Newspaper Page Text
Recorder
°£org^
«T. L. OLK8HNKK.
Editor
Official Organ of America*.
'MBeUl Organ of Snmler County.
Official Organ of Webster County.
FRIDAY. - • - - MARCH 22.1889.
The DAILY r.xcoRt.KR I* iMued every
morning except Mondays, during the year,
.tfiOe per month, «r hj.ojpcr per.
The wrbkly Kacoanxa la laaued every
Friday mornlne, at $1.00 per year, paya-
ol.ln advanee. II hit" the largest circula
tion of any paper Id Houthweat Oeorcla,
airculatlnf lar*el; In lb countleaofHum-
I.r, Lee.Terrell, Htewau, Webatur, Hchley, | county people waited on me and
adarton. Macon, Doolyand Wllcoa.
ALABAMA ON WHEELS.
Commission Kolb, of Alabama
has the following to say about the
work of the Alabama Immigration
Department:
“How has the immigration bureau
succeeded V
••Within the past three months I
have located over a thousand good
citizens in the State and have
brought #1,000,000 here to be invest
ed in plants. The newcomers are a
good honest class of people. Sir.
Johnson, of Red Oak, Iowa, is an
old man of sixty yesrs and a mil
lionaire. He came down to Macon
county and bought 7,000 acres of
laud in oue body, paying #70,000 far
it. He brought his sous and sous-
in-law and neighbors, and since
then others, who followed them,
have invested fifteen or twenty
thousand more in Slacon county.
Last week a committee of Macon
Enteral at Americas Poat-Offlce a. ace-
ond class matter.
All communications should ba addressed
to H. C. STOREY. Publisher.
Several of the States are regulat
ing the charges of telephone com
panies by law. Three dollars per
month is about the average price
allowed.
Senator Sherman seems to be boss
of tile Ohio appointments, and it is
safe to say that Foraker’s friends
stand a poor show of procuring fed
eral ofiiees.
Chattanooga is soon to hold an
eleetiou upon ttie question of issu
ing bonds for sewerage, l.et her
follow the example of Amerieusand
enroll herself upon the list of pro
gressive cities.
It is tile height of folly for the
State of Georgia to buy horses and
mules in Kentucky und Tennessee
when they can be raised here
cheaper. Moreover home raised
stock is acclimated und live longer
and keep healthier.
Tin- death of John L. Adams, the
Macpn forger, by deliberate starva
tion, is a case of wonderful will
power, and shows Adams to have
been a mail of more than ordinary
force of character. There are few
men who could have day after day
faced death in the manner that he
did.
The widows and orphans of Geor
gia who have their little property
invested in Central railroad stock
need somebody to save them from
the “Wall street wreckers."—At
lanta Evening Journal.
Central railroad stock at about
1.25 under the “Wall street wreck
ers" compares quite favorably with
70 under the former management,
and 8 per cebt. dividends are not
bad for the “widows and orphans,”
to say nothing of the “Wall street
w reckers."—Atlanln Ilnilroad Rec
ord.
Secretary Wlndom will go on
purchasing bonds at the usual fig
ures, mid it is said that there will
be no change at present, if at all,
from .Secretary Fairchild's methods
of denting with the surplus. Even
the “pet banks" will continue to
onjov the advantage that conies
from holding some ot tlie govern
ment’s money, and, on the whole, it
is becoming evident that it is much
easier to criticize a conservative
course, like that which character
ized the financial policy of the last
administration, than it is to im
prove upon it.
According to the Manufacturer’s
Record 4,300,000 car loads of fruit
and vegetables are shipped north
ward from the South during a sea
son, having the average net value
of #100 a car load, with transporta
tion charges of $4,500,000 per annum.
Florida and Louisiana lead In earli
ness: advancing northward the
slates secure a share of llie trade,
beginning in February with early
vegetables, and followed by vegeta
bles, fruits and melons until June.
The development of this industry
has been so rapid and general that
it bus assumed great importance,
not only to the South but to the
country at large, as olio of the most
significant of a number of import
ant movements toward the diver
sification ot industry, and applica
tion of laud to its most profitable
The Canucks are becoming tired
of harboring criminals from the
United States and they propose to
stop It. The Cauadiau Parliament
bus introduced an extradition treaty
that will send a cold chill up the
splual column of eminent Republi
cans now sojourning in that coun
try. It provides a big addition to
the list of extraditable ofienses.
