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YOUNG MAN HAS
NEW THEORY
Human Life Seems Centered In
Stomach. All Else is Secondary.
The immense success which has fol
lowed L. T. Cooper during the past
year with his new preparation has ex
ceeded anything of the kind ever be
fore witnessed in most of the leading
cities where the young man has intro
duced the medicine. Cooper has a
novel theory. He believes that the hu
man stomach is directly responsible
for most disease. To quote his own
words from an interview upon his ar
rival in an eastern city: “The average
man or woman cannot be sick if the
stomach is working properly. To be
sure, there are diseases of a virulent
nature such as cancer, tuberculosis,
diabetes, etc., which are organic, and
are not traceable to the stomach, but,
even fevers can, in nine cases out of
ten be traced to something taken into
the’ stomach. All of this half-sick,
nervous exhaustion that is now so
common, is caused by the tomachic
conditions, and it is because my rem
edy will and does regulate the stom
ach that I am meeting with such sue
cess.
* To sum up the matter —a sound di-
PROTECTION AGAINST
INFEGTED COWS
See Wilson Stamping Out
Bovine Tuberculosis.
WASHINGTON, U. C., Oct. 28.
(Special)—ln an effort to exterminate
bovine tuberculosis, thousands of in
fected cows will be killed within the
next few months, by order of Secre
tary Wilson, of the department of ag
riculture. This plan has been broach
ed to President Roosevelt, and has re
ceived his official indorsement.
Recent tests made by the depart
ment of agriculture of the effects of
the use of milk from diseased cows,
especially on babies, have resulted in
reports of such an alarming nature
that Secretary Wilson has decided
that the public welfare demands the
elimination of the plague. Many cows
have already been killed in the dis
trict of Columbia and the territories,
where Secretary Wilson has the pow
er to inforce the pure food laws.
In the States, where the govern
ment pure food law is inoperative, the
secretary will invoke the powers of
the interstate commerce commission,
which forbids the shipment of milk
that has not been tested from one
State to another. Rather than have
the markets closed to them, it is be
lieved that dairymen will submit to
have their herds examined by gov
ernment experts, and the diseased
cows destroyed. The shipment of un
inspected milch cows from one State
to another will also be prevented, and
cheese and butter may also be effected
by the proposed regulations.
Do the Right Thing
if you have Nasal Catarrh. Get Ely’s
Cream Balm at once. Don’t touch
the catarrh powders and snuffs, for
they contain cocaine. Ely’s Cream
Balm releases the -secretions that
inflame the nasal passages and the
throat, whereas, medicines made with
mercury merely dry up the secretions
and leave you no better than you were.
In a word, Ely’s Cream Balm is a real
remedy, not a delusion. All drug
gists, 50 cents, or mailed by Ely
Brothers, 56 Warren street, New York.
CHANLER 800 M
TO BE NURTURED
NEW YORK, Oct. 28.—(Special)—
New York Democrats are beginning
preparations for a great national
council of party leaders from all* the
-.tates of the Union, to be held here on
•Tackson day and the preceding day,
Tanuary 7 and 8.
Already a well-defined movement
has been inaugurated to bring Lieut.
Gov. Stuyvesant Chanler into the
imelight at this pow-wow, and his
supporters hope to be able to convince
their fellow partisans from other
states that he is the man for the place
at the head of the national ticket.
Hard Tlmrs Hi Kansas.
The old days of grasshoppers and
drouth are almost forgotten in the
prosperous Kansas of today; although
a citizen of Codell, Earl Shamburg,
has not yet forgotten a hard time he
encountered. He says: “I was worn
out and discouraged by coughing night
and day, and could find no relief till
I tried Dr. King’s New Discovery.
It took less than one bottle to com
pletely cure me.” (The safest and
most reliable cough and cold cure and
lung and throat healer ever discover
ed. Guaranteed by Eldridge Drug
Co. lmo.
gestive apparatus that is doing its
full duty, getting every particle of vi
tality out of all food by transferring
it to the bowels in a perfectly digested
state —this above all else brings good
health.”
Mr. C. A. Brock, chef of the Brock
Restaurant, Market District, Boston,
Mass., who is a staunch believer in
Mr. Cooper’s theory and medicine, has
this to say: “I had chronic indigestion
for over three years. I suffered ter
ribly, and lost about thirty pounds. I
was a physical wreck when I started
this Cooper medicine, a month or so
ago. Today I am as well as I ever
was in my life. I am no longer, ner
vous, my food does not distress me in
the least, and I have a splendid ap
petite . I am gaining flesh very rapid
ly—in fact, at the rate of a pound
a day. i would not believe any medi
cine on earth could have done for
me what this has done. It is a re
markable preparation and Mr. Cooper
deserves all his success.”
