Newspaper Page Text
THE AMERIOUS DAILY TIMES-RECORDEft THURSDAY, JULY 9, 1891.
Checked
i frightful inroads of Scrofula
nd all blood-taints. Dr. Pierce’s
Golden Medical Discovery purifies
and enriches the blood, cleanses the
system of all impurities, and restores
health and strength. It cures all
diseases arising from impure blood.
Consumption u ono of them. It’s
simply lung-scrofula. In all its ear
lier stagcB, the “ Discovery ” effects
• cure. It’s easy to see why. The
medicine that masters scrofula in
ono part, is the best remedy for it in
another. It it the best. It’s war
ranted. It’s the only blood and lung
remedy that’s guaranteed to benefit
or cure, or the money will bo re
funded. Mo other medicino of its
class does it. How many would bo
left if they didf
It’s the cheapen blood-purifier,
■old through, druggists, (no matter
how many doses are offered for a
dollar,) because you only pay for
the good you got.
Tour money Is returned if
doesn’t benefit or cure you.
Can you ask more?
The Wonderful Core For
Rheumatism.
Indigestion,
Certltleate of M. H. BUNDFORD,
^Associate Justice of Supreme Court of
I bare been a great sufferer for a numberof
Tfiu-a from IndlgMtlon and Rheumatism, am!
vosuffcretlfromngencral lcttin#down of
b nsU-ra for along while. I have taken a
hr bottlee of your medicine (Wooldridge's
| ‘ — 1 Cure) with marvelous results, nnd
rrccoinmentl It to all whoaro auflcr-
coini>laiut s.^ I]LANDF0RI)<
IOB SALE BY i
usehold Remedy
. ) FOR ALL
I BLOOD and SKIN
DISEASES
Botanic Blood Balm
I* Pm roe SCROFUIA. ULCERS, SALT
u lures rheum, eczema, ««ry
ol mallgn.nl SKIN ERUPTION, bn-
. ..... Nina .acncl.ni In toning splkt
Dilem ana rnstoring thn constitution,
«h.n laip.lrad Iron an* cun. It.
olmot ..pfrMttral healing propertle.
Juillfy u. in inuantttlng a cum, It
Slractlini ire lollnwnd.
. FREE -niitWJJSUv
, uiOOO BALM Cg., Atlanta, Cl.
Loans negotiated at LOWEST RATES.
Easy paymonts, owelty or farm lands.
J. J. HANES LEY,.
Aateiy ’Americas, Georgia.
W- L. DOUCLAS
SHOE
$3 SHOE SSS
THORNTON WHEATLEY
Americas, - - Georgia
OFFERERS
OFi
Youthful Errors
Lost Manhood, Earty Decay, etc.,
etc., can secure a homo treatise free
r addressing a fellow Buftc.-ar O.
Y.O. Box S19. Roanoke,
(IfitillifS -election, from tile :‘;iprr
It was cue of those wild nights you
rca 1 of i;i nine novels out of tea.
ThecoU c;;riu;r rain rplashe.1 vicious
ly against the |anes. and 1 lie shatters
rattled and hanged ua the fitful gusts of
wind swept through the deserted streets.
It Wiis lodge night, but Brother Fay
concluded to stay at home tor once, par
ticularly as his inollier-in-law was on
her periodical inspection tour, and spend
ing a couple of days with him.
With a High he roiled back in the
rocker, his feet in a clmir ami a news
paper spread open before him like
screen.
Presently, he chuckled, and wife and
mother looked up from their Hewing in
quiringly.
“Rather a remarkable case," lie
claimed, looking over the top of the
paper, and with a suspicions twitch
about the corners of his mouth he rend
aloud:
A model husband dieil recently at
Comislt, N. H. He had lieen married
forty-three years and never spent a night
away from honfe."
Well, I should say he was a model
husband," broke in the old lady, grimly.
‘Just think of it, Mary dear, forty-three
years and every evening spent at homo.
No lodge could coax him away from his
family," she added^ significantly. “1’oor
man, he ought to'havo a monument a
mile high,” and sho sighed deeply.
Brother Fay held the paper a little
higher and continued:
“Never spent a night from home. He
was paralyzed.”
