Newspaper Page Text
THE AMERICUS DAILY TIMES-RECORDER: SLSDAY, MAY 24, 189i.
JUST A little knowledge.
The f'o«i
Something is lost
when yon use Dr. Sagc]s_ Catarrh
~ nedy. "
dy. It’s Catarrh. The worst
cases yield to its mild, soothing,
cleansing, and healing properties.
No matter how bad your case, or of
how long standing, you can bo cured.
Incurablo cases aro rare. It’s worth
$500 to you, if you have one. Tho
manufacturers of Dr. Sage’s Remedy
aro looking for them. They’ll pay
you that amount in cash, if they
can’t cure you. It’s a plain square
offer from a responsible business
house, and they mean it. It seems
too one-sided, too much of a risk.
It would be—with any other medi-
oine behind it. It only goes to prove
what’s been said : incurable cases
aro rare—with Dr. Sage’s Catarrh
Remedy.
Other so-called remedies may pal
liate for a timo; this cures for all
time. By its mild, soothing, cleans
ing and healing properties, it con
quers the worst cases. It removes
offensive broatb, loss or impairment
of the sense of taste, smell or hear
ing, watering or weak eyes, when
caused by tho violence of Catarrh,
as they all frequently aro.
Remedy sold by druggists, only
80 oents.
THAT.^ so!jdhnny ROACH
i lAAOCBV
MASSENBURG MACON. GA
, SOLD by DRUGGISTS.
PRICE 25 CENTS
For sale by FLEETWOOD * RUSSELL,
■ole agents, Amerleus, Oa, 4-20-dawlm
ABBOTT’S
For sale by the DAVENPORT DRUG
COMPANY Amerleus, 6a.
»*N*ioii of Ic Hosts Not Vny Very
H‘dl In tlio l/ong Hum.
“It doesn’t pay to know just a little
about thing*,” said ono of those men
who ary always after “general informa
tion.” “Judging from experiatice I
thoroughly agree with the gentleman
who paid, ‘A little knowledge is a danger
ous thing.’ For example, I have never
been able to eat an egg with thorough
relish—though exceedingly fond of them
for their flavor—since I learned that the
little spot on one side of the yelk, toward
the butt end, is the germ of the chicken.
You may cook an egg in what fashion
you please, but whether it is boiled,
poached or fried, you will find that genn
always conspicuous, when once yon
know it is there, and you cannot eat the
egg until you have carefully removed it.
It would add considerably to my happi
ness if I conld believe today what I was
tanght in the nursery, that the white of
an egg makes the bones of the subsequent
fowl and the yelk the flesh, instead of
knowing, as I do, that both are merely
the food by the consumption of which
the germ is developed.
“But that is only a very minor in
stance. My slight knowledge of patho
logical anatomy, amounting to the mer
est smattering, is a source of continual
distress to me. Though an abstemious
man, on the whole, I cannot indulge in a
glass of any alcoholic beverage without
realizing that 1 am subjecting my sys
tem to the action of a ‘heart stimulant’
which accelerates the pulsations of that
organ injuriously. The slightest sensa
tion of any sort about my chest causes
me to imagine, despite myself, that the
tubercular bacilli are beginning to get
in their deadly work upon my pulmona
ry system.
“Presumably it is only a trifling inter
costal rheumatism, hut I am none the
less uneasy. A similar feeling in the
small of my back makes me think of
Bright's disease. Supposing that 1 swal
low an orange seed by accident, it oc
curs to me at once that there is a chance
for its getting into a certain useless sac
attached to the stomach, where, if it
does, it will occasion inflammation that
is necessarily fatal before long. I know
that my intestines are a prey to certain
vermiculor parasites, as are those of
every one else; but they do not occasion
me so much annoyance us tho possibili
ty, always existing, that painfnl concre
tions of lime may be forming in my
bladder or my liver.
“A superficial knowledge of physiology
takes much of the poetry out of exist
ence and removes a large part of the
gilding from the sublunary gingerbread,
os one might say. Having acquired it,
a man realizes rather painfnlly that he
is largely an elevated animal after all,
though hitherto lie has imagined himself
chiefly mind.
Supposiug that oue’s partner in the
german is a thin girl, ho cannot help
figuring her out as an articulated skele
ton and setting an estimated price npon
her as a ‘preparation’ in that guise. This
does not apply, however, when she is an
acknowledged heiress.
