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THE AMEJRICliS DAILY TIMES-RECOKDER: TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 10, l »91.
THE TIMES-RECORDER.
Dolly nnd Weekly.
Trai AMEHICr, ROOOODEK E*TABU«nKD 187».
The ah ericus Time, Esta ulish ed 1890.
COXBOLIDATKD, APRIL, 1891.
SUHSCUll'TION •
ailYi Ore Yeas
Oailt, One Mouth, - I
Weekly, One Yeas, - - . ■ U
Weeely, Six Montiu, I
For adventilng rales address
r, Basooh Mtbiok, Editor and Manager,
THE TIMES PUBLISHING COMP AMY,
Aiuerlcua, Oa.
Business Office, Telephone UK
Editorial Rooms, after 7 o'clock
Telephone 29.
Amoricus, Ga., Nov. 10, 1801.
The Grand Lodge of Masons at its sea.
sion in Macon, chartered thirty-two new
lodges. fyf
Shipp’s op™ house, Corilule, narrow
ly escaped a contlagrulion a few nights
since, owing to the timely discovery of
the tlames by Dr. ft. L. Essoin.
None of the newspapers have yet pule
linked Ill-line's telegram of congratula
tion to McKinley. Why this ominous
silcnco on this anspiciou, occasion?
The Age-Herald predicts that the al
liance convention that meets in Indian
apolis next week will modify the Ocala
platform, in view of the outcome of the
lecont elections.
Eight bales of cotton, of 450 pounds
each, picked from four acres of ground,
and twelve hales from tweivo acres, is
the achievement of a Cobb county far
mer, Mr. M. L. Green, tills year.
Jo.n.vie McLean has not yet wired his
congratulations to McKInloy. lie should
have been among the first to do so, be
cause he did a great deal in Cincinnati lo
help defeat the gallant Campbell.
It is an undisputed fact that tho most
pospnrous farmers in Houston are those
who raise their own farm supplies, and
cultivate their farms according to the in
tensive principle.—Perry Journal. Santo
in Cobb county.—Marietta Journal,
'Occasionally something happens to
Indicate that Itutherford B. Hayes is atill
in the land of the living. Up in Augusta
last Saturday Mr. Patrick Walsh played
the ex president for nil ho was worth as
a spectacle and got a really good speech
out of him.
THE FARMER’S ALLIANCE.
Senator John T, Morgan of Alabama
has a leading article in the November
Farmer on tho Farmers Alliance, whith
he thinks is in danger from the political
aspirations of some of its ieaders. He
■ays:
“It is a melancholy thought that the
pure purposes and principles of the
Farmers' Alliance should be thus abused
by selfish politicians who have crept
into Its secret counsels. There was
nothing wrong or unjust, unpatriotic or
unwise, in this organization as it was
originally established. Neither was It
weak in its influence or public policy. It
was a powerful organization^ political
resistance to political wrong and injus
tice. It was inspired with the thought
in which the higher liberties of the peo
ple have often had their birth—the re
dress of grievances. It was made neces
sary as a means of resistance to legalized
monopoly, to legalized tax rob
bery, to trusts that sprang up every
where to choke down business
rivalry and honest competition,
and to the accumulated advantages giv
en to corporations ami groat combines by
the legislation of the country. It was
the f) rst grand effort of the farmers to
combine in resistance to others who had
combined for agression upon them; and
Its failure, if it is destroyed by a mis
placed confidence in its political leaders,
will result in weakening, if not in dissi
pating, nn intluonco that would other
wise have blessed the country, Tho sin
cere defenders of the people against the
aggressions of monopoly, trusts and
combines, armed witii tho control of
taxation and finance, will miss the pow
erful support of the Alliance, when its
noble mission has been degraded into a
disreputable bunt after office.”
A <genti.eman from Sand Mountain
was in the city a few dayB ago with 73
dozen eggs and 75 chickens. Ho sold
them for $30 cash. A friend sold a bale
-of cotton for $30 and had to pay a part
of this for guano. Which did best?—
Gerald, Attalla, Ala.
The Savannah Morning News Is au
thority for tho statement that Gen. W.
W. Burns, a retired officer of the United
States Army and a Union Veteran, Is the
real author of “Hardee’s Tactics.” This
will be news to thousands of old soldiers
who always supposed that General Har
dee “thought his own thinks.”
The Prince of Wales wae 50 yenrs old
yesterday. It was a fine time to swear
off from gambling and other “Irregulari
ties” that bare mode his name a re
proach for thirty years past; and now
begin this morning with a big “ewear-
oft" and try to lead a sober, respectable
life from the beginning of his second
half centuay.
