Americus times-recorder. (Americus, Ga.) 1891-current, July 25, 1891, Image 4

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THE AMERICUS DAILY T1MES-REC0K DE& SATURDAY. JULY 25, 1891. TRAINED HANDS. Something is lost when you use Dr. Sage’s Catarrh Remedy. 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 ho cured. Incurable oases are rare. It’s worth IfiOO to you, if you have one. Tho manufacturers of Dr. Sage’s Remedy are looking for them. They’ll pay you that amount in cash, if they can’t euro 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 bben said : incurable cases alb ran—-with Dr. Sage’s Catarrh Remedy. Other so-called remedies may pal liate for a time; this cures for all time. By its mild, soothing, cleans ing and healing properties, it con quers the worst cases. It removes offensive breath, loss or impairment of the sense of taste, smell or bear ing, watering or weak eves, when caused by tho violence of Catarrh, as they all frequently arc. Remedy sold by druggists, only SO cents. This is the way with the Ball corset: if you want ease and shapeliness, you buy it—but you don’t keep it unless you like it. After two or three weeks’ wear, you can return it and have your money. Comfort isn’t all of it though. Soft Eyelets, and “bones” that can’t break or kink—Ball’s corsets have both of these. For sale by GEO. D. WHEATLEY. THE GREAT TONIC. Turinss Oe KmS. aids Digestion. Purely Vegetable. yyyoun -yjondebful qubesi LmI fall 1 wtJ suffering from General DebU- ty, from mbs blood affection, and my whole • run down generally. Commenced r medicine (Wooldridge’s Wonderful •xporlenoBd peat rebel 1. BOWERS. J bad a fully pronounced by •beetdoctors In the city of Columbus, ire# bottles of your w. W. C. (Wool- il Onre), and am to day as well " 1 other medicine but HENRY McBRIDK. y that the above facte are cor Jmehterrd the medicine. ^reb.Jt,iwa j.w. elliott. MIY All DRUGGISTS* A Household Remedy r . _ „ ^ ... FOR ALL BLOOD and SKIN diseases IB.B. Blood Balm , SALT I* r«MC SCROFULA, ULCERS. It cures rheum. ECZEMA, tvtry IH.M SnillMAl skis ERUPTIOR. ft- ■Mas bliss iSescloiis la toning up tho system ana restoring ths constitution, •tisn Imptlrsd Iron uny esust. Its •ln.it supsnstnnl healing properties Justify is Is gnsrantsslng s curs. It Unctions srs followed. 8ENT FREE «.# BLOOO BALM CO., StUnU. Cs. # J. W. TYNAN, inpeer and Machinist SAVANNAH, GA. 1ACHKE, BOILER AND SMITH GHOP, Wist Bned, Indian end River Street.. Karine Work 'a- Specialty. waay-van [SUFFERERS OFi outhful Errors t Manhood, Early Dec*y, etc., i can secure * home treatinelree silne a fellow suOe.'er C. Leek, P. O. Bo* 3!«. Uoan-.ie, [into. l~%. now They Proro ol Iiicnlcolnbi. Value to Woman at liar Work. Too much cannot be said in favor of training the hands to do whatever work they are called on to do witli exactness. A vast amount of the force of the world is merely wasted because the worker has not been properly trained to work in the simplest and best manner. Want of method is at the bottom of most of the troubles of overworked nervous women. They fritter away more than double the amount of energy required to do their wolTi preperly. and yet often fail in ac complishing it at the end. A systematic cook will go into her Kitchen, lay out the materials for an elalorate dinner, and by steady, orderly work will have everything ready at the pro|H‘r time. She will leave no debris of her work behind when the dinner is served, and—except for the few pots and pans soaking—there will be no sign about the kitchen of what she has ac complished. The housekeeper