The Savannah morning news. (Savannah, Ga.) 1900-current, November 27, 1904, Page 9, Image 9

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WAR’S DARKER PICTURES. ,ights in the millet fields of LIAO-YAMG PLAIN. rhf . Tall Grain Cut by Peasants on Kecent BattUfleld—lncredible En durance of Wounded Japanese Soltler —The Pariah Don—Wound ed Combatants No Longer Ene mies.- Oolnard Indifference,of the Manchurian Natives Bandit Scouts. Correspondence of the New York Post. Liao Yang, Oct. 4.—A1l the kaoliang, that tall millet with its burden of grain at the top like tasselled corn, is being cut low on recent battlefield. On coming battlefields it stands in rows, in strips, in sparse clumps, or har vested in towering stacks—in any de sign or condition that will serve to over our own earthworks, and sen tries, or assist in stealthy infantry • konnoitering, or disclose the approach of the enemy. The Chinese farmers hasten to cut it as the armies dic tate. glad to be able to save some of their crop. rhildren no bigger than a blade of the stalk, wearing nothing but a pig ail down their backs and a narrow biue apron depending from the neck ir, front, give help with the sickle; and so do the elderly women, who have hitherto been so fearful of show ing themselves that it appeared there were no women in Manchuria. Strong as any peasants are these women, del icately as thqm move on the tiny feet which the men have made them bind for centuries so they would never run a way. One of them, in the plain before Liao Yang, came upon a prostrate Japanese soldier. He looked dead, but he was merely in a last faint. It was twelve days subsequent to the end of the battle; the 'search parties had not found him. New recruits passing on their way to supply the vacant places at the front were called. They got their first glimpse of what a bat tle may mean to an Individual. The unconscious soldier had been struck in the thigh by one bullet, and one tibia had been shattered by an other. The recruits saw the attempts he had made to bandage and dress his wounds with the ‘‘first aid" mate rial which every soldier carries; they saw the wrappings brown with dried blood. Bent and broken mltlet within reach showed how he had fed himself during the twelve days of his painful isolation. He had eaten the tassels of grain at the top by pulling them down to his mouth. Exh’austing one spot, he had only to drag himself a foot or two to be among plenty again. It was want of water, of course, which tortured him most and which finally took his senses away. After reviving at the hospital, he spoke of holding his mouth open to catch rain, of setting his cup for It, of nfaking a hollow with a piece of khaki, and of lapping dew from blades of the kaoliang in the morning. Yes, his shattered shin had ached; but lack of water to wet his tongue, that made him think he must die. There are worse sights In the kao liang. It gives one a shudder to seq a flock of rooks settling and circling, and the tail-down way In which par iah dogs—cousins of the Siberian wolf —emerge upon the paths as you are rid ing along needs no Interpretation. In the busy days of burial nfany Russians were not placed very deep. Once In a while you see a uniform containing a few bones, beside a violated grave. The other day, as the attaches were being shown the positions the First Army fought for,'the whole party sur prised a dog tugging tfard at some thing. If ran, leaping; and there lay a poor Cossack, wholly uncovered, with one trouser tom away, revealing—well, soldiering is not merely a parade through waving flags and cheering friends, singing ddar songs of country under beautiful starlight beside glow ing campfires, nor even all shooting and getting decently shot. Another episode, which, however, I cannot describe |at first hand, Was this which comes through Gen. Fuji of the Kuroki army: Several wounded men lay on a hillside after a night charge. Six were Japanese and seven were Russian. They saw one another, and crept together and stretched them selves side by side to keep warm. One Russian, Whose hurt was in the arm, offered to steal down the hill to water snd fill all the canteens. He had gone only a little distance when he was shot by comrades who could not distinguish his uniform. Another Russian volun teered. He got safely out Af sight but he never returned. The Japanese got him. The rest of the men could Making Good— Wp watch the ltttle things, and by applying the proper treatment, are able to make good in our larger