Newspaper Page Text
6
FARM, GARDEN
AND HOUSEHOLD
By S. A. COOK.
The Winter and Small Grain.
The prophets are predicting a very
mild winter this year lor this country.
It is quite reasonable to anticipate a
wet winter and such a winter is like
ly to be warmer than a dry one. In
this section of the country we are due
a considerable amount of rain as the
result of the long dry spell of the lat
ter half of 1904.
From all accounts the British Isles
are having the worst of the winter
thus far. the cold of November being
the severiest they have experienced
in many years.
Now and then we may experience
winters like that of 1881-82 when grain
sown in November and December came
up and grew to maturity with hardly a
check to its growth at any time. Un
less a winter somewhat like that one
should follow this autumn there will
be little to expect from the grain sown
this season. Dry weather prevented
farmers from sowing oats before No
vember, and many have sown as late
as Dec. 10.
Except in these rarely occurring mild
winters such as 'Bl, there is great risk
in sowing grain even as late as Nov.
1. Asa rule if it cannot be seeded
properly by that date it is much bet
ter to wait until February before sow
ing. The farmer that raises plenty of
seed himself is the one that can afford
to take the risk. The small farmer
that relies on buying the seeds and per
haps at a price not less than $1 per
bushel, cannot well afford the risk.
While there is an advantage in sow
ing oats in the fall, it is only where
the sowing is made early enough to
allow the grain to get well rooted and
growth sufficient to make it mulch the
soil by the time the hard freezes of late
December or January occur. If this
cannot be secured it will be found to
be a much better farm policy to defer
the sowing until February, in the
meantime, giving the land a second
good plowing preparatory to putting
In the seed. This extra plowing will
offset the delay usually. Anyhoiv, it
will pay better to wait and prepare the
soil thoroughly than to sow like many
do when the work is done in Novem
ber—to-wit: broadcasting the seed on
unbroken soil and then turning all un
der with a turn plow. Oats or any
other grain sown after this manner
need not be expected to make much of
a yield. Unless the soil is extremely
rich in humus and elements of plant
food. Average soil will not make ten
bushels per acre under such treatment.
We w’ould not think of planting a
crop of corn without first plowing the
soil for it, and yet oats and sometimes
wheat are begrudged even this poor
preparation of one plowing and this
is the principal reason why our acre
age production is less than ten bushels
per acre when It ought easily to be
twenty.
It is only a few Southern farmers
that put anything like a proper val
uation on the oat crop. The very best
ones An.
With proper preparation of the soil,
proper regard for the time of sowing
and a use of the proper quantity of
seed, and the use of proper soil, there
Is no crop better worthy of our farm
ers' resard than oats.
It Is par excellence the food for
working animals—mules and horses,
and its regular use for such purpose
the year round, would have the effect
of saving thousands of these animals
that arc every year killed by corn in
the South.
Southern farming will never be at
Its best until oats become the univer
sal food for all working animals. For
one oat-fed horse or mule that dies of
colic a dozen of the corn-fed die.
The average farmer puts a very un
fair valuation on this great grain.
The Orchard-Winter Work.
The orchard is no small thing in
Georgia now.
What a vast orchard it would be if
every peach, plum and apple tree now
growing in Georgia were brought into
one great plantation!
The thousands and thousands of
acres there would be. W'hat a pros
pect for fruit In the coming years If
the trees are properly tended, and no
serious blight occurs!
But the orchard will not thrive if
not properly tended. Wherever there's
a tree there is some work—little it may
be to be done. Each tree will need a
little pruning of some kind, a little
wiring for the boxes, a little digging
around, perchance a little spraying. It
Is work that should be done In
December and January. Don't neglect
it.
The Black Walnut (or Farm Plant
inn.
The following suggestions by D. B.
Thomas of Missouri are well worth'
considering by any who begin to need
trees on their farms.