We recommend the Cooper prepara
tions as being remarkable medicines.
—Dodson’s Pharmacy.
DOMINICAN TREATY
PUT IN CONSTITUTION
SANTO DOMINGO, Oct. 28.—(Spec
ial) —A constitutional assembly will
meet in Santo Domingo tomorrow for
the purpose of the incorporating into
the constitution the recent treaty with
the United States.
Under the provisions of the treaty
the United States and Santo Domingo
the president of the republic is au
thorized by the Dominican congress
to issue and sell bonds not exceeding
$20,000,000 in United States currency,
to be redeemed in fifty years, bearing
5 per cent, interest, payable semi-an
nually. The bonds are guaranteed by
the treaty, which will become a part
of the constitution of Santo Domingo,
and the customs receipts are pledged
to redeem them. The bonds and in
terest are exempt from taxation in
this republic. A fiscal agent will take
the bonds and distribute the proceeds.
Out of Sight.
“Out of sight, out of mind,” Is an
old saying which applies with spec
ial force to a sore, burn or wound
that’s been treated with Bucklen’s
Arnica Salve. It’s out of sight, out of
mind and out of existence. Piles too
and chilblains disappear under its
healing influences. Guaranteed by
Eldridge Drug Co. 25c. lmo.
RUSSIANS OPPOSE
A CONSTITUTION
ST. PETERSBURG, Oct. 28. (Spe
ial) —The Union of True Russian Peo
ple, an organization of those favoring
the perpetuation of the old despotic
regime in Russia, have appointed a
fanatic priest, Father Vestergoff, as
the head of a deputation which will
wait upon the czar and petition him
to withdraw his manifesto of October
30, 1905, granting a constitution to
Russia. That the purposes of the
union are looked upon with favor by
the emperor is apparently shown by
the fact that he recently issued a
manifesto allowing the badges of the
organization to be openly worn.
What action the czar will take on
the petition is not known, but ar
rangements have been made at the
imperial palace to receive the deputa
tion with every courtesy. The con
stitutionalists will celebrate the anni
versary of the manifesto with elabor
ate demonstrations.
A Card.
This is to certify that all druggists
are authorized to refund your money
if Foley’s Honey and Tar fails to cure
your cough or cold. It stops the
cough, heals the lungs and prevents
serious results from a cold. Cures
la grippe coughs and prevents pneu
monia and consumption. Contains no
opiates. The genuine is in a yellow
package. Refuse substitutes. Sold
by all druggists.
Hughes says he not going office
hunting; but suppose the Presidency
should go Hughes-hunting?
Piles! Piles! Piles!
William’s Indian Pile Ointment wilp
cure Blind, Bleeding and Itching Piles.
It absorbs the tumors, allays itching at
once, acts as a poultice, gives instant
relief. William’s Indian Pile Oint
ment is prepared for Piles and itching
of the private parts. Sold by druggists
mail 50c and SI.OO, Williams' M’fg
Co., Props., Cleveland, O.
Sold by W. A. Rembert.
THE AMERICUS DAILY TIMES-RECORDER. TUESDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1907.
REBEKAS WILL HAVE
A LINE MEETING
To Entertain Their Friends
Tonight,
A most enjoyable occasion will be
that at Odd Fellows Hall this evening
under auspices of Vashti Lodge of Re
bekas, and a large assemblage of the
good friends of these ladies and the
general public as well will enjoy the
amusement features offered and the
delightful refreshments bountifully
served. The event of chief interest
will be the “moot court” wherein two
prominent young barristers will con
duct a court trial with judge, sheriff,
prisoner and witnesss in attendance,
the plea of the unlucky defendant be
ing that for divorce from her worser
half. The trial promises to afford
plenty of merriment for the specta
tors. At the adjournment of the
“court” the guests will be served re
freshments. An admission fee of fif
teen cents will be charged, and the
public is invited to come and enjoy
the occasion.
With flic Magazines
In the November number of Success
Magazine Frank Fayant continues his
amazing disclosures of the facts in
the life of Thomas W. Lawson. This
article deals with Mr. Lawson's early
financial battles—the Grand Rivers
(Kentucky) boom, the Lawson fight
and the affair with the Westinghouse
Electric people.
Samuel Merwin contributes the
second article of his series “Drugging
a Race” and treats of Great Brit
ain’s crime of fastening the opium
curse upon China.
In the second part of Chauncey
Thomas's article, “Our Own North
west,” he shows how Puget Sound is
bound to be the site of one of Ameri
ca’s greatest cities.
