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il>'!ansandora« P. P. r. na a iplandldwwttbTr
rcacrlb# it wl:h groat satisfaction for tbact
rrr* and Ituww Prtntnry. Socondary gtM
to Lh«utn«lUm, scrofulous
'Swsillni:*, Rheumatism. Hi
/ GO TO \
/ LITTLE MARDRE \
-FOR-
p ina Artitic Stationery,
'Eeamm,
jiurcurUl.
Scaldb*ad,
-BASE BALL GOODS.-
Newsoapera and Periodical!.
car. building up the *yst cm
LaUlaa who** antenia ere
la in an Import condition tin
th* wonderful toniflMd
P. I*., Prickly Ash, ?otO
i p-cnilarly be nr
blood rlMnalng properties <
Knot and PnUaainm.
LIPPMAN BRCi3., Proprietors,
T7HOLE3ALttJUlWJOGISTO.
iiopmap Eltx*. % ^VANMAIL GA.
ROYAL GERMETUER
I* tb« greatest blood partner and term de
stroyer of tho ago. It tonoe the stomach,
Increases the appetlto, purifies the secre
tions and quickly and permanently cures
all blood, stomach, kidney, bladder, liver,
and female diseases. As a tonlo It Is with
out a rival In the wholo range of materia
medico. £ It Is a sovereign remedy, and
never falls to euro rheumatism, neuralgia,
paralysis, Insomnia, dyspepsia, Indiges
tion, debility, palpitation, catarrh, ete.
Hon. If. W. Orody says t M It Is tho Ul
tima Thule ot all remedies."
Hcv. Bam. I*. Jones sayst M I wish every
suffering wlfo had access to that medi
cine."
r.ov. J. B. Hawthorne sayst "It has
brought certain and radical cares to hun
dreds In aeorgla and other States."
Mrs. Ella R. Ton non t, Editor Tonnonfs
Homo Magazine, says: "Its fame has
spread llko a prairie fire."
Dr. Jos. Young, the groat tc.mpcranca
locturor, sayst "OhI that every afflicted
man and woman could get this grand rem
edy."
Thousands of others attest Its vlrtass
and sound Its praise.
If you oro siok, do not despair till yon
have tried Germetuor. It has performed
cures that astonish the world.
If you are suffering with disease and fall
or a cure, send stamp for printed matter,
certificates of wonderful cures, etc.
For sale by King 1 * Royal Germetuor
Company, Atlanta, Go., and by druggists.
Price fl/iO per concentrated bottle, which
makes nno gallon of medicine os per di
rections accompanying each bottle. Can
be sent by express C. O. D„ If yonr drilf-
qiat rail not supply yon. . ^
lmmmBMI J. M.WOOIXI: V,M. D,
Atlanta,till* office MX Whitehall bt
SEND FOR OUn CATALOGUEoso PRICES
ATLAS ENGINE WORKS,
INDIANAPOLIS. INC
LAGRANGE FEMALE COLLEGE;
tipe-writnir.telegraphy. M
A rt aa4 *ai«t cellar* spralp
U*a. EcoBAnlcal HlMm.ni
t&SBi£fozs ,m
wluss&ar
SPEEDILY/ 1 ^
L. DOUGLAS
SHOE GENTLEMEN
Calf and Laced Waterproof flrnli.
HITCHCOCK’S GREAT CITY.
P® and Stovall Will Locate It Fifteen
Miles Prom Macon.
thousands of constant wcari
genuine nnnd-sewed, nn elegant n,
,tyllsh dress blioe r which commends Use...
iiaud-sefvcil \\ elt. A fine calf Mtoe
unequalled for stylo an *
Shoe which commends Itself.
*d Welt * “
or stylo at;
Well Is
a popular price.
PoUcrmnn’M Shoe Is especially adapted
for railroad men, farmers, etc.