I want to urge every farmer to lend
a hand and plant trees. Do not plant
them in your tillable land if you have
any other kind, but plant in stony or
hilly places about the house and barn
lots and along fences and roads. Vari
ous kinds of trees have been suggest
ed and tried, and there are many good
ones. Maple is a beautiful and valu
able kind, but slow growing. Locust
Is not so vuluable, grows fast and as
lumber or posts lasts well, but the
sprouts— 1 want it left out of mine.
All oaks are grand, but a little hard to
get started. Catalpa is a tine, light
and very durable wood, grows exceed
ingly fast and the sprouts do not
bother.
But every one of these trees is very
much subject to the depredations of
all kinds of stock, possibly excepting
bogs, which, while they do not bite
them, scratch themselves against and
loosen them, also root out holes and
wallow around the roots until water
stands about them, which Is often a
fatal injury. Most of us would not like
to do without pasturing any field long
enough to get young tree* started suf
ficiently to be beyond damage from
stock, so what are we going to do
about it? Simply this: plant some
thing that they do not like. I know
of only one tree that will exactly fill
TROH OPKNI JAN. 3.
Second Term I‘romiM-n Many New
Stildnils.
l.ntrnncr /•kiipiliiiiiloii* for I lie see.
ftixl term ol Itie (ieorglu School of
I'ei hnology will begin on .fan. 3. Tlu
ni|iilrements for rnlrunee to the low.
rst or iib.a|ii>reiHlee eia* at that
ilinr nrr as follott*:
Slgehrai Hall's, ISA |agc.
Pliotr (•roirw-lry; Milne'. |.lg pages.
T.ngll*h (•laminar: mine's,
( lawlea; la genii of Weepy Hollow
•ml Hip Van Winkle.
The alx >ic work I'oiiMltulea Use
grngreM of liar •iib-upprenii chu..
knee hrpi fg
Tor sutismy to Hu upprcnip*.
sum toll hitoriiiatii.ii will be glsea on
M>tlegt top All aptdiijiMta Wanild
► neeariH ty • a m on Jan t
rir catalogue and |xo tp li. ad-
I.tNAK HAM.. Tre
the bill: that is our old acquaintance,
the black walnut.
It is a veritable bonanza to every
body who has room for a tree which it
is not especially desirable to use for
something else. It grows fast, does
not sprout up from the roots, makes a
beautiful shade during the hot weath
er. In spring it leaves out a little late,
giving time for the grass to get a taste
of sunshine and grow. Then in the fall
the leaves are down with the first
frost, and curling up very closely to
gether, something after the manner of
tea, form a most complete mulch with
out smothering the grass, which again
has some time to grow in the sunshine.
In fact, I have observed that it always
grows better under a walnut tree than
anywhere else.
When planted around the fence, the
stock will shade under them In the
heat of the day instead of seeking
secluded places or the pond, and their,
droppings often otherwise lost, make
the vicinity of the line of trees the
richest of the field. If planted along a
wire fence when the fence is first put
up, they may reasonably be expected
to be large enough by the time the
posts have rotted to fasten the wires
to. Get them fastened to a tree and
your trouble with them is about over.
Seldom indeed will a walnut tree,
grown all its life out in the open, ever
blow’ down.
They will generally begin bearing
at about six or eight years old. Most
railroad towns furnish a fair market
for black walnuts, and the children
greatly enjoy gathering them. Where
plentiful, quite a fair sum of money
may soon be realized by an industrious
child in this w r ay. Four or five dollars'
worth of nuts gathered in a day is not
bad work for a grown person, either. If
you happen to be so remotely situated
that there is no market, the large
hogs will harvest them themselves and
get fat.
Well, now, you have told so many of
its good points, tell some bad ones,
someone says. Really I do not believe
I know any except that maybe it does
not grow so fast as a few other kinds,
although it is a quick grower. Much,
however, depends upon the land on
which it grows. It grows fastest on a
black loamy soil, and slowest on hard
clay. After growing a few years,
though, upon a hard clay soil, a black
surface will become noticeable, which
rapidly thickens until it is very rich
all around the tree at least as far
out as the limbs reach. In this re
spect, it seems almost the equal of
clover.
