtful whether he
was ever on the speedway, a bit of
glorified trotting horse road that would
have driven the eld commodore wild
with delight, and upon which he would
have shown himself daily had It ex
isted in his lifetime.
Anndcrhilt Horse Gossip.
Frederick W. drives quite as well as
his grandfather ever did, however,
and better than his father, William H.
A man who has renown four genera
tions of Vanderbilts says that William
11. was little of a horseman in reality.
He rode as a young man—the romance
which culminated in his marriage with
pretty Miss Kissam began in a fall
from a saddle horse in Albany—but he
never studied horse nature closely and
he never understood horses. He hadn't
a tithe of the commodore’s dash and
nerve as a driver and it was always
his trainers that got close to his horses
—not William H. Cornelius the second,
was never a horseman and the same
may be said of George, the youngest
of the commodore's grandsons.
Alfred G Wynne and Reginald, sons
of the commodore’s grandson Corne
lius, are the best horsemen of the fam
ily's fourth generation. Their brother
Cornelius, who has been discounten
anced by ins family because he mar
ried Miss Wilson, is no horseman at
all, almost ne'er i< ing seen either rid
ing or driving. Jits cousin. William K.,
Jr., though owning horses a plenty,
owns them chiefly because a? a rich
man it’s the thing to do; he cares much
less for them than for his various mo
tor cars and other horseless vehicles.
W. K. Vanderbilt, his father, takes an
immense interest ’in racing to be sure,
but no true horseman considers “Willie
K.” a member of the horse loving and
horse knowing fraternity.
Nor is Alfred Gwynne’s fondness for
the horse at all like the feeling enter
tained for the noble animal by his
great grandfather and his uncle. It is
considered the proper thing for a rich
man of the inner circle to drive four
in-hands, tandems and pairs, and
therefore he takes interest in coaching
and the like, among other things driv
ing the coach "Pioneer ’ from one of
the big hotels to some point up the
Hudson at regular intervals every
spring.
His polo playing is said to have been
begun because he is not very robust
and it was expected that the strenu
ous game would build up his physical
strength. • This expectation has been
measurably fulfilled; he is stronger
now than ever before and besides he
has contracted a genuine liking for the
game. Recently he has enlarged his
polo gropnds at Newport so that they
are now of the regulation size, and
the "younger and lighter” set in which
he and his intimate friend Robert Liv
ingston Gerry, son of Elbridge T. Ger
ry, Commodore of the New York Yacht
Club and best known as the “Cruelty
to Children” man, are such important
factors, will do much of its playing on
this field this season. Young Mr. Gerry,
by the way, drives the “Pioneer" gen
erally when Alfred Gwynne finds it
inconvenient to do so, and chanced to
be on the box the other day when a
“Cruelty to Animals” officer held up
the coach, claiming that one of the
horses was suffering from a galled
shoulder.
Reginald Vanderbilt is a better
horseman than Alfred Gwynne, per
haps, and a more daring polo player,
but this is due almost altogether to
stronger physique and greater weight.
None of the ‘‘younger and lighter” set
is qualified to play polo with the Fox
hull Keene set.
E. D. Morgan. Horseman.
A man who knows the various sets
ot New York millionaires about as well
as any one says that in a certain sense
E. D. Morgan, grandson of the famous
war governor Morgan, is the best all
round horseman of the lot. Horsemen
generally might not agree with this,
but for all that Mr. Morgan loves the
horse for his own sake as do few pro
fessional horsemen and still fewer mil
lionaires. Resides, Mr. Morgan knows
the horse and his points thoroughly.
He has a rule not to go into a busi
ness enterprise of any sort without
thorough investigation and he carries
the rule out in selecting his horses,
never taking any one's judgment but
his own when buying. This was trite
of old Commodore Vanderbilt, but It
has not been true of iris several sons
in-law, or of any of Ills descendants
save Frederick W. Hike the latter, Mr.
Morgan is averse to publlmy and nev
er makes a town display of Ids prowess
us a driver, though he tools a four-in
hand with much skill.
It was E. I). Morgan, by the way,
who made the famous “four-in-hand
trip around the "orid" a few years ago.