Imagination is always opposed to
facts, and by as much as the latter are
calculated to dispel agreeable illusions;
they are destructive of happiness. There
fore I am inclined to think that however
desirable knowledge maybe respecting
things with which one lias no personal
and intimate concern, it is most com
fortable to know a very little about one’s
self and one’s environment. ‘Drink deep
or taste not the Pierian spring,' ’’—Wash
ington Star.
W.
$3 SHOE
CLAS
otter special-
for Osntlemen.
^ aro war-
ktou, UrhTboUIIV
THORN iON HisA’l 1.KY
Americus, - . Georgia
_ for catalogue.
terry M’FQ CO.. Nazhv
Tenn
SHINGLES
BY THE CAR LOAD LOTS.
The best Shingles made nt the lowest
prices ever known befoje. Add res*
8. M. Josn h, America*. Oa.
I). C. Jo * eh, Leslie Oa.
«Ulmay20
U.irnura'* “Uriel* Mhi»."
As an illustration of ono of Barnum'e
inge-niousiuediodsof attracting attention
to his museum may lx- mentioned the in
cident of rim “briek man.” Ono day a
man applied for alma to B irnnin, who
was sitting in the ticket office. To the
inquiry as to why he did not go to work,
the mendicant replied that he would
gladly do so at a dollar a day if ho could
find employment. Bamtnn gave him
twenty-five cents to get his breakfast,
and told him to return, and he would
give him a dollar and a half u day and
easy work. When the man returned,
Bamum gave him five bricks, and told
him to place one in front of tho museum,
another on tho corner of Vesey street, a
third at tho corner of Fulton—on the St.
Paul’s church sidt*—and the fourth on
the east corner of Fulton. Returning
then to tho museum, he was to take up
the first brick and replace it with the
fifth, and then continue his rounds, put
ting down one brick and taking up the
other each time.
He was enjoined to answer no ques
tions and to seem not to hear, and that
at the end of each three-quarters of an
hour he was to pass into the museum,
look around at the curiosities for fifteen
minutes and then resume his rounds
with the bricks. Barnum says that tiie
man played his part to perfection, and
his eccentric conduct caused a great
crowd to gather about the museum.
Many of t hose, of course, went into the
museum to seek some explanation as to
the purpose of the “brick man.” This
was kept up for several days, until the
jHilice requested his withdrawal, liecause
such crowds lingered about the museum
that traffic was interrupted.—J. G. Speed
in Harper's Weekly.
tor Infants and Children.
• • Cu t or! a le io well adapted to children that
I recommend It a. superior to any prescription
known to mo." H. A. Ancnxn. II. D..
Ill So. Oxford EL, Brooklyn, N. T.
Two G.rmuu Word. That Mean Much.
German barbers In New York havo a
curiooa system of signs anil uiysterions
words by which they indicate to each
other the tendency of customers to give
large tips, small tips or none at all. If
a new barber in a large shop gets a gen
erous customer in Ills chair, u fellow
workman who has shaved the generous
customer before mutters in his ear,
Bruns"—that is, “He tips.” “Bruns"
is a distinctively German product, and
till recently was never heard outside of
continental barber shops. Its greatest
merit is that it means nothing to per
sons who are not barbers, for it hue no
Indorsement from the German diction
aries, and does not even enjoy the ques
tionable authority of student slang.
German barbers in New York desig
nate a man who gives no gratuities as a
muff.” Like “bruns,” “muff” is no
word at all, and was invented by wily
continental liarben for the needs of the
shop only. The amount of the tip to be
expected is revealed by the old journey
men to the new ones by various contor
tions of tiie fingers and by low German
monosyllables of no apparent relevancy.
—Montreal Star.
bHING-LES
—AND-
LUMBER
ured io furnish shorn
jfaetlon guarantee ♦.
p.rkers Station, loo mile* fr«i .... ,
on 8. A. AM. B. U. Ad.lnisaUH >.t Leslie
Oa. R. a. 11-MONACO.
[ SUFFERERS
-—sOFi—
Youthful Errors
Lost Manhood, Early Decay, eto.,
etc., can secure a home treatise hew
Virginia.
Stones Aro Composed of Shells.
The trinoli. used for polishing our ta-
nlowarv, is cutuposeu enthuiy of the si*
licious shells of infusoria. The earthly
[mint with which our houses aro colored
a nothing but the remains of different
species of these animals. Even the hard
est rocks—the flints—show, when exam
ined under the microscope, that they,
too, aro composed of the skeletons of in
fusoria. I once examined a thin section
of a flint formerly us«h1 by the great
hunter, Daniel Boone,
composed of the shells of infusoria. The
gun, an old flintlock rifle, from which
this flint was taken, is still preserved at
Frankfort, Ky.