The Idli providesfortheextrailition
of all criminals (except all politi
cal offenders) who have sought
asylum in Canada and who are
charged with thecommisslon of any
one of the following crimes in coun
tries with which Great Britain has
no extradition treaty: Murder, or
attempt or conspiracy to murder;
manslaughter, counterfeiting, for-
asked me to use my influence to
send them more people like Mr.
Johnson nnd his friends.
“The one thousand or more immi
grants will average nbout #3,000
each. There is #3,000,000 gone into
the agricultural life of the State.
But for the yellow fever scare I
would have brought a great deal
more. This spring we will got
many more immigrants. I am re
ceiving fifty letters of inquiries a
day.
“The million dollars in plants iH
invested in a diversity of enterprises
in Sheffield, Birminghamandother
towns. Mr. Ewing and a party of
gentfeinen from Iowa have bought
the cave at Huntsville, and will
spend a half million dollars in
dummy lines and other improve
ments.
“The sixty days trip of ‘Alabama
on Wheels," oost the different com
munities of Alabama #27,(100,
though only #l,:i00 was paid out of
tlie State treasury. We distributed
.40,000,000 puges of printed matter
and over 250,000 people passed
through tlie car. There was not a
day when less than 5.000 people
passed through. I mapped out tlie
route in advance, giving the date of
arrival at encli town, and sent u
prin’ed copy of the schedule to the
mayor and editor of every place wo
were to visit. At every town we
were met by n committee of citizens
nnd we were given receptions
everywhere. The newspapers wrote
glowiug accouutsof the exhibit and
the trip was a success from begin
ning to end. The Louisville and
Nashville railroad furnished the
cars and carried us as far us Evans
vllle, Indiana. From there we went
across into Iowa, and through that
State into Minnesota, down into
Wisconsin, and back through
Indiana and Illinois into Michigan
and Ohio."
“There is a great future before
this section, and that in the near
future,” said Mr. Kolb. “The tim
ber of the northwest isalmostgone.
R. G. Peters, of Michigan, has just
moved to Brewton, Ala., and put In
a #500,000 plant, the finest In the
South. He has 120,000 acres of pine
land, and lias builtaditch ten miles
long, at a cost of #1,000 per mile, to
Hunt logs to his mill. When I was
at Eau Claire, Wisconsin, with
Alabama on Wheels," I was called
on by Colonel Carson, who has
made millions in the lumber busi
ness. He came to the car in a car
riage with Ids wife, mill examined
the exhibit.
“He lias two mills at Eau Claire
that cut 300,000 feet a day each and
one above there which cuts 300,000
feel a duv. He told me that tlie
timber of the northeast had been
cut out aud very soon the lumber
men there would have lo move their
plants South or others would come
here and give them a competition
they could not meet.
“When T was at Columbus, Ohio,
the National Carriage Muker'scon-
veutioti was in session. I scut them
an invitation to come t<> tlie cur and
they came. They thought so much
of it that they appointed commit
tees lo visit Georgia, Alabama and
Tennessee and some of them have
come.
"There is the Columbus Buggy
Company which sells vehicles nil
over Georgia and Alnbamn, though
there is not a stick of timber in
Ohio Hint they can make a buggy of.
“The " ■..•• •
Company, at South Bend, Indiana,
makes a thousand machines a day,
and tlie quantity of walnut used i^
enormous. They will have to look
South for timber.
“The superintendent uf Hie Unit
ed Stales Bolling Stock company,
which hns put a #1,000,ihm plain in
Anniston and one in Decatur, und
has oue at 1 rbana, told me that
they were making a freight ear at
Anniston for #425, and the same car
made at I'rbana sold for #1)25, /nude
them less profit than tlie oue at An
niston. The reason I- Hint they got
lumber at Anniston for #10 or #12 a
thousand while it cost #40 or #50 at
('rbana, and they got iron made in
the town."
NEWSPAPER MEN TO "GO WEST."
At a recent meeting of the execu
tive committee of the Georgia PreBs
Association Mr. W. I.. Glessner,
editor of the Amerlcus Recorder
and Commissioner of Immigration
of the Central railroad, was appoint
ed chairman of a committee to ar
range for an excursion of the asso
ciation immediately after its next
annual convention. In a letter re
ceived yesterday by President
Estill, Mr. (ileosuer says that Maj.
Belknap, General Manager of the
Ceutral railroad, had tendered ti.e
association an excursion from Ma
con, or such other point as mny he
selected, to Kansas City or Topeka,
via Columbus, Ga., Birmingham,
Ala., und Memphis, returning via
Ht. Louis aud Cincinnati.
