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THE AMEK1CLS DAILY T1MES-KEC0KDER: SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1891.
THE TIMES-RECORDER.
I>nlly uurl Weekly.
The Ampbicuh Record Kit Established 1879.
The Axkrku's Times Khtahliniikd 1890.
CONSOLIDATED, Al’IUL, 1891.
SUBSCRIPTION i
ailt. On* Year,
Daily, Okb Month, e
Weekly. One Year. • • . • M
Weekly, Six Months, fi
For advertising rates address
k. Rascox Mybick, Editor and Manager,
THE TIMES PUBLISHING COMPANY,
Americas, Ga.
BuHlneHN Office, Telephone 99.
Editorial Rooms, after 7 o'clock p. m
Telephone *J».
Americus, Ga., November 8,1891,
“1 am no longer a Democrat, thank
God!” exclaimed Rev. Sam Small in
Boston. And let all tho people aay
“Amen!"
The Georgia editors will bo called to
meet at Macon about the 20th Inst, to
consider ways and means of securing a
creditable state exhibit at the World’
Fair.
The Alliance is congratulating itself
that though Col. Livingston Is shorn of
his notable chin whiskers, the quantity
and quality of his oliln music is In no
wise diminished.
The New York Commercial Adver
tiser observes: “In Franco men who
attempt to corner the people's food sup
ply are convicted of a felony and are
treated as crim'oals.”
Mits. W. II. Felton will organise a
club it. every county of the slate to im
press .fro farmers with tho utility of set
ting aside five acres for household and
barnyard nccesrities. It is to be called
“Wife'e Far n."
Mary Anderson Navarro is prepar
ing to return to the stage. The proof of
this lies in tho fact her valuable step
father, Dr. Griffin, says that “Mary
has no Intention of over again appearing
in public as an actress.”
Ix the name of common sense, what
does Elam Christian want with a third
party in Georgia when Alliancemen con
stitute two-thirds of the Democratic
party? Let “the othor fellows" organ
ize a third party if they want to -Lib-
,oral-Entcrprise.
Accomnxo to the Superintendent of
the San Francisco House of Correction,
the opium habit has been the chief
agent in breaking up the lawless gangs
of San Franoisco hoodlums. It so stupe
fies and eofeeblea them that there is no
longer any fight in them.
If Editor Howell really intends to run
for Governor, he will have to norve him-
aelf up to stand a good deal. Already
the Georgia edltora are pouring hot
ahot into him. Read thla from the Fort
Valley Enterprise: “Evan I*. Howell for
Governor. Evan so. Howell that
aonnda "
Hox. Robert H. Hat, who haa been
mayor of Anguata for seventeen years,
and who was’ generally elected by the
politiclane, saloon element and negroes,
was forced to oome down and out of the
race last week by public aentlmeot, of
the beat people In tbe city, and now the
reform candidate, J. H. Alexander, will
have a walkover. He It a- brother of
Gen. E. 8. Alexander, of the Central
railroad;
A Pennsylvania preacher has just
been expelled from the Sons of Temper
ance, because be took a drink of fresh
cider. This nearly equals the ease in
New England where a young fellow waa
expelled from a temperance society for
running a “elder press," tbe charge and
tha proof being that he was caught
aqueexlng a pretty girl who had just
eaten several apples.
No MAN|ln America poaaeaaea the gen
ius that Sam Small does to keep himself
in notoriety. Now he tangle* up with the
Boston newspaper reporters, and accuses
one of them of falsely reporting him.
Sam baa been a newspaper man enough
to know that reporters are always truth
ful, and yet he flies in the faoe of piovi-
dence by accusing one of tham of pre
varication. Go to, Samuel, and wipe off
thy chin I
Tux Ohio Legislature la overwhelm*
ingly Republican, which insures a Re
publican Senator from that atate for tbe
next six years. It will be either Sher
man or Foraker, Of these two evils,
Sherman every time. Where was tbe
People's Party of Ohio that waa going to
beat Sherman* And where was tbe
“Sooktess Sockdolager,” tbe prophet
Jeremiah, who already had Sherman’s
scalp dangling at hts belt? Let Jerry
explain this Ohio business, or forevar
hereafter hold hla peace.
The Tribune-of-Rome la getting so
aancy that tha Sparta Ishmaellte ahonld
look to Its laurels; hear hla latest:
Tha ■vealac Times, u la stated. It to be
resurrected. Mr. Pleasant Stovall to to be
IU. editor and Mr. David Robinson of tbe
ltoblnson Ht.-mn Printing company le to
manage Its business affairs. Mr. Stovall to
at present tbe uaoagiog editor ot the Au
gusta Chronicle. He to a eoorteoue gentle
man, one of the bestedltorial-writers In tbe
8t*te and an excellent all around newspaper
man. Mr.Robinson la a well known, popu
lar and •uecM.fUIbualiieoo man. Tbs new
venture ought to be. and donbUsss will be, a
suoosssfut one,—Savannah Maws.
