The times-recorder. (Americus, Ga.) 1891-1891, April 11, 1891, Image 2

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THE AMERICUS DAILY T1MES-REC0RDER: SATURDAY, APRIL 11, 1891. BICYCLES FOR BUSINESS. A Club of Newark Men. Who I'm (ho I Wheel Not for Pleasure Alone. V There U probably no city of its site in the United States where the bicycle is used ak milch around town for practical business purposes os in Newark. Thej been to Chicago," said Mr. A. It. eouscfence Miner* * A little time ago I was gob;; fn/ia Chicago to Cleveland. Three or four <•!' ns men struck up an acquaintance ns they (I don’t smoko) struck up n light in the smoking room. Kacli gave a little biography of his recent life. “I Imvo RAPID RISE TO WEALTH. i —; Story city is not so big and crowded as Brook lyn or New York, and it is quite con venient for merchant drummers, law clerks, brokers and other folks who have 'to cover a deal of (lavement* in tho coarse of a day's business to strido their ateel and rubber horses and roll swiftly frem office to office or from end to end of town at no expense of cab or car fare, and with ranch saving of time and effort. On any of the business streets there doz ens of business men can he seen any day speeding by on low safety wheels. The highways loading to Roseville and tho Oranges are much frequented by bi cyclers. many of whom do not wear the collect some conscience money. A good many years ago I made an invention. It was stolen from me by some Chicago people. I spent much money in trying to act iny rights, and did not get them. Two weeks ago 1 received a letter from the house in Chicago which had been manufacturing and selling my inven tion saying that if I would come to Chi cago I should hear of something to my interest. “I went to the place appointed and met a gentleman, who said: ’You are Mr. A. B.V 'Yes.' 'Our house 1ms for years lieen making and selling an inven tion of yours. I have recently become flannel shirts and knickerbockers of the j Christian. I know I have done wrong. rider for pleasure, and carry small sam ple cases strapped to their muchiucs or slung from their shoulders. Newark's city ordinances governing the use of bicycles in the streets were until lately quite as lilierul as those of other large New Jersey towns. The met ropolitan character of Newark naturally made the use of the bicycle proportiun- I ately greater than elsewhere under the same laws, uud the same reasons made the bicycle more of a nuisance in the streets. That is why the police of Ne ’4 ark have been very active recently in keeping bicycles strictly within the let ter of tho law, and from this has arisen a novel association of bicyclers in that town, the first of the kind in the coun try. It isn't a club, it lias no club house and its members wear no badge or uni form. It is purely a business organiza tion. chiefly of business men, and its chief object is to look out for the interest of all bicyclers in Newark, to keep the city authorities stirred np in tho matter of maintaining the streets and roads in good repair and to influence city legisla tion in the interest of bicyclers. The association calls itself the Bnsi • ness Men’s Cycle club and accept* any reputable bicycler or tricycler as a mem ber, bnt Is particularly nnxious to enroll .business men. The idea is to collect a great lot of names of men of business, prominence und influence, so that when the Club asks the city lawmakers to grant some new privilege to wheelers, or abolish some ordinance restricting bicy clers, or to mend some bad piece of pavement, or to open a now street, or to grado a road, the request will have the hacking of n lot of men whoso names will cany weight .with the city govern- _ ment. Business men who use'bicycles ..4 there are joining tho movement in con siderable numbers, and the members have already begun a campaign upon all the business men of their ucquaint- . A;,_ anco, dilating upon the healtlr and pleasure to be had in bicycling, and urg ing them to buy wheels and learn to ride, and then- to join the association. Tho club proposes to wage a heavy war upon bad roads for a radius of ten mile* around Newark.