Newspaper Page Text
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THE aMERICUS DAILY TIMES-RECORDER: THURSDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1891.
MEMORIES.
A vvorj.i tif and golden Hpht,
A -<.[! n'lrain u|»on 111. hr..*..
A Hill, bunch < f m*« 'ThU«.
And all an.tirol Hwnnl melodic*.
Or.« .nuinicr d»y
A imjn.v .nnHlilim fair.
A few nnifl pawing twilight liqur*.
A Inv. wind wlil.il*. red on til, air,
A dreamy -Hence o’.-r t In- rtow'ra
linn ...miner day
(•Hi
dytlurlluiE'rlnttti’
sliy, one lirlidil ,
ml dead In nil nn>n Man
J- 11 ml wld'b run:, wan p,.
lint. ..inmit-r dm'
ultlced her feet and poulticed her head.
red.
Ani^hiutered licr hack till 'tea. umartlng
Tried toniea, elixir*, paln-hlllcr* and anlvea,
(Though rraRdma declared it ... nothin.' bn.
And tliJponr^woniaa tbeegfit ahe mutt certainly
Till “ Karortte Preaerlpllon "the happened to try.
No wonder 111 prill., to loudly they apeak,
bha crew better at once and waa well in a week.
The torturing pains and distressing
nervousness which accompauy, at times,
corttin forms of “female weakness,”
yield like magic to Dr. Pierce’s Favorite
Pre
Prescription.’' It b purely vegetable,
S erfectly harmless, and adapted to the
ellcate organization of woman. It
allays and subdues the nervous symp
toms and relieves the pain accompany
ing functional and organic troubles.
It’s a legitimate medicine—an invig
orating, restorative tonic, a soothlni
and strengthening nervine, and a post
tlve remedy for “female weaknesses 1
and ailments. All functional disturb
ances, irregularities, and derangements
are cured by It. There’s nothing like
It tn the way it acts—there’s nothing
like it in the way it’s sold. It’* guar
anteed to give satisfaction In every case,
or the money paid for It is promptly
refunded.
Read the guarantee on the wrapper.
Ton lose nothing if it doesn’t help
you—but it will.
This is the way
•with the Ball corset: if you
want ease and shapeliness,
you buy it—but you don’t
ikeep 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 har*
both of these.
For sal* by GEO. D. WHEATLEY,
1
«
Old Nick Whiskey
is the best and is noted for its ago
and purity, having been made on the
same plantation over
1J23 years
without a rival as wo constantly keep
four year old
RYE AND CORN
on hand—ship any quantity, so write
for price-list.
Old Nick Whiskey Co.,
Yadkin Co. PANTHER CREEK, N. C.
umuui NR. hpMn
IflMMs, UffMS’l Hock, SAVANNAH, CA.
For sale by the DAVENPORT DRUG 0 f,
3MPANY, Amerieus, Ga.
till’.’I
-Lni
l UDW!. O flow
Mitif hf»0UHl«ri
liour*
' Hl» HU
ItHi until if tor I
Jjm knot, i
Tl»*> .few h- w
Anion# the gr«ut mass.-,
toil for tliftii daily hr^ail. o*i
have not yet dr voted Iheirn-e
inf< Uie Boil, and on tin* a
enemien have deviuwl the
via. mnst
mlv tunny
w to rill
•unt their
diar^e that
Jews are of nou.se in agrimlinre, that
they ar« averse to all hard work Here
also experience jfivw* a iHntaMou In
the land* where .lews hav.* i»een |>*»r
ini tied to acquire landed |»ro|>eity, wiiere
they have found opportunity to devote
themselves to atfrirultnre, they liave
proved themselves excellent furinrrs.
For example, In Hungary tin*y form a
very lar>;e part of the tillers of thi* soil,
and this fact is acknowledged to such an
extent that the liitfli Catholic clergy in
Hungary almost exclusively have .lews
«# tenants on mortmain properties, and’
almost all large landholders give prefer
ence to the Jews on account of Him in
dustry. their rectitude an»l their tiex
terity. These are facts that cannot lie
hid. and that have force, so that the
anti-Semitic movement, which for a
long tiifNf flourished in Hungary, must
expire.
It will expire because every one st
that so important a factor in the pj
duct.ive activity of the country—esp
ally in agriculture—cannot he spur!
My own personal experience, too. has led
me to recognize that the Jews have very
good ability in agriculture. I have seen
this personally in the Jewish agricul
tural colonies of Turkey, and the re-
porta from the expedition that I have
sent to the Argentine Republic plainly
show the same fact.—Baron de Hirseli
In Forum.
COUNTY DIRECTORY.
Mu
Ic.hI Sounds and NoInp.
