Americus daily recorder. (Americus, Ga.) 1884-1891, November 25, 1890, Image 3

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“?*- ■ !2oo L. DOUGLAS $3 SHOE GENTLEMEN VlM Calf u4 Um4 Waterproof Oi .tarsia Veit. A Dm colt sbo* \rt2r£2!& fc*2 SHOES A •lred due* Introduced _MU.lii.iwr- SOLID PIECES OF- Sterling ** Silver Inlaid In tha backs spooks' * * «sF0BB PLATSD FOUR TIMM VUMITED ToWawSO Years. muff iurmu MORE DURABLE THA* LX OUT SterllOir Silver mrmcosT. BACH ARTICLE 18 8TAMPED i 1 lP«l«HBEIIU»'Ll™ For sale by JAS. FRICKER & BRO Barlow Block, Aiiiericua, Gal Blood Purifier Cam Bod*, Old tores. Scrofulous ulcers, teraC «Vm tom. ScrofnlouE Htmor end all «crofuloui dlMtaea, Primnrjr, Secondary and Tertiary Coo- tagwaa Hood PoIboo. Ulcerosa Sores, diwaaeiol tha Scalp. Salt Rheum, Blotches, ruitulea, Pimp- kyRUpRMiHl Worms.trsld-Hesd, “ Rheomstlsm, CooUitutioosl Blood Roll sau ■ |LU. $1 p«r bottla. Ntfi Irish or siposuro In Malarial Regions, tTmtVriMaihe moat f#als| .weaver offered the s»f fevlog Recorder ^£ORGl> For To-day _nly I offer 100 Baskets Grapes at 40c to G5o basket. 60 Bbls Apples at 40 to 50c peck. The apples at 40c peck are very fine In flavor. Must be sold to-day, a large lot of flue Celery from Kalamzoo. The finest and largest lot of Pre serve*. Jelly and Mince Meat you ever saw lu a retail store at prlcea very low. Butter and Cheese, the finest ,ia large lots. E. D. ANSLEY, THE FANCY GROCER Wondsrs Under a Karsh. A remarkable discovery was recently made In the town of Oneonta, vrbero a company is engaged in digging phos phates from the depths of a swamp. In one place the marsh is underlaid at tht depth of twelve feet by an impervious stratum of blue clay, above which air found three socceeshre and distinct eras of forest growths. The bottom layer to of deciduous trees that grow only on up lands, such as beech, oak and inaple. The second layer is of soft swamp woods, ■nch as elder, basswood and dogwood. The upper layer is-of coniferous trees, such as pme, hemlock and spruce. The puzxle to the naturalist is the finding of upland trees ut the bottom of the mush, with the trunks and larger limbs and abundant.specimens of leaves and beech nuts fa » good state of*preservation. An other wonder unearthed by the excava tions is the finding, at a paint five feet below the surface and among the trunks of the coniferous trees, of a flat stone about five feet square which had been utilized os a fireplace. The blackened stone, thedarge collec tion of ashes and cinders, sod the bits of crumbling bonce of animals indicate that long ages ago somebody cocked food there. That somebody-most hare been man in the strictly primitive*and.savage state, for no-trace of any utensil or tool, not even a sharpened flint, has been found among the dobris-of tha fire,—Al bany Journal. America the Ronnie of the Bnalgrant. The degree to which America offers prominent advantages to the emigrant is just now shown strikingly by the ex isting conditions in Iceland. It la said that that country is gradually becoming depopulated owing to-the constant emi gration of its peoplo to the fbore* of Canada and the United States. These emigrants send back such favorable ac counts of their new borne that othere quickly follow. It to-estimated that 20,- 000 native*, nearly one-quarter of the whole population, hare left the country in tho last year. The emigrants are said to be chiefly from the northern and east ern districts, whero. labor is carried on only under, great difficulties, besides which recent harvests have been very bad and have entailed much suffering.— New York Oommerdai Advertiser. A Fro* Child. child was l>orn in Birmingham, England, on Sept 20, which bears a strong rceembl&nco to a frog. Its *V*n is warty and cold and clammy to the touch; when it cries it makes an un earthly croaking notoo. There aro three fingers on each hand and four toes on each toot Besides .the points enumer ated it has many other characteristics of a frog, even to huge, knotty looking, lid- loss eyes. The parents are almost dis tracted over tho occurrence and hourly pray for It to die. There are two other "frqg child” c on record, one the offspring of a Plata squaw in Nevada, which was bom about tea years since, the other a monstrosity which first saw tho light of day at Goshen, Ind., in January, 1683.