—New York Sun. , The Rabbit's Remarkable Nerve. Perhaps you uover heard how Col. W. W. Foote overenmo a contumacious rule bit on tho slopes of Mount Shasta, where wintor snows grow quite tall.' His boy ran in one day, full of excitement, call ing out: ‘‘Papa, there’s a big rabbit sitting out- sldo tho fence! Get your gun, quickl" Tbo-colonel fetched out Ids trusty weapon, and they started out to stalk their unsuspecting prey. Onco within gunshot lie (loured in a hot shot, but the thing never moved. Anothor barrel, but tho thing didn't wink an ear. “Jehosaphatl” said tho sportsman. ‘Tm not going to bo insulted by a mis erable rabbit." and ho started to club tho living daylights outof the beast with ' ' i gun. It lmd been frozen solid.— Oakland At) News. Wbut is to “Tiddly lVInk?" hat is to “tiddly wink?" Wo do not know: but whatever it is, at auy rate tho supremo court of Victoria bus de cided that it i3 hot libelous. A colonial newspaper charged a shire councillor with having “tiddly winked the shire funds.” Litigation ensued, and the m.nt- was carried on appeal to the highest mud in the colony, with the afore- results. Some fifty English dic- ionnries were brought into court to en able the judges to ascertain what was the real meaning of tho word, tmt“tid- , dly winking" was not discoverable in any of thorn. So they accepted tho defi nition of tho witness that tho phrase couveyed to his mind tho idea of “using little dodges to obtain one's own ends.” An imputation of that sort the court de cided was not necessarily libelous.— Tall Mall Gazette. Pocket ltarouletcr*. . Pedestrians with an inquisitive turn of mind have carried pedometers for ^ , some time past The individual who Py .Cyras an umbrella comes forward with a pocket barometer. The tourist ran ; - acroes the first man in his rounds who carried a pocket barometer. The gentlo- ,*£' : i«*ti was a “commercial tourist.” He took the barometer—which, by the way, was attached to a Dickens chain—from his pocket, consulted it and said: “Well, X guess I’ll take my umbrella today.” Pocket barometers are carried in Ire land.—Albany Journal. Sik* The IP card of Politeness. Office Boy (to busy 'merchant)—A friend of your father wishes to sco you, sir. Busy Merchant—Tell him my father lives at Kalamazoo, and I’m sorry. Friend of His Father (after message is delivered)—Very well; I’ll placo my ten thousand dollar order for goods olso- :where>—Puck. • In Greece Solon was the first who pro nounced a funeral oration, according to Herodotus, SSO B. C. Tho Romans pro nounced harangues over their illustrious and I want now to do all I can to right that, wrong. Will you please say how much money wo shall pay you for the wrong we have done you?' I thanked him and said I wanted time to reflect. I took the time and gave an answer. Turning to the cashier the gentleman said: ‘Make out a check for so much’—a sum double the amount I had named. That check was certified and I now have it in my (ssiker. I am glad to tell this incident for many reasons, one of which it tlut it tends to answer the charge that is frequently made that being a Chris tian makes no difference with one's busi ness habits."—Cor. Chicago Advance. Culture liy Klcctrlc Light. In the Ik>1 anieal department of Cornell university them have recently heon some very curious experiments in the cultivation of plants under electric light. A unmber of flowers and vege tables have been placed where the rays of powerful electric lamps fall upon them night und day, and their growth is compared with that of others of their own HjKMrios planted at the same time and under similar conditions except in the matter of light. The first mid most noticeable effect of this treatment is an enormously increased rate of growth. The plants which are lighted seem to work day and night, and to become especially luxuriant in foliage. The vegetables shoot forward with great quickness, peas, for instance, which become in a few weeks two or three times as tall j is their brethren living by common daylight; and the same thing is true of all the plants. When it came to seeds or fruit of any sort, the matter was entirely different. Here the plants which had grown slowly and by daylight were ahead. It is true that the pea which grew by electric light came to bearing much sooner than the other, hut its hastily made jhjiIh had very few peas, often only one, and those of an inferior quality. In every instance the reproductive powers of the plant seemed to have been most strongly affected, being sacrificed to mere foliage und rapidity of increase in general size.