Jt is a curious fact that musical sounds
fly farther and are heard at a greater
distance than those which are more loud
and noisy. If we go on the outside of a
town during a fair, at tbe distance of u
mile we hear the mnsical instruments,
hut the din of the multitude, which is so
overpowering in the place, can scarcely
be heard, the noiso dying on the spot
To those who are conversant with the
power of musical instruments the fol
lowing observation will be understood
The violins made at Cremona about tbe
year 1000 nre superior in tone to any of a
later date, age seeming to dispossess
them of their noisy qualities and leaving
nothing but the pure tone. If a modern
violin is played by the side of one of
those instruments it will appeur much
the louder of the two. but on receding a
hundred paces, when compared with the
Cremona, it will scarcely be heard.—
New York Ledger.
lUavan'a Artillery.
The largest rainfall on earth has been
recorded at t/liora Putiji. on the Bay of
Bengal, but the most violent thunder
storms ever olmerved are probably those
of French (Jniann. At Cape Orange,
some forty miles south of Cavenue, Cap
tain Kllert, of the French uavy, saw the
rills of the coast hills turned into water
falls by a cloudburstlike storm, while the
crushing of thunder peals was incessaut
and often almost deafening, so much ho.
indeed, that some of the sailors began to
mutter long forgotten prayers—probably
thinking the day of judgment near at
hand.—New York Telegram
Silencing Hubby.
Young Fatlier (in the future)—Great
snnken! Can’t you do something to quiet
that baby? Its eternal equalling just
drives me wild.
Young Mother (calmly to servant)—
Marie, bring in my hnsbund’s mother’s
phonograph and put in the cylinder
marked "At Ten Months.” I want him
to hear how ills voire sounded when he
Was young.—New York Weekly.
Trutellni; Incox.
Stranger—lieu I Boy, do you know
any of the newspaper reporters by tight?
Hotel Boy—Lots of 'em
Stranger— Well—er—aliem? I am tbe
Hon. Mr. Ureatmau, but t registered ns
Smith in order to avoid interviewers.
Here’s n quarter.
Boy—All right. I’ll tell 'em you're
here.—Good Newt
EH-Ask for caUkwue.
WRY MPOCO.MSwLC.TkM
$500 Reward t
WItDImjImiImc rtmd forarecMd Uv*r
t»«»W- •orunott»mh ^
r?
When pins were scarce and dear they
formed very acceptable gifts to the fair
, and as now and then money was be
stowed to the valne of pins in lien there-
not a few phrase hunters believe that
the term pin money originated from that
practice.
To form an idea of the experiments
thst take place abroad in tbe way of
testing new devices in warfare, the sta
tion at Liege, Belgium, consumes nearly
4,000,000 cartridge* and forty ton* of
powder a year in testing firearms
It is a well known fact that paper can
be compressed until it will be so bsrd
that a diamond will hardly tonch It, bnl
no known mechanism of the present or
the past ha* inch power to compress and
work marvel* with wood.
Nearly two bushels of unio pearls wen
dug out of an ancient Indian monad in
the Little Miami-valley half a dezen
yean ago, They were all so much de
cayed, however, aa to be of no commer
cial valne.
Robert Boyle, the great philosopher of
the Seventeenth century, mentions aa
English soldier who could tat ‘
nod another who eg
Superior Court— Hon. W. H. Fish,
judge; C. B. Hudson, solicitor-general;
J. II. Allen, clerk, L. 11. Forrest, sheriff;
J. B. Lamar, deputy sheriff. Regular
terms, fourth Mondays in November and
.1 une.
County Court—J. B. Pilsbury, judge;
F. A. Hooper, solicitor. Monthly terms,
first Wednesday. Quarterly terms, third
Monday in March, .lune, September and
December.
County Commissioners—.1. II. Black,
chairman; C A. Huntington, J. A. Cobb,
G. W. Council, J. W. Wheatley.
County Treasurer—J. E. Sullivan.
Tax Receiver—J. W. Mize.
Tax Collector—J. B. Dunn.
Coroner—J. B. Parker.
Ordinary—A. C. Speer.
Amerieus, 78!)th district, G. M.—W. B.
F. Oliver, J. P. W. K. Wheatley, X. P.
Court, second Tuesday.
City or Amkhicus—Mayor—Jno. B.
Felder.
Mayor Pro Tem—W. K. Wheatley.
Aldermen—P. II. Williams, J. J. Wil
liford, T. F. Logan, J. E. Bivins, J. A.
Davenport, W. K. Wheatley.
Clerk and Treasurer—D. K. Brinson.
City Engineer and Superintendent
Water Works—G. M. Eldridgo.
Chief of Police—A. P. Lingo.
DeWitt’s Sarsaparilla destroys such
poisons as scrofula, skin disease, ecze
ma, rheumatism. Its timely use saves
many lives. For sale by the Davenport
Drug Company.
for Infants and Children.
Are you going to use
Gas or Electric Light
ixtures? If so we can
ve you money.