promises. The matching of the buttons— the selection of sewing silk and twist—the Joining of stripes and plaids—the turn of a corner and the shape of a collar—these and numberless other details of con struction Rre what go to make up properly tailored suits. ' Our Fall assortment is'complete and we are making good. SUITS Tailored to Taste, $lB to SW. nuiauniiKe Tailors, 107 BULL ST., vatm*h, * * Georgia. not waik, so all lay quietly in one group, enemies no longer. In the morning they were found by a patrol, and car ed for in the same hospital. After Liao Yang battle one missed the numerous curling smokes which heretofore had risen from a fighting place that had been won. One miss ed Also those tandem couples of sol diers bearing between them on a pole a heavy box of ashes. There were so many dead here, and It took so long to find them, that only officers were in cinerated. The ash of the hard part of their throats was preserved and shipped .back to be buried in Japan; ■but the men of common rank had to be buried in quickly dug trenches holding sixty or eighty each. The attitude of the natives has the neutral character of indifference. They carry wounded Russians as they carry wounded Japanese, and both as they would carry logs or pails of water, suspended from shoulder poles. It is only because the ‘‘No. 1 Japanese Man,” as they term the highest alien authority, has fixed prices that they do not charge their yellow brothers as much as they charged the Russians. When Field Marshal Oyama sent 1,000 yen to be distributed among the na tives wounded by shells which fell in the city, and 1,000 yen more to the Scotch missionary's hospital, which cared for the dying, all was well. Three times their city was lightly looted; first, by the retiring and reckless Rus sians; then by the soldiers of the Man darin; then by the inrushing Japanese. By none was there looting such as you might fancy from the term. Some furs from this shop, all .the beer that could be carried from that, all the chickens that could be caught any where, amounting to very little. The Chinese saw no difference of treatment in the few hours they suf fered from these changing domina tions. Even the Hunghutze—those lawless ravagers —are pro-Russian where Russia controls, and pro-Japa nese where Japan controls—if it pays. Below here they offered their fighting strength to the invading troops. Not accepted as soldiers, these bandits served as scouts, under direction of Japanese officers, one hears. As far south as Pulantien they certainly were sentries at official doorways. They are on duty about Shusanpo Hills now\ As scouts, their method of gaining to enter Russian lines, feign friendliness, tell tall stories of the vast array of the enemy south, of his countless number of great guns. Then by way of the mountains they regain the Japanese lines, give the character istics, situation, and extent of earth works, disposition of strength, etc., and advise do not go here—big fort,” or do not go there—many cannon,” but go very fast this way” and "very fast that way.” The heads of Hung dr °P nearly every day on the ,y ang Ma ndarin’s execution ground out if a captive outlaw happens to wear a band upon his arm saying he is in Japanese employ, the Mandarin fears to touch him. If the city of Liao Yang has a bias, It is in favor of the Russian. Ask why, and the cause is thus explained: Sposee Russia-man wan tee fox skin. He no ask price. He sav I take,' and pay what merohant man say. Rus sia-man, he no care for money. What he wan tee —buy.” That made times brisk in the an cient walled town. Prices rose till it seems comparatively an expensive city. So great is the demoralization that furs are dearer here than in Japan. Sheep skins with the wool on cost $1.50 each; beaver for a pair of gloves, $1.50; full linings for great-ooats, made of the delicate breasts of foxes, cost S7O; lynx skins, $35; a woman’s sleeved jacket of fox breasts, beautiful of course, but—s3s; dogskins (tamed and crossed Siberian wolf), sl2 for a suffi cient number to make a sleeping bag; the fur of the legs of foxes, nicely matched and pretty enough and large enough for a woman’s opera cloak, S6O to SBO. For a town next to the moun tains where pelts are obtained these are inflated prices, and the lavish Rus sians are responsible. F. c, THE SICILIAN AT HOME. Traits of the Class of Italians Who Largely Flock to America. Alvan F. Sanborn, in Boston Tran script. Brigandage in Sicily is a thing of the past, whatever sensational reports