—Youth’s Companion. the Leap to Financial Success j of Adorn Dudenhclfer. |' A party of gentlemen were talking in ( front of the Hotel Sandersville a few • evenings ago, carrying on a finning • conversation about men and events. ( j They were colling np littlcreminisccocea [ j of the past, when one of them remarked:. j “Years ago, just after the close of the j i war. I remember there lived in this j ! county a man who every day walked be- ’ tween the plow handles, tilling his little farm tor a livelihood, contented and ! | serene, seemingly careless and unmind- j | ful of the hard life he daily led. By his fellows he whs not accredited with any j j unusual degree of business tact, nor was j 1 it the case that hi* judgment in matters j of finance was sought by any of his j j acquaintances. | “If lie was overly shrewd no one knew | it; if he anticipated any successful ] achievements beyond the sphere in which j he moved he did nor, let any bne know j of this latent ambition that fired his; brain. Finally he drifted away from I these parts. At first he went to Savan nah. Soon after reaching that city, hav-i ing made a favorable impression on a | Lady who had some means and ^ ho as sisted him in pecuniary matters, he lie- j Macbeth’s “pearl top" and “pearl glass” lamp- chimneys are made of tough glass that costs four times as much as common glass; and the work on them costs much more than the work on common chimneys, just as the work on a dress is proportioned to cost of stuff. The dealer is right in say ing that he can't afford to sell them at the prices of common glass chimneys. And what will become of his chimney trade if his chimneys never break? He is apt to be wrong there. He can afford to charge a fair price and give new chimneys for all that break in use. Have a talk with him. Pittsburg Geo. A. Macbeth A Co. came associated with John L. Martin in * nni ip iT|A\T r«n /MI i DTPH the cotton commission business. In that | All LILA I lUi\ lU.V LIIAKIlK. he prospered fairly well. „„ d eventually oeoRGIA-Bcm.aCoiiNTV. married his benefactress. Retiring from j To th« Honorable Superior Court of said the cotton trade he went, to New York county: sometime in the seventies. There he Th*» petition or Jas. T Cotney. R. L Sulll- struck in, it seems, with the ‘magicians ^ sVgievJ^K. Miirpheyunu’ A*.p‘. of finance’ in the great metropolis, and j WalFl*,citIxe»n»i»feity of amerlcua,.Sumter prosperity, has beamed on him ever since, iaow.'tii rifshfdwhS lor°‘tb^Uerewf i“ efr “At the annual election of stockhold- j associate* and *u ucraoi*. to be incorp -rated era pf the Central railroad In Savannah j ofthe Gen. Alexander, the president, voted by The pr nclpal office, pine- of business and proxy 8,700 shares of that stoek, the | property of Adam Dudenheifer, of New i Jorlty of board of directors shall reside at ul York and that vuua onlv & moaner nor.! l, ine*j but petition r* prey for privilege ol xonc, ana mat was oui> a meager por-, transacting business anywhere in or outside tlon of bis accumulations. Ihe Adam i of the Htate of Georg’a, if the Board of Diret- Dndimbpppr flint in ninrhml Hr. ' tors-hould de Ire mid It, is rhe Interest'd M-fld uuaennei. er tlrat liven id pinched ctr- mp , ny w Tse capital .lockof said cumstances in this county years ago is! company stiuli b<- Fifteen Tb urand (fiftouo) now the anmn (IndpTiliPtfpr that fa an. i Doll o, to be divided Into shtirct) of One" nowtne same unaenneirer tnst to ac i Hundred Dinars eh; bn petit loner* pray connted almost, if not entirely, a million- j f r th* prlvll^g- of b ‘winning buslne* when aire in the most populous and wealthiest j 1° percent • f*hI<i «a Hall stock i* p» d in >»nd T , . 1 r pray for the privilege of Increaslm city in tho Union. ! tal sfck from i - me to time in i “His life, so far as rapid money making “°ard of Director*, u* ocenaiou and nusines* . , * , .*? may demand to unumoi goes, is a marvelous success, and yet it Hundred Thousa ».» Dol is bnt the historv of other men. From Th^objectoi theiras*<»ciMt on I* pecuniary I ..„/i i.. n ! gain ana profit* for lu shurchohier* and tlie the bottom he has risen and worked his Fund net** they propose to conduct, 1* that of way through adverse circumstances to a ; nuying, .elli, a, repairing or n.anuraciuriuir. position of security and ease. It is all in I Hj| V .