We have $10,000
worth of Gas and Com
bination fixtures in
Brass, Copper, Gilt,
Bronze, Old Iron, Or
molu, Silver, &c., in
stock. Our prices are
10 per cent, cheaper
than you can buy from
the factory.
We carry afull line of
Hard Wood and Mar-
bleized Iron Mantels,
Tile Hearths, Grates,
&c. Heating and Cook
ing Stoves, Ranges,
Fire Sets. Coal Vases,
Hods, Fenders, &c.,
in Brass and Japanned.
Send for prices. We
are furnishing the New
Hotel with gas fixtures.
Hanoiciitt & Bellingratb Go.,
ATLANTA, GA.
“Caatorlv ' so veil adapt ,.1 to chltt
, recommend it u superior to any prescription
known to my” II. A. Archer, K. D.,
U jSo. Oxford Sis., Brooklyn, N. ?,*.
“The use of ‘Castor!** Is so universal and
it* merit* so well known that it sown* a work
of supererogation to endorse it. Few are the
intelligent families who do not keep Castoria
within
Late Pastor Bloomingdale Reformed Church.
r\^T»a ctSi.'2»l!c, Constipation,
Sodr iiiomacS, 2. jurhcca. Eructation,
Kills Worms, give* sleep, and promt! M a
Witioutin}<irlous t
u For several years I have recommended
your * Castoria, ’ and shall always continue to
do so os it baa invariably produced beneficial
results,”
Edwin F. Pakdxx, M. D.,
“Tbe Winthrop," 125th Street and 7th Ave*
New York City.
Th* Csntaub Company, 77 Murray Strut, Nkw Yorx.
Going west or east, north or south, who goes
by the ‘"Racket Store” without drooping in
and examining our goods and prices is
BADLY FITTED
to support a family. He needs a kind but firm
hand to knock some sense into him. Ours is
the only stock in town wnich is calculated
TO SUPPORT
extravagant claims, but we won’t make ’em.
We prefer to have a man and his family come
in and look us over; in fact, ours is
A FAMILY
store, and each member of your family will
find something to interest and instruct them.
ROGEHN & WILDER,
104 Lee Street.
Septlfal&w
ALLISON & AYOOCK
The Booksellers and Stationers
ABE NOW IN THEIR
New quarters in the New Hotel Build
ing “The Windsor” and are
Ready for Business.
ALLISON & AYCOCK, 406 Jackson Street.
AMHIRICOS. GA,
The Greatest Medicinal JMeetfvsr—
of the Arc.
No Disease of the
Blood can withstand
its powerful cleans
ing qualities.
Gzntlkkyn: In the spring of 1S3S I contracted a
severe case of Blood Poison, and for moro than a
7wit stuck to me closer tkan a brother. I had
taken quantities of all the blood puriflors on the
*?* rk £Kh u UJ 0 2! 9 •££ Tn 7 < l to do me any good until I
■truck \V. w, G. (Wooldridge's Wonderful Cure).
Five bottles of this truly wonderful medicine has
made * complete cure of me. When I commenced
to take W. W, a I was covered with sopm from
MAnrvurauo IT
WOOLDRIDGE WONDERFUL CUBE CO.
COLUMBUS, DA. ”
FOB MLR BIT ALL DRUGGISTS.
A Household Remedy £
FOR ALL \
BLOOD and SKIN i
DISEASES #
S3.B.B.
Botanic Blood Balm
It Cures Sg u tfgg
Ism ol smUmiM MIN ENUPTION, b»-
t id«i belna eBcacloui la toning n the
irsiltt >W rstlsris, Ik. cesMIistlss,
irtisa ln,alr*4 tras aav csss*. It*
shuts! isptmtlsrtl basils, ,re,tells*
isstllr st Is isarutMU, t cere. N
direction* sm followed#
8ENT FREE
BIOOO BALM CO., Missis. 6s.
Amerieus Ironworks,
BUILDERS OF
Engines, Boilers, Cotton Gins,
Presses, Feeders and Condensers, Saw and Grist Mills,
Shingle Machines, Pipe and Pipe Fittings, Boiler
Feeders, Valves, Jets, Etc.
Shaftings, Hangers, Boxes and Pulleys
10-Special attention given to repairing all kinds of
Machinery. Telephone 79. a ,s ‘ 4m
FINANCIAL.
8. H. HAWKIHS Pm't H.C-BAGLEY. Vic. Prn'i
W. 1. MURPhEY. Cashier.
ORGANIZED 1870.
-^SThe Bank of Amerieus.ge-
Designated Depository State of Gear^
BtockholdVS iudlvidSny lUblT K
Surplus ‘
surplus, ... BiatMMo
-: liIRECTOBS:-
rc^ J, hSr , Lf n ‘'. noa V InT '«®« n t Co.