The Central will furnish a band-
some solid train, consisting of two
sleepers, a coach aud a baggage
car, to be used during the entire
trip. There will be no charge for
the cars, and the Central will also
arrange for all transportation. It
is proposed to give the newspaper
men of Georgia an opportunity for
seeing the new und im|>ortant line
of railway, which the Ceutral has
opened from the great Northwest
to tlie South Atlantic coast at Sa
vannah, and of which so much lias
been said.
The excursion of editors and pub
lishers will doubtless aid the Cen
tral to make successful its scheme
of bringing immigrants to Georgia
by pointing out the natural route
from the West to this State.
The Association now has two invi
tutious to consider, but that of Maj.
Belknap Is so liberal and, it might
he said, exhaustive, that, in all
probability, President Estill will
accept It. Of course, Hr re is still a
probability that the,East Tennessee,
Virginia aud Georgia will increase
the attractiveness of its offer by in
cluding in it hotel bills and other
things. If it should there might be
hesitation inacccptiugtheCentral’s
offer. The indications now are,
however, that the association will
accept the tendered courtesies of the
Central. Of course it is understood
that the invitation includes the
wives of the members of the asso
ciation. The bachelor members,
therefore, who are contemplating
matrimony might wisely advuuce
the weddiug day, and make the ex
cursion their bridal tour.—Savan
nah News.
RAILROAD COMBINATIONS.
To read some of our Geortla ex
changes one would think that the
consolidation of two or more of our
railroads under one management
was an extraordinary occurence and
the occasion for sounding the tocsin
of alarm—an invasion of the rights
of the people and a violation of ail
the provisions of the Federal and
State constitutions. In order to
allay the fears of these alarmists
aud show our readers that sticli con
solidations are not infrequent, we
print the following from the New
York Journal of Commerce:
Oneof the Vanderbilt party talk
ing lust night about the union of
the Bee Line and the Big Four sys
tem, <mllities the situation as fol
lows: “It is reported that the Van
derbilt- have recently purchased
about 15,000 shares of the Big Four
stock. Hie price averaging 100. This
merely gave them a minority in
terest. But their purpose has al
ways been held to he the ultimate
capture of the Chesapeake and Ohio,
now controlled by C. P. Huntington,
Hie Big Four being controlled by
Mr. Huntington, Drexel, Morgan
& Co., George Bliss, and M. E. In
galls. To get tlie Chesapeake ami
SVMTKK CO UNI r.
i rrucATioN
LETTERS DISMISSION.
GEORGIA—Sumter County.
Whereas, Mrs. Clara B. Griffin, adminis
tratrix of estate of M. D. Mayes, having
made application for letters of dismission,
These ore therefore to cite and admonish
all parties concerned, whether kindred or
creditors, to show cause on or before the
April term of the Court of Ordinary of
Sumter county, to be held on the first ‘
day In April IS83, why said petition should
not be granted ns prayed for.
Witness my hand and olttelnl algnature
this the-Id da;
y of January, lass.
A. C. SPEER, Ordinary.
GEORGIA—Sumter county.
Whereas, Formerly Mrs. E. A.
'I hnmas. now Mrs. Torbert, administratrix
on estate of David Thomas, deceased, hav
ing made application for letters of dismis
sion.
Those are therefore to cite nnd admonish
all parties concerned, whether kindred
pi
creditors, to show cause on or before tlie
April term of the Court of Ordinary of
LIVE STOCK IN GEORGIA.
The Report of tlie I nited States
Department of Agriculture for Jan
uary and February of this year pre
sents somei ntereating facts und fig
ures as to the number and value of
farm auiipuls in tlie United Stutes.
Ail examination of these figures
shows a gratifying Increase in stock
breeding in tlie South, and especial
ly in Georgia,
Georgia is credited with 112,261
horses, with an average value of
#65.03 per head. of mules Georgia
has 152,047, with an average value
of #07.71, and stands the seventh
State in the Union.
In cattle Georgia stands fifteenth,
having 340,671* milk cows, with an
average value of #17.JM>, and 580,(188
oxen and ‘ ecf cattle.
In sheep we do nut make so good
Ohio they need the Big Four which
feeds it. Hence the deal now con
summated. It will be extended by
making tlie consolidated lines joint
ly lease the Indianapolis and St.
