Newspaper Page Text
Americus
Recorder.
Established 1879.
AMERICUS, GEORGIA, WEDNESDAY. JANUARY 21, 1885.
Daily, 1*kr Year,...$6.00
Weekly, “ ... 2.00
tWUARlTAI, PIIIZK A7.VOUO »1
Ticket* ouiyIS Sliarei lu proportion.
A>iericus Recorder
PUnUSHKD »v
> Xj. OXjE^SIM KH.
„ ( l „x ON (OTTOS ATtaiJE.
i'lti)l l,SSii).\llABIIHm:sS Willis Louisiana State Lottery Co. | that would fitly adorn a temper-
.mnmiin “ H’e do hereby certify (hat we supervise ! aD< ‘ C * ec . lur< ‘‘
\lMEKICUS. l>w arrangements for all the Monthly and ' A bright little girl gave away
* ‘ [ Semi-Annual Drawing% of The Louisiana what was regarded as a very pleas-
Vmei ii'Os is thsciunty seat of Sumter , State Lottery Company,anil in petion man-
u IV (ieorai:!, situated i.n tlio South-\ age and control lAt Drawings themselves,
01 I ij railroad, 71 miles south* ot of and that the same arc conducted with hon-
M , > anil nlinnt 80 miles nurlh of the , 'sty, fairness, and in good faith toward aU
ri Vi ta l iii '. It is situated in the finest partus, and we authorise the Company to
V't u of Geortii. raising a greater vari- use this certificate, with Jac-similes of our
Vv I aiT.ciHiir.il and horticultural pro- signatures attached, in its advertisements'
tlier part of the Booth,
A FAT HLA'.’K HOTTI.F. figure up how many $5 bills that
bottle contained I”
“Two hundred and sixty.”
j “Yes, or $1,300. But this was
There came to light in Macon not all. We saved enough iu that
Wednesday, says the Telegraph j time outside of the bottle to blty a
and Messenger, a New Year's story 1 little home.”
TOOMBS AND RY3IJKRS.
During the earlier days of Cap-
lain Isaiah Ilyndera, who died, a
few days since in New York City,
3 fruits. grain and vege-
tablciiof ib.j teni pc lute and semi-tropical
wheat, corn, rye, oats, rice, Irish
znd sweet potatoes, peanut*, chufag,
aotton peas, sugar cane, apples, pears,
pencilr H , gripes plums and other fruits.
The climate is mild and equable, and one
of the most healthy in the world, the air
l.piti • pure and omiud moat beneficial lor
lung and throat- diseases. All kinds of
•int i »or work can be performed without
inconvenience from summer bent or
wmt» r cold. Americas lias a population
i f O.tHK), is beautifully situated on high
unit rolling ground and toasts nf some of
llii Ii.iudnuutsl business blocks in tho
South. The city his lino public schools;
j,,, ,1 churches; n largo public library,
oil, duly, one semi-weekly and two
weekly newspapers; a n-w opeia bongo,
completely furLlshil wilu sceneiy nnd
Mpihlo of seating 1.000 persons: a well
• uginizrd lire depslliuent, including
ant secret. It happened in ibis
way : The Telegraph man stumbled
into a millinery store Wednesday,
and while waiting to get the atten
tion of the lady who makes the
feaiaie population pretty, idly lis-
lened to a conversation between a
'/fitted j customer—evidently the wife of a
“But are you not afraid that in and when he made sporting excur-
breaking the bottle your husband sions throughout the South, mis-
Commissioner*.
CAPITAL PIMZE, *?.%,000.
100,000 I lekels at Five Dollars Each.
Fractions, in Fifths, in Proportion.
LIST OP PHIZES:
1 CAPITAL PRIZE $75,000
1 do do 20,000
1 do do 10,000
C PRIZES OF fl.000 12,000
. 10,000
. 10,000
10,000
‘20.000 I
1,000..
the st
p av , d, i»eworod and lighted; there arel Ptbuary 10,188.1-
tw.i flouring luills, a cottonseed oil mill, j
ill ning mill and variety works, carriage)
fuvrv, and a number of minor man facto- |
rit>; about two hundred hr ms are engaged j
id mercantile huainii*; three banks with !
an abundance of capital; two good ;
hotels lurniah good nccommodattioo. !