The annual report of tbs cotton ma
chine’s trial comes from Atlanta, Ga.,
this year. It has at each of these trials
heretofore, as in this case, worked satis
factorily, and tho report concludes as
usual: “If it Is a success it will hsvo
the effect of greatly reducing the cost of
produotion.” But no prophet foretells
how long we must wait for the promised
reduetlon.
mi
One of the beet farms in Dodge eoun-
ty is managed by Mrs, W. U. Garret St
Godwinsville. Besides conducting a
mercantile business, dealing in almost
soything kept in a stock of general mer
chandise, she has made with one plow
this season ten good, heavy bales of eot-
ton, 200 bushels of corn and plenty of
peas, potatoes, eto. to last her through
the season.—News and Dispatch.
Mbs. Jeffebsom Davis, who Is now
in Richmond, has decided that the body
■of her distinguished husband, the ox-
Presldent of the Confederacy, shall have
* final resting place in Hollywood ceme
tery, In that city. The monnment to the
memory of Jefferson Dsris will not be
erected over the grave, however, hut on
one of of the prominent squares of Rich
mond.
■ It Is now claimed that a Philadelphia
distiller has succeeded after a series of
experiments In manufacturing an odor
less whisky by a process which is a care
fully guarded secret. The whisky is
equally as able to produce a jag as that
which has a perfume that causes a man's
breath to hit you at a distance of ten
paces. It is a great Invention, however;
because it will enable a man to kies bit
wife with impunity.
Small manufacturing enterprises are
the life of business communities. They
go further toward establishing an intel
ligent, thrifty and desirable population
and keeping money at home than any
other agency known to the commercial
world. Aa paying investments for Inac
tive capital they have no equal. As
their output la consumed by local terri
tory, as well as foreign, the profits are
assured.—Marietta Journal.
OFFICIAL NOTICE.
Tho Kvecutive Committee of the Con
federation of Industrial Organizations is
hereby called to meet in the city of In
dianapolis, Indiana, on the lGtb day of
November, 1801, for the purpose of de
ciding upon the basis of representation
to tlie great labor conference to be held
on the 22d day of February 1892, and
also to consider requests for a change of
the place of said meeting to some other
city than Washington, D. C. By the
terms of tho law of the organization the
chairman of the executive committee of
every organization of producers willing
to co-operate in securing the Ocala de
mands is a member of this Executive
Committee, and is entitled to act as
such at this meeting Each member of
this committee is requested to report to
tho Alliance Committee of Arrange
ments by 10 o'clock a. m., on Novem
ber 10. Ben Terrell,
President C, of I O.
CRISP AND FREE -ILVEB.
There seems to he an effort on the part
of tlie anti-free coinage element in the
East to boost Mills, because of his re
cent hedging in Ohio, on the free eilver
question; and thereby, by implication,
belittle Crisp's candidacy.
The Times Recorder does not be
lieve that the New York Recorder, a
Republican paper, baa any authority to
apeak for Mr. Cleveland and his friends
aa to their attitude on the speakership
question, especially as based on Mr.
Mills' vacillating utterances on the silver
question in the late Ohio campaign.
The New York Recorder in speaking
of Mr. Mills candidacy, says;
| |Mr. Mills' speeches in Ohio have at I rue toil
much attention hers. Ills declaration In
resard to free stiver coinage was not unex
pected, for tits attitude nn thla question has
been known In Washington for some time.
In a speech delivered at Ausiln, Tex., Inline-
diatelyuffer the adjournment of Congress he
expressed himself as forcibly aa In tils Mans
field utterances, and his friends here now de
clare that he never haa been an ardent free
coinage man. although tie lias always favor-
ed it and will continue lo do so. It. Is bellev-
ed here that he h is greatly strengthened his
candidacy for the speakership by his pro
nounced attitude, nnd the solid delegations
of New 5 ork. New England, and Pennsylv
niaare now placed to Ills credit. Congress
man Hemphill of South Carolina expects to
deliver the delegation from that slate Intaet
and tho Cleveland Inltueiice throughout the
-South and West wilt be turned cnthuslustfc-
ally Into tho Mills column. Aside from Its 111
tluence on tlie speakership canvass, however,
Mr. Mills'friends here nre not sanguine In
regard totheeftect of tils presence In the
Ol lo campaign, and muoti disappointment
Is expressed In the tariff argument which ho
has prepared for delivery there. There la no
longer room for doubt thnt there Is a per
fectly clear understanding between Mr.
Clevelard and the friends ol Mr. Mills. Thcr.
will he nodi. talon In the ranks of Mr Clevo
laud's supporter! when the time comes for
balloting for a speaker of the house.
