Americus times-recorder. (Americus, Ga.) 1891-current, June 12, 1891, Image 3

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

fc'i*.. am THE AMERICUS DAILY TIMES-RECORDER: FRIDAY, JUNE 12, 1891. CURES smuts Wy^®r35f3|TTr!rsrTrpi5Hir55r5tisr Uifanu-n for tka < CURES AURIA !«"* uwiy I'curtiivu toy im »..u<*riul loo to mm! blu»t clrvjjtaf propatki td, 1*. P. P. 1’noklj AUi, Put* Itect GIRLS AND FLOWERS. Cures dyspepsiA 1 HITMAN EKUS., Proprietor,, DreggiiU, LippnA.1'3 Blcck, 8 AYAS3 AH, GA. ' SNI* For sale by tho DAVKIWIHT DRUG COMPANY, Americiu, Oa. NOTHING SUCCEEDS LIKE SUCCESS. WM. RADAM’S IGROBG KILLER HOST TRULY MO CORRECTLY CALLED The Greatest Medicine in the World A WONDERFUL TONIC aND BLOOD PURIFIER ALMOST MIRACULOUS CUBES Of bopclow And i r Inmrnblo rtiscntt’* id Apparently ... are coiwtantly being mutlo. It 1* trpcctnl to * • • iBili* • 1 given DOSS NOT DISAPPOINT EXPECTATIONS. More prepla are oein/? rairrd by Microbe Killer tlitin by all othe;* luedicines oombincvl. We request a thorough investigation. History of tho Microbe Killer free by VLEKTWOOD & UITSSELL, Solo AffenU for. Suintur county, july22-<llyr lUICtMCf cum HELP WMTt'O To take the place of a corsct-if you won’t wear one-try the Balt waist. That’s, just what you can do. You can try it, and even wear it for two or three weeks, if you wish. Then, if you’re not satisfied, you can return it, and get your money. For)rale by OWO. D. WHKVH.K V. JAPANESE CURE fc f’tmrzrateed Curt for Tile* of whatever >m*a or degree—Ex emnl, Internal, Blind or Blooding, Itchii g, Chronio, Recent or Hereditary. $1-00 i box; G boxen, $5.00. Sent by mnfl, prepaid, on roooipt of price. We guarantee to * ire any caee of Piles, Onarkutood and sol* 'inly by TIIK l)AVKN.*OKT DRUG CO., Wholesale aud BetaU Hrujglsttj^ Sample* free. foton-dftwlyr One Olrl Who Sri lit Them Shrewdly, nnd One Who Uses Them Curiously. A genial old gentleman was buying violets from the Rower girl on Broadway. “Well, Pin getting to bo a pretty old customer, eh, Katie,’* he observed, as he arranged the flowers in the lapel of his overcoat “You’ve been buyin* flowers a good many years, sir, but you’re not old yet,” replied Katie, with the shrewd flattery of her sex. “I like to see a gentleman wear flowers, especially a middle aged gentleman. That shows his heart ain’t ^rowin’ old, an* it shows he likes what’s *weet an’ clean. I notice a lot of the gentlemen lose th«?ir grip in that way when they get along.” “How do you mean they lose their grip, Katie?* asked the gentleman. “Oh, they get over carin’ for vi’lets when they get married and has fam ilies,” replied the flower girl. ‘’I see a lot of young fellers dressed up fine goin’ dong here for a few years, an’ they all wear flowers in their coats. They are ill bright, just like the flower, and you | •an’t help likin’ ’em for it. That’s when they’re mashers an’ when the girls care for ’em. •Then they get marriiHl, an* the first thing they drop is the flowers from their uits.' That lakes away all their bright ness. an* then it does j-vein as if they go sort of dusty, an’as if their lints were dd or not brushed. Once in a while, though, a gentleman gets married an* grows a little old au’stid lie buys vi’lets. like yon do. sir. Th n 1 think ho must Ik* a nicer sort of man than the rest, an’ probably is very happy at home with a • good wife an’ children.” The old gentleman blushed, and hemmed nnd hawed. “Humph! Haw—what’s tho price of those roses, Katie? They look very fresh.” “Two dollars a dozen sir, and they’re fresh cut this morning.” “Humph! Haw—well, pick out two lozen nice ones and send them to my wife. Here! This is my card. Good morning, Katie.” “That’s a nice gentleman,” said Katie to herself, as the customer walked away. •I gness I reminded him of his wife. ;hough. That’s the way with the best if ’em. They never toilet tbeir own auttonholes, but*they think a woman don’t need any more roses after her hair liegins to get gray.” A girl who is such-an extreme belle and favorite that tho men she knows btmlen her with floral mementoes of their regard lias many strange