The wife of President Roosevelt is
strongly inclined toward the simpler
modes of living, says the Delineator
for November.
When she is not on official duty,
Mrs. Roosevelt insists upon living her
life as any other American woman.
She frequently walks down-town to
the shops, unattended even by a maid;
she makes her personal calls and sees
to little matters of her own home
circle with the same regularity and
devotion as in the years before the
duties of the White House entered
into her calculations. One point she
never neglects, and that is to be at
home when the President is at leis
ure. When he has a group of his men
friends at luncheon, Mrs. Roosevelt
joins the children in their apartments,
for her dominant thought is always
for them. She is their companion at
all times.
The opening chapters of a new nov
el, “Though Life Us Do Part,” by
Elizabeth Stuart Phelps, is the fea
ture of the Woman’s Home Compan
ion for November. The announce
ment of a new story by the author
of a “Singular Life” is always agree
able, and this new novel gives prom
ise of being one of Mrg. Ward’s best.
Under the title “Do you Know Your
Grocer?” the editor makes some very
telling comments on grocery condi
tions throughout the country, that ev
ery housewife will read with interest.
The leading article in the November
Metropolitan Magazine and the most
important contribution the color prob
lem has yet called forth is “The
Negro and the South,” by John Sharp
Williams, the leader of the minority
in the House of Representatives and a
future United States Senator from
Mississippi. It has long been recog
nized that a Southerner’s knowledge
presented fairly is what the country
has long been awaiting. Mr. Wiliams
at last supplies this demand. There
are no unthinking denunciations of
the negro. He is treated fairly, and
best of all, solutions of his future are
suggested. ,
The difficult problem of dressing
fish by machinery, to save the enor
mous amount of band labor necessary
at canneries, seems to have been solv
ed at last by the invention of a Penn
sylvania man, who has devised a ma
chine which scrapes off the scales,
cleans the fish and trims off the heads,
tails and fins.
An illustrated article in the Novem
ber Popular Mechanics shows the fish
as they are passing through the ma
chine, and again as, carefully dressed
and ready for canning, they drop from
it at the rate of 200 to 300 an minute,
according to size.
BOOKKEEPING COURSE
93.00 per Mouth.
SHORTHAND COURSE
93 00 per Month.
TELEGRAPH COURSE urlimited
Scholarship 9<10.00.
Write SOUTHERN BUSINESS COL
LEGE <fc SCHOOL of TELEGRA
PHY, Newn n, G*.
BEDBUGS TOO MUCH ■;
FOR COMMISSION
Reply to Criticism of Pan
ama Conditions.
WASHINGTON, D. C., Oct. 28.
(Secial) —Replies to the charges of
Miss Beeks, who under authority of
the President, made an investigation
of conditions surrounding the em
ployes of the United States in the
canal zone, have been made by the
Canal Commission.
Miss Beeks criticised nearly every
feature of the living arrangements of
the employes from the fact that they
were forced to use cold shower baths,
to the lack of “Jim Crow” counters in
the Commissaries, so that blacks and
whites should not have to mix while
making their purchases.
The Commission says in effect that
there is no such thing as a, cold bath
on the Isthmus unless ice is put in the
water, since the water in the pipes is
79 degrees. To the charge that 1,000
men are quartered in box cars, it is
stated that these are employes of the
railroad, who cannot be quartered at
one place, but must go from place to
place.
Miss Beeks suggested that the fam
ilies should have separate houses and
not be quartered in the four-family
houses now used. To this the reply is:
“The cost of building separate quar
ters is fully 50 per cent, in excess of
that of the four-family type. For
1,000 families this would represent
$1,000,000 in buildings alone. The
Commission has not money for this.
Bedbugs and vermin on the Isthmus
seem to have greatly impressed Miss
Beeks, as they have impressed other
people who have gone there. The
commission frankly admits that it is
unable to cope with so formidable an
adversary. “This is an evil,” says
the reply, “to be expected in a climate
so favorable to insect life. The com
mission combats it by every means in
its power.”
As to the impure and unpalatable
drinking water and the lack of nutri
tious food the commission merely
makes sweeping denials, statements
to the contrary by the chief sanitary
officer being quoted.
The Knock-out Blow,
The blow which knocked out Corbett
was a revelation to the prize fighters.
