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*OR COUCHS AND CROUP USB
TAYLOR’S
TO-MORROW.
■iiiniTo. and to-morrow, 0 fair and far I
" bl ‘> treawurealle wbrn hope i*hi(fh, alone
Jour shining wav!
" l«l promises all unfulHllcd. what bettor j
de«U to do
Than ever yet. are softly
skies of blue.
Monday, April 5!
tieneath your
ttiui to-morrow O sweet and far
Ik*fore, along; your
Still overturn* lead
shinim> way!
•Still evermore lift u|> your eyes ahov
4he-
r £ET
mulleiiv.
v needs and finer deeds that we
iiu\ e left midoiie.
Nora JVrry ui Youth's Companion.
NOVELIST AND HIS MANUSCRIPT.
SM'vwS
i^an^iV^WA
Zola
WAITER A. 7AYL. *>., Atlanta, Gal
hmiiKH.s HITKI.KI
KRRY COKDIit
AURANTII
-Mont of ty disease* which afflict mankind an origin
ally caused bv a disordered condit ion <>f th*LI VER .
lor all cumplnintH of tiiin kind, such an Torpidity of
the Liver, Biliousness. Norvoui Dyt»|iepsia Indige*.
*'°n. Irfe* ilarity of the Bowels, Constipation. Flatu
lency, Eructations and Bnrninff of the Stomach
twmetim.- railed Heartburn), .Miasma. Malaria.
Bloody Flux, Chills and Fever. Kreakbone Fever,
Exhaustion before or after Fever-. Chronic Diar
rhea. Wd of Appetite, Headache. Foul Breath,
Irroffularit'*'* incidental to Females Bearing-down
2£fc. stadigers aubawtii
iH invaluttble. It is not a panne..a for nil diseases.
*' u ‘ OliPIT a " diseasesofthe LIVER,
.hlVVTlC STOMACH and BOWELS.
- the
ora pie:
uddy. heaItliy color.
fr.r
vlyr
ellot
f the BEST AL-
and PURIFIERS OF THE
is A VALUABLE TONIC.
STAEICER'S
For Gale by all Druggint - F
AURANTII
’iieSI.OO per bottle
C. F. STADICER, Proprietor,
’40 SO. FRONT ST., Philadelphia, P*
WANTED IN AMERICUS
i good-. W ill p
Writ* for lerms
\ddiVM* l? I AN •
IMI’ANY. W
CUREmDEAF
BEANS
/-VURE Bllioiisnos®: F’ck Headache In Four hour*.
yG) One dose rctlova** Neuralgia. They cure and
prove it Chillr. Fcv.t. Sour Stomach .* Bad
Breath. Cl-ar tho Skin Tone the Nrrves, and give
Life . ’ Vigor to the syst**r.i. I)t»e: ONK BEAN.
Try them once .'.nd you will r.ever be without them.
Price. 26 conU per botila. Sold by Druggist* and
Medicine Coalers generally. Sent on receipt of
price in stamps, postpaid, to any address,
j. r. SMirn & co.,
fcmufactu.crj and 5.Frcr**., ST. LOUIS, MO.
tlir Noted French Author, Tor- |
Printers and Proof-Header*.
rit<*H everythbig himself; he
i a secretary for his extensive I
He even heal* his |
u,l< * addresses them when he i
mMidN hiH friends brochure" nr hi* trans
lators material. He also write* hi*
literary manuscript himself. Out of it
. 1 !l ‘‘ printers compose what sire called
t “placards”—large pages with fourgigaii-
tic columns of text. These are sent to the
author carefully revised and free from
errors, and then Zola begins to correct,
He tills the. wide margin all round with
hundreds of marks and letters; ink-line*
«-ut through the text, thin threads run
< tons ways and diagonally, entwining
like a lasso a sentence scrihhled in an
of mii s)NU‘e; scarcely a line is exempted
Irom the liieroglyphies of the master.
Hen* a note of interrogation must make j
room for one of exclamation; here a i
semicolon is changed into a full point; a J
oonima before or after the et effectively i
divides a phrase; pa it i< a pies are replaced |
by adjectives; substantives take the
place of pronouns; redundant adverbs
, must also disap|N>ar: the -past difinif’ is
substituted for the “imperfect;” more
j descriptive words supply the place of
i tame ones; for an expression related in
: five or six pages a synonym is intro-
dined; whole phrases are remodeled, sen -
: unices are condensed into two or three
words, and even half columns are ruth-
1 Jessly consigned at once into the coiu-
j |K>sitor’s type-case. It must he a bitter
task to break up the print again, but
there is no help for it. The extra fees
; charged elsewhere on authors for correc-
| tions are not known; nobody complains;
author and publisher rival each other in
I a common endeavor after perfection.