Without tile storm beat harder and
louder (a habit storms have at such
times), while within silence reigned, save
the suppressed rustle of the paper and
the •’swish” of the thread through the
pillhw case the old lady was working on.
—National Weekly.
Cliuraeteri.tlCN of the L’rugnaynns
The whole Banda Oriental and its in-
habitants strike one as beiug more re
fined, more amiable and more gentle
than the land nnd iieopio of the sister re
public. Nevertheless, in the country
everything is very primitive, nnd one is
astounded at the rough way in which
many of the rich estaucieros live on their
estates in the simplest nnd most comfort
less houses. These men own leagues and
leagues of land, and they live like the
patriarchs of old—with two or three gen
erations of children under the same roof
and eating at the’same table—in tli# old
fashioned creole way. Such men, as may
bo Imagined, are not progressive; they
continue their pastoral industry in an in
dolent, npnthetic manner, leaving to na
ture almost everything except the opera
tion of selling and receiving the money:
and, above all, they cannot be persuaded
to subdivide their lunds and let them ont
for fanning.
Uruguay is being kept back chiefly by
the conservativeness of the creole land
holders, who possess immense estates that
are inadequately developed. The law of
inheritance and the obligatory subdivis
ion of property among the heirs will
modify this state of affairs in the coarse
of time, and theso vast holdings will be
gradually broken up and developed in
detail. The process, however, will nec
essarily be slow, and meanwhile, us the
state owns no lands, the increase of im
migration can only bo slow in propor
tion.—Theodore Uhildin Harper’s.
Not Literature.
Farmer Ellsworth lives in the suburbs
of a little Massachusetts town, and is a
man of considerable conseqaenco among
his friends and neighbors. Daring the
long winter evenings ha and Aunt Hul-
dah, his wife, read much, and his com-
tnents on the literature of the day, though
not often grammatically expressed, often
display discrimination.
Not long ago ho took n book of short
sketches of country lifo from the town
library, and when ho brought it back he
hod to pay a small line, having kept it
several (lays over the timo allowed.
“I’m willin’ nu’ glad to pay it, too," ho
said, os he laid down bis pile of coppers.
“You enjoyed it, then'/” asked the li
brarian.
"Enjoyed it? I should think wo did!”
said Former Ellsworth. “My wife, ’spe
cially, has ready every one of them stor
ies twice over. Bat I’m bound to say,”
be added, in his character of critic, "that
it ain’t exactly what I should call writ-
in.’ Why, it’s jest like folks.”—Youth's
Companion.
Two Kinds or Cnnsusns,
A ccnsns of the United States differs
in its very conception from n European
census. Once in ten years, as with us,
the English government makes nn enu-.
mention of tile inhabitants of the king
dom. The time chosen is the night of
the 2d of April. On or before that day
tho enumerator mast leave at each house
within his district a family schedule,
which calls for tho luuuo and personal
characteristics—age, sex, color, occupa
tion, etc.—of each person who on that
□ightflaill sleep in that house. If a man
he traveling on thatnight, he Is to be re
ported nt tho hotel or private house at
which he nrrives in the morning.
A census of tho United States is a very
different thing. As in England, tho
census is supposed to be taken on a cer
tain day—with ns the 1st of June—but
the question regarding each and every
man is not where he was on that day,
hut where on that day lie had “his
usual placo of abode."—General Francis
A. Walker in Forum.
A Corporation with u Son!.
“Yon see that man who just got off
tho car'!" said a street car conductor.
Ho worked for this company over forty
yean, nnd was a 'bus driver long before
they hod any street cars. Tho company
pay him, or rather his wife, regularly,
and ho does not do s thing. They some
times give him a quarter. He goes after
that quarter as regularly as though h*
was going to get the whole of his salary. *
—Buffalo Courier.
Conversation tVnn Drowned.
Abrie—Why, old man, what in the
world is the eat 1 trumpet fori
Charlie—It's my new tuit When t
wear it I can hardly hear anything else.
—ilnnscy’s Weekly.
Envelope*! Envelope.!!
We have j ust received a big job lot of
manflla envelope, of fine quality, that
were bought at a bargain, and we can
print them fur you with card, etc., cheap
er than you can buy them plain by retail
anj « here They a re more durable than
white, an:.' are good enough for all busi
ness purposes, and are much cheaper.