may occasionally be spread to the contrary, •but the resort of the knife, instead of to the courts, to settle private quarrels is still frequent and must toe classed (despite Its picturesqueness) as a high ly anti-social practice. It should be borne In mind, however, that this par ticular brand of lawlessness is a relic of the time, scarcely more than a gen eration distant, when the social, po litical and Judicial organisation of the • province was such that justice was not to be had through the courts. It is gradually diminishing under the influ ence of more liberal institutions and one of these days it will virtually dis appear; never entirely, however, In cases where Jealousy Is Involved. The Sicilian is a fiery lover. One cannot readily Imagine him, with all his good bulsness sense, accepting legal damages as sufficient satisfaction for the alien ation of affections. 'Something of the barbaric fierceness of the Moor, from whom he Is partly descended, enters into his amours. The lottery, which plays so Impor tant a role in Sicilian fiction. Is really a devouring plague In the Sicilian cities, where the excited crowds about the ticket offices are one of the sights; but it seems not to have Infected the country districts to any great extent. The Sicilians are unquestionably born gamesters. Still, the lottery apart, their gaming is of the very modest sort that does not interfere with regular labor, dissipate savings or wreck homes. The habit of betting on elec tions is as prevalent in Stolly as in America, and at this point. If at no other, our Sicilian immigrants will ac climate themselves without strain. Sicilian honesty Is not an easy thing to define: not because It does not ex ist as an unsympathetic critic has face tiously remarked, but because it is a Batin sort of honesty that puzzles the non-Latin mind, and is likely to cause misunderstanding and trouble when transplanted to other than Latin lands. The Sicilian is exceedingly honest In his way; his way Is not exactly the American way, that Is all. He is the last person to live beyond his means. He has a keen sense of the obligation of a debt. His word is reliable in af fairs of real gravity. On the other hand, he has fewer scruples than the Yankee regarding the number and kinds of deceit permissible in driving a trade—which is saying a great deal. Like most of the Latins and certain of the Celts, he prevaricates without stint In matters of no importance. He Is a postmaster In other words. In the art of telling amiable, white lies. He can match the subtle flattery of the Frenchman and tbs delicious blarney of the Irishman. Like them, he will promise you anythlnr and everything out of sheer politeness, rather than ap pear disagreeable; which does not pre vent him from being splendid in his loyalty, like them, once his allegiance la won. Hs holds lightly the engagements he makes with bis saints, as be does ev erything that haa to do with hia re ligion. He breaks the most solemn re- Ugh turn vows, made In time of street, when prosperity returns. Thus a friend tells me of a most amusing dispute be overheard between several Sicilians on shlpboerd as to whether they ehould or should not pay an offering they had promised their patron saint, during a severe storm, U be brought them safe out of It. SAVANNAH MORNING NEWS; SUNDAY. NOVEMBER 27. 1904. TWP GERMAN ARMY. i - Pessimistic View of the Kaiser’s Management and Tactics. Schierbrand in the North American Re view. No one who has of recent years re sided in Germany and has had occa sion to consort with the army there and has closely observed it can have failed to remark Its rapid decadence. Gaming and betting are indulged in to an enormous extent in army circles. With this, too, there is an enormous amount of hard drinking. Besides all this, luxury in its general aspects has obtained a finft foothold in the Ger man army everywhere. Out of every hundred officers at least ninety live beyond their means. Asa dire result of all this, usury and ‘‘money marriages” have become established - features in life. Against this whole train of evils the Kaiser, it is trud, fulminates decrees and army orders. Yet the Kaiser himself is largely—one might say solely—responsible for the present highly unsatisfactory condition of his army. There has never been a monarch on the throne of Phussia, who has been such a spendthrift, nor one so fond of expensive court festivities and lavish personal display, and for him to preach to his young officers strict economy