Thtoli pbtrspubliabodaaa piece of sen,
but as arinnn mistake on tha part or tha
Raw.- AT to ins first editorial notlcesver
taken or a Georgia paper bp tha Sa
vannah News. Colonel Lull must have a
financial Interest In tbe to-be-resnmeetsd
Times.
SOI Til KISS DKVKLOPMKNT.
The Manufacturers’ itecord, of Haiti-
more, of November 7, in reviewing tlie
Industrial progress of tho South, says:
“The general business situation
throughout the South shows no material
change, in.insui.il interests continuing
to make satisfactory progress. The
movement of cotton Is still very heavy,
and foreign shipments active. The In
dications show a very decided tendency
of western produce to seek outlets to
foreign markets,through South Atlantic
and Gulf ports, and railroad capitalist#
are more and more allowing their appre
elation of this fact. Thus, in addition
to tbe many large inland manufacturing
and trading cities which are growing up
in the South, tills section is certain to
build up great seaport cities at New.
port Newt, ~ Norfolk, Charleston
Fort Royal, Savannah, Pensacola,
Mobile, Galveston and probably
at other points where good harbors can
be created at a moderate cost. Tbe
development of a larger trade with tile
West Indies and South America and tbe
construction of (the Nicaraguan canal
will both prove of enormous value to
the South by furnishing new markets fur
Southern agricultural and manufactured
products, and by makiug Southern ports
great shipping and trading centers. In
every direction evidences are accumulat
ing of tlie solid growth of Southern
business interests of all kinds and the
outlook is very bright. In Nortli Caro
Hun, where there is considerable nickel,
there are rumors of a nickel steel-mak
ing company: at Greensboro, in the
aiue Slate, tiro corner-stone has been
laid for the tlrst large modem furnace,
and tlie lirst one built for coke, ever
constructed in that State; tlie building
of this furnace is an uvent of great im
portance to tlie two Carollnns, whore
high-grade Bessemer ores are found in
abundance, tlie development of which
will add immensely to the prosperity of
both States.”
THE STATE I HESS.
Buena Vista Is agitating the erection
of a public hall for entertainments, sueti
as concerts, school exhibitions and the
atrical troupes.
AN EXPLODlai FALLACY.
And exchange says:
It lscleurtli.it McKinley could liavo car
ried the Buckeye State l.y a much lancer ms
jorliy If hla high tariff doctrine had not In
jured him aiuonx tlie f inning classes.
This is one of the fallacies of politics
that people seem loth to give up.
McKinley’s high tariff doctrines did
not lose him a vote in Ohio, and if he
had been a free trader, ids vote would
have boon tlie same. The Republicans
voted for their ticket, regardless of tlie
doctrine, because they knew that Mc
Kinley’s defeat meant the wreokfof the
Republican party; and they voted to
save the party, not to endorse this, that
or the other doctrine.
All these campaign speakings and ral
lies and processions never change a sin
gle vote; their only effect being to stir
up the voters and get them to turn out
freely on election day.
Any campaign that ia so vigorously
prosecuted as waa that in Ohio brings
out tbe full vote, but it does not turn a
single ballot.
The Timka-Rkcoudek offers • year's
subscription free to every voter In
Ohio who will state on oath that he
chaoged bis politics either way Id conse
quence of any speech he heard, or any
thing he read during the campaign.
Each side simply whoops up Its own
and bring* in the stragglers, and that la
the stun and substance of politics the**
days.
WHERE THE MOREY 18.
There are 0,711 banka in the United
States, and that by tha report of this
year these batiks have on d*posit$4,400,-
100,202. ot this- great amount the banka
of the atate of New Yolk hold more
than one-third. The bank with the
targeat deposit in tbla country is tbe
Bowery Saving* Bank of New York,
wblcb reports $47,014,754. There are
thirty banks in Now York city with de
posit* exceeding $10,000,0001 The total
amount of wealth deposited in tbe banka
of New York state is over a billion and
a half of dollars, or about fttyjoneapita
for all the people of tbe United States.
These figures are from the Financier,
and Indicate two things: First, that
these $25 per capita of idle money now
in existence lessen what ia in the lianda
of tbe laboring claaaea and country peo
ple who don’t keep bank accounts; and
second, that nearly all the Idle money In
the United States is piled up in the
North.