Times Publishing Co.
Mark W. Harrington, editor of the
American Meteorological Journal and
professor at Ann Arbor, Mich., bos been
appointed chief of the weather bu
reau.
Not the night Word.
“No.” said Bortha sadly, “ ‘pain’
doesn’t express what I suffer at these
times—it is simply ‘anguish!’ I know I
ought to consult a physician, but I
dread it sol I can’t bring myself to do
it. Then, too, 'female diseases’ always
Seemed so indelicate to me, I can’t bear
to have any ono know or speak of mine.”
“Yes, dear,” answered Edith, “but
don’t you know you can be cured with
out going to a physician? Bond to any
druggist for ft bottle of Dr. Pierce’s Fa
vorite Proscription, and tako it, and I
warrant you'll feel better In a very few
days."
The manufacturers warrant the medi
cine, too. They guarantee It to do ex
actly wliat it claims,'viz: to euro leuEor-
rhea, painful irregularities, excessive
(lowing, prolapsus, Inflammation or
ulceration of the uterus, and tho innu
merable other “female weaknesses.” It
•o strengtaens and builds up the uter
ine system and nerves that worn-out,
run-down wives nnd mothors feel rejuve
nated after taking it, and they are saved
the painful ombarrassmont and expense
of a surgical examination and a tedious
tiresomo treatment.
S^M ROTJTE.
Local and Through Schedule in Effect April 19, 1891,
A dispatch of Wednesday from Ra
leigh, N. C., says: “The railway com
mission decides that it is duty to assess
for taxation tho proporty of express
and telegraph comparles in tho state as
well as that of railways.
A CHILD KILLED.
Another child killed by tho uso of
opiates givon in the form of soothing
syrup. Why mothers give their chil
dren such deadly poison is surprising
when thoy can relieve tho child of its
peculiar troubles by using Dr. Acker’s
Baby Soother. It contains no opium or
morphine. Sold by Floetwood & Rus
sell, Amoricus, Ga. 10
Assistant Secretary Crounso has se
cured os a slto for tho public building at
Savannah, Ga., tho property bounded
by Bull, Y'ork, Whittaker and President
streets, tho cost of which is $05,000.
The Queen Pawned Her Jewel.,
Queen Isabella, of Spain, pawned her
jewels to raise money to fit out tbo ex
pedition that discovered the new world.
Her sacrifice was not greater than is
mado by many women of America, who
deny themselves many things in order
to have mot l y to buy Dr. Fierce’s Gol
den Medlcai Discovery for their sick
husbands orchlldren. This “Discovery”
Is more than Important to them, than
tbo%ne mado In 1492. For all diseases
of the Lungs, Liver, Throat, or Stomach
the "Discovery” is a sovereign remedy,
A trial convinces, its continued use
cases. It purifies the blood, invigorates
the liver and strengthens and builds up
the wholo system, Guaranteed-to bene
fit or euro In ovory case, or money paid
for It returned. • 1
‘Mol” he sold, rising from the piano,
“I have not been ablo to give much time
to my moslo lately.” "And the timo
yon do give to it,” choerfully responded
his rival, “is simply atrocious.”
A DUTY TO YOURSELF.
It i. surprising that poople will use a
common ordinary pill when they can se
cure a valuable English ono for the
same money. Dr. Aoker’s English
pills are a positive cure for sick head
ache and all liver troubles. Thoy are
small, sweot, easily taken, and do not
gripo. For sale by .Fleetwood A Rus
sell, Amorious, Ga.
Pore spices and flavoring extracts at
‘drldi
Dr. Eli
dgijjs Drug Store.
Mother
If the little darling Is spending such
sleepless nights slowly and pitifully
wasting away by the drainage upon Its
system from the effects of teething, give
Dr. Bigger’s Huckleberry Cordial and a
euro will result
Abbott*. East Indian Cora Paint.
Eradicates. Corn., Bunions and Warts
where all other remedies fail.
The best baker Insiouthwost Georgia,
at C. C. Carter’s.