Augusta, Ga., has $4,010,000 invested
in thirteen cotton mills, Tho pay rolls
of these mills aggregate $050,300 per an
num paid out to 4,385 operatives, and
they consume 72,052 bales of cotton per
annum. Columbus, Ga., has about
$3,000,000 invested in eight mills which
employ about 3,000 hands. Theso mills
started on a very small scale, have paid
good dividends aud bavo grown to their
present proportions through the re-in-
HANDSOME DISPLAY
or’
New Dress Goods
-A.T-
BEALL & 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.
through the re-in-
£££££: ought to'ieave the Lace Curtains and Curtain Draperies a SPEC
IALTY.
PROFESSIONAL CARDS
T A KLUTTZ,
t Architectand SupranmcNDEST,
Lamar street—Marphey Bulk
I H. It. WE8TBROOK, M. D.
. PHYBIC1 AN AND SURGEON.
' Office and residence, next house to C. A
Huntington, Church street. /#b 7 tf
T A, FORT M. D.
, Office at Dr. Eld ridge’s drug store. Can
J be found at night In bis mom, over
Eldridze’. drag store, Barlow Block.
Ian S-ll-tf
D R. T. J. KENNEDY, M. D.
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON.
Office at Dr. Eldridga’s Drugstore. Can
be found at night in his office room over
Eidrldge’a drag store, Barlow bloefc, febs-ly
South, and as the country grows and
capital accumulates mills will spring up
all over the South.
A WISE STEP.
A correspondent from Oglethorpe
county writes the Athens Banner that
tlie farmers down in that seetlon are de
termined to p!an,t more small gain this
year than they have put under the ground
for many a year gone by, Almoat every
farmer In that entire part of Georgia baa
entered fully into the spirit of the Cot
ton Convention recently held in Atlanta
and has agreed to plant less cotton and
more small grain, corn, potatoes and the
like.
The trouble with the South to-day is
the over produotion of cotton and the
shortage in the produotion of wheat,
oats, hay, corn and such crops. Cotton
is our section's great commercial back
bone, it Is true, but our commercial in
terests hare lately been suffering very
much frbm an enlargement of the spine.
We have had too much of a good thing,
and every farmer In the South knows it,
Great interest was recently occasion
ed in Europe by the announcement that
au English physician in the Indian ser
vice at Simla has lately experimented
with leprous patients and a critical ex
amination revealed to him a germ that
he discovered to be Indubitably the mi
crobe of leprosy. When this important
infoimatlon was communicated to Pas
teur by a Paris journalist he manifested
no surprise whatever and stated that the
report merely confirmed what he had
long expected.
The people who went to Macoe last
Friday and Saturday over the Southwest
ern railroad, paid full fare both ways,
though It was advertised that reduced
rates would prevail throughout tlio wcok.
The only excuse offered is that the sup
ply of excursion tickets was exhausted
at the stations, and the agents could not
issue any except for full fare, without
authority expressly given.—Houston
Home Journal.
Pbksident Habrisox Is to visit Sa
vannah this winter upon the Invitation
of those Interested in the promotion of
the deep water project. The President
is in political deep water at Washington
with Seylla Blaine end Cbaryboie Cleve
land on either tide; and it must be a re
lief to him to tell what he knows about
the “deep water” question.
Ireland resembles a good sized vol
cano just now, a roaring, tumbling, bois
terous volcano that has settled down to
business, but It is becoming more and
more evident that either the fighting
must be given npor home rule aban
doned. The people can’t have both, end
ifs about time for them to nuke their
choice.—New York Herald.
An advertisement in a newspaper get.
into the household sad It talks to every
member without making itself obetru
st vs or offensive. It works faithfully
•van day. It Is the most active, the
most persistent, most patient, most poj
it to and most successful agent.
W. C. liussell, druggist Jesit-cs to in
form the public, that he is agent for the
most successful preparation that has yet
been produced for coughs, colds and
croup. It will loosen and relievo
severe cold in less time than any other
treatment. The article referred to is
Chamberlain's Cough Remedy. It Is a
medicino that has won famo and popu
larity on Its merits and one that can
always be deperded upon. It is tho
only known remedy that will prevent
croup. It is put up in 50 cent and $1
bottles.
HD, FOR TIE FUR!
Will arrive this week at
ALLEN’S
All Kinds of
Material for Fancy Work
Also a complete line of
NOTIONS
NOVELTIES
DOCTORS J. B. AND A. B. HINKLE
Han oat of the beat famished and best
equipped doctor's offices in the South, No. Sll
Jackson street, Americas, 3a.
General Surgery end treatment of the
Eye, Ear, Throat and Nose
A Specialty.
C HA8. A. BROOKS. H. D.
^Graduate of Bellevue Hospital Medical
College, N. Y., twice graduate of N. Y.