Suppose tbe Government were to coin
or print a billion more dollars to-mor
row, how much of it would ever And its
way into the South under present econo
mic conditions? Not a million dollars
of the thousand milllona; and yet we are
constantly howling for an increase of tlie
per capita circulation.
W. C. Russell, druggist desires to in
form the publle, that be is agent for tbe
most successful preparation that haa yet
been produced for coughs, colds and
croup. It will loosen and relieve a
severe cold in lees time than any other
treatment The article referred to I*
Chamberlain's Cough Remedy. It is a
medicine that has won fame and. popu
larity on ita merita and one that can
always be depetded upon. It la the
only known remedy that will prevent
croup. It is put np in 50 cent and $1
An every day Item at. Balnbridg* now
ia the reoelpt from ooontgy. farmers of
largo q nan tide* of tobaeed, and It Is sell
ing for 40 centaperpound each. It la
not likely that there will br^noch cot
ton railed in Decatur countyr<f*.,
The Madisonian is urging tlie building
of a dummy line from Madison to Eaton-
ton, Ga , about twenty miles a natural
ridge all the way renders grading almost
unnecessary.
The Lumpkin Independent says: We
hear some complaints of wells failing in
different parts of tbe country. This
prolonged drought is a severe test on
wells and streams.
The Chattahoochee river ia lower than
it has been in years—perhaps lower than
has ever been known before. Steamboat
traffic above Kufaula has been suspend-
ed almost entirely.—Lumpkin lade
dependent.
Mr. C. C. Campbell, of cotton com
press fame, went all tlie way from Al
bany, Ga., last week to Cincinnati, Ohio,
to vote for Campbell, the Democratic
candidate for Governor of that State.
Tho continued dry weather has not
prevented frost. We learn that on low
lands near creoks ice formed one half
inch thick last week. Cano has been
killed and in some instances frozen so it
had to bo turned into syrup to prevent
its souring.—Schley County News.
Frost has nipped tlie vine and enabled
Mr. ti. Riley Dykes to count his crop of
gourds. Ho has only one vine. It runs
across twenty-seven tlirec-feet cotton
rows, and baa a crop of 28tl gourds cling
ing to it. The vine covers nearly one-
eighth of an acre.—Hawkinsville Dis
patch.
Brother Latimer's liver is evidently
out of order, for he refuses to feel
wealthy, even when his neighbors say
Stewart county is lulling in luxury. He
says: “The man who says that the much
wished for good times have come in
these parts is either intoxicated, a newly
married man. or a liar ”
Tho Kastman Times-Journal says:
“Mr. Robt. Vuiwig, a German gentle
man from the nortli, has purchased a
tract of one thousand acres of land near
Godwinsrilie from Mr. C. II. l’cacock
and others, and .is preparing to open a
stock and fruit farm ou a large scale.
Mr. Veiwig has already moved to tlie
place, bringing with him six or eight
German families.”
Tbe man who says that ho is kept opt
of the churcli because th< re arc so many
hypocrites In it is not influenced by
them anywhere else
1,1 THE FI!
Will arrive this week at
ALLEN’S
All Kinds of
Material for Fancy Work
Also a complete line o(
NOTIONS
NOVELTIES
Ladies dou't forget where to go
when you want something pretty
sad new in this line for the
A. L. I. FAIR.
Very Beep'y,
Yours, etc.,
TIM MM
••*•-** n *»■%:*•* ’ S/. J.*' 4
402 Jackson St. under Hotel Windsor.
HANDSOME DISPLAY
OF’
New Dress Goods
AT
BEflLL & OAKLEY’S
JUST RECEIVED.
Beautiful Camel Hair Suitings in rough
effects.
New line Solid Flannels
New Line Broad Cloth.
New Line Plaid Flannel,
New Line Dress Goods,
Pretty Line Striped Flannel,
Beautiful Fur Capes,
Elegant line new and stylish Wraps, Jack
ets, Cloaks, etc.
New stock Kid Gloves, best $1.00 Kid Glove
in Americus.
Full line Pearl Buttons, large and small, to
match, both white and smoked.
Laoe Curtains and Curtain Draperies a spec
ialty.
Beall k Oaklev,
"313 LAMAR STREET,
PROFESSIONAL CARDS
T a. KI.UTTZ. ; —;
. KLUTTZ,
Aacairaw An Boesaianjmmr.
America*, Georgia. ** T ’
T.