A sore leg, the flesh a mass of diseaao,
ot P. P. P (Prickly Ash, Poko Root and
’otossium) achieved wonderful results,
the xesli was purified and the bone got
sound, and my health was established,
says Mr. James Masters, of Savannah,
Ga. 30jundl2t-w2t
A nice lot of clg
and pipes at Dr. :
tra, smoking tobacco
Udrldge’s Drug Store,
Clarence Busbee, assistant treasurer
of tho Buena Vista Saddle Company,
Lexington, Va., has skipped. The
amount of his defalcation is not known.
The Turning Point
with Max a mb ana, trivial sab ust a mm
S. S. S. for |
I Oimnoatssasn,
> sSifeW-
a WmgsjeaMmasad *Ha dmmsSM
DnwMi BeUIl.
SWIFT SPECIFIC 00..
Drawer a, Atlanta. Ga.
iHi
Mixed.
Dally Ex.
Sunday.
3 Id
4 it
A4 35
05 05
5 22
ft 48
6 10
6 18
G 31
G 41
; 6ft
7 09
7 13
7 3ft pt
3 25 p i
1 07
4 30
No. 18.
Mail* Ex
Dally.
8 20 a i
8 28 V
8 39
8 4G F
8 52
8 66
9 08
9 13 F
10 03
10 08
10 17
10 30
10 39
10 63
11 03
11 09
11 49
11 32
12 32
12 42
12 55
02
16
1 20
1 37
1 46
1 61 F.l
2 00 pn
7 10
Dally.
7 00 p ii
7 12 F
7 22
7 29 F
7 35 ,
7 39
7 52
7 67 F
8 11
8 27
8 42
8 63
9 23
9 34
9 48
10 01
10 07
10 18
10 32
10 47
11 00
11 00 p m
11 20
11 30
11 43
11 60
12 06 at
12 10
12 31
12 43
12 49 F
1 oo am
7 35
NO. 2.
Mail.
Dally.
6 02 F
6 30
6 4j
6 64
7 03 F
7 17
7 28 F
WESTERN DIVISION.
STATIONS.
,v....r-nah* An
aIop ... .
Louvale
. Lour Ale JunctlcT .
Iivir
.... LunipxJn . ..
..Randall .
.Richland.,
. Ponder..
..Preston..
Jennings
Markett
Plains
Salter
New Point
Littlejohn
Ar.... Aiuerlcus. ..Lr.
No. 1.
Mail.
Dally.
No 3
Pass'ug’r
Sunday
only
11 69 a
11 18
10 65
8 27 F
7 60
7 37 F
7 27
7 19 F
6 66 F
6 62 F
6 46 F
6 41
6 35 F
6 28 F
G 26 F
6 15 pi
No. 7.
Mixed.
Dally Ex,
2 66 pm
D 67
11 V5
10 37
10 00
9*7
9 37
EASTERN DIVISION.
STATIONS.
....Dr Amerlous
Gatewood .....
Huntington
.Parkers.
.. Leslie .
..DeSoto.,
..Cobb.
.....Johnson
Coney ...i
.... Cordolo
Penia
....Williford
Seville
. .Goodman..
..Abbeville .
. .Copeland..
Lopoland
..Rhine..
Horton
Milan
Oswald
...At Helena Lv..
....Lr..' ..Helena Ar..
../.Ar Rrunswick Lv,.
....Ar J ackson ville Lv..
.... Olenwood ....
..Mount Vernon..
Peterson. ...
: vfiBSr
Appleton..
. Lyons...
. Savannah.
7 32 F
7 26
t7 22
6 64
6 48 F
6 37
G 20
6 07
6 66
5 60
5 40
5 27
5 17
5 02
4 51
4 45
4 34
8 00 pi
3 66
3 31
3 22
3 08
3 00
2 46
2 40
2 21
2 10
2 Oi at
7 40 pi
No. 17.
MallaEx.
Dally.
6 10 pi
6 00 F
5 49
6 42 F
5 37
5 16 F
6 (13
4 47
1 26
1 20
1 Ol
12 64
•—Dinner
F—Flag Station.
t—Breakfast
W. N. MARSHALL,
Gon’l Supt
E. S. GOODMAN,
Gon’l Pass. Agt.
CENTRAL RAILROAD OF GEORGIA
Soutnwestern Division.