seems a ludicrous para dox. The efficiency of the army, too, has seriously suffered. First, all the trust ed and able men that had slowly risen before 1866 are gone. The Kaiser would have none of them remain in ac tive service. He called this “rejuvenat ing” the army, a process of rapidly weeding out all the battle-scarred and experienced commanders. The process has left none but totally untried men in every post of importance, men neith er very able nor at all willing to criticise or to withstand the Kaiser’s whimsical innovations. Again, both the weapons with which the wars of the future will be fo’ught and the radical change in tactics and in strategy that must result from the employment of smokeless powder and long-range guns and rifles are new elements, untested on a large scale. It is a matter of common knowledge that the Kaiser, from his strong love of the spectacular, has taught his army at every great maneuver held since his accession in 1888 not to fight as they wij) have to fight in a future war in order to win. Instead, he has taught them to fight as if the old smooth-bores were still in use. His massing of cavalry and his insane cav alry and infantry charges in serried What to Do For Your Disease Seek the Advice of the Celebrated Specialist, Dr. Hathaway, Who Makes No Charge Whatever for Consultation, Ex amination or Medical Advice. He Will Tell You All About Your Case and How Best to Cure It. ALL CALLERS HAVE FREE USE OF MEDICAL EQUIPMENT. WRITE THE DOCTOR IF YOU CANNOT CALL* J. NEWTON HATHAWAY, M. D. Recognized as the Oldest Established and Most Reliable Specialist. The hungry need food, the naked ( th ®,,*J ck , nee , d medl_ cal advice and scientific treatment— but first and most important of all, they need reliable medical advice from one who thoroughly understands his profession. In inviting you to consult Dr. J. Newton Hathaway, you should remember that it is entirely to your advantage to do so. There can be no proflt in It to him. as he makes no charge, yet he willingly gives up his time to aid you. In consulting Dr, Hathaway, you Diseases That Dr. Hathaway Successfully Cures. In all these years of enormous prac- tice and specialism, It Is safe to say that Dr. Hathaway hag developed and perfected treatments to cover the ma- jorlty of diseases. The readers of this paper, who follow his announcements know that he often, with the permis- slon of the writers, reprints letters re- celved by him from grateful cured pa- tlents. But for every letter he has published hs has five hundred In a vault that he can never find time nor space to publish. These letters bear out the fact that the people whom Dr. Hathaway treats are Invariably cured; they that write him years afterwards, and still are Neurasthenia. Lost Manhood, Stricture. Enlarged Prostate, lUicnmntlßin. Kidney Trouble Liver Trouble Catarrh. Spinal Trouble, Tou can writ* Dr. Hathaway with the etrlctaet confidence, feeling sure that what you tall him will be kept In **cret only you and he will know. He will tell you of the beat way to be cured, and exactly by what meana he propose* to bring about the cur*. Furthermore, he will be glad to give you when you call, or aend you any one of the following eight book*, aooord- Ing to the subject that would Intereat you: No. 1, Diseases of the Throat and Lung*; No. I, Dtaeaaea of the Uri nary Tract; No. I, Dtaeaaea of Women; No 4, Dtaeaaea of the Hk In. Kectal and Rheumatism; No. I, lilood Poison; No. 4, Nervoua Debility and Vital Weakness; No. t. Stricture; No. I, Varicocele. Mend your a4draa to-day for the book you went. It will be for warded you promptly. ranks up steep hills and over vast ter ritories swept by the enemy's fire for long distances have been the amaze ment of all competent judges, of every foveign general witnessing these dis plays, which are magnificent as purely military spectacles, but far worse than useless as a mimicry of actual war conditions. At the big autumn maneuvers a cou ple of years ago. when American offi cers fresh from the Philippines were present as eye-witnesses, I had this from the lips of one of the latter; "If the Kaiser means to tackle the enemy in that style in the next war not a man or horse of them will reach their destination.” Next to that stands the gruesome chapter of the abuse of power by offi cers and non-commissioned officers in the German armv exercised toward their subordinates, the rank and file. Nearly every day items may be read in the German press like the following, cabled here on