After such a corrected text the Paris
j journal prints, and the translations are
j done in exactly the same way.
| In the. newspaper print the publisher
sees his work a step nearer the book
form. Bui the process of alteration is
| still unfinished, aod Zola is not the man
I to watch this process with his hands in
his |KH*kets. Ho now perceives in Ills
work a thousand things which escaped
him liefore, and he begins anew to cor
rect more industriously and more relent
lessly than Indore. He makes ravages
on the text, refining and touching up the
]M*riod*. reconstructing whole pages, and
sprinkling column after column with
new improvements. “The feuilleton is
for me only a first draught,” he once
wrote to me. At last comes the ilav on
j which the publisher. Charpentier, re
ceives the last bon-a-tirer; the new work
is rea<ly; Zola will never more withdraw’
anything from it, and he can now' rest.—
ienna AUgemeinc Zeitung.
The Troposwrt African Inland Rea.
The most recent estimate that has been
de by the the French engineers in re
gard to the promised African inland sea
is that the undertaking could be consum
mated in the maximum period of five
years, at a cost of about $30,000,000, it
being sufficient to cut, in the alluvial
part of the region traversed, a canal
averaging some eighty to one hundred
feet in width, which would be further
widened by the action of the current.
It appears that the estuary of the Owed ;
Meliah. which is the lieginniug of the ]
canal leading to the place to l>e inuii- !
dated, offer* a port, covered at high j
water, of adequate breadth, which might i
easily be excavated, and would form a j
a |M>rt sheltered by nature from all the
winds from northeast to south, passing
by the west; the winds from northeast to
south, passing by the east, wotjld not Ik*
dangerous to tin* breakwater*. The nav
igation of the canal, it is also said, will
offor no difficulty, as the canal will form
almost a straight line. The proposed in- )
land sea would Is* fifteen times as large j
as the Luke of Geneva.—Boston Tran- j
script.
RECORDER
Gift Distribution!
-TO ITS-
Advance Paying Subscribers
WILL TAKE PLACE.
-WE WILL-
GIVE AWAY!
Electric .%gi*L
An interesting
tie* influence of c
• *f root*, lias li
Itiirs In (Isriminy.
•x|K*riment, showing |
electricity on the growth |
n made in Germany by :
essor I iclderteiiw. Plates or cop|>er
were thrust upright into the earth and
connected by wires with similarly placed
zinc plate- alsnit 100 feet distant—an
electric battery lieing thus formed, with
tlie earth lietwoen the copper and xinc
in the circuit. Both ]Nitatoes and beets
planted Indwcen such plates gave an in-
creused yield—Islets 13 js*r cent., pota-
toes *,*3 per cent.—ascompared with other
imrts t>f the same Held.—Arkan*aw Trav-
DEWING MACHINE
HAS NO EQUAL.
PFRFECTSA TISFACTION
¥ew Home SewiD£ Machine Co.
—ORANGE, MASS.—
!0 Union Square) N. Y. Chicago, Ilk 8t. Lou It, Mo.
Atlanta. Ga. ')tHaa, Tax. 8an frandoeo, Cak
DAVIS At CALLAWAY, Am uncut, Ga.
The Scarcity of Small Coins.
The Chicago Herald holds that chil
dren’s savings hanks ace responsible for
the scarcity of small coin* in that city.
Hundreds of thousands of dollars in pen
nies. nickels aiul dimes, the Chicago edi-
tor says, an* hoarded in the thousands of
toy hanks throughout the country, and
these, if put in circulation, he contends,
would materially lessen the stringency
of tin* money market in coins of the
small denominations.
A ltcmarkablc Mains Superstition.
Talking of superstitions, that of a Saco
man is rather remarkable. He never
will allow hirnself to go to sleep with
the toe of his slippers pointing toward
liis l»ed. Should he retire leaving his
blip|H*rs in that position, he can not sleep
until they have been changed and the
toes made to point in the opposite direc
tion. Then he sleeps the sleep of the
jUgt,—Bkldtford TUbm.