Even many of the precious stones, such
as the camelian, owe their beautiful
colors to the presence of fossil infusoria.
—Macon Telegraph.
Importance of Hroiitliing Properly.
In all the various systems of physical
culture now in vogue the greatest im
portance is attached to taking.the breath
properly. The breathing should be slow
and deep, six breaths a minute being a
safe average. There is still a difference
of opinion in regard to the relative value
of abdominal and chest breathing, and
each system has its advantages. One of
the best exercises for increasing the ca
pacity of tho lungs is to draw a full
breath very slowly and through the
nose. Keep the lungs inflated us long as
possible, and then expel the air suddenly
through the mouth, and repeat the pro-
“The use of ‘Castoria* is so universal and
its merits so well known that it seems a work
of supererogation to endorse it. Few are the
Intelligent families who do not keep Castoria
within easy reach.”
Carlos Mxrmr.D.D.,
New YorkClty.
Late Pastor Bloomingdale Reformed Church.
yule Worms, gives sleep, and promotes di
med! cation.
44 For several years I have recommended
your • Castoria. • and shall always continue to
do so as it has invariably produced beneficial
Edwin F. Pa non, H. D.,
14 The Winthrop,” 129th Street and 7th Are.,
New York City.
Tb* CnrrAca Compact, 77 Murray Struct, New York.
R. S. & G. W. OLIVER,
(Successor# to Little Mardkk)
Care should lie taken uot to try to
make tbe period of bolding the breath
too long at tbe start; the more gradually
the power of doing this is attained tbe
better will be tbe permanent results.
There are many breathing exercises, and
pne of tho best is tho taking pf a deep
breath and swinging the arms, first one,
then the other, and finally both, while
the breath is inhaled. Excessive prac
tice of any system should be avoided,
and the gulden rnle of taking moderate
and judicious exercise should be ob
served.—Now York Commercial Adver
tiser.
An Outfit for Traveling.
A woman who has traveled a great
deal abroad says: “A steamer trank
ought to hold all of one's baggage for a
summer trip to Europe. In addition to
a warm, loose flannel wrapper for cabin
use and half a dozen changes of linen,
all that is really reqnired is a close fit
ting traveling suit of dark cloth or serge
with toque to match sitting firmly on
the head in cass of a stiff breeze while
upon the deck, while some prefer the
less dressy worsted or velvet hood to
protect the ears and throat; a short wrap
of warm material, a long mackintosh to
envelop the form during stormy weath
er, stout shoes and a light plaid to throw
over the knees, either when seated upon
the deck of a steamer or traveling
around in an open carriage upon land.
“With this necessary outfit and alight
Biitniner silk for the warmer days of
sight seeing, one is well equipped for
the longest journey, and may travel at
ease free from the anxiety attendant
upon the poesession of the usual list of
tranks carried by most novices while
upon a journey.”—Boston Transcript
The Vanderbilt System and IU manager*.
More than 7,000 miles of railroad are
absolutely controlled and operated by
the Vanderbilt family. The roads which
are advertised as the “Vanderbilt sys
tem” are the New York Central and
Hudson River, tho Michiguu Central,
the Lake Shore and Michigan Southern,
the Cleveland, Cincinnati, Chicago and
St. Lonis, tho West Shore, and the New
York, Chicago and St. Louis. These six
roads with their leased lines and tile
Roue, Watertown and Ugdensburg.
which has been purchased by the Van
derbilts, have 7,000 miles of line and
represent a capital stock of more than
8150,000,000. Their bonded indebted
ness will aggregate nearly 8000,000,000.
These roads ure under tho absolute con-
id and personal direction of Cornelius
Vanderbilt. As his principal aids m
managing this property Cornelius Van
derbilt has surrounded himself with four
brainy men. They are Chauncey M.
Depew, John Newell, Henry B. Led-
yard and Melville E. Ingalls.—Chicago
Herald.
105 FORSYTH STREET,
Keeps always on hand a complete assortment of Books
and Fine Writing Papers; School Books for
every county in Southwest Georgia.
Fine * Pictures, * Framed * and # in * Sheets.
Large lot of New Moulding just received. Send in youi
Pictures ‘and have them framed. We lead, others follow.
Come and see us when you need anything in our line.
REMEMBER THE PLACE.
C. M. WHEATLEY, Pres’t
CRAWFORD WHEATLEY, Vioe l'res’t.