‘r ami plated varef also musical inst.ru- tlieman, after all.”—Sanderson ville(Ga.) ment* and inu-ieal m*-rchandf«e of all kind* Prncrro** i «ptlc»l goo **, preciou- Kt-Uie*, art g*»od«. * ro KTwSS. - j bricabrac, einNswaie, walking r..n»*s, tim- I br*d a-and cutlery nod all other article* A Good Method of Copying. j of inerclmnd'Ko usually kept In }-w* Iry nd PASSENGER SCHEDULE SUWANEE river route to florii — Taking Effect March 9«, 1891. HtBndard Time, OOih Me 6 16 p m 6 a» p m h p m 10 46 am *\r ... 11 00 a m Lv....,, I 55 p m! Cordele*. 3 "Jo p ml \r Tilton 4 54 p m Ar Valdosta A* 12 01 p m II 23|a m 6 5*1 r» n»| \r .Lake City Lv " t » i> »»l * r . J ckMonvtile ,Lv) 7 Quant lu p nijAr.. Connection n rth bound aud sou h hound !* made in Macon with trafni of Central mid E. T. V. A G. railroad*. A. C. KNAPP. J.T.IMGE, L. J. HARRIS, General Pa* So 5:0 Muiber Macon Gh. C. C. ROPK't, Jh., Solicit ing A gent. 6 Kltn»M»t| Block. Ulant*. On. L. C. CONOVA, C.T.A. R. T. RICH \ ttl». Agent, Union Depot. W.P.LAWHHE.T.P.A, PalntkA. Fla. JAMES MENZIES, Southeastern Agent, 9& West Bay Ht., Jacksonvitic, Ha. SCHOFIELD’S IRON WORKS, FOUNDRY AND MACHINE SHOP. laid, or thwt ideal in* rurnent or on the ln*>all« y l»e to cheese cloth, or as many pieces as may ; tiny of the article* he necessary to make the desired number t SSKor'UilSfmJ for cash of copies, each tlie size of the letter book meat plan, nr dispose o same page. When about to take copies wet 'J'ify’p.Vpr’v’p g°°toKorrr the clotli. or several pieces if necessary, ; porste pnrpo.es, sad secure the’same by so thoroughly that there shall be no dry , , 1 n /J l 7| B o 1 Mt« r ?!oVp'mre? r p/op'rtp- J ' n P 'i" Dyspeptic. Take Note* Dyspeptics will do well to observe the following general rnlei: Live on two steals a day if poasible. Never eat to eiceea Estimate as nearly aa yon can tho actnal needs of the system, and limit the quantity of food to them, remember iug that one grows weak if he eats too much. Eat slowly and masticate all food even longer and more thoroughly than a healthy person careful of his di gestion would do. Quite dry foods, as a rule, are liest suited to dyspeptics, who should drink sparingly with their meals. Some cun bike ice water in very small quantities without lieing disturbed by it, but generally it retards digestion. And the sumo is true of all cold drinks. ■ Warm ones suit most dyspeptics best, nnd a very little weak tea, if properly made, is not at all likely to do p.ny harm. Tho food should be neither very hot nor very cold. Properly, it should lie about “blood warm." Every ouo knows from experience just what foods distress them, nnd what urc well borne; of course, the former should be excluded from the diet.—Boston Herald. The Imliifttriul Organization of the Future. Tho wages system is of recent origin, certainly modern, I believe transitional A hundred years ago tho weaver owned his loom, the tailor his bench, the'eob- bler his stall, the stage driver his coocli, the woman her spinning wheel. The in vention of steam, the spinning jenny nnd the pbwer loom created a necessity for organized labor. Individualism gave place to combination, and combination created capitalism. I believe that os slavery gave place to serfdom, un,d serf dom to the wages system, so in time the wages system trill *ivo place to indus trial democracy.—Bev. Dr. Lvinau Ab bott in Forum. Chinese in Agriculture. A Chinaman in this city lias a garden ten feet wide at one end, twenty at the other aud forty feet long that lias pro duced more garden truck and will pro duce more thau any white man's truck patch of an acre of ground. White men j could get (minters on agriculture from these same heathen Chinese, as it has been their study for centuries to know ; how to utilize every square foot of land they cultivate.—Rapid City Republican, j spots. Tins done wring them out as dry as possible with the hands. Now place the oil sheet in the book and the cloth thereon, and the leaf of the copy book on this. Next lay the letter or manuscript on this, and if another sheet is to lie copied add another oil sheet, a wet cloth, the tissue leaf, and so on for as many sheets as there may be to copy. By this process os many as twenty sheets may be copied successfully at the same time, while the most expert with the brush, or any similar device for moistening the tissue leaves, will some times fail on a single copy. We retired our hair and felt brushes to make place for the cheese cloth a number of years ago. For typewriter work nothing ex cels the cloth. Clear copies may be pro- cureij ns long as there is enough ink left on a ribbon to make an impression.