who in dulges in brilliant flashes of industry and lets her work slido between times is an abject failnre, but not more of one Ilian the over energetic housewife who takes a dozen steps where three will suf fice, and uses up her strength in petty ways, bo that she is unable to accomplish necessary tasks or only does them finally by an almost snperhuman effort. As a rule American housekeepers dis like science and method ns applied to their work, and with some show of rea son. Qrahamites nnd various other food cranks have appropriated good terms, full of meaning originally, und have ap plied them to t\ieir own ideas. Scien tific cooking is associated almost irrev ocably in tho mind of the uverage housekeeper with bran bread and oat meal mush—a diet now warranted by intelligent physicians to break down the strength of a Tartar savage. Thorough scientific knowledge of what is neces sary to sustain life would lead any one to avoid such a diet. The matters which it is especially necessary to bring down to a scientific basis in order to Bave time are methods of work. In the kneading of bread, for example, if tho work is done properly and the ilongh turned and folded systematically in kneading there is no waste, no stick ing of bread to the bowl it is raised in, and no dust left over tho board. The simplo exercise of kneading steadily and easily for half an hour is no hardship; it is, on tho contrary, an admirable and delightful exercise, which may be recom mended for broadening tbo chest. When the proper method of handling the paste in making puff paste is onco acquired yon may discard marble tables and chilled rolling pins, and success is as cer tain as it can be from any merely human work. If tho skilled housekeeper is offered any labor saving tool to assist her in this work bIio can tell in a moment, if she understands tho best method, whether tho new tool will be of assistance or merely offers a makeshift for the genuine process. Good makers of cake formerly used an old fashioned egg whip. By taking long strokes in a moment or two they heat the whites to a coarse, moder ately stiff froth, such as makes a deli cate, tender cake. With somo of the new patent beaters they can produce a fino froth, stiff and tough enough to bend when cut. A good cake baker knows, however, that such a froth will produce a fino grained, but a tongli cake. Aguin, in mixing in tho flour with the other ingredients, tho trained worker knows that if she folds tho flour in care fully, instead of taking circular stirring strokes, her cako will bq feathery light, but that with tho circular stirring she will break down tbo whites and render the cake liable to be tough. Her success depends upon scientific knowledge of the proper way to dO'her work in every case. In cleaning there is a right and a wrong way. If the worker scrubs a floor in tho go lucky "hit or miss” Btylo of some charwomen she can devote a great deal of strength to hor work and yet leave a larger part of the dirt on the floor when she is done. If, on the contrary, the worker keeps two pails of water at hand, one to scrub with and one for rinsing the floor with, abundance of clean cloths and a firm brush, and the floor is scrubbed with the grain of the wood, it may be cleaned with very little outlay of muscle. —New York Tribune. To Printers end Publishers. The Times Publishing Company has for sale a portion of the newspaper and job outfit made surplus by the recent consolidation of the Times and Recor der, consisting of ono cylinder newspa per press, two Gordon job presses, one Hero paper cutter, one perforator, six stands, two imposing Btones and tables, live hundred pounds of nows type, etc. This material and these presses are virtually new, having been in use only a year. A great bargain in prices and terms can be secured by the right par ties. Address the Timkh Pihusjiino Company, Amerlcus, Ga. There Is much humidity In the atmos phere as there Is in tho eyes of a woman audience In the theatre when “Kast Lynne” Is being wept over.