B. JI. JOSSEY, Sec’y & Treas.
C. C. STONE, Supt.
The Americus Construction Company,
Successors to C. M. Wheatley & Co.
Have the largest stock of
Dry L UMBER
Both Rough and Dressed, ever held in the city, with unequalled capacity
‘ ' will fi ‘ -
for the execution of fine work. They will furnish the' trade with
Sash, Doors, Blinds, Mantels, Stairvork, Pulpits, Pevs,
COUNTERS, SHELVING-, MOULDINGS, ORNAMENTS, ETO.
Prompt attention given all orders. Write for Catalogue and prices
Office and Factory, COR. BAY A JACKSON STS. Telephone No. 78.
Uptown Office, No. JACKSON ST. Telephone 110.
CRAWFORD WHEATLEY, Pm.
ARCHIE R ELORIDGE, Gen’l Ming 1
The Americus Refrigerating Co.
APPLICATION FOR CHARTER.
• EoRGJ A—hunter County.
To tb- Honorable Superior Court of said
County:
Tb- petition of.la*. T Cotney.
, Luihei C. Helj, f\ J. Hehn
•an, l.uihei C. Hell, C. J. Hchttgder. P. C
' egg,H.t*. Hagley.W. E. Murpliey and w. p.
■Vullis, citizen** of city «,f • Ameilcus, Sun-ter
iity. Go r.la. and other*, respectfully
•howeth heir <Je*l<e for tbe ’ nelve*7**l~’e»r
elute* and *u censor*, to be inoorp rated
• umiui i uuii uciirgin, whup* a ma
jority of board of director* shall reside at all
•Imes; but petition ra prey for privilege of
iruiiHaetlng business anywhere In or nutaide
of I be stale of Georgia. If t fie Board of Direc
tor* -hould de Iremdit !■ *he Interest'd autd
(#15 900)
•onn any shall be Flftec
Dollars, to be divided into shares of One
Hundred fo'lar* e»ch: bu petitioner* pray
b*r the prlvtleg of beginning business when
toper cent of said cai-ltal stock I* paid In end
pray for the privilege of Increasing said capi
tal stock from time to time, in ulscretlon of
•<oard of Directors, as occasion and business
may demand to an amount not to exceed One
Hundred Thousand Dol.xrs.
Th« object of thef rassoclMt on Is pecuniary
gain and profits for It* shareholders and the
business they propose to conduct. Is that of
mi) lng,«ellti g, repairing or manufacturing,
watch- s, cloeks and Jewelry of II kind*,
•dlv r and plated v are, also musical instru
ments and musical merchandise or nil kinds,
optical goo *, preclou- stones, art goods,
hrlcAbrac, glass wine, walking canes, urn-
brel'a«and cutlery and all other artloles
of merchand *e usually kept In Jewelry end
musical instrument houses and petitioners
pray for the pr vilegeof renting or leasing
-*• tlcir ' *-* — **“*
• nf •resaid, or thatn
houses,or sell same for cash or on tbe Inst ail
ment plan, or dispose o‘ same ns may be to
Interest of sail company. Petitioners also
pmy for prlvib ge to borrow money for cor-
porale purposes, and secure the same by
mopgage. trust deed or otherwise, upon any
all of Its corpora e propertp; o make
tes, accounts, to buy bold, improve,sell
lease and rent real or personal propert. for
corporate purposes, and dispose of ant real
or per-onnl property held by »ald company *
for cash, or on instillment-, to subscribe to
orown stock in other com ran les If directors
should think It to the Interest of said com
pany. To appoint all officer*, agents (or the
management of Its buslnesfl.to employ sales-
. • —id all c
drummers, workmen, and all other
person** for conducting said badness. Peti
tioners pray for the privilege to make and
enforce such constitution, by-laws, rales and
regulations for tbe government of said com
pany as maybe necessary and proper, not
Inconsistent with the laws of Georgia; also
to have and use a common seal, to sue and
be sued, to plead and be Impleaded, to con
tract and be contracted with, to have such
other powers and to do such other acts as
arecust mary and proper, to carry out the
intent.deslgn and purppse of said corpora
tion. Petit! mer- pray to be Incorporated
for the full term or twenty (20) years, with
privilege of renewal at tbe expiration of said
term according to law
And petitioners will ever pray, ete.
WTP. Wallis,
Petitioners* Attorney.
Filed In office this 8th day of April, 1891.
J. H. Allen,
Clerk 8 c. H. C. Ga.