—St. Louis Republic. TUe Age of Indian Oalbmb la Put There is not the smallest danger of a serious Indian outbreak in the north west The conditions existing in this region have been entirely changed by the building of railroads and the estab lishment of means of rapid communica tion among posts. It is quite impossible to organize an Indian outbreak under the eye of the agent on reservations without the conspiracy becoming known. With existing means of communication and transit an outbreak could be crushed in its indptoncy by a rapid concentra tion of troops. Thoro are elements which might once have boon dangerous in tho situation at Standing Rock—a heaven •sat prophet and a meddling woman— the age of Indian outbreaks is past Portland Oregonian. ' A special fjotu Paysoc, U. T„ nys John Bolton accidentally killed himself while going horseback from Payton to Solan, b the middle of the forenoon be left town to visit his sister in Salem, taking with him a double barreled shot gun, with which be shot himself. Be waa found on horecfrack with half the right side of hto heed blown off. Ba sitting in tha saddle leaning Us over the boat's new. Apparently tke .hone had not moved stnoe the gun exploded. It is believed that ba had urrrtR from jane hading. 1 Park, Nov. 10.—Among the many smaller theatres recently founded in Pads Is tho Theatre d’Application, which was established in January, 1888, by M. Bodinier, formerly secretary qf the Theatre Francois. It is situate in tho narrowest port of the rue St. Lasaro, at No. 18, just a few steps from the church of Notre Dame de Loretta. This modest but useful stage was opened with a view of affording pupils of the Conservatoire a practice field. MM. Got, Delaunay, Worms and Man- bant, in tbeir double capacity as ahinhm lights of the national theotroandas lead ing professors at the Conservatoire, have sustained M. Bodinier in his venture with the utmost energy, as it is tbeir own pupils', and consequent own reputation, that benefit thereby, u. Bodinier, the manager, to tho right man in the right place. Last year, to tho re gret of all who know him, he had to re sign hia position as secretary of the Com- edie Francaiso in consequence of the de velopment his theatre has taken and the urgent necessity for tho constant pres ence there of a master mind. As for the financial result, time alone can show bow it will answer; but the promoters would appear, considering the compara tive lightness of tho expenses, to have every reason for confidence in this re spect. Perhaps ono of the most singular and interesting of modern theatrical attempts is that of M. Maorico Boncbor, the brill- iaut poot, who, in May, 1888, opened at his own risk and expense a small house in the GtJerie Vivienne, whero daring the winter season dramatic representations aro given In which, strangely enough, puppets are substituted in the eoene for human jerfonners. Tho interpreters, as I say, aro mere marionnottos, but they do work of a higher order than that usually expected frwrn flesh and blood actors and of such transcendent writers as his, Aristophanes, Shakespeare, Cer vantes, Calderon, Lope de Vega, Machia- velli, for which ordinary comedians are rarely suited. The marioncottoe—worked by M. Signoret—go through tboir pan tomimic display while the parts of each are road by auxiliaries behind the scenes. Among tho friends who second K. Mau rice Bonchort efforts this way are MM. Felix Bouohor, his brother, a painter of considerable talent; Raoul Rmchon, Felix Rabbe, Amedeo Pigeon, MBoa. Oecfle Dorelle and Paulo Verne, all gifted as artists or litterateurs. Most of' the playa hitherto produced are in verse from tho facile pen of M. Maurice Bon- chor or put into new form by that achoL ariy and accomplished writer. Lord Lytton, who was present with nis family when Shakespeare’s ••Tem pest” was first given, expressed to the originator