and po etic ways of disposing of her superfluous Ixmquets. In the first place she never gives any preference to oueover another, but selects the one she is to carry by ad vancing with her eyes closed to a large table, npon which they have been indis criminately scattered by a servant, and selects one at random. This, she de clares, saves the trouble of thinking the question over, and-gives an equal chunce to all her admirers. She then has her maid pluck all the petals from the roses that are left, and these are saved until the next morning, when, after coming out of her bath, they are paired in a shower over her, and she stands among them while her toilet is completed. All the violets are collected together each night,'and after they are thoroughly mixed the dainty maiden makes up a small bunch, which she fast ens at the neck of her nightgown. Those that are left are tossed over her bed after she has retired. The orchids are made into as large a bunch as possible and Hmqiended from the chandelier of her l>edroom.—Hew York Sun. To Printer* and Publisher*. .. Tlio Times Publishing Company has for sale a portion of tho newspaper and job outfit made surplus by the recent consolidation of the Times and Recor der, consisting of one cylinder newspa per press, two Gordon Job presses, one Hero paper cutter, one perforator, six stands, two Imposing stones and tables, five hundred pounds of news type, etc. This material and these presses are virtually new*, having been iu use ouly a year. A great bargain In prices and terms can be secured by the right par ties. Address the Times Publishino Com paw, Americus, Oa. 167 DOZEJST Men’s, Beys’ and CMMieifs Strew Hals IT YEIIAI VJ IID A VTY DkTi IT ▲T WHOLESALE AND RETAIL. WILL BE SOLD REGARDLE88 OF DOST OR C0N8EQUENGES. 120 MISSES’ SAILOR HATS at 25c., worth 50c. For the above, and anything else in the Hat line, go to The “GEEST AMERICAN EAGLE" SHOE SM Minnie Maddern Fiske, having desert ed the drama, lias gone in for literary work and is writing a novel said to be partially autobiographical. Where you will find all the novelties in Men’s, Boys* and Children’s IromsraijfTTnawf Dll. ACKF.U’N KNfil.lSII PILLS Aro active, effective nnd pure. For sick stomach, h appetite, bad complexion and liilioiiK- new-, they have never been cq* aled, either in Aim ih a or abroad. For sale by Flee tv\oo«I A Russell, Americus, Ga. I). Glauber, senior member of file firm of Glauber A* Isaae, of Bi unswick, is now at Indian Springs, from which place lie will go to California on a pleasure trip. Walter Bridges, Athens, Trim., writes: “For six years I have been ailiic.lt d with running sores-and an enlargement of the bones hi my legs. I tried everything I heard of without permanent benefit un til Botanic Blood Baltn was recom mended to me. After using six bottles the sores healed, and 1 am now in bet ter health than I have ever been. I send this testimonial unsolicited, bo- cause 1 want others to be benefitted.” may 12 d w-lm. Col. T. F. Oakes, who Is at the head of the Northern Pacific system, Is forty years old and began his railroad experi enced ns a rodnian. Heller ill Hlcknt-ft*. It is a very' old observation that a domi nant idea is valuable in controlling the human being, and whether it be in the liearing of pain or in the devotion which leads the Turk to die contentedly before the Russian bullets, belief is a factor that may bo turned to great advantage. In directly, Christian science may prove an aid to medical science. The intelligent physician of today could receive n* greater aid in the scientific practice of his profession than to bo emancipated by his i>atients from the obligation invari ably to prescribe a drug. When people are williug to employ physicians to order their lives so that thyy may live in health, the custom which binds the phy sician to prescrilie something for his pa tient will be unnecessary. As we have become more civilized this state of affairs is gradually coming into { place, but there still lingers tho expect:i tion that the doctor's visit means drugs. Christian science and faith cure, more refined than the spiritualistic beliefa which have preceded them, form an in teresting study in mental pathology, and mark au advance from tho grosser stage «»f table tipping and mugnetic doctors to a recognition of the fact that among the weapons employed by the scientific phy sician of today an appeal to a deter miued purpose to overcome pain is worthy of a place beside antiseptics and auodynes ami tonics.