— Cor. Writer. Dyslng lloSr4, It is said that the process of dyeing roses is becoming a remunerative branch of industry with English horticulturists. Instead of growing new varieties ol roses, which is a process of years, they simply grow ordinary white roses nnd dip them in a chemical solution which in a single hour converts them into the most mhgnilicent yellow tea roses, the; rare scurlot red or the peculiar shade ot bluish violet which has been one of the favorites of the season. In a similar way pink roses are turned into blossoms of the deepest red. Somo years ugo, be fore this branch of "floral chemistry" was developed, the first experiments were successfully made in France " .th tlie (Kjpular pink hortensin, which, by being watered with a solution of iron, assumed a bine slrado.—London Lotter. nr.tes, arcnunlH. to buj i.nld, Improve, - ell lea*e and rent real or por*onal proper! for corporate purpose*, and dispose of an» real or per-on»»l property held by raid company foroash.or on Instalment*, to *uh*crlbe to orown stock In other coin t*an lea if director* should think It to the Interest of said com pany. To »pp‘ Int all officer*, agent* for ihe management of it* hiiHli ess to employ sales* men, drummer*, workmen, and all other person* for conduct Ing said business. Petl- loners prav for the privilege to make and Inconsistent with the laws of Georgia; also tract and be contracted with, to have such other power* and to do such other act* a* »rocu*t mary and proper, to carry out the intent, design xud purpose of raid corpora tion. Petiti mer* pray to be Incorporated for the full term of twenty (30) year*, with privilege of renewal at the expiration of raid term according to law And petitioner* will eve^pray^etc^ Petitioners* Attorney. FUe t In office this 8th day of April, 1801. J. H. Allen, Clerk 8 C. 8. C. Ga. I hereby certify that the above Is a true extract, from tho record ot charters of Sum ter court. Thl* 8th April 1891, J. H. Allen, Clerk 8. C. 8. C. Ga. J. S. SCHOFIELD’S SONS & CO., Prop’rs, Manufacturers of Steam Engines, Boilers, Cotton Presses and General Machinery, Cotton Gins, Cane Mills and Saw Mills. Dealers in Mill and Machinists’ Supplies. Special Attention to Repair Work. d&w-4-7-6mo* MACON 9 G"EOK-GrIA« BLACK BEAUTY. Probably no book has ever appeared in America which has received such universal, uniform and unanimous praise from both the secular and religious press in all parts of the coun try. At last accounts over 107,000 copies had been sold in London, England. This book retails at 25c., but ALLISON & AYCOCK. The Larnar St. Book Dealers and Stationers have about fifty copies on hand that they will sell at 15c per copy. Call and get one before they are all gone. UPPHAW Proprietor, Druggists, Uppmsn** Feck. SWANN AH. C* For sale hy the DAVENPORT DRUG Lots and Money. Verisoft—I Iovq yon, dear Alice, and 1 j >■011 to bo my wife. Alice—Bnt yea ore too poor to bay the engagement ring. Verisoft—Yes, bat you can loan me the money.-^Jewelera’ Circular. A handcar which moves along the! traclni and mows weeds fifteen feet j away is one of the innovations in rail-] road machinery. It will do to go very , well with tho rotary snow plow as an | illustration of automatio intelligence, j Mr. William Astor, of New York, cn- joyt an income of $23,505 a day; Mr. ■lead. Theo[s)mpus obtained a pciw for John D. Rockefeller's amounts to $18,715; j the best fnnenu oration in praise of Mr. Cornelins Vanderbilt’s to $15,000,, Mausol os, 353 B. C. I «nd Mr. Jay Gould’s to $7,450. The Fly Too Dig a Fool Put a fly on tho window and up h€ goes toward the top; ho can’t bo made tc COMPANY, Auirricu*,' Ga. walk downward. A St. Louis inventoi hit upon m. idea, why not use that Hard Times to get Money! habit against them? Forthwith ho made ° J a window screen divided in half. The i upper half lapped over tho lower, with Tc „ mV(Hl lw ,. nty d „,iar. .nude! an inch of space between. As soon as o fly would light on the screen he would My Newsprint Hty:cs cannot be excelled, proceed to travel upward, and would and by eulllnu no thus walk straight out of doors. On; reaching the top of the lower half he, ]VT. FUTFNT) would be outside. Not being able tc walk down ho had no way to return tc You can set a Stylish Hp,ing suit at small the room. By this means a room can • be quickly cleared of flies, which always c wt * ftml *'"*<**"<"' K ’aranteeU. seek the light.