^ made In Congress, Button aud Laco.
t$2 SHOES laiSes.
aniost favorably received since Introduced
recent Improvements make them superior
>s8old at theso prices.
r Dealer, and If he cannot supply you send
factory enclo*' '
, r order man Its. _ . „ „
\V* Li UOjOLAS, Brock/on* IUo*»
Wheatley, Americus
sunkenNess
Liquor Habit.
m worio mEfie/SBiffo/ti cuke
ifES GOLDEN SPECIFIC.
bcgivenlncofTeq, tca.orln articles of food,
he knowledge of patient If necessary;
utely harmless and will effect a pernio-
M*edy cure, whether the patient Is a
■lrinkerornu alcoholic wreck. IT NEV-
>. It operates so quietly and with such
that tho patient undergoes no Incon-
und soon his complete reformation !■
IS page book free. To bo had of
l.* ny Dr. E. J. Eldridge,
Blood Purifier
lolls. Old Sores. Scrofulous Ulcers, Scrof,
f*. Scrofulous Humor and all scrofulous
Primary, Secondary and Tertiary Con-
I1*xk1 Poison, Ulcerous Sores, diseases of
Salt Rheum, Blotches, Pustules, Pimp-
nter,Ring-worms,Scald-Head,Eczema,
im, Constitutional Blood Poison, Mer-
timatism, Diseases of the Bones, Gen-
lityandnll diseases arising from impure
Hereditary Taint. Sold by retail drug-
er bottle. Roy Remedy Co., Atlanta, Ga.
aEwsshut
r.XiwIwk, ffrll*ftrl*ikif|rHbfUli
I PARKER’S ■
1 HAIR BALSAM
■ CImimm and beautifies tho hafr.
I Promotes a luxuriant growth.
hr.r; 5® Wfflffvsy
I Cure* eealp diseases k hair tailing.
CONSUMPTIVE
D^n^ImhJWon, Pain, Take in time. JO cu!
~ORN8. The only «ur*curefbr Coipe.
^Tat J5rug£i»t», or I11SCOX k CO., W. V.
Sv.zWvom
BBIlVeakness • f Body and Kind,
HJLUf Errors or Ezeeiata in Old or Young.
[IaIHOOD Mir Switrti H*w to ealarf* anS
lil, I'SDITSLOPKO OMARS A PAKTS OF BOOT.
*»::!»» HOUR TRRiTHKST—RmmSI* In a day.]
WM8teiHMt>mq*tl*>tTlH. WrtUtktB.'
»t*luaU*« aatjrwti malted (a**l*d)fr*«.
! MEDICAL CO., BUFFALO, N. V.
tfs Pills
jjdarjttmwly n.vor Falla to
isia, Constipation, Sick
dacha, Biliousness
diseases arising from a
Liver and Bad Digestion.
tnni remit la gaod appetite
"‘••I. l)o.o .mall I elegant,
oatoii and easy to swallow.
5LD EVERYWHERE.
WEAK MEN
ublo treatise fsealsd) containing MU
for homo cure. FREE ot charge. A
“dical work 1 should read by every
* wmms and dsbUltated. Addrss^'
C,FOULER,.noo$u,_Comi.
.tf. fare
to .11 in
A.j.m
Atlnmn Constitution.
Macon, Ga., October so.—On yes
terday tho Constitution recorded
the arrival in Atlanta of Colonel
Thomas P. Stovall ami Mr. Benja
min Hitchcock, Tiie Constitution
said thst tlie gentlemen were en
gaged in an enterprise which would
be of some ira;>ortance to Georgia.
i he Constitution's correspondent
will now unfold the said enterpri-e.
Messrs. Stnvat!|.nd Hitchcock went
from Atlanta to Macon.
Mr. Hitchcock is a well known
real estate dealer of Xew York.
His Ozone park, Union Course,
Itockaway Beach, Laurence Beach,
are well known north.
He has acquired control, with Mr.
Stovall, of 000 acres of laud la
Central Georgia, fifteen miles from
Macon and 150 miles from the At
lantic coast, upon which they pro
pose to found the city of "Grand
Center” with all the accessories of
the latest modern improvements.
Four boulevards running to the
principal points of the compass will
he laid out, opened uud graded, and
a line church built for each denom
ination, which will avgree to accept
aud "operate” It. Three-fourths of
the tract lias already been In culti
vation. It fronts on tho Octnulgee
river, with deep water forsea-goiug
vessels, and is traversed by the
Macon und Brunswick branch of
the East Tennessee, Virginia aud
Georgia railway. This winter, Mr.
Hitchcock is to go to Europe in the
interest of the enterprise. Low
fares will be made from the North
ern cities, and tho enterprise will
be maintained on a broad and
American scale.
The War and the South.
Knoxville Journal.