Post Graduate Medical School,Chief Burgeon
8. A.M. R. R.etc.) OlIerahlH professional ser
vices as a general practitorer to the citizen*
of AmerlcusKnd surrounding country. Spe
cial attention given to operative surgery,
including the treatment of hemorrhoids, fl*-
tula, stricture, catarrh and all diseases of
Anus, Rectum, Genitourinary system and
nose and throat. Office In Murphey buildiDg
Lamar Ht. Connected by speaking tube
with Bldridge’s Drug Store. Calls should be
left telephoned there during the day. At
night call at residence on Lee St, or tele
phone No. 77. apr29tf
E A. HAWKINS,
t attokney at law.
Office up stairs on Granberry corner.
Beall k Oaklev,
313 LAMAR STREET,
The PHARMACY,
Cor. Cotton Ave. and Forsyth St.
I carry as fine and varied a stock of
Drugs, Chemicals,
Standard Patent Medicines,
and Imported Toilet Goods
at can bo found. I am not under enormous expemes and can sell you goods and
fill your
PRESCRIPTIONS
at reasonable rates. Give me a call and save money.
W. C. RUSSELL, Proprietor.
Ladies don’t forget where to go
when yon want something Ipretty
and new in this line for the
A. L. I. PAIR.
Very Besp’y,
Yours, etc.,
TIM ALLEN
402Jackson St. under Hotel Windsor.
H D.
a
*
WATTS,
Wholesale and Retail Groceries
Has come to the front again, and can be found on the corner,
Watts Building, With an elegant line of fresh
Groceries*^ Confectioneries,
which he will sell at rock bottom prices. Country merchants
will find it to their interest to coll and see him when,
needing anything in his line.
WHISKIES BRANDIES
and plenty of Jugs in the rear, which will be shipped to any
part of the United States and Georgia.
SEND HIM YOUR ORDERS.
^ P. WALLIS.^
Will practice in all court*.’ Office "over
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
Americua, Ga.
..... , in an rrtiirir
National Bank.
w;
T. LANE,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
Americas, G*.
Prompt attention given to all business placed
in mjr hiuuls. Office in Barlow bloca, room 6.
[ A. IIIXON,
Office In Bagiev building, opposite the
Court House. Prompt a'tentlon given to
all business. Iun5-tt.
M aynard * smith,
ATTORNEYS AT LAW.
T. 1
L HOLTON,
ATTORNEY AT LAW.
.. . . Abbeville. Ga.
Will practice In all the counties or the
8tate. Prompt attention given to all col
lections entrusted to my care. M
ANQIiEY & ANSLEY,
A TTORNEYS AT LAW, Americus, Ga.
Will practice in the counties of Sam-
ter, Schley, Macon, Dooly, Webster, Stew
art, in the Supreme Court, and the United
States Court.
O. MATHEWS,
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW,
Wellborn F, Clarke. Frank A. Hooper.
CLARKE & HOOPEB,
ttorneys at Law
AMERICUS, ..... GEORGIA
ma*15-d-w-lv
Walter K. Wheatley, j. b. Fitzgerald
Wheatley Sc Fitzgerald,
ATTORNEYS AT LAW,
Office: 40BJeakeaaat.,UpBtaira,
AMERICUS, I GEORGW
Jan7-tf
jjUDSON * BLALOCK,
Will practice la all ooarts. Parmereblp limited
to civil caeee. Office op etaint, corner Lee and
Lamar (treat, in Artaaian Block, daeri-d-wly
E. G. SIMMONS, W. H. KIMBROUGH
SnpCORS ft KIMBROUGH,
ATTORNEYS AT LAW
Barlow xtloolc. Room d.
Will practice in both State and Federal Court*.
Strict attention paid to all business entruited to
them. TelephoneNo. 109. 12-lO-OOtf
&
sewerage and general snylneering
Construction eupertntended. sewerage a
epeclalty. Office 4S Lee ctrert, Americua, Ga
apr21-3m
ABL.ft NEFF,
CIVIL AND SANITAHY ExUINXKR*.
Plane nnd e-timstes for water supply,
cork.
G. 1
A«n irBfl WX *chtre« Street Atlanta.
OFFICES {Koom 7 Barlow Bl’k, Americus
Plans and specifications furnish*! for
sliding* of all description*-public build
ings especially. Communications by mall
to either office will meet with prompt at
tention. Wn. Hall, Superintendent A mart
ens office. >
dealer to send for catalogue, secure the
T. M. Allen. K Taylor. T. E. Allen.
REAL ESTATE.
Do yon want a FARM of 100 acres, for $ 600,
200 acres, for tlOOO,
100 acres, for $1000,
130 acres, for 11300,
126 acres, for $ 900, or a nice cottage in the
city, or some large plantation to grow rioh on ? If so, call on
Allen, Taylor & Co.,
W. L DOUGLAS
'•JSSUfllSis®#;' 1
*ujjujus
We offer at this season Turnip Seed!
THORNTON WHEATLEY
Americua, - - Georgia]