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LOOK OUT!
Compare thi* with y»u* •w -hnw:
W. (linni ausrdiii, Ua
Advice to the Aged.
Man lirinnlIlM, nth u alur-
— w - s
Tutt's Pills
» ■Plrtfte tmtrN thfM nfun.
■UaiUllai the hewele. (It In* nalnr-
«!l*iy«y without .training or
IMPASTING VIGOS
BOLD EVKBYWHEltK. *
For Sale,
Eleven hundred acre* of land on the A. I*.
*LR. R., twelve mil .>m from Am«-ritu» hihI
one and one-half mi U>m from Plain* of Dura.
Well watered and timbered; convenient to
ehun-li and achool. Good houaen; rood
neighborhood. Will ncII whole or divide to
ftult purvhaaer. Cheap* for caah. or make In
eaay payment*. Bargain to right man.
for flirt her particular* addraaa
H. H. OLIVER, ^
tMddlm Plain* of Dura#
Outlook for a Young Doctor.
“If a young man aft#*r getting hi*
diploma can get with an established phy
sician who will throw the aurphw of hi*
practice in the young man'a way, and
give him the Ijenefit of his long exper
ience, he will have by far the Itest chance
of success. For here as in ail other lines
of work influence tells. My son is a doc
tor who has been in the profession six
years. He uiakes $10,000 a year, but he
could not be doing that if he had not had
me to help him. A fair average practice
for a young doctor who has got ordinary
ability, is $2,000 a year. There are many
who do not succeed at all. It isn't that
young men are so actively opposed. But
when he starts in nothing is known about
him. He lias to make his own success at
the start by persistent effort, hoping to
make a hit by the treatment of some hard
case.
It is when a young physician has be
come successful enough to attract atten
tion that real opposition to him is devel
oped. Then others try to crowd him out,
for his success injures them.all more or
less. What a doctor needs rnoro than
anything else besides his learning is tact
in dealing with his patients. If he ha*
tact and itersevernneo he will lie likely to
get on. He ought always to keep up
h>«* studies, for a physician is never too
old to learn. The science is constantly
advancing, and it beliooveajt good prac
titioner to keep abreast of the times. I
am constantly delving into subjects akin
to my specialty, muling on them and
even devoting considerable time to writ
ing about them. Ami while on this |>oint
1 want to say emphatically that a young
physiciau should not try to supjsirt him
self by teaching or any other kind of
work while pursuing his studies. He
should give his whole time to the matter
and make up his inind to lie a doctoi
with all that implies or nothing."—In
terview with Dr. William A. Hammond.
Onion Sets!
THE MONARCH COMES
Let it Snow, Blow, Rain, Hail or Sunshine, We will Come Sure'!
Two Complete, Matchless and ltoffsllng Performances at
AMERICUS, TVrfiTr in
THURSDAY, 1YU V . 11.
Now is the time to plant. The
Note.—Thearranremenu of the Anu rlnui Showmen’s Pooled I^asuc win „
y other flrru. from visiting Aim rlrin till hiumiii.-; Editor.) “ wm
Sim Walters Onion
SELLS BROTHERS'
Cold and Two Silver Medals,
■warded in 1883 at the Expoaitinnx of
New Orleans end Louisville. ami the Iti-
wrationa Exposition of london.
The superiority of Corelinc over horn
or whalebone bea now been demonstrated
bgr over fire years’ experience. It is more
durable, more pliable, more comfortable,
and nmtr brrakt.
Avoid cheap imitations made of various
kinds of cord. None are genuine unless
"Da. Wsknik’s Corali.ne" is printed
on inside of steel cover.
Ml Mil IT All IIAIIM MUCHAITt.
WARNER BROTHERS,
353 Broadway, Now York City
SenM Organ* of
In tlie matter of sense organ* we are
met by teriotiN difficulties of interpreta
tion. A* *akl the Dani*h naturalist Fab-
ricius, nearly 100 years ago, “nothing in
natural history is more abstruse and
difficult than an accurate description of
the senses of animals. " And this al>-
struseness and difficulty is more keenly
felt in btudying creatures so wklely differ
ent from ourselves as the bee. Such uu
insect would seem at first bight to l o
about as susceptible to the delicacies of
touch as an ancient armor .sheathed
knight. Head, thorax, abdomen, limliN
—all are ensbcathc-d in chitinous armor.