of this novelty—M. Maurice Boochor speaks English fluently—his de light at the performance, the translation in verse of tho play, and tho music in troduced. M. Kenan grew quite enthu siastic over the pretty fantoccini, and wrote a letter to the newspapers wherein he formulates his own theatrical aspira tions. The ideal theatre he holds to be the grandest of literary instruments; the actual modern theatre a mean and des picable affair. He would restore the an tique stage, making each performance a solemnity, “announced," as be says, “to tho universe in advance,” in which the most able actors, instructed by the greatest philosophers and critics, should render the works of the most illustrious poets before a whole nation assembled. M. Renan is inclined to hope that the marionnetio performances may mark the opening of a now era. M. Boncbor is, perhaps, less sanguine lu his views, although much might be said in favor of M. Renan’s opinion. The rod ribbon of tho legion of booor with which a gracious muse has recently dee- orated tho buttonhole of M. Maurice Boochor, is a tribute fairly earned by the young and deserving poet, whom we may somo day see a member of the French academy. In November, 1887, a new theatre call ed Theatre doa Jounce—Theatre of the Young—waa opened in the suae house where M. Boochor exhibits hie marioa- netta, with the avowed object of af fording shearing to untried playwrights. M. Dearochea, the manager, has silica opened a playhouse in which pieces not accepted by the regular theatres, after a stpcereful performance, are played on Bunday afternoons. An aesodatiou called Theatre desEs- tournsaulx—Theatre of the GHddyhenda —also makes use of tho moo stage oc casionally for tho study of dramatic plays and tho production of original pieces in prose and verso. It is a sort of school for young actors and actresses. Such schools furnish to tho dramatic profession some good beginners in the art of acting. Of coarse they do not pretend to turn out first class artistes. The Theatre du Paradis Latin vuoa tabliabed two years ago, and seems to he on the high road to fortune. It fagmito ckfcfiy for its aodfcooes apua tha people of the Intin quarter, in which it to sit- noted. The students, who are quite at gh&a r . ( ^ Oval ono hundred columns of voluntary certificates have been printed in the Atlanta Journal front such people as Rev. J. B. Haw thorne, Rev. Sam P. Jones, Hon H. W. Grady, MaJ. Chaa. W. Hub- ner, late of the "Christian Index," Gen. Janies Lon gat reel, Col. W. Avery, Jute editor Atlanta "Const!- tlon," and hundreds ofpromlueut divines, editors, doctors, specialists and others, certifying to remakable cures performed by Dr. King's Roy al Gsrmatuer, after eminent physi cians and all kuowu remedies had failed. 8end two-cent stamp to King’s Royal Gertnatuer Co., At lanta, Ga. t for. book of particulars. It is truly a great remedy, and surely cures when all else falls Peculiar Many peculiar points make Hood's Bar- saparllla superior to all other medicines. Peculiar la comblnaUon, proportion^ and preparation of tngraUa Hood's Sarsaparilla possesses the full curative value of tlio V best knowtf remedtes^^. One Hundred Doses Medicines la larger and smaller bottles require larger doses, and do not produce as good results as Hood’s, eculiar In Its medicinal merits, Hood's Sarsaparilla accomplishes cures hith erto unknown, and has woo for Uaelf V. the title of "The greatest blood purifier ever dlscoveredL'»^r fecullarln Its “ good name Cynd home,”-there la now S ^%"^nore of Hood’s Sarsaparilla^r * ^^soldln Lowell, where S JlVJ/ttisnude, than of allyT ^ pother blood porlflers.