Ton of Guano !
Sewing Machines!
Planting Machines!
Watches!
Corn Shellers!
Chamber Setts!
China Tea Setts!
Shoes, Hats!
Jewelry!
Silverware!
Dresses!
Clothing!
Books!
And Many Other Valuable Presents. *
Another Failure,
BUT NOT ANOTHER BUST I
Ol course everybody heard of the^Bargain Store having sold
out, busted, and made assignments, and did everything else that
would tend to bring us out of existence, but we are glad to state
that we are not busted, nor have we sold out; nor have we any
intentions to do so.
On the contrary, we believe that we have tried to monopo
lize the Dry Goods trade ol Americas, and we now not alone
believe, but we assert that we have succeeded beyond our ex
pectations. The Bargain Store to-day stands without a rival,
and offers unprecedented bargains. We are not stunned by the
announcements of others selling off at cost on aecout of chang
ing firms, failures or assignments. We rely entirely upon the
facts, that our stock was, and is bought originally at half and
often less than half their value, which enables 11s to undersell,
any and all, no matter what their pretenses. As'evidence of our
assertion, we will state that we will duplicate any bill bought
from the so called selling out, stores, and allow you a discoun
of 5 per cent, on your purchase, (domestics excepted, which
we always sell at factory prices.) Another evidence of our suc
cess and in expectance of our doing the largest business here,
the Bargain man will go East very shortly and buy the largest
stock for Spring and Summer wear that was ever exhibited in
Americus. Our stock now, is we think, the largest and best
selected in the city, and in order to sustaiu our reputation as
stock at special low prices. We have a few heavy Ladies Wrap 8
i and Gent’s Overcoats left, which rather than keep them over
I till next fall, we will sell at .about one-third their^ value.
Whenever in need of Dry Goods, Clothing, Shoes, Millin-
! ery and Notions, call on the Bargain Store and get their prices
| before buying. Respectfully,
S- IVE. COHEN,
THE BARGAIN MAN.
Cotton Avenue, Sign of Red Hag, opposite Bank of Americus,
AMEjFUOUS. ga.
Jas. Fricker & Bro.
JEWELERS
AND PROPRIETORS OF THE
Watches, Clocks amid Jewelry!
Solid Silver and Plated Ware!
Gold and Silver-Head Canes!
and otlitr style* in gr^st variety. GOLD PENS and PENCILS in handsome caaci.
j Fine Table And Pocket Cntlery, and many other thing*, all suitable for CHRISTMAS
1 nd BRIDAL PRESENTS. In our
MUSICAL DEPARTMENT! ‘
We have as tine assortment of
Pianos and Organs!
AM) SMALL
Musical Instruments!
1 a* oan be found in the Stair. If yon uant a PIANO or ORGAN call anu examine
j our’a and gel our prices. We will gnatant«*e to aavo yon from ten to fifteen dolh**
I on anORGAN, inti frrru iw< ntv-fiv to fifty on a PIANO, and you get a home guar
antee. We ean sell INSTRUMENTS nt what Agents have to pav for them and make
J a fail profit. PONT FORGET THIS!
j«Tames Fricker & Bro.
AMBRIC CJB. GA.
* — —
1 Jowers’ improved Cotton Seed.
I TUI* »«*• 1 hM made more cotton than any otbei wod in tbe Htatc of Georgia, and r.ot a man u bo
I him planted them has expressed dtsaaiu iie.lnn.
1 Certificates truni a large number of tin* m >*t Reliable and Successful l’ unt. r* 10 Geoigta,*A!a«
1 boras, and other State*, are on tile, aud cau h- cead by sending fur a circular.
JOWERS IMPROVED COTTON SEED
Will ninkeffroin 50 to 100 per cent, more tint than ordinary rotlui), while the ataple l.«J superior % and
! bring* a better price la tne markc.
PliAHTTBRS OAXT MAKE MONEY I
Address alllletters to
W. L. GLESSNER,
AMERICUS, GA.
]’ 7
Price, Three Dollars Per Bushel !!
Urd«*MDI|t<>.HABBULO, JOHNSON * CO., AojM iu, Go., or la mn oddlMo, will ho.|>ro.rl •
W. P. JOWERS, Preston, Webster County, Us.