Louis road, whieli bus long been a
burden to the Bee Line, its annual
deneit amounting to several
hundred thousand dollars. And
the new line that will he
taken into the system will he the
Cleveland, St. Louis and Kansas
City, which is now in courseof con
struction. Mr. Ingalls will be presi
dent of tlie consolidated companies.
The combination will take in the
Big Four, with 838 miles of road;
capital stock #10,000,000; bonded
debt, #10,IKK),IKK); the Cleveland, Co
lumbus, Cincinnati and Indianap
olis— 73S miles of road; capital
stock, #15,000,000; bonded debt, #10,-
610,000, aud theCievolnnd, St. Louis
aud Kansan City, 320 miles of road;
capital stock, #12,000,000; bonded
debt, #10,000,000. The leased lines
will go with the rest of the property.
It is not believed that new capilal
stock will be issued. Each line will
go into the new combination upon
terms thnt will give each linea cer
tain por cent, of the earnings of the
combined line. The Rig Four se
cures a St. JxiuiH and u Kansas City
line. The Vanderbilts get a line to
Kansas City. The Big Four’s debt
will all be reduced by *1800 into 4
per ceuts. This line also contrib
utes good terminals at both Cincin
nati mid Indianapolis. The general
offices of the combined lines will
probably he located iu CiucimmlL”
“Having virtually acquired the Big
Four," said an old railroad limn,
“they will soon reach out to the
Chesapeake and Ohio. The efl'eet
of capturing the Chesapeake and
Ohio can hardly be accurately meas
ured. It is a goal well worth at
taining."
We do not find in the paper from
■Sumter county, to lie held on tho first Mon
dHy in April. 1HSII, wliy sulil petition » houlil
not be grunted as prayed for.
Given undersny tmnd nnd ofltclul signa
ture, tnls January 71b, bus.
A. C. SPEER, Ordinary.
A PPLIcXtION
LETTERS DISMISSION.
G EOUGI A—Sumtku County .J RJJG
Whereas, Mrs. H. E. Ma*k, administra
trix of estate of It. J. Mask, deceased, hav
ing made application for letters of dismlss-
l P»
editors, to show cause on or before the
April term of the Court of Ordinary of
Sumter county, to he held on the first Mon
day in April, 1SS!». why said petition should
not be granted as prayed lor.
Given under my hand and official signa
ture, this Juuuary .°»d, IKK).
A. C. SPEER, Ordinary.
Cornr ok OiiitiN iiiY, (
at ( *ii aMhkks, February it, 1X.-W. i
GEORGIA—Sumtkk County.
Whereas, an election was held on the nth
da v ot February. IKXV, In the Jitcid district,
M., said election having been held
GENTS’
being our Specialties, we keep,
large and varied stock of these
goods and can always show the
Latest Styles in
Neckwear
rtiin
> law in
questions arising
le and pro-
jis having been made to me
Ires, and niter examining
I having decided upon all
t of said elect In
that then
No Fern
lived nr
sj votes, and ‘’Stock luiv
ten, anil whereas the in
aid ballots should be cast
dock Law," ami from tin
the majority of sold votes, there being none
JisUfor "Stock Law," I, A.C. Speer, ordi-
do hereby declnro that
nit of said election I- *‘Fo
MIKKIFV’S SALK.
l GEORGIA—sr.MT^n County
Will lx? sold before the court house door,
he city of Amerlcus. county of Sumter,
and State of Georgia
In April. IKS!
ale. the billowing described property
Collars.
The trade is cordially invited to ex
amine our stock of
him
District of Sumtercounty. levied on und
to la# sold as the property ofSarnh Hpcneer,
N. A. Stephens, V. M. Spencer und It. S.
Ilrooks, by virtue of a county court fi fa.
Issued from the county court of Sumter
county in favor of the Rank of Amerlcus,
the sulil defendants. Tenant In posse
1 HERIFF’S SALK.
and State of Guorgia, on the first Ti
In April, 16X1*. between the legal hours of
sale, the billowing described property,
to-wit: ®fflD ZZ
One black “mare mule named Knt<. one
roan hurst mimed Dixie. Levied on nnd
. . to l»e sold as tho property of .1. F. Ross, ns
which this is clipped any italic ed- |
Burials or any o'.iier manifestation
of alarm. It seems to ho taken us a
matter-of-fact business transaction,
although it involve^ some slxty-tive
millions of dollars.
A Millionaire in a Minute.