Correct Schedule, Ho. 22, in Effect;[April 12,1891
a SAVANNAH A WESTERN DIVISION
Schedule No. 10, taking effect Apr. 12th, 1891.
No. 6, Between Savannah and Birmingham! No. 6,
Dally,
740 p m
via Amerlcus,
Leave Savannah..,
.Xyons.w..
Americas......
.Buena Vista,
Dally,
Arrive 740pin
Arrive Columbus, Leave 8 60
100 ax
0 40am
6 25 p m
No. 8
Dally.
Passenger
No. 6
Dally.
Fast Mall
EAST BOUND.
No. 6
Dally
Fast Mall
No. 7
Daily
Passenger
3:33am
518 w
6 30 “
10 60 “
520pm
555pm
2 35p m
4 10 «
•5 35 ••
10 20 “
6 15a m
0 30 “
Lv. Americas Ar.
Ar. Fort Valley Lv.
“ Macon “
•• Atlanta “
“ Augusta "
*• Savannah “
108pm
11 33 a m
10 21) “
710 *•
9 io p m
987 p m
8 00 “
0 40 **
215 •*
700am
0 40 44
No. 7
Dally
Passenger
No. 5
Dally.
Fast Mall
WEST BOUND..
No. 0
Daily .
Fast Mail
No. 8
Dally
Passenger
9 37 p m
1006
4 42 am
7 85 am
18pm
180 ••
4 12 »
720 «
Lv. Amerlcus Ar.
Ar. Smlthvllle ••
“ Eufaula 41
44 Montgomery Lv.
2 35 p m
1 30 44
1105a m
7 40 a m
825a m
J280 “
10 25 p ra
7 80 p in
No. 7
Daily
9.77 pm
1006 «
10 45 p m
4 50am
715 am
725am
No. 6
Daily
1 18 p m
130 “
25^ “
640 •«
TO FLORIDA.
Lv. Amerlcux XF.
" Hmithville "
Ar Albany Lv.
“ Thomasvllle Lv
44 Way crows ••
•* Brunswick "
14 Jacksonville 44
No. 0
Dally
2S5p m
120 p m
12 20 p m
8 80 am
No. 8
Daily
323 a m
300 “
215 *•
1010 p
760
785
Solid Trains with Bleeping Cars Between Savannah and Birmingham. ,
For further Information relative to tickets, schedules, best routes etc. etc., apply to
A. T. MAXWELL, Agent, J. O. McKENZIE, Sup't, E.T..CKARLTON, Gen. Pa»s.;Ag*t.
Amdrlcus, Ga, Smlthvllle, Ga. Savannah,Ga.
D. H. BYTHEWOOD, Division Pass. Ag’t., Columbus,;Ua. .
D. D. CURRAN, Sup't, Columbus, Ga. J. C. QHAW.Trav. Pass. Ag’t., Savannah Ga.
PASSENGER SCHEDULE
Georgia Southern&Flori(lalty.
SUWANEE RIVER ROUTE TO FLORIDA,
Taking Effect Jnne 14,1801. Standard Time, 01th Meridian.
~5oY^o SOUTH.
2 4ft p in
• 40 pm
7 00 pm
9 35 pm
11 OS pm
12 5ft a m
3 00 a in
7 10
10 45 am
11 00 am
1 55 pm
3 25 p m
4 M pm
7 00 p m
Lv Atlanta.
Ar Macon..
Lv Macon ....Ar
Cordele Ar
GJINU NORTH.
. Tiflon Ar
Ar Valdosta At
Ar Lake City Lv
10 U0 p mlAr..
.Jacksonville Lv
.PiUatka Lv
....St. Augustine Lv
10 20 p m
0 20 pm
6 10 p m
S 27 p m
1 66 pm
12 01 p m
9 66 a m
7 30 a m
7 06 a
io 50 a ra
7 00 anl
6 85 am
4 07 am
2 45 am
12 65 am
10 so pm
6 80 m
R.S.ti.
SUCCESSORS TO
(W. L. Mardro and Ameriyn. Newa Co.)
Train, .rrlre and depart from union depot. In Macon and P.I.lka and F. C.4P,
depot In J.ckaonvllle.