^^* <*>/>eculIar In Us phenooo- AXyWnol record of sales sbroadj^r jo other preparation Ever attained such popa- V ~^lority In so short a time, ^ and retained Its popularity VS»/and confidence among all classes ^of people so steadfastly. Do not be Induced to buy other preparations, but be sure to get tho Peculiar Medicine, Hood’s Sarsaparilla kUtllSlnaU. fllXlteSL toffMlmm *7OIL HOOD . OO.AlOlMltM,IM> IL» IOO Dome One Dollar . home inside its doors, g laatiwcf *elnl» ha tha is Ofthfiwartotl* they all attend in faro*. Then there are the Theatre Independ- aat, or dee Indepeodanto, in tha rn# Fbo- taiat; tha Theatre dea FaOea da Lyon, with tte underground sights called "tho at No. IS rao de Lyon; the Theatre (fAmatonra, which opeoad its doors April I, 1888; the Theatre Moderno, founded by EL Fanaod, for merly adminietrator general at the Renaissance theatre, all of which havp in view aome novel feature In common with the houses previously described. Yet another playhouse of the earns sort, IssrieF—.1 ritiah nnseiiia wonnlrvanatomc*tiw»wwld.'Hawffl ; cauea urn TDeouwnee ueraaoe, wm re- reentryoo^op^^mAlL^BewiD ^tahhehsd by MM. Pkwval, Leon The musical world to also following to Mm M totoad ' •"**» **"• baT ® the Theatre Lyriq^e Ma MBt Coiw.ua tha Goooert Utn,of«W<ih at £, M. TV**or>)fa—ia. pSSj •- » T lath,nibsNbU. haBam ■OAXJL, AT- Arthur Rylander’s AND8|EE—- THE LATEST STYLES IN Dunlap Hats Nellie Bly Caps WE ARE ON THE TOP ROUND CARTERS THE LARGEST STOCK. AT THE LOWEST PRICES. CALL AND SEE US. Calvin Carter and Son. D P P. C u r ' 5 ■ ■ l’a r I A NTEBEgSBS LIPPMAN BROS., Proprietors, WHOLES AUfiJOtUOaiSTB. '•none Block. - ^VANKAH. fiA >E ACOCK HOUSE ELLAV LLE. GEORGIA NEW HOUSE. NEW FURNITURE Good sample sleeping rooms Itoi. commercial men and the psbttsj Plnrt-eiaas (Sr* and saUafscUon fwaran W ATTS HOUSE AMERICU AMERI0U9. GEORGIA ■■ D. W4tTA PnprlMcr. CLOTHINGIt First claims parents’attention. We are more than ready 4a this partment, The Salta, The little Troueera and the BoyaForniablnn; Hate and Cape begin to go, ere the men begin to think of ehanglng theirs. We've often thought of calling our etore The Mothers' Clothing Store, because the mother is the best economiser in the household and the gen erally finds out that the dolla^ go the farthest at M B. M’S, IBs Quuspos (Mier of Mmol Coopt, AND;PROPnik,TOR OF. “The Eagle” Shoe and .Hat Store, 117 and 110 FORSYTH ST. AMERICUS, GA. H. 33. WATTS -—nmu ui Ettiuuoitru— GROCERIES fine Tobacco, Cigars and WbUky a Specialty! Mo. 903 For.jth and 1001 Ltt SlrMta, • • AMKHICUB. GEORGIA R«. L. McLEOD db CO., FANCY WrSTAPLB GROCERIES, SHOES, ETC. WHISKIES. CIGARS AND TOBACCO A SPECIALTY. ITOSILCTfASR 33JJR ^LflWPACTKTSgl l WIMw1Ui tkf BmI nnmd.otLlqoort, BiMdlM, VlM^Bmt.BU. P Th* Opera Homs, t AKERICCS, a 11 k liltiliiM 11 in.1 ' ii'IimW FHYBICIAN AMD UBOMOVB. R. WESTBROOK. M- D. DHURORON. Offlcs etoC. A. Huntlni Q-T. MILLER, M- D. IIOIAN AMD BUrGBON. Office i, end resltli B. a nAWKIHB, Br., T.Iepbon, M. C. A. BBOOKB- Hawkln* a Brooks, Amerlcut, Georgia W. L Bullard La«a?“«anw» ,'Agent.* 1 ilONTBactor, ia preeered to dc HI J6; C5 8 )) \ X 99 . a • 3 — aUOKMAKRRB. P. R-STAN FI ELD- 'pHACTIOALBHOKMAKBBen<l n-irnlr- A sr, Amerlcua, ue. Bepetring aspesTiUty S-H.HOLSEY. wssssmm rKlNS. V. Office I i TTOHNRYS AT LAW. A in Rsrlow IHock. _ ITUTTA LUMPKIN, A MTPOBNEYH AT LAW, Americas, I Ofllos In Barlow block, up stain. L. J. BLALOCK. AlWBNBX AT law. Office to court R0BT- L* MAYNARD. ATTORNKY and Couuasllar at Law, A Americas, a*. Prompt and careful at- jaiSSSK-aa Der ^a!Sffe ssfeawsr:: sa«!ttKsaafg,saf ,te>wor Iaf.Hwto.. AM.Cbtra.' HINTON A CUTT8.* WALTER KPWHIATLSV. 1 TTORNEY AT LAW. OOM «B A JHkMD.trMt,ap^teln. Juiyl*-ly. ANSLEY & ANSLEY. W.P. WALLACE. J. A. HIXON, o-nNEY l .ItADtlOfl ,1V.D tO DR. W. P. BURT, J M OR. J. J. WORSHAM. that^tUi ruiuwu Ieleotion Notice. FOR FENCE OR STOCK LAW. . Whereas the number of irrciholdora der action ItiSofthe revised co*Ie fi\S7i RUGS. Owing to tho great delay in freights, I am compelled to retire from Hie Carpet busi ness. I offer tor sale iu my store on Cotton Avenue, consisting of I They are suitable for Rugs only and will be sold ati Call and examine them. There are a number of beautiful pieces. sica, MANAGER. 411,416 and 418 C«tbn * RUGS 5T fcS i Ti | ills i li !- sSsillsl^ Ordinary KHE2DLE HMDS STREET JUlLWiu City Limits; I/* Htreet and eornev Mac nolle Avenue en>l FeldetUtrsetataad §i o p. m. Meet Central Tre ine el SffiL f MA. B:«, m . IiSAtrik. CtM end WiffiV h. A. li. Sat, a. £ end e.ao p m. To teke sired October; RAY