He didn’t ejreoinmiviguie the earth on
the box of a touch. of course, the clr
cumnaglvsttoii being affected on board
tile big English steatn yacht "Mniy,"
but li< t;ok along vtlth him a coach
and four and whenever he
landed there landed also his driving
• ►lubllsbrncnt Mi Morgan has driven
his own foot-in-hand In iVyton, the
euburba of t'aleutta, over the roads
••ear Hong Kong Tokto and Honolulu
and many other gtraitge pltr* e Ho
other man tiring or dead hag polled tit#
i ibbons over tb backs of big ssi
s3*so 97c
PANAMA SHIRT
HAL I f&slillli ullipil I y° urc^°’ce °f an
T l a • ,j .. , RSijKfflHllGM a mense line of Patterns and
That is sold all around us J \w'iM ffIJwJMTTM
a- it , , /Va hHHH™ Fabrics. Some plain stripes,
for K.oo. How do we do h 'ft I r I SM '
it? Well we do it and '-'Jr'' nifilnw some plaited bosoms, some
silk bosoms ’ some wort h
were compelled to telegraph w |sg|
for more. We’ve enough In wSB - tf * Cf\
for all. While we are on H
the Hat Line we’ll tell you ||| To the economical man this
of some other specials. is a golden opportunity.
A ROUGH WANT
STRAW A * } - 50
Hat, made on a 1902 block, CHIT F° r a line ens Low
with heavy silk band. We 11 Shoes, all styles, sizes and
marked them to sell #I,OO, widths, mostly Vici Kid.
but cutting prices is evi- Every pair bears our name,
dently the rage just now, HOT and every pair is fully guar -
so they will go at IIV I
anteed.
59 c. WEATHER?
We’ll meet you more than bave Ladies Oxford’s
■mi A CU/I Df C way> anc * we are r ° m
W¥ mm&iM fl DLI equipped to handle your trade. 75c to $5.00
SUITS SERGES par
For Children. Mostly blous- ——
es with sailor collars. We FLANNELS We have Children’s Slip
have bunched them into f rn m
two lots, and it means all CRASHES. Pe s Z
, , ._. . 50c to $2.50
we have on hand. The prices
seem ridiculous, but they These are the ideal Summer pair.
must move. Fabrics, and these are the
r A ■/% things we are showing in
dL*)C mUC greatest variety, We have a very pretty
line of Silk Neckwear at
for choice of the two lots, **
sizes 4 to 8 years. **•o >up, 25c.
And you know we carry no
-25c thing that we do not stand We have Men’s Socks in
per garment for very pretty back of > and nothin g but per- brown and black at
Underwear, pink, blue and feet fitting, stylish, up-to-date #
brown stripes, worth 39c. clothing. oc pair.
horses in as many out of the way
regions as he. Mr. Morgan keeps his
own horses, (there are forty or fifty
of them,) at his fine five hundred acre
place in the Wheatley Hills, on Long
Island. It was the second of the
splendid millionaire establishments to
be set up in that region and is situ
ated about seven, miles from the West
bury station on the Long Island rail
road, which in its turn is twenty miles
from New- York. Mr. Morgan's visi
tors are often conveyed from the rail
road station to his home on the top
of his “Concord” coach,: famous in so
ciety and millionairedotn, if not with
the public.
.Morgun's Antique Coach.
He is especially proud of this vehicle
and frequently himself handles the
reins from its box. There is an im
pression that the vehicle is at least a
century old, but experts in coach archi
tecture declare it to be of the vintage
of about 1820 and there Is warrant in
tradition for ithe statement that it was
put in commission as a regular stage
coach about eighty years ago. Mr.
Morgan ran across it in Maine some
years since. It was still In use, but to
see it was to covet it with him and
after that it was a question of price
onH.
Guests who are particukirly favored
receive photographs of the old coach
as souvenirs on departure sometimes.
One I* ot< graph shows Theodore and
Mis. Roosevelt as Inside passengers.
Mr. Morgan himself has the reins while
Center Hitchcock, Jr.. J. D. Heresford
and Stanley Mortimer are sitting with
him on the box. Standing on the rear
nxle of the coach Is Brady, Morgan's
superintendent, the same who acted is
his coachman during the "four-in-hand
trip ‘round the world." Mr. Morgan
believes Maine Is the best place to
buy coach horses and It was while h*
was looking up horses for tils own sta
bles thst he found the old cnadi.
Mr Morgan Is almost as proud of tils
harness loom as tie Is of tils Concord
coach. It Is understood to tie th,
finest harness room, save one, In
Aincrba In It bang practically all
the Morgan hai ne-a*es vs* ept those
used by ftie working farm teams, but
the pride of tbs room is s round dos
•n gets of four-in-band harness, the
finest and handsomest that money can
pay for. One man is kept busy the
year round burnishing and otherwise
caring for these harnesses and he is
as proud of them as his master possi
bly can be.