Americus is tho centre ot trade for six |
conoticM comprising the richest agricul
tural section in Georgia, the average an
nual cotton rccciptM being 30,000 babe, j
which will be largely increased by the *o «io b(
emuplfetion of the Preston and Lumpkin j}”
railroad now in process of construction, poq
It is the largest city in Southwest Geor- two do s
gw, and has been appropriately naintd J Approximation Pr
the “Commercial Capital” of that Rec- 9 ,,
tion, and it is rapidly growing in popn- |
lati oi and wealth. As n plane of bu*i- M*T l’rize«, amounting to 9*216,140
ne.v. rendonco it prefer ntd attractions I Application for rates to cluWs should he nindc
1,1.1m! by few cuics in the t-nulh. ! lh « U.mp»ny hi New OtIwim.
,/ ... t hi i . • : !■ or further Information write rleaily, invlr**
1 1 ; .T») of all kinds is compar.itivelj f„ | address. POSTAL NOTES,' Eipreee
eh'.ip, nltlroigb rapidly advancing in ; M nirc-* ” - - **- *
value: tho inhabitants of both city and | “IT *<**1
coniitry arc cultivated, courteous and
dial wetconi #
New Orleeu
M. A. DAUPHIN,
007 Seventh M-. YVn*liiu K t»n, D. V
Make P. O. Money Order* paynwlc and .tdiirc**
—! mechanic—and the milliner. The
lady was looking at a very pretty
hat tor her little girl who stood at
her’side with hungry eyes. The
hat was purchased, and the Tele
graph man mentally thought it
looked like extravagance for a
mechanic’s family to throw away
four dollars and a half on a little
girl’s hat.
As this was the only purchase in
which the child seemed interested,
she idled up to where the Tele-
grayh man was standing and art
lessly said : “We dot lots er money
a spi.kmoid opportunity to ! now.” The reporter here mentalU
•hawing, ci,ass b. in -THE academy | cursed himself for forgetting to
Incor)«,rat,-J in ISOS (or VS y»»i> I,, tin- Lt-gi-la-
lure for Educational and Chat liable purposes—
with a capital of #l,000,000-to which a reserve
fund of over #650,000 has since boon added.
Hy an overwhelmine popular vote it* franrhlsr
v:i* made n part of the present Htate Constitution
adopted December 2<l, A. P., 1879.
pa fjtontt.
nber Drnwlufti
bo-iiit.il’l •
600...
terprfalog traJcamcn, ju-
dici uh capitalist* >tn«l tnduKtriona fann
er* this hoc lion of Georgia offer* lino op-
portutii'ics. Any Inlorniatiou in tcgaril
to city or country will bn cheerfully fnr-
nialieU by aildreswing the AmEUICTh Re-
coHDKlt. Americus, Ga.
LA MYERS.
C. !!. Md’KOItY,
ATTORNEY AT LAW.
93 iinil upward b) Express at our expense) ad
N. A. DAUPHIN,
ELLAVIDLE, (
■*-AH «Ini'll* from AS
0 or under, $8;
MISCEI. L A XEO l \S.
E'«* J Jli'Ur. C. Horace MoCall.
Moiiiiiiieiital Marble Works,
.HILI.EK h MiCAl.l , Prnprielurs,
went Corner of tho I'ublio S«piare,
AMERICUS, GA.
Monuments, Tombs, Etc., Etc
Registered L«
NIOW Olll.KAN* NATIONAI. BANK
New Orlraui, Lu.
Moat Marltot
PROVISION STORE.
W. H.&T. M.C0BB
Having purrh«M d from li t
Mark, t u,d Provision Sto.o
COTTON AVBNUB
keep on band the very best ctlH of|;
BEEF, PORK, kill m S.tlSARE,
«*t Italian
illluu fo
American Marble
isflrry Kudos
Anderson ville School
"ill Open Spring T.-rm Jaiiii.iry
I'.’Ill, tsst.
uml also n full line of
Green Groecries unit Provisions,
em<>racliiff all kind* of Vegetables and Fruits lu
their reason, Cnnaed Goods,etc. It Is thelt aim
to keep i first < las* c*tahli*hincnt, and give their
customer* Kt)od (fotsis at the iowesi prices.
fWHiici.est price paid for Cattle, llojr*, and *
kinds of country proanee,
Americus, Dec. 15. lSN2.tt
THE SCIEKI OF LIFE. O.VLV $1
'"JIL-Kanb. 'i i'EaDAT, i buy a ticket for the last lottery
'-lITth Monthly Draw , ‘ J
i uiawing.
| “Where did you get it, sis ?”