I hereby certify that the above Is a true
extract from the record ot charters of Sum
ter court. This 8th April 1891.
J. H. Allen,
Clerk 8. C. 8. C.Ga.
APPLICATION FOR CHARTER.
GEORGIA—Sumter County:
To tbe Superior Court of Bald County:
The petition of <\ R. Whitley, M. B. Carap-
be I. James L. Montgomery. Liston Cooper,
J. T. VN ortham. it. II. Chas-, L. B. Ritter
selves together and d*slre for themselves,
tbelr a-*oclate>, successor* and assigns to be
Incorporated under the*laws of Georgia and
made a body politic, with the right of suc
cession under the corporate name ot the
"Americus St am Laundry Company.**
Th» object of said corporation is for pecu-
nlaty gain and profit for its shareholders,
and the particular bus ness to be carried on
Is that of a general laundry, the washing and
Ironing of clothes or every and all character
and description, and such business as Is
usual and Incident to a laundry.
The capital stock of said corporation shall
be five thousand dollars, divided Into shares
oe nve thousand sonars, divided into shares
ofnne hundred dollars each,with the privilege
of Increasing same to a sum not exceeding
twen'y-flve thousand dollarsumdeach stock
holder to be in'Ivualiy liable to the extent
of hi* unpaid subscription of said capital
st«*ck The place of buslms* and principal
office of said corporation will be in tbs city
of Americus, said county.
Petitioners for thermo, ves and associates
pray that under the oorp«r*te name afore
said, they ma> b** Incorporated an t mat e a
body politic for the fn'l term of twenty (80)
Respectfully state that their new Ice Factory will start the
manufacture of Ice in a short time and will be prepared to
furnish Pure Crystal Ice in any quantityfrom a pound to a
car load. Their Refrigerating Chambers will also soon be in
readiness for the preservation of all perishable food products
and will be perfect in every particular. For further partic
ulars either telephone, write or call on
THE AMERICUS REFRIGERATING CO.,
Office & Factory Cor. Jackson & Bay Sts., on Central R. R.
aprllA-Smo
year* with ihe privilege or renewal at tbe ex-
G lratl<*n of that fin e, and o have and enjoy
ie following rights and privileges, to- U:
nd privileges, to- It:
, The right to ine and be sued, plead and be
Impleaded, to con ract and be contracted
with.t * use a common seal and adopt by-
la s, rule* and regulations binding on Its
stockholder* forthe government of its stock-
county In this8t*teor ouukle of this 8t *te.
To borrow money for corporate purposes ard
- trust dsed
J. HENRY FREEMAN,
413 COTTON AVE.,
Contractor* andBuilder.
Kstlmntes cheerfully furnished. Alio dealer In Bulldluf Material.,
Doors, M, Blinds, Brick, Shinies,Latls
Wall Papers, etc.; Lemls, Oils and Avcrill Mixed Paints, the best in
the world. Call and see me when you n .ed anything in my line.
In the Train.
“That fellow over there must feel un
comfortable.”
•“Whyf"
“He tried to shut the window for the
girl in front of him, but couldn't do it.
After he gave it up the girl tried aUl ]
zoooeeded.”—Boston Herald.
A l>aughter uf a Duchess.
The younger daughter of the Duke and
This flint was ! Duchess of Connaught was bom on St.
Patrick’s Day, and rejoices in the name
of Victoria Patricia, »o called in honor
of her grandma and that Irish saint. An
American lady living in London, and
who seems to know a g«x*l deal about
English royalty, says the little girl is a
real toauiy, and that her cousins, of
whom there is a troop, call her 44 Patsy I”
Whether this will render the name pop
ular in aristocratic circles remains to be
seen, but Patricia in itself is a lovely
mouthful and a decided improvement
on Gladys and Gwendoline, which are
as common as Edith and Mabel were ten
years ago.—London Letter.
STATE OF GEORGIA—SUMTKB COUNTY.
To the Honorable Superior Court of said Count j:
The petition of W. P. Bort, H. C. Bagtey, M.
Callaway, M. 8jK?er. P. C. Clegg, J. j” Hanwley
anil B. Myrick show that they constitute the
~’e*ent Jloard of Directors of the Americus
me* Publishing Co., a corporation that was on
io 20th day of February 1890, duly chartered
under the laws of this state, and nnder said
charter had an authorized capital of common
stock to the amount of Ten Thousand Dollar*,
with the privilege of Increasing the same to
Oue Hundred Thousand and that Yen Thousand
Dollars has actually been paid into said com
pany.