Dec. 14 last: "A thousand specifications of cruelty are made against Lieut. Schilling of the Ninety-eighth Regiment of Infan try, whose trial begins at Metz to day.” Two days later the same Associated Press correspondent reported a similar case, only worse, wherein a sergeant named Franzkl. of the Eighty-fifth In fantry, figured with 1,520 counts of maltreatment and abuse of authority on 100 counts. These, however, are but ordinary cases. There have been not a few in recent years where convic tion was had for tormenting luckless private soldiers to death. The German army, then, judged by every rule that governs modern life, is In a bad wky. Will it require an other Jena to restore that robustness of moral fiber to the German army which was probably the most impor tant factor that led it on from victory to victory in the gigantic struggle with France a generation ago? FOOTGEAR OF THE JAPANESE. It Makes the Feet Hard and the An kles Strong. From the London Chronicle. The Japanese’ shoes, or “geta,” as they are called, are one of the singu larly distinctive features of Japanese life which ■will strike t’he observer with wonderment as soon as he see* them looming along the roadway, or hears them scraping the gravel with an irrita ble squeak that makes his very nerves shudder. Nevertheless, awkward though the shoes appear, they are of a kind constituted to make feet as hard as sheet iron and ankles as strong PS steel girders. The shoes are divided Into two varieties; the low shoe is call- consult the foremost specialist of this age, the man of the largest practice and greatest success In curing the sick, the man who has studied abroad, practiced In hospitals and sanitariums and has had 25 years experience In hls profession. Is not such a man worth consulting? Would It not be worth consulting him, even though he charg ed vou something for It? and yet there Is not one penny of charge, no matter who It Is, what your disease Is, or when you find it convenient to call. able to say that they are cured; and in every Instance they are perfectly satisfied, not only with the cure, but with the courteous and elegant man ner that the doctor treats them In their business relations. This is some thing to take notice of, for sad to say, the patient Is not always treated as they should be, but treatment can be expected from Dr. Hathaway as his office is and will continue to be per mently located. The doctor will be glad to examine, counsel, advise any man or woman who calls at hls office, or who writes him regarding any of the following diseases: Blood Poison. Nervous Debility, Varicocele Mucous Discharges, Urinary Troubles, Diabetes, Stomach Trouble, Lnng Trouble, 1 Locomotor Ataxia, You should make every effort to call In person, at least once, for In that way you will have a better ehanoe to get acquainted with the personality of the doctor. Beside* all callers have free us* of the doctor's vest medical equipment such as static, faradlc, galvanic electrical machine*, mag netic appliances, vibratory apparatus. X-ray, Violet Ray. etc., etc., and be alde* sprays, inhalers, and other da vloea that many will And beneficial. These are all free to callers, while those who are treated by mall get the medical book. Self examination blanks, etc., free. The address la the name as for year* past. J. NEWTON HATHAWAY, M. D, *OA Bryan atreet, ftavannah, Oa. Office hours 0 a. m. to II m„ 1 te 1, 1 to Ip. m. Sunday* 19 a. m. 1 p, Bk Female Troubles, Ijeucorrhoca, Womb Troubles, Ovarian Trouble, Cancers, Ulcers, Rrlghi’s Disease, Nervousness, Heart Disease, Epilepsy (Fits). i. Pierpont Morgan's New Art Gallery Now Being Built in New York x^fcwrjßT' fcr ■■ Aj^yi, < __^j- fli' BBUJtwP h i*(SI New York. Nov. 26.—Priceless treasures in art and books will shortly be housed in the beautiful gallery am* library which J. Pierpont Morgan is erecting on the north side of East Thirty-sixth street. 