I will tell one more and possibly a
third, which are really all that can be
mentioned. The one that is clearly an
objection, is that of affording a favor
able abiding place for the pesky cat
erpillar. It is one very well liked by
them, though seemingly not preferred
above wild cherry, hickory and some
others. The other, it yields no honey.
In planting, no especial care is re
quired, I take a few nuts or as many
as the occasion requires, jab a hole
w'herever I want a tree, plant a nut,
and the operation is over. The sprout
is reasonably certain to appear next
spring, unless some enterprising squir
rel or hog happens to find the nut. If
the sprout ever gets started, it is there
to stay, as nothing will ever want to
feast on it.
About Wild Turkeys.
The Farmers’ Journal says: “Every
fall a few wild turkeys are put on the
market. The experiment has been
made of breeding and keeping the
wild turkey in confinement, and it has
succeeded so well that the farmer who
can procure the turkeys should do so.
The turkeys of either sex crossed with
'the Bronze give a cross nearly and
sometimes quite as large as the pure
Bronze, and the wild blood gives the
progeny of such a cross a vigor un
known with the same birds.
The bird from such a cross also has
a superior flavor, and In some mar
kets commands a higher price because
of the gamey taste. It is true that the
older the turkeys grow the wilder they
grow, but this disadvantage is more
than counterbalanced by the benefit of
the infusion of wild blood. The Rhode
Island Experiment Station speaks as
follows of wild turkey crosses:
"Where wild birds are plenty crosses
between wild and domesticated birds
frequently occur without design on the
part of the owner of the latter. Scores
of cases are recorded where a wild
gobbler from the woods has taken pos
session of a flock of common turkeys
sometimes after first battling with and
killing the domestic gobbler. The re
sults of such a cross in almost every
case have been so satisfactory that
such matings are much desired by tur
key raisers in those sections, and
young wild birds are caught for this
purpose and brought up with common
young turkeys.
"Very often nests of wild turkey
eggs are found in the woods and
hatched on the farm. When raised
from the egg they become more gentle
and fearless than the domestic turkey,
but if chased or frightened they re
cover their wild habits very quickly.
Wild turkey crosses are hardier and
healthier than common turkeys and
rarely have disease. Half blood hens
are generally too wild, but half blood
gobblers are not so wild and are suit
able for crossing with domestic hens.
A quarter wild cross is better for prac
tical breeding than a pure wild or half
wild bird. Half wild crosses do well
if allowed a large range, but are not
suited to woody lands or ‘as easily kept
on small ranges as the domestic tur
key.”
Wild turkey hens under domestica
tion and wild first-cross hens often
disappear in the spring and are not
seen again until fall, when they usual
ly return to their own home with a
brood of nearly full grown turkeys.
Half blood mothers make their young
too wild. Half blood reared by do
mestic hens are not much inclined to
stray. Quarter bloods under certain
conditions may be as wild as the wild
birds of the woods.
There Is a growing demand for
wild gobblers, and farmers who may
be so fortunate as to procure them will
get rich.
Alfiilfs ••Meal.*’
Recently a high protein stock food
has appeared in the market, known as
alfalfa meal. It is prepared by cur
ing alfalfa in the best possible man
ner. For this purpose the hay must
be green, cut when the first blossoms
begin to appear, and cured without in
jury from rain or sun, then by a spe
cial machine this palatable hay is
ground Into a line meal and placed on
the market as a food especially desira
ble for dairy cmi, young stie-k of oil
kinds, Including hogs and itoulity. This
meal has proved wonderfully impuior.
Being finely ground. It <an I*- fd Pi
sny kind of farm slick, it is par
tp-ulaily satisfactory for elly horses.
! where the standard feed la corn, oats
and hay. With these feeds tlura Is
danger of horses brooming f< v-tl*h and
| healed, particularly during hot treath
> rr. The meal is practically a balanced
ration. Four ot flve pounds per day,
with the usual amount of corn and
oat a. gives ap tenth and i eau lie for work
ihotaes, ft has also lawn fed eaten
lalvety to fattening aha ra and ctyntet
| aefe **>• lead * flat t# of huge guerrfj
i free f corn.