—Philadel phia Times. Put Up ami Put Down I went a word to rhyin* with Ilia, I have It now; I'll put down pill*, Excuee me, though - th i n t ut down pills. I'd rather suffer some big Ills. To put down the old-fashioned. huge, bitter pills, that griped so and made such disturbance Internally l« more than a wise man will do. He will not put up with such unnecessary suffering. He URes Dr. Pierce’8 Pleasant Pellets. As a Liver Pill, they are unequaled. Smallest, cheapest, easiest to take. Put up in vials, hermetically sealed, hence always fresh and reliable, which is not truo of the large pills in wood or pasteboard boxes. jAs a gentlo laxative, only one Pellett for a dose. Three to four of these tiny, sugar-coated granules act painlessly as a cathartic. Some almanac makers say the “dog- day” period extends from July 3 to August 11, while others Insist that it does not begin until July 24 and there* after lasts just ono month. Every al manac maker, no doubt, should have his date, since every dog has his day. In Plain English. Unquestionably considered of incalcu lable consequence In correcting all con stitutlonal contaminations, is Ilr, Plorce’B Golden Medical Discovery. Can con scientiously commend it to careful con sideration, confident of its competency in nil controllable chronic complaints. Tho "Golden Medical Discovery” is the result of much research and wide perionce, by a practical physician of world-renown; its formula ombraces the most potent restoratives of the whole vegetable kingdom. It Is especially recommended for all blood disorders dyspepsia, liver and kidney complaints, scrofula, salt rheum, catarrh and con sumption—in Its early Btages—Insuring relief and cure in all cases. A. Loudon Snowden Is the latest of Mr. Harrison’s foreign ministers to come home. E. Burd Grubb and C. Emory Smith are also away from their posts. OUR VERY REST PEOW.E Confirm our statement when wo say that Dr. Acker’s English Remedy Is in every way superior to any and nil other pro- itions for the Throat and'Lungs. In Doping Cough and Croup, it 1b magic and relieves at onco. We offer you a simple bottle free. Remember, this romody is sold on a posttlvo guarantee. For sale by Fleetwood* Russell, Amori- cus, Ga. S Attention Hutlderi, Wo sell Langman * Martinez prepared paints, and aro authorised by the manu facturers to repaint any house at their expense on which their paints do not provo satisfactory. E. J. Ei.dridqe, Druggist. Th. Stowaway. A very small boy stole a ride on a train running ont of Jersey City tho other day. When two men took their seats they heard a slight sniffle beneath them, and ono of them, looking aronnd, found a boy hardly bigger than a pound of tea lying on the floor, shielded from sight by tho reversed baekB of two seats, which formed a tent over him. Of coarse, the men did not inform the trainmen that they were carrying a stowaway. Indeed, one man was inclined to slip twenty-five cents down to tho little rogue. Men always seem to like young scamps. Tho child was still beneath tho seats when the two men got off the train. He was still sniffling, too; perhaps from a prickling conscience; perhaps from fear of the vigorous shak ing which ho know would bo forthcom ing when he was discovered.