150 feet east ofl Madison avenue, The structure adjoins the rear of Mr. Morgan's residence, and its exterior is entirely of granite. In the center of the front is an indented portico, leading to the entrance. In bight the building .is equal to that of an ordinary three-story house. In shape the gallery is a letter ”T.” Its frontage is 115.2 feet, anH the central section la 73.5 feet deep. The two wings will have depths of 40 feet each. Each of tho columns at the portico is of one solid piece of granite. The gallery is detached entirely from Mr. Morgan’s residence, and ds fireproof. Its estimated cost is s3ool 000. In this building Mr. Morgan will place his Immense library and collection of paintings by famous master* The collection of paintings is at present scattered, some of it being in tho Metropolitan 'Museum, some In Euro pean galleries, and the rest In storage, excepting what Is In Mr. Morgan’s residence. ed the "kcmiageta,” and is only used when the roads are in good condition. The high shoes, named “ashida,” are worn when the weather is rainy and the roads are muddy. Both kinds have a thin thong attached to the sur face to secure them to the feet, which are therefore not covered as if they were in shoes, but are left exposed to atmospheric conditions. The ’’koma geta” resembles somewhat the Lanca shire clog, and their construction mere ly entails the carving of a block of wood to the proper size. The “ashida,” however, are of more complicated’ de sign. They have two thin pieces of wood, about three inches high at right angles to the soles, and occasionally. In the case of priests or pilgrims, only one bar attached. Some of the "geta” worn by little girls are painted iri many colors, and others have a tiny bell hanging from a hollow place at the back, which, as it tinkles in a mystic way, heraldn the approach of children. The superior makes are covered with mats made of panama. The highest price amounts to about 10 yen, or $5, while the cheap est Is less than 10 sen, or a few cents; but then the ' geta'’ will not last long er than a month, and once out of re pair can never be mended. Learning to walk on a “geta" Is an exceedingly difficult process. Indeed, it Is far easier to acquire skating or stilt-walking. The average child In Japan takes about two months before being able to move along on the national footgear, and the little ones repeatedly slip from the wooden blocks, falling to the ground, which seems to their miniature lmagln nations a considerable distance beneath them. Although foreigners usually take with readiness to the customs of Japan, they are absolutely unable to manipulate the perilous "geta.” A curious story is told of a San Francisco merchant who was invited to attend a fancy dress ’ball. He thought it would be quite the correct thing to attend in Japanese costume, and wrote to a friend In Yokohama to send a complete suit of the costume of a gentleman of high class. In re ceipt of the costume he was immense ly surprised at its extensive variety. He mastered all the intricacies of the flowing robes, but when he unearthed the “geta” he was completely at a loss to understand Ms use. Having only Just arrived in the country and not being over observant, he had omitted to notice the foot arrangements of the people. After much earnest considera tion he was suddenly seized with a brilliant idea. "Ah!” he exclaimed, in his desire to extol everything Japanese, “this wooden block has got a very love ly shape; It is very beautifully carved and artistic. Therefore, it must be a kind of decoration to be worn on the shoulders like epaulettes.” And so the merchant went to the ball with a “geta” on each shoulder, instead of on each foot! Some parents allow their children to play barefoot in the streets, but when going out with their elders or paying visits it is essential that every one, from the smallest to the tallest, must mount the wooden clog and propel themselves in this odd fashion. The dislike of the Japanese children for the activity of outdoor games is to be mainly attributed to the awkward In cumbrances with which their little feet are loaded. For instance, one seldom sees Japanese children gamboling in open playgrounds—they have yet to learn the feverish pleasures of "hide and seek” or “rounders,” while such a thing as top spinning or football never obstructs the roadways. Singular superstitions are associat ed with the "geta” which at times are decidedly useful. When a host desires that a too attentive caller should de part he induces somebody to burn moxa, which has a peculiar odor. The guest will immediately take the hint ONLY ONE NIGHT OUT EN ROUTE TO ST. LOUIS, MO., -VIA SEABOARD AIR LINE RAILWAY. Direct connection In Union Depot, Montgomery, with through sleep er for St. Louis. LOW EXCURSION RATES ACCOUNT Louisiana Purchase Exposition. 15 day, 60 day, and season tickets on sale daily. ▼err low lute Conch Excursion Tickets, limited 10 days from date of aale returning, will be sold each Tuesday and Thursday daring month Full Information apon application to any agent Seaboard Air Railway, or to CH>RLBS P. STEWART, A*st. O. P. A., Sdvtnnih. Gg. TOO LATE FOR CLASSIFICATION WANTED. 