Umar atreet-Stogh^’^gSgt;
nntlngton, Church Street. 1 ‘“’“•Jo.Oa
InSeRf dra *“*"• ®*ri°wBlock. 01 '
Kldrldge’s drngWorifBSJiow'btacff?,^
DOCTORS J. B. AND A. B. HINKLE
H»v* on* of tha beat tnrmlahad .
equipped doctor’s oOcm In the
Jackson street, America*, BooUl ' s <>. HI
General Burger, and treatment of tbs
Eye* Ear* Throat and Nose
A Specialty.
C BAS. A. BROOKS, H. D.
. M™R a R^ te^* 1 offe nilu *^I ro few! on *f
clal attention liven « 0 oncraiive ™ J lp *'
Deluding the treatment o?hemo'rh’iffT’
tola, itrleturo, catarrh amt all
Ann*, Rectum, Genltourlnmy . . m .« .!
now and throat. Offlce In Mnrphey- buffiJKJ
Umar Ht. Connected by *wasini
with Kldrldge’* Drug Htore! Calls .Iiohmi
left iirtelepfioneH there during the daj
night call at residence on Lee bL c- - -
phone No. 77. ,,
Do you want Clothing
that ia the Newest—Nobbiest—
Clothing that has character?
Ask for
Clothing Designed by
NEW YORK.
LOOK FOR ONE OF OUR LABELS.
DESIGNERS AND MANUPACTUHEHS
—FOR—
EHD5, HEEL & GO.,
MACON, GA.
- * •- ’
The largest retail clothiers In Georgia. Call as them or write for ealta on approval.
Koatloa this paper.
FED BEEF,
Georgia Beef, finer than ; any Western beeij^on' ever, saw,’ at
MAYO & WINKLEB :
E a. HAWKINS,
ATTORNEY AT LAW.
Offlce up stairs on Cranberry corner.
W T. WALLIS,
, ATTORNEY AT LAW,
National'iBank? ,D *“
w;
T. LANE*
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
Prompt attention (Iren to all bu*InSl C ?i^A
in m^hands. Office in Bartow bloc*, room A 1
J A. HIXON,
, ATTORNEY AT LAW
Offlce In Bagiev bu I Id 1 ng. A opposite ’
Court House. Prompt a'tentlon ripen toV
all buxines*. Iun5-tt,
M aynard * smith,
ATTORNEYS AT LAW.
_ . Araerlcui, a*.
Prompt and careful attention given to all
business entrusted to u>. Lamar street
over P. L. Holt’s. aepIMAwSm*
T.
L HOLTON.
ATTORNEY AT LAW.
Abbeville, Ga.
Will practice in a»l tbe counties of the
State. Prompt attention given to all col.
lection* entrusted to mj care.
ANSLEY& ANSLEY,
A ttorneys at law, America*
Will practice in tbe nountie* of
ter. Hchley, Macon, Dooly, Webster, 8tew-1
art, In the Supreme Court, and tbe United I
States Court.
J O. MATHEWS,
. ATTORNEY-AT-LAW,
9 221% Forsyth street, Americus, Ga. I
Will practice in all the Coarts,*nd in tbs Coos I
Wellborn F. Clarke. Frank a. Hooper. j
CLABKE A HOOPER,
ttorneya at Law
AMRR1CUB. ..... GEORGIA |
mawM-d-w-lr
Walter X. Wheatley, J. B. Fitzokrald |
Wheatley A Fitzgerald,
ATTORNEYS AT LAW,|
Offlce: 40C Jackion 8t., Up Stair*,
AMERICUS, * GEORGIA |
JauT-tt
JjUDSON k BLALOCK,
L. J. BLALOCK,
LRMVIRI,
AKtaicu*, Oxoaoia I
In an oourt*. Partarnblp limited I
— *■— comer leoandl
deeJJ-d-wly 1
Will practice in all court,. Para
to civil CUM. Offlce n, stairs, a
Lemar strset, In Artaslsn Block.
B.O. SIMMONS, W. a KIMBROUGH |
> idEBsotrsa,
ATTOifctoEYS AT LAW
Barlow Bldok, Room 4.
p AK Cma , Airi>HAU1TA.T B.aixa***. .
“Ji 1 -aSEl
ql-norrman-c^t.
t24U Peachtree Street Atlanta.!
OFFICES ) Boom 7 Barlow Bl'k. Anwrleu
Plans and specifications tujjljUd jjJ
building* of alldeeerlPtlons-P'bllo bow ■
logs especially. Comn-unIcatl*»aaby noA»s
to either offlce will meet with ^TPTmerlJ
tention. Wm.Hall.BupertatsndsntAmeri-|
cus offlce.
dKHKIMfw^
aaa 9Ausin3&c!n8. -
mm
uo»
thobnton
America*.