SAVANNAH MORNING NEWS: MONDAY. DECEMBER 19. 1904.
THE
BEST CHRISTMAS GIFT
For Wife, Mother, Daughter
Sister or Sweet Heart
tiy this Sign j These Machines
you may know \ are never sold
and will find |to dealers.
Singer Stores /\ tA Only from Maker
Everywhere I to User
A small payment down, the rest at
convenient intervals.
Four different Kinds and a wide
range of prices to suit.
SelectNow-Delivery when wanted
Get the Best and you get the Singer
150 Whitaker Street,
Savannah, - Georgia.
SEVERAL PLANS
FOR THE CANAL
Continued from First Page.
'ten feet above mean sea level and
falls ten feet below: whereas, the fluc
tuation of the tide of the Caribbean
at Colon is less than two feet. The
construction of a dam at Gamboa, with
the necessary spillways, as noted in
the previous plan, would be the same
under the sea level plan as under the
thirty or sixty-foot level.
AVonld Provide Water Supply.
“The construction of the Gamboa
dam would provide the water supply
for the entire line of the canal, in
cluding the cities of Panama and Co
lon. It would also provide a power
plant for the generation of electric
power sufficient to furnish ample pow
er for the operation of the Panama
Railroad and for the operation of any
machinery that might be used in the
construction of the canal. It would
require two years to construct this
dam and, roughly estimated, its cost,
including spillways, would be between
$15,000,000 and $16,000,000, not including
the power plant.”
What the Cost Would Be.
Asked by members of the committee
for an estimate of the cost of the
various plans, Mr. Wallace said the
best estimate that could be made at
present would be Rased on the esti
mate of the former commission of
$200,000,000 for a ninety-foot level canal.
Figuring with this as a basis, the
sixty-foot level canal would cost $225,-
000,000, could be open for traffic in
ten years and fully completed in
twelve years; the thirty-foot level
would cost $250,000,000, open for traffic
in twelve years and fully completed in
fifteen years; the sea level canal would
cost $300,000,000, could be open for traf
fic in fifteen years and completed in
twenty years.
Chairman Hepburn's question de
veloped that the estimate of time to
build the canal \\‘as based on a ten
hour day and that with the construc
tion of the Gamboa darn and the opera
tion of the power plant, electric light
sufficient to illumine the whole of Cule
bra cut might be had, thus making
practical 'the working of two or more
shifts, and shortening the time of con
struction. Mr. Wallace stated that the
excavation of this cut was the feature
of the construction of the canal that
took the time. He said:
AH Ilepeml* I'pon Cnlebro.
“Upon the economical and efficient
handling of the material from Culebra
cut depends the cost and the time it
will take to complete the canal. Every
other question and every other prob
lem connected with the entire work
Is subordinate and inferior to the
problem of the excavation and dis
posal of the material from the Culebra
cut; that is the principal problem of
this work. The control of the Chagres,
the construction of the various dams,
the construction of harbor improve
ments and all works, are relatively
less Important.”
Reverting again to the question of
the Bohio dam, upon which depends
the construction of the ninety-foot
level canal. Chairman Hepburn ask
ed questions which brought out a
statement from Mr. Wallace as to the
probability of finding proper founda
tion for the dam. Mr. Wallace said:
Beil Rook Wasn't Found.
“It is very uncertain. What will be
found when more borings are taken
Is entirely theoretical. But the results
of the borings so far taken at the va
rious sites investigated have been dis
appointing. The average depth bored
without finding bed rock has been 163
feet."