4 YOUNG LADIES AT Conida’s. Apply Monday Morning. “w ANTED, A GOOD COLORED porter for our delivery department. Apply Monday morning fo Gustave Eckstein & ,Cos.. 13 Broughton street, West. __ FOR R ENT! 210. 212. 216 JONES, east; just remodeled, J. N. Dieter, 222 .Tones, east. WANTED. SERVANT ~FOR GEN eral house work; good wages. 207 West Thirty-ninth. "LOST, ONE SMALL RED COW. with long horns. Reward If returned at onoe to 671 Railroad street. A GOOD WASHERWOMAN DE slres family washing: can be found at 529 Little Jones street, west. WANTED, SALESLADIES FOR permanent position; also extra help for Saturdays; experienced preferred, but not necessary; must be quick and accurate. Apply to manager, 9 to 12, mornings only. F. M. Kirby & Cos., 10-cent store. __ __ A FIRST-CLASS REGISTERED pharmacist, sober and reliable; state age, experience, salary expected and give references. Fern wood Lumber Company. Femwood. Pike county, Mississippi. WANTED.” MEN EVERYWHERE; good pay: to distribute circulars, ad vertising matter, tack signs, etc.; no canvassing. National Advertising Bu reau. Chlcago. TO MAKE MONEY, SEND FOR our list of latest specialties; six sam ples prepaid for $1: will retail for sl2; goods guarahteed or money refunded. Southern Agency Company, Memphis, Term. . _ 7 ULOLA " COMPANY'S FRUIT flavoring extracts are pure and per fect; delicate,_yet strong. “AMERICAN CLUB GINGER ALE continues to grow In popular favor; being pronounced the finest ever offer ed for sale; * pure stimulating tonlo. AMERICAN CLUB GINGER ALE is the purest stimulating tonic ever offered for sale; only perfect produots used In manufacturing Kalola Co.'s goods. WANTED, EVERY SAVANNAH resident to realize the unusual oppor tunity of advertising their city by re ferring to Kalola Company's excellent products; Kalola, which is becoming famous East and West for curing num erous chronic cases of indigestion and stomach troubles of long standing; and their soda fountain beverages, Rocola and Malt Iron Ale; 'also Ameri can Club Ginger Ale. NOVEMBER AND DECEMBER Edison gold moulded records; oall and hear them; they are extra fine. 8. 8. Sollee, agenL_ EDISON GOLD MOULDED REC ords and Edison phonographs for sale at 8, 8. Bollee’s, 120 Btate_street, west, THERE IS NOTHINO NICER TO give a friend than an Edison phono graph; there are nine thousand choice pieces of music to choose from; the Edison phonograph plays each pleoe perfectly. S. 8. Sollee. 120 State street, west. DON’T FAIL TO~CALL AND HEAR the November-December records now at 8. 8. Bollee’s, 120 State gsreet, west. and simultaneously his leave. When a thong of a “geta” is accidentally sev ered on the return from the visit to a sick person a firm belief exists that the patient must die. The Japanese, however, dearly love the "geta.” and although civilization may teach them to win battles It will never Induce them to wear leather boots. NOTICE ! All parties having bills against us are requested to present them for payment by Dec. i^. Allen Bros! Housefurnishers and Wedding Present Specialists. HOTELS AMD SUMMER RESORTS. NEW YORK. Broadway and 68rd Street. Telephone in every Room. Take a ear at any Railroad or Steam* boat Terminal, (In They All Pass tlie Empire. Within 5 minutes of all Theaters and large Department Stores. To Elevated and Subway Stations t minute. Over $250,000 m Improvements. Completely Remodeled, Redecorated and Refurnished. All room lights controlled by dooa switches. All clothes Closets automatically lighted. Furnished throughout in Mahogany and Brass. Rooms (with use of bath) $1.50 peg day up. Rooms (with private bath) $2.04 per day up. Suites (with private bath) $3.54 per day up. W. JOHNSON QUINN. Hotel Delleclafre Broaowag aid 77tk street. New York. (Seventh A venae, j Amsterdam Ave. Hungarian I ■ i Orchestra. ■’ Moat Artistically Beautiful Hotel in the World. Can offer few single rooms, with buth, beautifully fumUhed, auttable for two people, |6o per month. TRANSIENT RATES l One Room, with both lira per day Parlor, Bedroom, with bath, Jj and h per day Parlor, a Bedrooms, with bath, ft and 7per day Every improvement known to modern in genuity. ctaXSwmldT ma * m,lne ' ' ,The HoU * MILTON ROBtEB, Proprietor. DE SOTO HOTEL, Savannah, Oa. Open all year. Large airy roema; 7,900 feet plaxtaa; 100 rooms with pri vate bath. Telephone noi vice in every room. Liberal Inducement* to fami lies desiring permanent board. WATSON A POWERS. Proprietor*. 9