‘•Papa broke tli’ bottle.”
“Broke the bottle?”
“'Essur; th’ bottle was jus’ as
fuller money as it tood be, an’
we’s ’icb now.”
No true reporter can be idle
wben such an item as this is in
io'ooo j speaking distance, and it was not
'JJ’JJJj | more than a few minutes before the
a-V»e | child’s mother was persuaded into
° telling the following story, and
yet she never dreamed thnt every
word of it was being jotted down
by the shorthand finger of memory
upon the thumb worn pages of a
mental note book.
"I have passed through the or
deal of a drunkard’s wile, and 1 am
t -o happy now to go over what
and how much I suffered. My hus
band drank heavily, and often half
of his wages went for drink. He
kept a large black bottle of whisky
ali tbe time in the house, in addi
tion to what he drank in town. On
Christinas Eve night, five years
ago, he came home drunk, and, as
something had gone wrong with
him, he was in the woist kind of a
humor. Our eldest boy was in the
crib very sick with a fever, and
there was not a cent of money in
tbe house to buy him even the
cheapest toy. My husband had
been away trom borne all day, and
being drunk had forgot all about
his Christmas. I pul my husband
to bed, and returned to the bedside
ot my dying boy to watch and
weep. It ras nearly daybreak
wben I saw my precious son sink
ing fast. Bushing out of the bouse
I called in a lady friend, and then
aroused my husband. The sleep
had somewhat sobered him, and aa
will break bis resolution?”
“No; because we have slatted
another bottle bank,” said the lady
with a happy smile.
The husband is a Macon mechan
ic, well known, and enjoys the re
spect and esteem of all." He says
lie never knew how much genuine
pleasure there was at home with
his loved ones uutil he got sober
enough to appreciate It, and to fill
instead of cmply^ the fat black
bottle.
The Tar and Feather Temperauee So
ciety In Connecticut.
On the night of Dec. 31, 1883,
says a Norwalk letter, three young
men sat around a tavern fire in
Georgetown, a little village about
10 miles from Norwich, Conn.
The three were intoxicated and
were watching tbe old year out.
As the clock struck 12 one of the
youug men said: “Boys, the new
year is here, now let’s swear off
and form a temperance society.”
The others, in spirit of lun, sgrecd.
The articles ot association were
then and there drawn up. They
were similar to the rules of other
temperance organizations with one
exception. The clause contaning
the pledge had the following ponal-
cliaoce, says tbe Macon Telegraph
and Messenger, wrecked him ia
Warreuton, Ga.
The cards had run unluckily, for
a flush sport rarely collides with
the law, and the Captain found
himself facing an indictment for
dealing faro, with no friends on
the jury panel, aDd so counsel to
stand between him and tbe prose
outing attorney. Robert Toombs,
then a young attorney, who rode
tbe circuit io which Warren coun
ty was embraced, was at court,and
espoused the cause of tbe friendless
aud unlucky gambler.
Bo skillfully did he conduct the
case that Captain Kynders escaped
with no punishment more severe
than a nominal fine and a repri
mand from the presiding judge.
Counsel and client parted at the
court house door, the gambler
promising to redeem the obliga
tion—the young counsel flushed
with triumph, putting away the ef
fusive thanks with a lordly air.
Years rolled by, and Toombs
had become a prominent member
of the Whig party and a leading
member of Congress, and Captain
Hyudrrs with his Empire Club
was a power in the politics of New
York City on tbe Democratic side.
After the Mexican warlt will be
remembered that a movement
who shall drink any intoxicating
liquor, for any purpose whatsoever
between now and midnight of Dec.
31, 1884, shall be tarred and featb
ered.” This clause becoming known
gained the club tbe natuo of the
“Tar and Feather Temperance So
ciety.” Meetings of tn • society of
three were frequently held. Grad
ually applications lor membership
began to pour in, and before six
months had passed the society
numbered 30 members. The year
of abstinence expired on Tuesday
night, and a grand ball wag given,
to which a large number of the best
people of the place were invited.
The hall was filled. At midnight
the President announced that tire
pledge had expired. By au unani
uious vole, the pledge was renewed
for another year, and some twenty
new names were added to the roll
The peculiar penalty proves an at
tractive advertisement, and tho
matter is tbe talk of tbe neighbor
hood. Nearly every resident wears
the society’s badge. The badge is
blue ribbon, with a lump of tar
filled with chicken feathers at
tached.
he loved his boy devotedly, he wa» ' locn made. For several weeks
rl'.