Tho bee hits his skeleton outside. As an
American gentleman once observed in
my hearing, the main difference between
an insect and a vertebrate is this, one is
composed of flesh and bone, the other is
composed of skin and squash.
The question is, how can delicate im
pressions of touch lx* transmitted through
the tough, dense skin so as to affect the
sensitive “squash" within? If you will
examine one of the feelers of tho lice you
will see that tlie surface is richly supplied
with hairs. It i* hv means of such s< use
hair** that the bee experiences a sensation
of touch. Each touch hair is hollow, am!
within it is a protoplasmic filament con
taining, it would seem, tlie delicate ter
minal threadlet of a nerve. A curious
modification of the touch haire is found
on the last joint of the antenna. They
tire here bent sharply ut right angle* so
as to form rectangular booklets.— Mur
ray’s Magazine. •
A Nhiiiu and a Mnare.
Business as it is done today is, in some
of its aspects, a sham and a snare. It is
in the method jobber* have of placing
goods thut many a small dealer finds his
quagmire. Think of tho swarms of
drummers which infest the domain of
tlie retailer. The latter is importuned to
buy, buy, buy everything from a needle
to an engine, until be is far overatocked
beyond the requirements of his trade, and
the result is the many frequent failures in
tho commercial world today. Tlie mean*
by which these drummers induce pur
chases is too long a story to tell. Enough
to say is that each one must sell good*,
and often tlie most questionable moans
are resorted to in order to make sales.
Indeed, whether by salesmen un the road
or in the store, the niercliant is *o impor
tuned and dogged that he is often in
duced to give an order and on hour after
luually know what lie bought. The
whole idea of business today seems to me
lo lie pull, haul and scramble, rather than
cool, delilierate, legitimate business,
lienee, 1 say from Ibis system of over
stocking largely results tlie failures of
small merchant*. — L. S. Lavton in
Chicago Nows.
Is the best ever planted in Georgia. We
have fought his entire Crop, and are sell
ing them at the low price of 10c
per quart, or 75c per peck.
&
m
huge |3Ring Circus—Classic Roman Hippodrome—Academy of Art—Five Continent Meu,|
erie—Indian Village and Museum—and Grand Firemen's Tourniment. r *
We are also selling Drugs Cheap,r and are
Leaders'in prices on Tobacco.
A FEW WORDS- -11 »•’«
i tli**
* place this Mngnlflc
Vat ii
id tViiTu »!Trih» <>i h< We have
i-s with our combined Inhibition- than have all the shows of the Worldl
olldateo. We challenge every living showman In the sum of lltn^moto i.nwiuc
Hill, Wallers & Go.,
-half tlie novelties anti at tract ion* you win find uiulereanvas. WKN KVKIUHVI
m il SHOWS. We will exhibit to you on Ttf I’ IlHDAV, NOV. 17, thdsauieColossali
stupendously perfeet cluster ofOorawiis K:»hibitloiyt tliat so delighted! he people of
ratio, Cincinnati, Pittsburg, Philadelphia, Itnlttmore, Washington, St. Louis ami.N*i
York City, amt we know you will exclaim with the people and press of these |>)hccm: -yr
never saw such Grandeur lie fore. ’ Kverytlriig Is clean, moral, irrand and perfect, a ml v
guarantee satisfaction to the most exnetltig.
$3,500,000 INVESTED FOR THE PUBLIC’S DELECTATION FACTUAL
EXPENSES, $4,200.
Corner Lamar and Lee Sts., Americus, Ga.
Tullis & Jossey,
-THE RECOGNIZED LEADINC-
Grocers and Provision Merchants.
ILLUSTRIOUS FOREIGN REINFORCEMENTS:
F.l Mnh*U’s Arabian Soldiers and Acrobats!
Prince Misnko’s iloyal Vcddo Japut
McGregor’s Scotch A title!