From the earliest days of the ring the
knock-out blow was aimed for the jaw,
the temple or the jugular vein. Stomach
punches were thrown in to worry and
weary the fighter, but if a scientific man
had told one of the old fighters that the
must vulnerable spot was the region of
the stomach, he’d have laughed at him
for an ignoramus. Dr. Pierce is bringing
bomf; to the public a parallel fact; that
thq sCmacVis the most vulnerable organ
out of\he pr\e ring as well as in it. We
protectnur haaHs, throats, feet and lungs,
but are utterly indiffer
ent to, until disAAfinds the solar plexus
and knocks us outT Make your stomach
sojuaLaad
Pierccls jloldoQ. Medical . and
most Am \ ner
atile snot, ''Golden Medical Discovery ”
cures "weak stomach,” indigestion, or
dyspepsia, torpid liver, bad, thin and im
pure blood and other diseases of the or
gans of digestion and nutrition.
The" Golden Medical Discovery”has a
specific curative effect upon all mucous
surfaces and hence cures catarrh, no
matter where located or what stage it
may have reached. In Nasal Catarrh it
is well to cleanse the passages with Dr.
Sage’s Catarrh Remedy fluid while using
the "Discovery "as a constitutional rem
edy. Why the "Golden Medical Discov
ery” cures catarrhal diseases, as of the
stomach, bowels, bladder and other pelvic
organs will be plain to you if you will
read a booklet of extracts from the writ
ings of eminent medical authorities, en
dorsing its ingredients and explaining
their curative properties. It is mailed
free on request. Address Dr. R.V. Pierce,
Buffalo, N. Y. This .booklet gives all the
Ingredients entering into Dr Pierce’s
medicines from which it will be seen that
they oontain not, a drop of alcohol, pure,
triple-refined glycerine- being used ins’, d.
Dr. Pierce’s greet thousand-page illus
trated Common Sense Medical Adviser
will be sent free, paper-bound, for 21 one
cent stamps, or cloth-bound for ;>1 stamps.
Address Dr. Pierce as above.
GLOVER’S OPERA HtiUSE
One Night Only
TUESDAY. OCTOBER 291 H,
COMING
The Great Matzoni and
His Company.
Me Myrth aad Mystery.
The Hand Cuff King
and Jail Breaker,
Read what the papers
say.
Prices: 25c, 35c, and 50c
Reserved seats on sale
at WILL DUDLEY’S.
1
; i.d’Jan< New York
4*«y.v«v E --j • •... —irriT
FALL SUITS.!
Do it now! Buy your New Fall and Winter Suits today
A long, cold winter is before us. Be prepared for it- Have
the advantage of wearing your New Clothes the whole season.
You can buy right here now to best advantage. We carry
a larger stock, more fabrics,more shapes, more sizes than you
can find elsewhere. Moreover, every Suit we sell has an un
usual style about it —a look of genuine smartness that you’ll
find it hard to equal.
We are showing all the latest things'in Browns, Blues
Greys and the new mixtures in fancy fabrics. We can fit any
body and no matter how much or how little you pay we will
give you the greatest value your money can buy. Come in!
$7.50 to $35.
Hamilton & Co.
Sell it For Less.
t ijf' I
It’s Only a Question of lime
when every one having fmahcial
matters to look as er will realize
the need of a Bank Account.
To the modern business man it is
simply-indispens tUe. He pays
his biils by check a» d has a receipt
and the correct change every time;
and it promotes habits of system
and accuracy in the conduct of his
affairs. Open an account with our
SAVINGS DEPARTMENT.
Bank of Southwestern Georgia.
I you |
SHARI
I V *4 ij
In The General
prosperity of our country to-day by
having steady work and better wages
than ever before!
What are you doing with your
share?
Prudent workmen are “making hay
while the sun shines”—they’re build
ing a Bank Account week by week
while times are prosperous—getting
4 per cent interest on their money at
Our Savings Department.
Why not Join them?
The Planters Bank of Americus
Fish Tales
are often exaggerations, but we have
no need of stretching the truth in our
business as
FISH DEALERS
Freshness is an absolutely indis
pensable quality in unsalted or un
smoked fish and we handle none about
which there may be the slightest
doubt. We keep every kind in sea
son from the gamely trout to solid
mullet. And we don’t try to make a
fortune on every pound of fish me sell
pithor
SHERLOCK & CO.
PHONE No. 32.
W. H. LASSETER
Contractor and Builder, Estimates
given on
Brick, Wood or Stone Houses,
Bolton Bros. Store, Lamar St.
DR. W. H. BOWDOIN!
OSTEOPATH.
Office over Sparks-Mashburn Co.
All diseases treated without use of
drugs. Chronic diseases a specialty.
Consultation free. Office phone 416.
Residence phone 133.
Robt. L Miller,
Tin work of all kinds, repair work a
specialty. Cotton avenue, opposite
Harrold & Johnson warehouse. Phone
523.
Painting and Calcimining.
FIRST CLASS WORK.
ISRAEL JOHNSON.
119 Cotton Ave. 10-J1