—Century. If food sours on the stomach, diges tion is defective. De Witt’s Little Early Risers will remody this. The famous little pills that never gripe and never disappoint. For sale by the Davenport Drug Comj* , »iJV. t ESTABLISHED 1867. JAMES FRICKER & BRO. Tho venerable portrait pointer, G. P. A. Healy, who now resides in Chicago, is still plying tho brush, though 88 years of ago. J iy grlpo or cause nausea. Mild bnt sure, assist rather than forco. Host little pill (or sick headache, chronic constipation, dyspepsia. For salo by the Davenport Drug Company, Bishop Floscii of the Catholic diocese of Milwaukee is snlTeriug from cancer of the stomach, and his recovery is doubt ful. It is quite tho fashion uow to take De- Witt’s I.ittlo Karly Kisers for liver, stomach and bowol disorders They are smalt pills, but ndglity good ones. The Davenport Drug Company sells them, Fredrick Douglass cannot observo his birthday anniversary,' because lie does uot know precisely when ho was born. Constipation, blood-poison, fevor! Doctor’s bills and funoral expenses cost about two hundred dollars; De Witt's Little Karley Kisers cost a quarter. Tako your clioico. For salo by tho pavonpnrt Drug Company. Cardinal Gibbons has returned to Hal-' tlmnro Improved in health, although still weak from Ids recent illness. Catarrh, neuralgia, rheumatism and most diseases originate from Impnro blood. Cleanse It, Improvo ft, purify it witli Do Witt’s Sarsaparilla and health is restored, strength regained. For salo by the Davenport Drug Company. I have Just returned from New York, where I purchased a vory large stock o( DIAMONDS WATCHES at prices that will enable us to sell lower than ever before. Our stock Is Immense, assortment complete, prices lower than any one. Call and see for yourselves before buying. C. A. FRICKER, President. 4O9 JACKSON ST., AMERICUS, GA. (Barlow Block.) Americus Ironworks, UUILDKKS OF Engines, Boilers, Cotton Gins, Mrs. Lllllo Povcrciix Blake lias born elected president of tlio Xew York City Suffrage league. Vory popular, very small, very good. Witt’s I.ittlo Karly lUnrs, Um pill JtUe Karly Hi . for constipation, biliousness, sick .head ache. For sale by the Davenport Drug Company. For sale by the DAVENPORT DllUO dJOMPANY Americas, Ga. H, THF RFST KNOWM REMEDY UolSJTMJuresGonorluea snU _ , OlMt In ItoBUnjs, without ram. Prevents Stricture, .Contal*. no Gr by di bottj^vjcefl Sold in Americus by Cook’s Pharmacy j Kldridge, Fleetwood & Russell, J. Dali and Davenport Ding Company. A Tower iu Ilie Lund. Lift your hat reverently when you meot the teacher of tlio primary school. She is tho good angel of tho republic. She taki-s the little bantling, fresh from tho homo nest and full of his {louts and his passions, an ungovernable little wreti-b, whose own mother honestly ad mits she sends him to school to get rid of him. This young lady, who knows her business, takes a whole carload of these anarchists, half of whom, single handed and uloue, are more ihaii a match for both their parents, and at once puts them iu the way of being use ful and upright citizens. At what ex pense of toil and weariness! Here is the most responsible position in the whole school, nnd If her salary were doubled ■he would receive less than she earns.— BbslbyviUe (Conn.) Democrat. Jaysraith (gloomily)—Larkin called me a liar today. Mrs. Jayimifit (indignont'y)—Did yon tell Mm to prove it? Jnysmith—It wasn't necessary.