Australian Iks
s and Broadsword Combatants!
nerong Throwers and Hindoo Ju«ki
ROYALLY RESPLENDENT AND INFINITELY COMPREHENSIVE REVIVAL
AMERICUS, GEORGIA.
SPORTS OF THE ROMAN AMPHITHEATRE
With all their Imperial Splendor and Soul-Intoxicating Effect*!
Always on Hand, a Full Stock of
Greatest and Grandest Wild Beast Shoi
Ever Seen in a Christian Land!
Signals In Football Playing.
Tlie spectator, during the scrimmage,
can hear an almost constant flow of con
versation from tlie captain to hi* men,
exhortations to “play hard” or “put the
ball through,” or apparently superfluous
information on every kind of subject con
nected with the game. He i* really man
aging his team, telling them to whom
the ball is to be passed next by tlie quar
ter I jack and what players are to do spe
cial pieces of work connected with tin*
plnv. Every sentence lias its pregnant
word, conventionalized to mean to the
player* something quite different from
the meaning which tlie op|ionents will
probably attach to it; ami the whole sys
tem, carefully memorized and practiced
for weeks, enables tlie captain to keep Iris
team well in hand throughout tiie game.
Each team ha* it* |*»t system of signal
ing, which it fondly imagine* to be uu-
discoverable; while tho iirst few min
utes of a “great” game are spent in
btudying the signal* of the opposing team,
to sec whether they liave been changed
since tlie lost season.—Alexander John-
bb»n in The Century.
Bagging and Ties, Meat, Lard,
Hams, Flour, Corn Meal, Sugar,
Coffee, Soap, Potash, Cigar?,
Tobacco, Etc., Etc.
1 GIVE I’H A CALI. AND I1K CONVINCED THAT WK CAN AND Wit. . HEM. YOC
(iOODH IN THIS LINE ('HEADERTHAN EVER SOLD IN TIIIH MARKET.
We are !alsc£Headquariers for
A Fervid Jury Address.
Capt. Ben Brown wo* an attorney for
Boveral years after the war. In interro
gating w itnesHes, if hid client liad been a
M tidier, he would never fail to bring out
that fact, and in hi* speech to the jury
he, with fervid em{Jia«b>, .. muM * xclaim
tliat his client “had breathed the ml
flame of liattle." Once when lie got off
his winning piece of oratory, the attorney
on the other side met him a* follows:
"Ah, gentlemen of the jury, my client
lias been a soldier, too. He has not only
breathed tlie red flame of battle, but 1m
luis combed grape and cat mister from hit
gory locks." Capt. Brown was nevef
afterward known to uUude to the
breathing.—The Argonaut
Whiskies, Wines and Brandies!
sou: agents kok
“Old Gum Springs,” “W. H. McBraver,”
and “I W. Harper’s Nelson County”
KENTUCKY WHISKIES.
STARTLING. VIVID AND IMFRESSIVE ILLUSTRATION^OF
Civilization's IVlarch Across the Plain^
mid I nlversiilly lb-cognized ron-muni Organization ••
PAWNEE BILLS ‘WILD WES1
With the Historic Custer Battle Added!
. Track MioU, Indian, and Vu«l
unit.- p.-rll. and V.. tr v <>t the I*rolrte.l— Uolqu
WO Noted Scort. <-■
Thanking our fricndH (or tlieir liberal patronage ittjlhd post, we nre ’deter
mined to do ail in our power to make It. to their interest
todeal with ua. I^HraenlierUw^ilare!
lysEE THE GLORIOUS, LAVISHLY SUMPTUOUS STREET PAP
In all It* Htalellne**, on th • PiiWIo Thoroughfare*, ai 1011 *
Cotton Avenue, next door to Counoil ■oGarrah’s Warehous
o*ui-tf
USUAL POPULAR PRICES OF ADSISSION-Performance* *t Curt< ^
glp*fosnivoiv and Kniphatlcally No Free TlcktU to An) ^
Cheap Round TripJExcunions][oii all Railrtadi.-4«« •*»**•" Afeo
a