—New York Tribune. nig Cables on tb. Brooklyn Bridge. The fonr cables of tlm Brooklyn bridge are sixteen inches in dAuneter each and consist of about 20,000 single wires. One difficulty with which the engineers of the Brooklyn bridge had to contend was tho fact that the outside or exposed wires were expanded by the heat of the son, while the Inner and protected ones were not so affected. The pressure of the hinny. KoUrrs. etc-nisd. ., ^ being of varying velocity, re- EeflSumn'ofluTinU, IS™d such adjustment of the wires as qnlred such adjustment to prevent displacement, even in a hurri cane. It took fifteen months’ continual work to string the wires of the bridge.— New York Son. The Old Grandmother insists on the mother giving the little one Dr. Diggers' Huckleberry Cordial. She knows it will euro both young and old of all bowel troubles, nml not con stipate as many preparations do with injurious effect. Sanannau, Ga., March 25, 1880. Messrs. Lippman Bros: I was suf fering with weakness and general debili ty, bolng almost incapacitated from at tending to my business. I was forced to call on Dr. Whitehead for treatment. He at once pat me on F. 1*. P. (Prickly Ash, Poke Hoot and Potassium), and af ter taking two or tbreo bottles my health improved, and, although suffering for somo time with general weakness, de bility and catarrh, am now comparative ly a well man. E. B. Fobker, With Cornwell * Cbipman. At the present rate of legal fees nono but a wealthy man can “keep his own counsel.” gssssssssS S Swift’s Specific S S A Tested Remedy For All s and Skin i Diseases s S A reliable core for ConUf loos C Blood Poison, Inherited 8crp- _ o fuls end Skin Cancer. Jl Aia tonic for delicate Women § and Children It has no equal. S s S Being purely vegetable, is harm- Q lees in its effects. w S A treaties on Blood and. Skin DU- ft ..u. mailed ran on aiwUcaUon. W S Druggists Boll It. ' C SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., ■itolVSSTTmff NiSESli.' Teacher—VVhydid Alexander weep? Claim—’Cos be couldn’t find any more worlds to conquer. ,* Teacher—Why could he find no more* Class—’Cos he didn’t advertise.—New York Trnth._ y- _ _ F : C L M ' s“ de * j ■) ■ L <■!•< 1 U-flF TERRY MiG CO. (Hucceruora lo W. r„ Mnrdrr.) W. N. MARSHALL, Gen’l Supt, E. S. GOODMAN, Gen’l Pass. Agt. CENTRAL RAILROAD OF GEORGIA Soutliwestern Division. Correct Schedule, No. 22, in Effeot {April 12,1891 SAVANNAH fit WESTERN DIVISION Schedule No. 10, taking effect Apr. 12th, 1801. No. 5, Between Havannah and Birmingham! No. 6, Dally. 7 10 p m via Amerlcus, « Dally. Leave Savannah Arrive 7 40pm LyouN 100am Amerlcus, 6 40 am Bueua Vista, 635pm Arrive Columbus,.. .Leave 360 No. 8 Dally. LawNnngt.’ 8:83am 0 80 “ 10 60 « 6 20p r Passenger 9 37 pm ic or* 4 42 ft m 7 35 am No. 7 Dally 0 37 |» m 7 25a m No. (i Dally. Part. Mail asa EAST BOUND. No. 6 Dally Fast Mi.ll No. 7 Dally Passenger 2 35p in 4 Itt “ 635 •• 10 20 “ 0 15a in 6 30 “ Lv. Amerlcus Ar. Ar. Fort Valley Lv. “ Macon “ “ Atlanta ** “ Augusta " '• Savannah ** 1 08 pm II 83 a in 1020 •• 7 10 •• 910 p in 0 37 p m 8 00 “ 040 •• 216 “ 7 00am 640 " No. 5 Dally. Kant Mnll WEHT # BOUND. No. 6 Dally Fast Mall '2 86 pm ISO “ 1106 a m 7 40 a m Pasaengei 826a in 1280 •• 10 26 pm 7 80pm 1 Hpin 180 *• 4 12 M 7 20 *• No. 5 Dally 1 18 pm IJU “ 25t « 5 40 •• Lv. Amerlcus Ar. Ar. Hmlthvllle •• “ Kufaula ** “ Montgomery Lv. TO FLORIDA. Lv^ Amerlcus Ar. •' Hmlthvllle •* Ar Albany Lv " Tlioinaavllla Lv " Waycroea •• ** Brunswick " '• Jacksonville " No. 6 Dally 286ptn 120 p in 12 20 p m N 80 am No. 8 tally • 33 a m 300 ** 216 *• 10 10 p 760 785 Bolld Trains with Sleeping Cars Between Havannah and Birmingham. For further Information relative to tickets, schedules, beat routes ate. etc., apply to A. T. MAXWELL, Agent, J. OfWcKENZIK, Hup’t, K.T. CHARLTON, Lieu. Pase..Ag’L Americas, Go. Hmlthvllle, Ga. Havaunah.Ga. Do H. BYTUEWOOD, Division Pms. Ag’L, Columbus,tGa. D. D. CURRAN, Hnp’t, Columbus, Ga. J. C. HHAW.Trav. Pass. Ag'L, Havannah Ga. PASSENGER SCHEDULE SUWANEE RIVER ROUTE TO FLORIDA, Taking Etfeci Juno 14,1801. Standard Time, 01th Meridian. -goTNii MOUTH. 2 45 p nt iHOpm 7 00 p m 10 45 -... 11 00 am 7 10 a r 4 54 p... 7 <10 p m .... Atlai la Macon Macon .... Cordate ..... Tilton ....Valdosta . .. Lake City I 25 p m| Ar.. ..Jacksonville.. "Palatka... ”Lv . Ht. Augustine Lvl. 10 60 a GOING NORTH, ...Ar 10 20 p m ..Lv 6 20 p m ..Ar 6 10 pm ..Ar 6 27 pm ..Ar 1 M pm M 13 01 p- 9 66 a 246am 12 66 am 10 60 pm Connection nertb bound and son'll bound !■ made In Macon with trains of Central, Macon and Northern and E. T. V. A G. railroads. A. C. KNAPP, Traffic Manager L.J. HARRIS,Ticket Agent, Union Depot. HENRY BURNS, T. P. A. Macon, Oa. mt.wr- — JAM EH MENZIEB, Southeastern Ag I West Bay HU. Jacksonville, Fla. SCHOFIELD’S IRON WORKS, UNDllY AMD MACHINE SHOP,. J. S. SCHOFIELD’S SONS * CO., Prop’rs, Manufacturer* of Steam Engines, Boiler*, Cotton Prc**ea and General Machinery, Cotton Gin*, Cane Mill* and Saw Mill*. Dealer* in Mill and Machinists’ Supplies. Special Attention to Repair Work. iltrl7 s MACON, GEORGIA, ; ^ - i - Blank Books, FINE STATIONERY SHEET MUSIC, Daily Papers, Magazines, Fashion Plates, etc., etc., Base Ball Goods, Art Materials, PICTURES! PICTURES! Picton Frames Made to Order. Any kind, size or proie, and to onr picture frame department we have jtwt added ten thousand feet Monlding of the very latest design, and an experienced workman, and wo will be pleased to have you call and look through our stock at any timo. 105 FORSYTH STREET. S. A. M. ROUTE. Sarauili, Americas A Montgomery R'y TIME TA11LH Taking Effect July 12,1891. too 10 00 10 37 2 16 pm 1 ve...UirtnTnchain arr 7 00 pm lv.... Chlldersnorg lv Bylacauga Ivc .•OpellkA lvo 6 06 4 40 1 26 11 46 am »rr Kllaviiie. lvo ’EUavtlle lvo arr...... Amorions.. lvo Lyons lv arr Savannah...... ntr Charleston arr 1 v.. .. .Montgomery arr| 7 06 p m lv Columbus arr 11 26 arr Amnrlcua.......lv| 8 90 toufa koplgommry and Aniiricua, via Enfanla 12 20 pm lv.. Americas lv between Americas and'JacksonvIlle, via Helena |7 00 pmilv.......Ameriusc.. 1 II aim tv r*— • 10 arr Bi 1 60 |anr Ja .Brunswick lvo . Jaekaoavtlla lv Cloee connect Ion made at Monti Bleeping care between Columbus and Baran- Paasenren from Charleeton destined to points amt of Sovannab, change care at C. & 8. June- W.N.MAMHALL. B. ft. GOODMAN, Gen. Superintendent “ “ Americas .Ga. Amerlcus, fiau J. M. CAKO LAN, B. K. Pass. Agt Savannah, Ga. K. a. SMITH, M. D. **•’ Amerlcus, Ga. JNO. T. ARGO, C. B. A., Amerlcus, Ga O. H. SMITH, O. E. A., New York, N.Y. THE East Tennessee. Virginia and Georgia R’y System. —IS TH* ONLY- Shortud Direct Lint to th Kortb, East or Veal tb.Soatb. ■ Kl*gut FuRmui BlMplBg Cut, brtTM. Jacksonville and Cincinnati, TltnavtUa and Cincinnati, Brunswick nnd Louisville, ■ Chattanooga and Washington Memphis and New York, Philadelphia and New Oileans, Chattanooga and Mobile, Atlanta and Chattanooga, Without Change. For aaj In/onnntkw addreM B. W. WUNK, Urns. Voss, and Ticket Mft KaoxtUM, Tna. o. W. SMoezMfios- vra.**