As to foundation for the proposed
Gamboa dam, which is required in all
of the alternate plans, Mr. Wallace
said:
“At Gamboa the elevation of rock on
the site of the proposed dam is at sea
level, and numerous borings taken at
that point, entering the rock twenty
to twenty-five feet In depth, would In
dicate that at Gamboa there Is no
question as to the ability to find a
satisfactory foundation for a dam at
a maximum depth of sea level. The
probable method of construction, say
of the Gamboa dam, or even of the
Bohio dam, would be the construction
of a core of concrete and the filling in
with the waste dirt out of Culebra
cut. The Gamboa dam can be con
structed cheaper than the Bohio dam
on account of the fact that the foun
dation Is much nearer the surface and
Dropsy and Skin Diseases.
HOW THEY CAN BE CURED.
..Numerous men and women suffer from dropsy and akin diseases, and
don't know what to do for It. For the benefit of these we will tell a simple
way by which you can be sure of results that are both satisfactory and
t permanent. The mistake that so many make when they
have a skin disease like psoriasis, eceema, salt rheum,
tetter, acne,cancer, boll*, ulcer or Mlinilar eruptions. I* to
go to the neareat druggist and get hi* opinion. Of course
be recommend* something mil of stock —a salve, oint
ment, Thl* seldom prove* HaHefartory, because skin dis
eases are usually blood disease* and *toina< H diseases,
and hence a comprehensive treatment for the entire con
stitution Is necessary. You can get such a treatment
from no one bill a doctor who has studied these diseases,
and mads a successful Specialty of them—a man like
Dr. J. Newton Hathaway, who has been practicing suc
cessfully for over a quarter 0 f !t century. Dropsy, too.
Is a field wherein he I* one of the few who have succeed
ed. Few people, when they have dropsy, know who lo
go t for relief and curs. The hands, the fast, the legs.
DIMIAIH AMAV stomach or chest are swollen, there are s*he# and peine
1(11*4(01/1 if a• ilie and relief Is an Immediate necessity. Instead of wasting
zMil. I Muhll.li- lime or money call oil (Ms eminent specialist. Dr. Heth
•if and kf/ad lie. sway. There la no uU'.lion about him curing you and as
HaMr Niae-fahet. lie makes no charge for the esamlnshon of any disease
end hie advice and guidance thereon you can consult him a* any time,
feeling sure that no charge wll! result If I* Is Inconvenient fer you to cell
then write him for ttetr Fsernlnetlwn blank booklet et. Attend Is thta
promptly The eddteae Is as follows J ffewtor Hathaway M D, >(, g
Hrvai eirei hasennah. <ia f/HU# hours It n is It m . lls , Fis t p
M. HuiMlAjM \(l M* I/# f y
the dam site much nearer the Culebra
cut.”
Advantages of Sea I.evel Canal.
Answering a question about the
operation of a sea level tfanal, Mr. Wal
lace said:
“A sea level canal would be less ex
pensive to maintain, less expensive to
operate, save time passing through it
and could be widened and deepened,
when required, without interfering with
ti'afllc.”
Mr. Wallace said that he was not
prepare'd to estimate as to time or cost
or plan of a canal until he had com
pleted taking the dat'a he is now com
piling. He has several engineers at
work along the line of the canal, each
engaged in compiling data on a gicen
problem, but he could not then tell
when his recommendations as to the
t 4 anal will be ready.
Work Is In Progress.
Work is now going on in the Culebra
cut, one American steam shovel and
some of the French machinery being
in operation. Fourteen American steam
shovels Wave been purchased, one of
which is being set up. The others are
to be delivered at the rate of one a
month.
During October, 3,185 men were on
the pay roils of the commission. Of
these, 2,165 were laborers receiving 15
cents, silver, an hour; 245 were labor
ers receiving 17% cents an hour; 775
were machinists, boilermakers. pipe
fitters, plumbers, carpenters and ma
sons; 256 were Americans from the
United Sfates, whose compensation is
paid in gold, and who fill positions as
engineers, clerks and foremen. More
laborers are to be employed in the Im
mediate future.
Mr. Wallace is somewhat doubtful of
the practical working of the civil serv
ice order as recently applied to carfa.l
employes.
TO GET RID OF THE LOBBIES.