£-0.00 i
• un
id «2f. P0 per
• public- fluid about UO p<-i
r*l and tuition tvn dollars )»b*T
.inoMli, paid uh'tidily mad
Mr.su* $3.00 per month. Foi
‘U rination apply to
A J. CLARK, rrincipal,
Andersouville, Ga.
•**< odtf
lander
1885.
K. MATHIS, Fri I pal.
tt*!.-! cbifr[p; of the iilmve school
% •January 12th. nixf. I have
y fl ’ r <'f Amlticns before,
respectfully nsk a renewal of
wr ’’“PP'irl.
I eum<. Hates, Etc. :
^ncei 1 ’ r " tv ' , ‘ ■' "- rl “ “th. ...f-gfO
r-t-CiZ '’ * ler ,n " ntl1 3.0U
•&'»onuT “ “*• ‘“ J «•*•’ s ‘*”-
•Itc3hf *'* 1'tiuctpnl.
DURHAM’S
IMPROVED
I Mo
y .,uW .HYSELF.
i (iroat Medical lUrk on .Manhood.
K\! ,.u*te*l Vitality, Nt-rvou* and Fliy-ical I>-
l>#»iiti« In man. Error* of
Youth, a> d tho >
dlarrrtlon or t**
you nr. middle airo end old. tt contain* 125 [»r«*
M-rption* for nil Brute nnd chronic diseases, each
one o| «hich I* InvaluaMe. 80 lound )•? the au
thur, whose . xivriem-t* or *1 vrar* I* *a»h s*
probably never n. fof* fc
chin. Boo [tact s liound
»the lot
pilil. Hi
Gold Died-
y.dic..| A
fsny phyai-
eueh muslin,
L*d covers, full silt, fu man teed to ‘*ea finer
.■very *eiisc—mechanical, literary and
nul—tBun acy other work sold tn this
lor or die money will Iki ref unded
iu*tsue.* Price only #1 by mail, poet
iurratirc *;unpie 6 cents. Hcud now.
tied the author by the National
clMlo
. ;o the officers of which# he
cut, I
ml*" of socieiy t« whom the
II not be u-eful, whether y >uth,
, instructor or clergyman.-Ar«
Addro* the |V*)mdy Medical Institute, or Dr.
W. II. Parker. No 4 Hulfiuch Street, Uoston,
M i*?, who may be consulted on all do-ease* ie
quirbiK *k II ar.d ex[x*ricnce. Chronic and obstl-
I.ate dlsesce* tb it ll»\e laffl. d tin M r A I skill
of all other physician* a speei FI K./N L>alt>
Such treated •u>t'e**fully w "THYSELF
M-llUlo!
e oft.lltii
• I-aper
• 1'Jml
toon beuJlug over the little fello
begging him to say something to
him.
The little fellow slowly turned
his eyes toward hi, father and
said; “I’m going to die, papa, for
1 see the angels beckoning me to
come. Tbis is Christmas morning
papa: please let me see what Santa
T1IK .STATE SILVER-STREAKED.
Dalton, Ga.,Jan. 19 [Special.J
Extraordinary discoveries of sil
ver in the Cohuttah mountains have
past Jerome Prince, of Boston,and
an assayist of San Francisco, have
tieeu pursuing investigations in
that region. They are making their
tests with an electric machine, and
to-day announced the result of their
investigation. They state they have
traced a vein 1,500 feet wide, which
extends entirely through the moun
l/sirs, jriuw-C IUV B’.V "»HV • ,
Claii8 put in my slocking. 1 My * a,n » a distance of eight or nine
husband went to the mantel and m 'l es - ri |e y represent Boston cap-
took down the little stocking. It i w , ll ° ‘j av « extensive mines
was empty! He stood still al , f | in Nova Scotia, Colorado aud Cal-
stared at it for a moment, and God j ‘fo rn ' a ’ ln< ^ 8la ’ ,c l * la ^ Georgia
only knows the agony of his heart j m > ne s are tfjn times more valuable
in that abort lime. He turned to I ^ an an . v thc y ever before assayed,
the bed, not knowing what to say, a8aa y® have run as high as 80
but our boy wsuld not have heard l >cr cc P t an( t “talc that twen-
him had the poor man's breaking I million dollars could not buy
heart allowed him to sneak. Ullr I the vein they have tested. An ex-
bov was dead' tensive smeller will be erected at
“The day before New Year’s my I),lton - 0reat excitement prevails
husband called for the bottle. May I throughout north Georgia over the
God forgive me for my feelings at j wonderful discoveries,
that rniuute, fur I wished he. too,
A l.iicky “.Vemiihis Ledger and Ap
peal” Carrier.