It requires no wide stretoh of the
imagination to conceive the bitter
discouragement of the southern
people, when Lee surrendered at
Appomattox iu April, 18G5. The
future was to them gloomy and
dark. They did not know then
what the temper of the victors
might be. It could not be told
wbat part passion might play when
the curtain of actual war had fallen
It wus not known whether exile
and imprisonment was to follow
involving the leaders of tho Con
federacy in still deeper troubles
But Grant's magnanimity gave
hope. Then came a gleam of sun
shine when he tojd the soldiers of
the losing side to take their horses
home with them, tftat they would
need them on their farms. Then
they did go to their homes, with
hope and with a purpose t<J retrieve
their lost fortunes.
And they have done it. The
South is more prosperous tha^ever
before'. Notwithstanding the enor
mous losses sustained, including
the slaves, the wealth ofj the
South is very much greater than
ever before. Before the war there
were no blast furnaces In the South
Now, thousands of tons of iron ore
is made of Southern ores every
mouth. There were nn manufac
tories iu the South prior to the war,
to speak of. Now, they have sprung
up in every Southern state, in large
numbers iu some of them.
The war was really a benefit to
the south. With the emancipation
of the African slaves came the
emancipation ot the energies and
the latent, unused powers of the
southern whites. It was an emanci
pation that has been fruitful of re
sults. Under the slave regime the
resources of the south would not
have been developed in a hundred
years a9 they have been in the la9t
twenty-five. We can all see this,
and feel it, and while it wa9 a terri
ble experience, can all rejoice at the
results. As a nation we are strong
er and more prosperous than eyer
before, and there are none in any
section of the country, who believe
it possible or.desirable that the
union of states should ever be dis
solved.
HANDLING BIG FREIGHTS.
The Central Taxed To Move Tho .Cot
ton Crop.
Savannah News.
In talking with a Morning News
reportei;yesterday,' General Man
ager Gabbett said that the Central
railroad is handling cotton this
year with greater regularity and
promptness than ever before iu Its
history, owing to tho largely in
creased rolling stock, and the many
other improved facilities for the
ready transportation of .heavy
i freights.
! “Cotton is not allowed to pile up
| at the stations along the line now,
j as was the custom once,” he said,
I "and little complaint can bo made
now of the road’s not being able
. leading nShnu to take every halo of cotton as soon The rai
I ! «• offered'. Of course, unexpected , Vienna in the preliminary heating,
*■** Q lx acinoT7.eo*ca
©rjjTraj
I The oily Ram”remedy ft* ,
delays will happen some times.
Iprsscribs it and Is* | tl ^ n , g some difficulty In de-
f llvering. the cotton from the yards
here sometime!, and some little
contusion at oil times, caused by
the immense quantities of cotton
which we have to handle here, but
we a reared ucing the work to a sys
tem and expect to reduce the trouble
iu delivering cotton to a minimum
Cotton is the all important freight
just now.”
Iu reference to the continued re
ports of his resignation Mr. Gab
bett said he hpd reason to believe
that they were orginuted elsewhere
with tlie hope of influencing cer
tain movements in railroad circles.
"I could not think of leaving the
Centra! railroad in justice to my
self until tlie plans I have inaugur
ated have been carried out," ho said.
A BIG SUIT FOR PUIAGES.
James Hollis Sues a Rail . 11 and Town
For $37,000.
)
From the Suvannah News.
BiTi.Bit, Ga., Oct. 30.—What
promises to be a very interesting
■lawsuit will be instituted shortly
ugainst (he Georgia Southern and
Florida railroad ami against tlie
township of Vienna iu Dooly
county. Superior Court Bailiir
James Hollis will sue the railroad
for $25,000, aud a suit will be filed
againt Vienna for a sum of half as
large. He has just returned from
Vienna, where, he elaiins, lie was
detained forty hours by the town
authorities on a charge preferred
by tlie Georgia Southern and Flori
da railroad of assault with intent
to murder. He says that he was
ejected from tlie train, although
lie paid his fare, and lie is going to
make them pay lively for it. A
week ago he left Butler with adrove
of horses to be disposed of in
Vienna. Beaching the second
station above Vienna he sent the
horses through the country, and he
went down on the train to get a
place In which to keep his stock.
He was unable, he says, to purchase
a ticket at the station. The agent
told him twice he could not sell him
one. Hollis, replied, "AlH* right;
I will.not pay more than 3 cents a
mile, then,” and got on the train.