Continued from First Page.
ing exhausted his entire supply of
seed, he managed by making trades
with other members to secure many
times his own quota of seed Mr. John
son expects to spend his Christmas re
cess agitating the proposition to es
tablish an Irrigation farm in his dis
trict, near Spartanburg.
WILL BE NO QUORUM.
Congressmen Leaving the Capital
Sooner Than They Should.
Washington, Dee. 18. —The exodus of
members of the House from the city
since the adjournment Friday indicates
that the lower branch of Congress will
be without a quorum to-morrow.
Should any member make this point
the only thing that can be done Is to
adjourn from day to day until Wed
nesday, when the Christmas holiday
recess until Jan. 4 begins.
The question of where the inaugural
ball shall be held is the only matter
of legislation In sight In the House for
the week. This will come up under
suspension of the rules.
The Senate has approved the pen
sion office, and the House the Congres
sional Library. There are indications
that a deadlock has been reached on
the matter, and that the Capitol build
ing will be proposed as a compromise.
Senate Adjourns Wednesday.
Washington, Dec. 18.—The Senate
will adlourn on Wednesday for the
Christmas holidays, and no business
will be attempted previous to that time.
After being called to order on Mon
day the Senate will adjourn until Wed
nesday and Wednesday’s proceedings
will be confined to mere formalities.
Soon after thd Senate reconvenes In
January the Committee on Appropria
tions will report the legislative appro
priation bill. It will be the policy of
the Senate to take It up as soon as
possible, and to have other supply
measures follow speedily.
KILLED BA" THE FALL.
A'oung Man Wan Thrown from Ills
llorse Avar Adel.
Adel, Ga„ Dec. 18.—Mr. Cliff George,
son of a prominent planter of the riv
er bend district, this county, while re
turning from a sugar boiling was
thrown by his horse and killed In
stantly about 10 o'clock last night.
NEGRO CHARGES HALF
BROTHER WITH PEONAGE
First Case on Record of a gro Be
ing Charged With the Offense.
Athens, Ga., Dec. 18.—A great deal
has been said about white men of the
South holding the negroes in a state
of peonage, and many cases of that
kind have found their way into the
federal courts. Clarke county comes
to the front with a case that Is en
tirely different from any ever yet re
ported. It is the case of one negro
who swe*ars that another negro is hold
ing him in peonage.
Robert Christopher, a negro living
near Whitehall, took out a warrant,
charging his half-brother, George
Christopher with peonage. Robert al
leges that George is compelling him
-to work for him without any legal
right to do so, ‘and he seeks the aid
of the federal court to make George
let him go.
This is probably the first case of the
kind in the history of the county. It
has hitherto been considered a racial
question, but here is a case In which
race cuts no figure, and in which two
negroes are having it out with e'ach
other.
The committal trial of the accus
ed negro will be held before Commis
sioner Kinnebrew, and the develop
ments of the case promise to be full of
interest.
MAN AND WIFE CHARGED
With Haring Used the United State*
Mall* to Defraud.
Central City. W. Va„ Dec. 18.—J. C.
McElroy and his wife are under arrest
here, charged with using the United
States mails for fraudulent purposes.
The officials claim they have evidence
showing that the accused have been
dealing in green goods in this part of
the state. The woman was arrested
last night and owing to her prominence
in this vicinity the action caused a
great sensation.
Quarreled Over Card Game,
Knoxville, Tenn., Dec. 18.—A special
to the Journal and Tribune from Jel
lico, Tenn., says:
Near Red Ash. Ky., this afternoon
Cal Marcum shot J. Marsh Siler
through the body, the bullet penetrat
ing both lungs. With others they were
playing cards, when a dispute arose
over 20 cents. Siler reached to get the
money, when Marcum shot him and
then beat him over the head with his
pistol. Marcum has not been arrested.
University Boy*’ Holiday*.
Athens, Ga., Dec. 18.—The University
of Georgia will close on the 21st inst.,
and Lucy Cobb Institute will close on
the following day for Christmas. This
year the holiday of the university boys
will cover just one week. They are
expected to report on the 29th inst.