Petitioners show that they desire—fall
stockholders of said AinericosTItnes Pnbll*hlng
Company consenting thereto)—to have said
charter amended so a* to authorize said eon»o-
ration, towit, the Americus Times Publishing
Company to isaue, to an extent not to exceed
Manufacturer of Tin, Copper and Sheet Iron (Ware, Galvanized Iron Cornice, of T| >ou«nd ptm,***
W. H. R. SCHROEDER,
* (Hnccesaor to Schrocder A Strickland,)
724 Cotton Avenue. AMERICUS, GA.
Tin and Iron Roofing, Hot Air Heating Etc. Iron Smoke Stacks.
Exhaust Piping for Saw Mills a Specialty.
NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS AND BUILDERS.
When arid 1. dropped oo an article of
wearing apparel poor ammonia imme
diately npon the spot to neutralize the
effect of the acid: tlicn addIv chloroform
by addreHlng a fellow suflerer, C. and tbe original color will in almost
w. Leek, P. O. Box 816, Boanoke,
every caw return.
Yen Time. Ilett.r-
Mr. Upton—1 notice <u a French pa
per that Minister de Preycinet U now
one of the Forty Immortals.
Mrs. De Fashion—Only forty? A that
all Parle ha*? Why, in New York there
are four handled at ni—New York
Weekly.
ty CALL, AND GET MY ESTIMATES AND GIVE ME A TRIAL.
-
On May i, at the side track at Furlow Lawn, the
OCMULGEE MtICK COMPANY
AND TIIE
RIVERS LUMBER COMPANY
WILL OPFN A SALES YAKD FOIt
BRICK, LUMBER AND SHINGLES
A man will be in charee of the
A full stock of everything will
•rear, the Mm. by morir.fe or trn.tdMd
orotbe wise upon any or allot It, corpora c
P To*ii»v», hold, owe, u»e and enjoy ell
property, real and peraonal, a. ro.y D» g«.
.wan lorlh.tranwotlon oflu told buclnw.,
and IO boy machinery to can y on tbelr wld
buunew. and to appoint all officer! and
aeanta for theman-z. ent ot lie bncinew.
to employ a Inmen, workman and alloth.r
penoBB necamary Io carry on tba >a!d buil-
nem. and t» have and .njo all othar rlzbta.
powere and privileges necewary to carry out
the ■ bj.cuof .aid corporation ronforrred b.v
*?w upon corporations of Ilka character by
tbe laws of Georgia
JA8. DODSON A BON,
_ . . Petltionera’ Attorneys.
Filed In offlee April Hi, 1801.
. J. B. a i,lew, Clerk.
I certify) tho above and Ibref Ivina to be a
true extract from tbe Record of Charter,,
this 10th day of Anrll, 1881.
J. H Allen, clerk 8. C
PETITION FOR AMENDMENT
TO CHARTER.
.Hwauiuuiyiiwcu 1UUUWIIII IWIIMPtMUba ••
bf known as “Preferred Stock,** of said cofiMira
tton, said stock not to !»e increased above Tea
»im precedence over an timer -
i ireviously htsued by the said Americas Tim**
t*|ililihbiiig Company, and tho said Amerli-':'
Times Publishing » ompany to guarantee to t' 1 *
holders ot such “Preferred Stock’* dividend- <>n
the same at the rate of Id p-r cent, per amnwu
ob the par value of Mich stock to lie paid —
of Junnary of each year out of the t
[ to deliver goods to customers,
i kept. Your orders solicited. 4-30
JA8. DODBOJf ft BON. 1’etltlonen Attorney.
Filed iu offlee April 4th, 1 m, .
. J. II. AI.WN. Clerk C. 8. c.
I certify the above nnd foregoing to be a trn#
extract from the Records of Charters this. Apr* 1
4th, 1801.
J. H. ALIEN, Clerk C. S. ‘ ^
H the best mmm
G|
0
* u.fl.i!.
Oleet la 1 to0l)ny., without r»»
Prevent, stricture. Contain'd™
ncrldor poltonou. subutnnccu. ■
Is guaranteed aln )
^rracrlbedl
b*nni«£
Ijy <li
stltntea. Act
hem.
Sold fn Americus by Cook’s Phsrin^f*
" * “ - A Rutfcllf *J-
E. J. kldridge, Fleetwood A -— _
£• Hall and Davenport Drag Comp*®'*
~ ‘
Wife-I
- , ' -V -
wmi