He said that the conductor of the
train was standing near the agent
und heard the ngeut tell Hollis that
no ticket could bo sold him
Hollis handed the conductor the
price of a ticket when he came
through the car, but the conductor
told him it was not enough, and if
Hollis refused to pay conductors
rates to Vienna after reaching the
next station, he would be put off
Hollis said ail light, he would pay
no more.
When the station wa9 reached
the conductor camo through the
car aud asked Hollis for fare.
Hollis refused to pay any more,and
when the train started the con
ductor pulled the bell line and told
Hollis to get oil.
"You will have to put mo off by
force,” replied Hollis.
"Well, come on them,” the con
ductor replied, and he seized Hollis
by the collar. He pulled Hollis up
and led him out the door, down the
steps, on the ground.
When the train started Hollis
jumped aboard and said, "Now, I’ll
pay my faro.” Before the conduc
tor camo for tho fare, however,
Hollis changed his mind, and when
thd conductor called for the fare
Hollis refused again to pay any
more. The conductor called his
orew and together they were about
to throw Hollis off when be promis
ed to pay his fare again. He t^aud
cd the conductor $5 too much, ho
said; and the conductor refused to
give back the change. Hollis said:
If you are thief enough to steal it
for the railroad all right, keep ft.”
Whereupon the conductor tossed
the money back to Hollis, saying:
“Here's your money, now get off of
this train.” HoIIIb said that a ne
gro train band attempted to eject
him, and the conductor flaunted ‘a
revolver in his face. Hollis then
drew his knife and backed against
the side of the car to defend himself.
He kept the men away from him
until the train reached Vienna.
When the train stopped he dis
mounted and the conductor called
out to the marshal to arrest'Hollis
for attempting to cut him.
Tho marshall arrested Hollis and
held him forty hours upon a charge
of assault with intent to murder.
Hollis contends that the conductor
bad no authority to eject him when
tbe fare was paid. That the con
ductor had no right to throw the
money back to him and put him off.
He said that ho did not draw his
knife until ihe conductor flaunted
the weapon in his face. As to his
claim against the city, he said that
If a crime was committed it was
committed several miles from Vi
enna, and the authorities of that
township had no right to hold him
for it. He was defended in bis
preliminary hearing before the
mayor by Col. Wooten, who will be
■CALL AT-
Arthur Rylander’s
AND SEE
THE LATEST STYLES IN
Dunlap Hats
. AND
Nellie Bly Caps.
WE ARE ON THE TOP ROUND
CARTERS
THE LARGEST
STOCK.
AT THE LOWEST
PRICES.
CALL AND SEE US.
Calvin Carter and a Son.
CLOTHING
First claims parents’ attention. We are more than ready In this de
partment, The Suits, The little Trousers and the Boys Furnishings; Hats
and Caps begin to go, ere the men begin to think of ohmnglng theirs.
We’ve often thought ot calling our store The Mothers’ Clothing Store,
because the mother is the best economizer in the household and she gen
erally finds out that the dollars go tbe farthest at
111 1. M'S, lb] tap Qile if SoutW Ungjt,
AND PROPRIETOR OF
“The Eagle” Shoe and Hat Store,
117 and 119 FORSYTH ST.
AMERICUS, GA.
W. W. Wheeler & Co.
ore now in their new quarter*.
HAND-MADE AND NORTHERN HARNESS BY THE WHOLESALE ANr
RETAIL. CALL AND SEE THEM.
associated with B. P. Hollis, Esq.,
of Americus, against the railroad
and town. Thirty-seven thousand
doliats is not a small sum, and
Hollis Is sure that he has flrst-rnte
cases against both.
railroad sent witnesses to
They have also secu red the services of
A. First-class Shoemaker,
Repairing a Specialty. Prices reasonable and Satisfaction Guaranteed
Sold
W ATTS HOUSE,
AMERICUS. GEORGIA
STRICTLY STALL-FED
, n. I). WATTS, Proprietor. ,
nrst-CItu Accommodations!
Electric can from Depot* to Hotel
(’ururi meet all train*.
o
T
AT
W, W.C. for salo at Cook’s Phar
macy, 439 Cotton Avenue, Ameri-
MAYO’S GEORGIA BEEF
MARKET.
and it is understood that the case,
assault with Intent to murder,
against Hollia, will be pushed vig
orously. Hollis owns a great deal
of property in tbia county, and is a
tbrilfty farmer. Z. D, R.