™*'° c . m, bK e ® Brick Co.
““aD^Us^u, of tias. Dodson & Son, AttompT*
w wholesale dry goods.
W. E. Murphey, Cashier.
tld up Capital
- - $100,000.
- - 80,000.
THE BANK OF SUMTER
T. N. HAWKES,
President.
O. A. COLEMAN,
Vice-President.
W. C. FURLOW, Cashier.
DIRECTORS-O. A. Coleman, C. C
Hankins, B. H. Jossey, T. N. Hankes
W C. Furlow, W. H. C. wheuS* R ;f
Oliver, H. M. Brown, W. M. Hawkos
Dr. E. T. Mathis, Arthur Ryiander. ’
Liberal to Its oustomeu, accommoda
ting to the public and prudent in it.
muiagement, thik bank solicit* deposits
and other business in its line.
I. MONTGOMERY, Prut. J. C. RONEY, Vic. Pr«t.
JNO. WINDSOR. C-r. LESTER WINDSOR *„t. CV
E. *. HAWKINS, Attorney
NO. 2839.
THE
Peoples' National Ban!
Of Amerieus.
Capital, 950,000. Surplus, 925,000
ORGANIZED 1883.
Americas Investment Go.
Investment Securities.
Paid up Capital, 81,000,000.
Surplus, 8260,000.
DIRECTOKe:
H C Bagley, W E Hawkins, S W Coney,
W S Gillie, J TV Sheffield, P C Clegg,
W M Hawkes, B F Mathews, G M Bvne,
W E Murphey, S Montgomery, J H Pharr.
B. P. Hollis.
E. Buiir, Jb., Pres. H. M. Knapp, V. P.
O. A. Coleman, Sec, a Treas,
Georgia Loan Sc Trast Co.
Negotiates Loans on improved
Farm and City Property.
P Hollis,
Attorney,
J E Bivins.
Land Examiner.
Saw Mill Men, Attention!
ENGINES,
Our speeial business is heavy machinery such as
BOILERS, SAW MILLS, AND WOOD-WORIING
and for first-class machinery, we defy competition. We are general
enta for
H. B. SMITH MACHINE C'G.'S celebrated Wood-working machines, and can dis
count factory prices. Write for circular of “Farmers’ Favorite” saw mill; it is the
best on the market. Second-hand machinery constantly on hand,
prices; we can save you money.
ana is roe
Write for
THE LITTLE SEWINS MACHINE MAN
orPKRS rOB BALK
SEWING MACHS & MOTORS
For >11 Machine* on easy term., and can
supply tbs best
m iu.
Perkins Machinery Company,
6] SOUTH BROAD STREET,
Ifeatio. Iu Tmt-Rxcoann Wb
t When You Writ*.
ATLANTA, GA
sogUdftwly
E. T. BYED,
FIRE AND LIFE INSURANCE.
Insurance placed on City and Country Property.
Offloe on Jackson Street, next door below Moyer's Ofioe.
dtoM-dlj.
0. O. HAWKINS.
G. O. LOVING.
HAWKINS & LOVING
We are prepared to do EMBALMING on short notioe. SATISFAC
TION GUABANTEED. Also keep a fine line of Metallic and
doth Covered Cases, Caskets and Coffins.
HEADQUARTERS FDRWiAmfflt^, *
tn^rnmmemsnM«M»taBty*.AWfaa«k«.fh
GHOST 8T0RIE8
When you hear a man say
“We’ve got a PIANO here
just as good as the I VERS
& POND for a great deal
less money,” remember that
all the gnost stories have
not been told yet
When you hear a man say
that “So-and-so” keeps a
better line of musical goods
than we do, just add one
more to your list of ghost
stories.
When you want an IVERS
& POND PIANO with all
its patented improvements,
see that you get it. Allow no
solicitation or specious mis
representation to switch you
oft onto something inferior.
Ghost stories frighten chil
dren, but not mature and
sensible people.
Call on us and try the
IVERS & POND SOFT-
STOP, even though you do
not wish to buy anything.
PHILLIPS & CREW,
79 Peachtree St., Atlanta, Ga.
AUGUST MYERS.
Artistic Tailor
Under T. Wheatley's Store,
FORSYTH ST.. AMERICUS,GA-
Having been tn the tailoring l>u.iDe«
for twenty seven years, I have gf « n
perfect satisfaction to my customers, a"
have made no miaflta. I dealwHb
first-class house in New York city,
can show many excellent samples^■
good English, French end IwhejJjT
goods, and customer# will find “T
Ire *11 first-class. A Urge number or
samples of Imported suiting*. I el
make np suits for 822 to
Call and see me.
A. MYEBS,
Cor. Forsyth end Jukton
DOMESTIC - COAL!
Season
prepaired tofornlsh a Wj
»Coal for Grate purpose*. >»
ft SIMS.