Instances are on record where
toilers iu gold mines and diamond
lieids, w ho, by one turn of a spade,
a single movement of (lie hand,
have been transformed from penni
less laborers to millionaires, lint
they were not so luckyusisthecon-
stiinpHvo wlio finds a means of res
toration to health, who learns that
tho dread disease from which lie
sutlers Is not incurable. I)r. Fierce’s
Golden Medical Discovery will cur
s»l
art of Htimfc
urity lor T. A.Hnelgrove, drawer!
pointed out by plaintlfF* at for-
Clothing
and we guarantee to save you 20per
cent, on every suit purchased of u«.
We can sell you a beautiful
Worsted Diagonal Suit
WEKSTER C OUXTY.
IMPLICATION.
.ETTKRS DlSMISHIt
A ri ’
RGIA-Wi
Whereas, W. W. Simmons, Guurdinn ot
Oscar and Morgan Leveretl. minor hel»so|
M. A. LeveretL, deceased, having filed hi-
Fifteen Dollars !
put if ion for IcftcntdlMmlMsIor
Sold everywhere at t-0. In
creditors,
Novum b«
Webster t
ned, whether kindn
fills Jam
;iunfed as j
mv bund ;n
irv 7,
W. II. GO!
i of Ordlnar\
i» the first Mn
Hall! petit h
! CHEVIOTS, MEI.TONS A XU
<KR(iK GOODS,
bowing having less Ilian half a consumption (which is lung send-
now mg. Mating less man nail a „| a)i amlnothiug else will. Forall
million. Too many dogs is the
cause.
Georgia makes an unexpectedly
good allowing in hogs, having 1,540,-
431, and standing eleventh in the
list of States, being shead of any
! other of the Atlantic or Gulf States.
Meat raising lias been on tile up
grade in this State during the past
few years aua is increasing. The
report of the Agricultural Depart
ment gives tills encouraging state
ment of the prospect of stock grow-
i George
CANNOT HAVE TOO MANY.
MllCOll K\t'lllllg NcWH.
We cannot have too many rail
roads ; they are among the greatest
factors in developing and curiching
the country, and should receive nil
proper encouragement. ’ We do not
wish to be understood as favoring
railroad rings aud syndicates aud
unjust combinations anil discrimi
nations, for the law should look after
these wherever they exist, but we
can sec no good sense in fighting
railroads because they are railroads
aud because the men who own them
persist in running them.
Gobi In Our Obi Field..
Considering health better than
wealth. Then we must consider
Taylor’s Cherokee Remedy of Sweet
Gum ai.d Mullein better than gold,
tor it will cure coughs, colds and
croup.
l“i:bl id Ho- Le t that
there is a grow ing disposition to
give more attention to certain de
-crlptiousof livestock, including
horses, cattle, and to some extent
swine. The continued low price of
cotton and tlie repented failures to
reach profitable results where farm
ing Is based almost exclusively on
cotton culture, together with the
necessity for more attention to
building up the worn soils
by resting, rotation aud iiunurlug,
have turned attention ill the direc
tion of .stock growing. The in
creased attention to the breeding of
.iorses nnd tlie importing from
abroad of tine-blooded stallions is
noticeable especially in the coun
ties of Bibb, Houston, Sumter, Jef
ferson, Flovd, Baker, Cofi’ee and
others which might bo mentioned.
The small increase in tlie price of
horses is due to tlie improvement in
quality of home-bred stock, not
withstanding tlie etl’eet of introduc
tion of quite a numlier of cheap and
comparatively worthless Texas
ponies.
diseases of the blood, such
blotches, pimples, eruptions, scrof
ulous sores aud swellings, il is un-
cqualed. It is guaranteed lo cure
in all cases of diseases for which it
is guaranteed, or money paid for B
will he promptly refunded.
>f Mo-
groat
ger.v, larceny, embezzlement, oh-j The Philadelphia Inquirer nu-
tuining money, goods or valuables I uouuces that ( on. Harrison will
under false pretenses; criminal as-I give every encouragement to the
sault, abduction, child stealing, j Republican party in the South,
kidnapping, burglary, houselireak- j Several other Republican l’resi-
ing or shoplifting, ar-on, robbery, dents did the same thing, hut the
threats of extortion, perjury or ; Southern Republican party was not
subornation of perjury. I noticeably strengthened.
Mr. N. H. Frolilielistein,
bile, Ala., writes: I tak
pleasure in recommending Dr.