—New York Journal. Old Fxpres* Office *tand, Lamar street. aprin-lmo. Curability of Consumption. In a late series of experiments Dr. Koch found that certum bodies, such bb volatile oils, and certain metallic salts, such as nitrate of silver and preparations of gold, even in very small doses (1 to 1,000,000, and even less), destroy the bacilli of consnmption in a very short time. He therefore concludes that in the course of time some drug may be I u LadoR-VIT.u.oT^r 1 discovered that will cure the disease by destroying the bacilli without injury to I D/MM5HC5 DANGlIX TO LIFE #MOTHERfc?CHILD. the body.—Arkansaw Traveler. Hill, uud Oy.t.ra, | The dietetic expert haa analyzed the !ii )n „„, e . I nREGUU T -, n __ * "Bine Point," and finds that, bulk for; C2-* bulk, tne tnollnsk Is equal to milk in AT la nr A. .a T. H. SMITH. nutritive value. “Oysters," he says, “come nearer to milk than almost any plying the body with material to build i Architect and Builder, np its parts, repair its wastes and fur nish it with heat and energy are pretty] nearly the same.”—Chicago News. r Americas, Ga. I. B. «Ml II, wnp, rlnt nilen: of ork. Kstbnates mrul.bcU on li n notice. All work guaranteed. -f-!<J2ir W. H. R. SCHROEDER, (.Successor to Hcbroeder A Strickland,) 724 Cotton Avenue. AMERICUS, GA. Manufacturer of Tin, Copper and Sheet Iron Ware, Galranlzed Iron Cornice, Tin and Iron Roofing, Hot Air Hosting Etc. Iron Smoko Sticks. Exhaust Piping for Saw Mills a Specialty. NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS AND BUILDERS. I would bo pleased to fir* you « toe all work to beflrst-clus in every pi notice. I also do Heavy Iron Work (b &yCALL AND GET MY ESTIMATES AND GIVE ME A TRIAL.. !-14m p 'T’ FIRE AND LIFE INSURANCE REPRESENTING THE SAFESTAND STRONGEST COMPANIES IN THEJIlED. Insurance placed on City and Country Property, Offlco on Jackson Street, next door below Mayor’s Office. H. SANFORD, Contractor and Builder, AMERICUS, GA., Is prepared to take contracts for buildings of all kinds. With Urge experience in building be can guarantee as good work as can be done auy where. Designs Furnished, Estimates Made. Incitde finishing a specialty. In hard woods All Utest designs Samples can be had on ap plication. Call at J. B. Dunn's store, on Lamar street, Americua, Ga. dec!7-8m mwm Hvm maur/snvTCHtcvjts 8* HAUfES GOLDEN SPECIFIC. It can b.-gl ven in coffee, tea. or In article* of toed, without the knowledge of patient U necessary 5 . It Is absolu'ely harmless ana will effect a perma nent and speedy cure, whether the patient is • moderatedri nker or an alcoholic wreck. IT ff E V- KU FA l LH. It operate* so quietly and with such certainty that the patient undergoes no Incon venience, and soon Ills complete reformation |a effected. 43 page book free. To be had of ► «*r fal$* Dr. E. J. I* I* ridge Caveats, snd Trade-Marks obtained, snd all Pat ent business conducted for Mod trait Fees. Oar Oflct Is OpsotHs U. 8. Patent Office, snd we ran secure patent In less time than those remote from Washington. Send model, drawing or photo., with descrip tion. \V e advise, if patentable or not, free of charge. Our fee not due till patent It secured. A Pamphlet. “How to Obtain Patents," with names of actnal clients Inyonrfitate, county,or town, sent free. Address. C. A. SNOW & CO. Oppo.fi, Point Office, Wxhlngtn, D. C. SHINGLES, SHINGLES. TT-THE BEST KNOWN RFMFDY S'T in 1 ' mS*****’ ’rithmnT'ili. ■ 2 r™,!.- * * trlc,UM . Contains no ST Pfridoppolnnouasab.tnnct's,snd [•jm.r.ntesd absolutely Intrmless. 0 prescribed liy phy.lclsns. Ileet 8y- JWOw with enebibottle. Prleefi Si. !’ r dnntKlou. Itew.re oC Sub. gJJJtejnAcmeChemjOOjUdjiJMJjlj W 8 ? , t!2A ra ® ri JL 11 * b * Cook ’« Pharmacy, E. J. Kldriflpc, Fleetwood A Russell, J. E. Hall and Davenport Drug Company. $500 Howard ! mnlMoltk. Th-r.r.,„4.lvv-.—-i, Ci , n jarr— BuyTourrtinrle,.«Cobb's, on *. Al A M. i sad a Incbra^tdtli, ttudis long. i JO <™ P wt. dmntSrfvmwM/iu? 1 * ** ctKmn on car-load lots, For sale by the DAVENPORT DRUG COMPANY, Americas, Ga. f.'kl ■ ' ’• '' mm isesesi