The $50,000, the Second Grand
Fi'ize in Tbe Louisian, State Lot
tery, drawn yesterday at New Or
leans, was partly held here, and
partly in Cincinnati and San Fran
cisco. Among the lucky meu is
it and all enjoy tbe contents.' You ^ r - Gus Phillips, a route carrier
can imagine how iiappv I rva«. He on tl* e Ledger and Appeal. He
had sworn off many times before, has one tenth of the ticket and is
but I knew be was in earnest this J entitled to $5,000. He will visit
time. We made a calculation and tl*® New Orleans Exposition and
estimated that whisky cost him, present it to M. A. Dauphin, in
taking the past year as a basis, on ' New Orleans, to be cashed In per-
an average of $5 a week. You sec i son— Memphis (Tenn.) Ledger,
were dead. I obeyed him ruccbani
calfy. To my surprise he took the
bottle in his hands und, pouring
the whisky on tbe ground, sjiid :
‘I will drink no more: and the
money I would spend for whisky
we will put iu this bottle, ami at
tbe end of five years we will break
F0K SALE KENT, OK LEASE
A plantation of 1,700 acres in Terrell
Coun-J; 1,000 acres cleared. Onm* land; , eoo< l ,l eH l of his money went to Dec. 17.
good build i Off h. Will sell on long time, ® . * \,„ nnnma f _
wiih v«od security, and will sell all stock, P*y court ilnt * for drunkenness -
tools, fringe, etc. Or will lease or rent Well, it was decided to put %o a Lx-I’resident Hayes isthe proud
on g ml tenuH, with good security. This week in the bottle for five years,! possessor of ninety-eight Leghorn
Isa .plendidi nppi.riuniiT lor an en- gome what would. The time wae bent and a large number of ounning
at^aouBDER oScs'" * “ p q oj>t Mow Y«st1* d *jr, »nd the little nbteke. H» U well potted os
Xsrsmbsr«, ism. wit big hlsok bottle wa, broken. Now I the lay of th* Und.
made by Bailie Peyton and other
Whig leaders of the South to nom
inate General Taylor far the Pres
idency. It was met by the prompt
and intense opposition of Mr. Clay,
who ruled his party with an iron
rod, and who had a following as
powerful and devoted as that now
numbered by Blaiue. New York
City, then as now, was the political
centre, lr*m which all movements
radiated. It was of the highest
importance that a Taylor boom he
Inaugurated at that point, but the
leaders of the Whig party of the
city, who were partisans of Mr.
Clay, successfully resisted any at
tempt to accomplish this. Every
speaker that was sent there was
publicly received, wined,and dined
and greeted by a Urge meeting,
but so soon as he attempted to set
forth the merits and claims of
General Taylor, he was silenced
by hoots, yells, cat calls, whistles,
and all tbe appliances known to be
effective in breaking down a public
speaker.
At length Mr. Toombs was se
lected to lead the forlorn hope.
Wben he arrived in New York and
announced bis purpose, Mr. Orin-
nell and leading Whigs assured
him that his mission would be a
fruitless one. He kept his coun
sel and hie temper and retired to
hie hotel, the Astor House, from
which he addressed a note to Cap
tain Uynders.
The summons speedily brought
the Captain. Toombs told of his
mission and its difficulties, and in
voked hie assistance. “Come
down," said the Captain, “and see
tbe boye."
Toombs was carried down to th*
headquarters of tbe Empire Club,
was introduced with proper com
mendation by tbe Captain, and
over a fiiendly glass all around,
accompanied by cigars, the cam
paign wae laid.’
“You shall speak as long as you
want to," said the Captain, “or I
and my boys will know the reason
why you can’t." Cautioning
Toombs to bandy with tbe crowd
for awhile at night, they parted.
The hall was filled to overflow
ing, the stage wae occupied by all
of tbe Whig leader*, but promi
nent among tbe spectators might
have been seen Capt. Uynders, and
here ana there the most fearless of
the members of the Empire Club.