(Sta "
ol OP/MMlj
JLywL t
K|
HP Qwiitj
K'fcO-Jls-v3o-35<.
lU. 'felnUtM.
W* -druL
JERRY GEORGE’S
New Restaurant.
Superb and Delicious Menu serv
ed from 12 to 3 and from 6 to 9
o’clock. Price 35 cents.
Ladies’ and Gentlemen’s Dining
Room up-stairs. Parties of from
8 to 40 served promptly.
Christmas Candy
The largest and finest stock in the
city.
Fancy Baskets and Boxes
Filled with the nicest candv.
Our 5-lb. French Mixture SI.OO
For Xmas Gifts.
In our Restaurant Christmas
shoppers will find the choicest
atid best, and moderate charges.
ELECTRIC LIGHTS
ARE
SAFE
LIGHTS
They arc also aatiKfartorjr to
tlic user In every way—clrmi, con
venient, bright and MATCTII.KMK
In more ways than one. Absolutely
free from dnnger.
We pay particular attention to
keeping mir cuelotiiera pleased,
mul ure always glad to lie adtlsed
of any Innihlc either with our ser
vice or Its inet.
Write or icle|dione us and learn
more about llis ad i ant ages of
electric lighting
Savannah Electric Cos.
1 11 1 setae Hawk flanging.
friAMP/Ms M#
LIQUORS I LIQUORS! I
Up to ou* cars with orders t but oar up
per story not shallow. Room to take care
of all that comes. Quality for price we
ship will tell. Rush orders for Christmas.
A. EHRLICH & BRO.,
Wholesale Grocers and Liquors,
hi, 1 13, 115 Bay Street, west, - - - Savannah, Ga.
~ynf^HASMMI<ING^UPPLY7ar
126-130 Bay Street, West.
JOBBERS.
IIJOV T £t vT^ KKS ’ SA * ,TA KY PLUMBING GOODS. WROUGHT
!2!| 0 \ PIP . F “. Fn I rINGS 7 etc ' AU sup pile* for STEAM. WATER and GAS.
Sole Agents for the celebrated HUXL KY VALVFA
Wool, Hides, Wax, Raw Furs and Skins.
Write for Prices.
D. KIRKLAND,
We offer the following list as a suggestion for appropriate
Xmas gifts. Furniture always is pleasing because it’s use
ful and ornamental.
•
SEWING TABLES MORRIS CHAIRS
WORK BASKETS SHAVING STANDS
MISSION CLOCKS CHIFFONIERS.
MISSION CHAIRS CELLORETTES
LADIES’ DESKS CHAFING DISH CABINETS
TOILET TABLES COUCHES
PICTURES PICTURES PICTURES
LINDSAY & MORGAN
DIAMONDS
And Diamond Jewelry of every
description. Gems mounted to order
to meet any taste or requirement.
STERLING SILVERWARE.
Cut Glassware, Fine Umbrellas.
Gold and Silver Novelties.
117 BROUGHTON, WEST
Sternberg & Cos.
The freshest, newest and handsomest
CHRISTHAS DISPLAY
In Georgia, and LOWEST PRICES.
Open late every evening this week. Call and view
our selections. No obligation to buy.
SILVER.
KALOLA
Continues to be praised by thousands for wonderful
cures perfected.
Kalola Cures Indigestion, Constipation, Liver and
Kidney diseases by removing the cause.
We have hundreds of testimonials by home people
who have been cured by KALOLA.
Half teaspoonful Kalola taken occasionally before
breakfast in half glass warm water insures perfect health
and appetite.
KALOLA removes all blotches and pimples from skin.
Many young ladies in Savannah and elsewhere have been
made PRETTIER by using Kalola.
“Take Kalola Six Days and Eat Anything Yoo Want."
Not equaled as a morning laxative.
For sale by all druggists, 50c and sl.
KALOLA COMPANY.
21-23 Bay Street, West. Savannah, Ga.
W. U. Itlll.Wl'll, Vice I‘reoldent nml Oneral Manager.