First American Harness Room.
I
Fine as Mr. Morgan’s harness room
is, however, Dr. W. Seward Webb’s Is
the finer: experts declare it to be the
finest In America and excelled by only’
a few in the whole world. It is one of
the chief attractions of Dr. Webb's
great farm at Sherbourne, Vermont,
and Is a really rnTole apartment in the
famous barn. Two men constantly
guard and minister to the round hun
dreds sets of four-in-hand harness kept
there. A curious feature of the room
is that its contents include no sets of
harness that have ever been In serv
ice, the sole purposes of the room and
all it contains being display and not
use.
Dr. Webb is the most spectacular of
the millionaire horsemen, perhaps, but
those who ought to know say that he
handles the ribbons awkwardly. He
was the first of the American million
aires to breed hackney horses. He
hoped to make money a plenty out of
this business, and ffit example led his
brother-ill-law, il. McK. Twombley,
and several other to Import the high
stepping English horses for breeding
purposes. Dr. Webb has done better
at the business than anybody else. He
has given a great deal of attention to
tin* crossing of hackneys with trotters
anel thoroughbreds, but the results,
w hbh It was hoped would bring out
the best qualities of both strains to
Hu* cross, eliminating the* weak points
altogether, were not satisfactory In
any marked degree.
Ur. Webb's farm Is ten times ns hlg
as Morgan's and his horses are about
ten times as numerous, but their aver
age of excellent c Is not M, high. Tile
d*M tor owns Ho finest herd of tnules
In the world, not one of which Is under
Seventeen hands In bight There Ik
a well-defined understanding among
tin* doctor's friends that a hilt
be dm e not purpose the abdinbintnent
of his t -rinnfil farm, tit* itoes Intend
to live els. a here in the winters here.
*** **** be* a live of the deep snow Slid 1
the low winter tempers! mis# This fg- I
mof has It that this plan will In tar
ried into effect as soon as the doctor
can build a suitable house for himself
near Hyde Park, his brother-in-law's
Hudson River country seat.
John Jacob Astor,' who went into the
hackney horse breeding along with
Dr. Webb and Twombley Is said to be
no judge of a horse himself, always
having his animals chosen by some
hired persons. An acquaintance of Mr.
Astor says he never has owned a good
horse at all, but that is an exaggera
tion, doubtless.
I be king of Millionaire Horsemen.
All things considered, the palm must
be awarded, as every one well under
stands, to William C. Whitney as the
reigning king of the millionaire horse
men, while his son, Harry Payne
Whitney, richly deserves the title of
crow-n prince. Mr. Whitney's Long
Island establishment contains five hun
dred acres. The barns and racing sta
ble's, covering five acres and maintain
ed jointly by himself and his son, are
famous as models of their kind. The
steeple chasing and other private
equine exhibitions of one sort and an
other held there every fall are highly
popular with those fortunate enough
to be invited to them. Mr. Whitney's
devotion to the turf, which has recent
ly manifested itself most strongly at
Saratoga, is due mainly to the keen
delight he takes In racing as a recre
ation.
Asa horseman pure and simple Har
ry Payne Whitney is the superior of
his father, undoubtedly, deserving as
the elder man Is of reputation In that
.. ,H ,hl * surprising, since at
the age the younger was devoting
much of his time to the study of horses
and horsemanship, William <’ was
bending his energies chiefly along the
lines of the law, polltels and public af
fairs. Young Whitney rides superbly
anil his string of "hunters” Is famous
Hurricane on which h<* has hud him
self photographed repeatedly Is his
favorite mount for M stiff ‘‘cross coun
try" canter _ Paul lanby,
Sunday l.scursluu Is IlmusMlcb, <>
Effective Hundiy, May J|, and each
flundsy thereafter the Plant Mystern ]
will Sell loan*! t,|n k<# to UruMS
***** G * holidays, Hiniied to dais
J 7 •' • w _ Vut informants #. \
ticket agents.-*4. 1
A Thousand Ills
HOW PEOPLE SUFFER Fa
SPRING TROUBLE.
EASILY CURED BY GRAYBEARD.
Now la (he Time to Take It „
Banlalt Those Attaka Aceo B1|) „ N
by a General Lettiu B Down of , h „
System _ Important Testin.onl,,).
front Good People,
I During the months of May and j une
there is no end to spring coni
Plaints. If you eat, they come, if yo '
I fast, they come. Nobody escapes the m
j Graybeard has always been regards
| as an invaluable remedy for these ail
ments. Often a single bottle corrects
the derangement of the system.