—West Shore. Peter Cook, a well known citizen of Macon, died a day or two ago. Purlllos the blood, Increases the circu lation, expels poisonous humors and builds up tho system. What more do you want a medicine to perform ? De Witt’s .Sarsparilla is relialilo. For sale by Davenport Drug Company. ' F. G. Kilpatrick, at Habersham, claims to have a brand of cotton that will stand tlio winters of this climate. A beautiful skin, bright eyes, sweet breath, good appetite, vigorous body, pure blood nnd good health result from the use of Do Witt’s Sarsaparilla. It It sold by tho Davonport Drug Company, Presses, Feeders and Condensers, Saw and Grist Mills, Shingle Machines, Pipe and Pipe Fittings, Boiler Feeders, Valves, Jets, Etc. S. H. HAWKINS. 'L H.C-BAGIEY. VkiPm'l W.l. 'JRPhEY. Cuhltr. 'ROAKIZKDIHTO. -»0The Ba.ik of Ameipfjts.’g^ StockhulfWa i Capitol* HurpluM* -il> H. C. Boglejr. Pro*. A' lividaaUy liable. - 8150,000 - • $100*000 * ORS;— ’ n. v. iNurier, 1 res. amn P. C. Clegg, Pres. Ocmnlff Jo*. Do<Uon, of Jo*. B 8. Montgomery Pree’t People* National Bank. J. WriUteffleid, of Sheffield ft Co., Hardware. T, Wheatley, who!e*a!e dry good*. ' W. E. Murpbey, Cashier. ild up Capital - THE BANK .OF SUMTER T. N. ItAWKES, President. 0. A. COLEMAN, Vice-President, W. 0. FURLOW, Cashlor. DIRECTORS-O. A. Coleman, C. C, Hawkins, B. U. Jossoy, T. N. llawkes, W. C. Furlow, W. H. C. WlieUey, It. S. Oliwr. H. M. Brown, W. M. Hawkes, Or. E. T. Mathis, Arthur Rylander. Liberal to Its eustomein, accommoda ting to the public Od prudent in its management, this bank solicits deposits and other business in Its line. I. MONTGOMERY, Pr«t. J. C. RONEY, Vk. Pmt. INO. WIN,SON. Cr. LESTER WINOSORAitt. C'r. E. A. HAWKINS, Attorney NO. 3830. THE- Peoples’ National Bank Of Americus. Shaftings, Hangers, Boxes and Pulleys Americas investment Co. jj@“Special attention given to repairing all kinds of Machinery. Telephone 79. MM “ Saw III Men, Attention! Are you In need of machinery of any description* If so, write us your wants, ' ’ ‘ "ll—' ' “ *-—■ stating Just wlmt you desiru and wo will make you low prices. - Our special bus! doss is heavy machinery such ns ENGINES, BOILERS, SAW MILLS, AND WOOD-WOBIING MACHINERY, general and for first-class machinery, we defy competition. Wo are general agents for II. U. SMITH MACHINE CO.’S celebrated Wood-working machinos, and ean dis count factory prices. Be sure to write for circular of "FIsrmers' Favorite" saw mill; it is the best on tho market. Second-hand machinery constantly cn hand. Write for prices and see If wo cannot save yon money. Perkins Machinery Company, J. F. Gullett, of Atlanta, died Sunday night He was an ex-alderman and an cx-meml>er of tlio legislature. . 67 SOUTH BROAD STREET, MmiUo » Thb Time* WbenlYon Writ*. ATLANTA, GA. JuMOtrUtwIyear BADBLOODIf . ■ oa ths Fsot | Srw. For Twb Weeks.Past WE HAVE BEEN For One Week More WE WILL CONTINUE Sliowtu" the fittest lino el Mouldings for Picture Framing, etc. over diHjilayetl iu this vicinity, at a reduction of DOCTOR ACKER’S KNGLISH BLOOD ELIXIR WHY?"“IWaM l ?" liar* yc« *r*r *m<1 mercoryl IX*», <1L glvfl yoursaiC th* n*ed«4 •*Uwntl*ti »* th*; W.»~<t solUII *„ wm CENT FROIK REGULAR PRICES •cat* th* polaoa from th* W.M. naour.H AS aTourdnUKioL of writ* to W. H. Kh 4* ■ 31* UM4R ATKICKT. AMKRICDB. UKOKQU. Capital, KOfiOO, Hurp)u0, mz&fiOO ORGANIZED 1883. ' H. Haolkt, ITm. w. E. Hawkish,Boo, ATr. Investment Securities. Paid up Capital, *1,000,000. (Surplus, *330,000. directors: H V Bagloy, W B ITawklns, S W Coney, W 8 OlTlls, J W Sheffield, P C Clegg, WM llawkes, BPMatbewS^O M Byne, W K M urpl.cy,^ Montgomery, J H Pharr. CAPITA (.STOCK, . SURPLUS* UnAnrldail I Pr*»ld*nL A. W. SMITH, Wkm • 'o*hl*r. * Bank of Southwestern Georgia. * M. BPEEK,^ nt J.W.WHKATLEV, W. II. C. DilDLKT, ® faultier. AsiUtaat Ci DIRECTOR^: - » W J. W. Wheatley, K. J. Kldridge, C. A. Huntington, * It. R. Johnson, ’J, C. Nicholson, W. II. C, Dudley, R. J. Perry, W. Smith, M. Speer. K. Burr; Jr., Pres. H. M. Knapp, V. P. O. A. Count AN, See, a Treas, Georgia Loan & Tr.ust Co. Negotiates Loans on Improved Farm and Qity Property. B P Holms, Attorney, J K Bivins. I.and Kxamlnei. ». a nmr.msiom. CUIt. CASH III Planters’ Bank of EMle KllavUle. (ItorxU. PAID DP CAPITAIh - Collection* a Sp Liberal to IU customer*, the public *ml pru(total la IU bank solicits deposit* aod 11 •