MaSW^r.ire^Sn® “M.S. =* mad# "* M "“» W “ h l " , “
A. C. KNAPP. Trafflo Manage HARBIS^cX^Agent. Union Depot.
JAMES MENZIE8, Southeastern Agent, OS West Bax ML, Jacksonville, Fla.
SCHOFIELD’S IRON WORKS,
IPnrvniiv a wr a *
FOUNDHY AMD MA.CIII1VE HIlOl*
KEEP ALWAYS ON HAND.
a: FULL LINE
SCHOOL BOOKS
Floe Stationery
SHEET MUSIC.
Will receive sdbscriptions
for any paper or
publication, t
PICTURE FRAMES
Made to order, any size or price.
Glass to fit any frame.
Big lot of Mouldings just received
that wo will sell as cheap as
anybody else.
Call and see onr line. No trouble to show
goods or order anything that we hxveat In
stock. * *
Don’t forget the'oldjBook Store,
105 FORSYTH STREET.
S. A. M. ROUTE.
TIME TABLE
Taking Effeot April 10,1891.
8 00 a m
10 00
10 87
2 IS pm
8 27
11 00
4 30 am
7 35
» 28 p m
ire Birmingham.....am 7 00 pm
Ivo.... Clilldcrsburg Ire 5 05
Ire Sylacanga Ire 4 40
Ire •Opelika Ire 125
arr Colombo. arr It 45 aja
lre.'.....Colambtu Ire 111 20
are EtlariUo are 0 05
...•KllarUlo Ire 8 50
... America. are! 120
Ire Amnion* Ire t oo
Oordrto..... ..Ire 0 20
•Helena Ire 2 65
ILyon. Inf 115
arr Barannah. are 7 40 pm
atr Charleoton.
Detw’n Montgomery and America.,
In.....Montgomery
Opelika.:
rugg
715pm
r—- ; «ti »
I America.'.'."litre! 5
Between Montgomery and Amdriew, Hoi Union
Springe and Colombia.
..Montgomery arrl 7 06 p m
n»
Detw’n Montgomery and Americas, vlx KufsuW
Ire Albany i
Americas.. I, r/.ftpifS
between Americas and Jacksonville, m
fc7 w pm
1 18 »m
6 10
7 60
Close connection made at Moni
}▼« Amerluso..c'..7PT <• l
*▼0 ..Helen*.. lr» Hi
•rt Brunswick......Ive I -ft*
Jacksonville Ive 11*
15F3
lints in the Southwest, end At _
ilrratngluun end all points In the Northwest.
• Meal Stations.
Sleeping cars between Columbus and Savan
nah.
Fasseni
west of
t ion.
w. n.ma:
ngcre from Charleston deitlned to point.
Hor.nn.h, change car. at C. & 8. Juno*
J. N.MAB8HALL, E.
Gen. Superintendent.
_ Americas. Ga.
J. M. CABOLAN, S. ■. Pass. Act.
Savannah, Ga. E. A. SMITH,..
,, „ Western Pasm AgL, St. Loots, Mo.
M. D. BOYER, T. P. A,
Americas, Oa. .
. H. SMITH, Q. E. A.,
New York, N.Y.
East Tennessee.
Virginia and
Georgia R’y
System.
-IS THE ONLY—
J. 8. SCHOFIELD’S SONS * CO., Prop’n, .
Manufacturer* of Steam Engine*, Boiler*, Cotton Presses and’ Onnnrai
Machinery, CGtton Gin8,Can»and Saw MuSratejSS
Machinists’ Supplies. Special Attention to Repair Work,
i Repair
MACON, GEORGIA,
This line Is conceded to be tbe
id runs tho finest Putin
the South.
ategaat Pullman MnatacOtKibotween
Jacksonville and Cincinnati.
Titusville and Cincinnati,
Brunswick and Louisville,
Chattanooga and Washington
Horn phis and Now York, •
Philadelphia and New Oileatu,
Chattanooga and Mobile,
Atlanta and Chattanoog*,
Without Change.
For any Informsdion addree.
B. W.WBRNN, Ora. Pare, and TIcketM 1
Knoxville, T»nn.
a. W; KNIGHT, Ass’t Ora. Pras-Sg
Atlanta, Georgia.
I I
I