King’s New Discovery fort ’onsunip-
tion, having used it for a severe at
tack of Bronchitis and Catarrh. It
gave me instant relief and entirely
cured me and I have not been allliet-
ed since. I also hog to state Hint I
had tried other remedies witli no
good result. Have also used Kloc-
trie Bitters and Dr. King’s New
Life Pills, both of which I can rec
ommend.
Dr. King’s New Discovery for
Consumption, Coughs aud Colds, Is
sold on a positive guarantee.
Trial bottles free at Dr. E. J. El-
drldge’s Drug Store. i
TO RAISE 100 BUSHELS OF CORN
ON ONE ACRE.
“Surge,” in Sunday’s Constitu
tion, gives tlie following advice as
to how to raisconehundred bushels
of corn on one acre, and says it has
been done repeatedly by ti.e follow
ing method:
Plant the rows three feet upd
half apart and then close enough iu
the drill so Hint when tlie corn ma
tures you cuu shuck a row ami lay
tlie cars end to cud, touching, anil
make them string out tile whole
length of the row, aud you have got
one hundred bushels of good corn
from one acre of ground. This
holds good. If your ears are ten
inches long and you plant in the
drill tweuty inches from stalk to
stalk, you must make two good ears
to every stalk. If you only propose
to make one car to the stalk, you
must have corn ten Inches from
stalk to stalk in the drill, Stimu
late the land and it can be easily
done as demonstrated by many of
the tarmers iu theTruitt settlement
of Troup couuty.
lll.K
1 1-1
J.KTTKII8 ADMINISTRATION.
GF.i »It< JI A—W r.usTKK County.
Whereas, .1. F. Owens having applied for
.foil
.1. F. Owens ]
rs of administration on the'estato <
.!. Oliver, del-cased, letter* to bo on:
• E. Tho
Monday in April
Witness my hand nnd official signature,
till* -Itl» clay of March, 1*W.
\V. IL COSBY. Ordinary.
SUPPORT,
laving tiled
One or the .Smith'#!.
Are you Ow.en Smith? “Oh,yes,
I must be, I am owin’ everybody?”
But I owe more to Dr. Biggers’
Huckleberry Cordial for curing me
of tlie cholera morhus and dysen
tery.
Labor contract jumpers are re
ported numerous over in Oglethorpe
county.
Syrup of Fi|i.
Is Nature’s own true laxative. It is
the most easily taken, and the most
eirectlve remedy known to Cleanse
the .System when Bilious or Costive:
lo dispel Headaches, Colds, and Fe
vers ; toCure Habitual Constipation
Indigestion, Plies, etc. Manufac
tured only by the California Fig
Hyrup, Company, San Francisco,
Cal. Sold by E. J. Eldridge.
SU27-UA wlv 6
Mipenrt tor I miner
TTii'-i' nr
all parties rniieern.al, uln-lliei
creditors, to show cause on «
April
kindred .
we can show the handsomest line
in town, aud guarantee to suit
everybody. Job lot of
heb
? tho
rdlnary of
'f the
tity. to he held on the tint Mon
ill next, why nuld petition
o granted as prayed for.
hand nnd official n'gnnturo
of Mu
idi, I
\V. H. CusRY, Ordinary,
to be closed out. Think of it, we
can sell you a
fir t||
1 Hein
«lei of
TURNER'S ENGLISH HAT FOR $2.25
| b <pa«
•neck.
8
F&Brr&OBHi
A Most Effective Combination.
This well known Tonic nnd Nervine In raining
great repanutpqu a cure for Debility, l>y»pep
ftia. and iSKIClor* ditordera. It relieve* a
languid and debilitated cnndlMnnff of the ly
. * tr *njrthen* tbt intellect, *nd tMviuvfnnciinna
fpillds up worn out Nerve* s *
^mpnlred or lo*t Vitality, amt bring* back
•ngtli rip! vieor. It in |>lra*aut fo the
•I retmltu ly braces the Nystctu against
side dli'eMi'
--mured nr imt i linn’
youthful
Uw«lenrr»«lng Influence of Malaria.'
Price- *».OO |H*t* Dottle of 24 ounces.
Foil SAI.R BY ALL DRUGGISTS.
Bids Wanted.
The undersigned will receive Healed hid##
enting lake at Oak Grove Cemetery.
I»e«v soaari-A. feJCCt at)V
i Mareu
L L. MACK,
Hold the world over for $4.00. Other
bargains too numerous to mention
can be had by calling at our Btort-
; oi
IPOSI
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k ’ l «l fn
Mai
GR
Clothier and Furnisher,
AMERICUS, GA.
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