Each one of these bore a piece of
chalk and was instructed to mark
the back* of all who were engaged
in disturbing the speaker. Toombs
was introduced regularly and pro
ceeded with his exordium. When
he referred to Gen. Taylor, a din
arose aa though bedlam had broken
loose. Toombs coolly received the
angry ovation, and responded to
those m**t prominent and noisy.
All at once Ryndcrs mounted a
chair and with the voice of a Sten-
tor shouted : “Put out the chalk-
backs ! d—n them; put them out I”
and seizing a burly rough be pro
ceeded to execute the order. In a
moment the fellows who had been
trained and hired to put down Tay
lor speakers were sprawling upon
th* sidewalk, with torn clothe*,
battered hats aad bruited la***.
There was profound order In th*
ball, and Toombs proceeded, with
bis fiery eloquence, to advocate
the claims of “Old Bough and
Ready.” He carried the audience
by storm, and the movement was
successfully inaugurated in New
York that culminated in the elec
tion of Gen. Taylor to tbe Presi
dency. Capt. Rynders, tbe Demo
crat, had settled his indebtedness
with the young Whig lawyer who
had years before befriended him,
and the incident was for years after
ward* recalled, wheu political rem
iniscences were in order around the
social board.
Ini.
Pere Hyacinthe uses tobacco
only for killing insects.
Carl Schurz will soon tackle
“possom and sweet taters” in the
South.
Mayor O'Brien, of Boston, de
lights in statistics, yet he is not
merely a figure-head.
Robert Browning, the poet, is
about to marry again. He is only
seventy-three years young. Poets
neecr grow old.
Schiller is to have a bronze
statue in Lincoln Park, Chicago.
It is believed that tbe great Ger
man poet must have been fond of
pork.
Robert Lincoln, it is said, writes
his name with an R like a six store
house. The size of the Rev. Mr.
Burchard’s “R’s” in a matter of
profane history.
According to the Ephemeria an *
examination of 3,726 prescriptions
in a Boston drug store showed
that 504 different drugs were called
for by the doctors. Quinine took
the lead by appearing in 292 pre
scriptions, morphine appeared in
172, bromide of potassium in 171,
iodide of potassium in 155, and
muriate of iron in 134. The whole
number of articles in the pharma-
copia is 994, and Boston uses more
thau half of them.
The remaius ol workmen who
died and were buried along the
line of the Northern Pacific Rail
way while it was building are now
being exhumed, placed in coffins
and buried in a finely laid out cem
etery at Missoula, Mon., at the
railway company’s expense. Tbe
men detailed for the work are call
ed by the other railway employees
“resurrectionists.”
Hoi.MKH' St'HK CUKE MOUTH WASn AND
•leotilrioe is au infallible cure for ricer
ated Hore Tliroat, Bleeding Gums, Sore
month and Fleers. Cleans the Teeth and
seeiM the Gums bealthr. Prepared sole
ly by Dre. 3. P. A W. ft. Holmes, Den-
lists, 102 Mulberry Street, Macon, Os.
For sale by Dr. W. R Burt, dentiss
J E. Hall, and all druggists and dentistt.
Then, pilgrim turn, thy seres forego
All earth born cares are wrong,
Man wants bnt little here below
Nor wants that little long.
Begoue ray cares, the pilgrim said,
But how about my woes f
I need a plug bai for my head.
And a Jim Crow salt of clothes.
Soft ts the dews from heaven desocnil
Let your kind accents fall,
And toll me where I'll find a friend,
With plug bat. clothes and all.
With tbis roqucsl the hermit rose
His face lit up with smiles,
O, Pilgrim if you must have clothes
It* sure lo go to Gyles.
To Railroad Contractors!
Sealed bids for track laying on the
Amerlans, Preston A Lumpkin Railroad
will be received at the President’s office,
Americus, Oa., until noon February 10th,
188o. Specifications under which the
ork is to douo will he fnrnished on re
quest. 8. H. HAWKINS,
dlsw3t-w2t President.
A. P. aad I*. B, B.
Stock Certificate* rt-odj to h* ia*
MQed. Subscriber* will plaoM pay up
balance doe on their notea prompt!/ to
tbe Treasurer and bring hot certificate
and get afoek. 8. H. HAWKINS,
janl7d2w2 President.
POR SALEH
Good milk cow with young calf. WUl
be sold oheap for cash. Apply al this
offlo ? jaoSOtf
WA1ITT3BP.
Two or three BOARDER A Apply i
Its 0 Bee. jaaYttd