WHAT MR. 0. A. CLIETT SAYS.
A few months ago Mr. O. A. ciiet*
of Powersville, one of the most exten
sive fruit growers in Georgia, said
“ More than , six years ago I suffered
terribly of dyspepsia. I could not find
anything to relieve me for any length
of time. I was restless, nervous, could
not sleep, all I ate disagreed with me
In warm weather this ailment was i
greater source of annoyance. I cure(l
the dyspepsia by taking Graybeard. \ t
the time I gave a testimonial to that
effect. Now, six years later, 1 want
to renew that testimonial and add that
I have not passed a sick day from this
cause since. I have not been compelled
to take any more medicine for dyspep
sia, because I have not been troubled
with it since. I am in better health
and feel better every way, and I want
to say that I attribute it all to Gray
beard.” '
WHAT MR. MARTIN SAYS.
Mr. W. C. Martin of Lenox, Lowndes
county, who went from near Valdosta,
was for years and years afflicted with
both rheumatism and eczema. He could
not afford to lose time, and in his ea
gerness to get rid of these ailments
toqk almost everything which is sold
over the counter of drug stores, a
great many of the preparations bene
fited him some, but the ailments always
returned. In spring and summer these
ailments were worse. Finally he got
hold of Graybeard and it cured him.
He was so delighted xvith the medicine
that he told his friends far and near of
it and said: “I would not take 1500
for the benefit derived from a few bot
tles of Graybeard. I was afflicted with
rheumatism and had a touch of ecze
ma, and was broken down generally,
and Graybeard restored me to health.”
WHAT CAPT. WILLIS SAYS.
Capt. Willis is a prominent cigar
dealer in Atlanta. His statement is
that every spring he was annoyed by
festering and troublesome sores on his
hands. He applied local applications,
all of which benefited him, but they
were not permanent. Said he: "After
using everything I could think of I
began to take Graybeard. Less than
two bottle stopped the sores and gave
rne just splendid health. It is the
greatest medicine I ever saw.”
In spring bad blood manifests itself
in skin eruptions, in itch sores, In
rheumatism, and general breaking
down.
Nervousness, sleeplessness and even
dyspepsia all come from it.
Graybeard is a superb remedy for
these ailments, and now is the time to
take it to stop them.
It is worth SI.OO a bottle at drug
stores; 6 bottles $5.00.
Graybeard Pills are little treasures.
You should have a box of the pills, 25c.
Milk Bottles and Caps
At Cut Prices for
THIS WEEK.
<3> i pint Milk Bottles
45c dozen.
r 1 i qt. Milk Bottles
/ \ 65c dozen.
i ; 2 qt. Milk Bottles
; 75c dozen.
Milk Bottle Caps
V. J 29c 1,000.
Eztra heavy Bottle Carriers,
75c.
S. Bernstein,
303 and 305 West Broughton.
BOTH PHONES.
We are now occupying the
ground floor for retail depart
ment.
EDUCATIONAL.
SUMMER SCHOOL
KNOXVILLE, TENN,
JUNE 19, JULY 30.
EXCURSION VIA
Atlanta, Knoxville and Northern R’y-
ONE FARE ROUND TRIP.
From all points In South to Knox
ville and return. Tickets sold June Id,
17, IS, Lit and 30. Final limit Aug.
15, except by deposit of ticket _ with
joint agent on or before Auk- 15 and
payment of fee of 50 cents final limit
will be extended to Bept. 30.
Greut opportunity for trip across the
Smoky Mountain's via the Atlanta,
Knoxville and Northern Railway Loop
Line.
Information concerning: the trip a ll '*
school will be furnished on application
to any railway agent, or write to the
uimer'signed. He atire your tick'!*
read via A , K & N. Hallway.
j. if. McWilliams,
Gen. I'itM. Agt., Knoxville, Ten#
uinmill Hill KIIHKri M MODI
Heal cijutppi <1 w buui for uoj'i In *' 1
tieudi, fly# mile# from any town r ' •
lage, lei phone and dedV no,‘la *l'
iiumiale ie,pill ed of #1 , y ap| l* .*
n Loot for entail boy* In erpers l "
building* Koi iMialogu*’ addle**
J. Caller Mailuw, M A. >ra4t#.