Newspaper Page Text
Recorder
c £qrG^
W. L. GLESSNER,
Official Or^tn of 8umt«r County.
Orc+n of Wfb»titf Couuty.
* FRIOAV. - • JANUARY 30. 1891-
The AKtHU'Crt Becohdeb 1% pubihmed
Dai'y "-’ll Weekly, during thv year.
'i u e 1.MIU KH’OHDICB 1. tHMlvd every
moruitii; except Mondays, during tile year,
at Me per month, or HUM per year.
The wnitr K«co*DXK I. Issuc<t every
Fri-ay mornlat!, at *100 per year payable
In advance. It Inis the largest circulation
any paper in Southwest Ueorifta.clreula-
tln* !ni cely In tUcoounttes of Humt®r, ljee,
Terrell, Stewart. Webster, Schley. Marlon’
Mr-eon, Dooly and Wilcox,
t Entered at Amerlcui Poat-Offlcea.second
c an matter.
A!’ communications should be addressed
to AMEItltntS PUBLISHING CO.
The H. A. A if. railroad makes
spl“nd!d showing In its report to
the railroad eommiaelon. In twelv
raontlis its receipts have increased
over fifty per cent.
O-orgla people are taking a great
er interest in the tight on the force
bill than are the Georgia Senators,
They only get *5,000 a year for be
iug "paired," you see.
The Central road is again reporte
to have secured control of the Chat
tauonga, Home & Columbus road
Tills time there seems to be consld
eraiiie foundation in the report.
J. S Schofield, one of the best
known men inOesrgia, of the firm
of * Schofield A Won, founders, of
Macon, died at Ilia residence, in
that city yesterday morning at one
o’clock,
When the silver lobby succeeds
in bringing about another compro
mise the couutry will have free
coinage of silver and their occupa
tion will be gone. Judications
point now to a free coinage bill.
dome visiting capitalists are In
specting Mncnn’a street railroads.
If anyone wauls to inspect the
Atuericus street railroad they will
Jiavetodolt scon, as It is fast disap
pearing under our precious dirt.
Home one has appropriated the
name of the Georgia Chautauqua,
and ,C.iitor Turner, of the Albany
Nows, waxes wrathy. What would
he do if some oue should call Amer
jcus the Queen City of Wuutliwest
Georgia?
The Atlanta Journal prints a cut
of Candidate Oglesby. It should
have printed oue of Gen. Palmer,
the Democratic candidate for Sen
ator from Illinois, for he will he
the man who will fill Mr. Collum’s
seat.
In reply to a query from the Co
lumbus Knquirer-Sun, Commis
sioner Trammell, of 4he Railroad
Commission, says that tho Com
mission has uo authority over the
physical management or condition
of tho railroads.
The Constitution wants to know
where Col. Ruck is. According to
this he is n6t in Atlanta, and as he
left Araericus oue week ago last
night, The Rbcokdkb would sup
pose that Judge (Speer must have
captured him.
FINANCIAL POINTS.
In mining circles In Colorado the
general cry is Tree coinage or noth
ing at all, and the opinion is ex-
pr-r-cd that a free coinage bill
w:.!J increase the output of the
Colorado silrtr mines from $36,000,-
OCal .o *.->0,000,000, or over *1,000,000
a month.
The trunk lines report a good
business at present, but a steady
fa!!!»g otris anticipated in the ton-
Huge in the near future, which will
la ' over a period of several
months.
Tlie Louisville and Nashville
statement for six mouths is expect
ed lu show earnings of about 4 per
cent. It is thought that a - per
ce’o Dividend will soon be declared
wi ll'he the option to declare an
extra dividend in June, if the eurn-
i up for the year warrant it.
East bound shipments from Clii-
.■aj, last week were: 77,397 tons,
against 113,300 last yea".
The Reading directors will proli-
a v ueel in Philadelphia to-day
to determine the rate of interest on
the preference issues. The iinpres-
siu., prevalfs that 2 to 3 percent,
will lie paid on^the first incomes.
Tl.o sales at the New.York Stock
Exchange iaat week show a de-
viee-’iu all departments except
tilv* of Railway bonds. Stocks
were dealt In to the extent of t>35,-
Oli shares, a decrease of 09,407,
while in State and railroad bonds
tiie transactions were $7,665,000 in
par value, an increrse of $2,597,500.
The Ohio party reached South
west Georgia just iu time to find,
warm, pleaaaut weather. What a
cent, as t to the frozen country they
have left.
! A GOOD COMPARISON
The Abbeville Tifties says that
"in unity there is strength," and
then draws Rise two pictures:
Iu the heart of Southwest Geor
gia Is a fair young city that atone
time gave promise of becoming the
metropolis of Southwest Georgia.
Tile city iu question is located on
the banks of me Flint river, and
enjoys a back conn ry of f fifty miles
iu extent) as rich and productive
lands as the state affords.
There are six railroads running
to the town, and for many yeur»
she has been the principal cotton
market south of Macon.
Her annual cotton receipts with
iu the past few years have run up
from 20,000 to 90,000 bales. She lias
several cotton compresses, good
freight rates and facilities, twelve
to fifteen artesian wells, and many
other advantages ttiat should have
propelled her forward to wealth
and greatness, yet with all these
advantages she lias for many years
struggled and stagnated
What is the reason? Simply
tills: Her citizens are divided Into
factions that antagonize each other
in ail efforts that are made to pro
mote tile growth and prosperity of
the town.
This antagonism betw> en her cit
izens lias retarded the growth of
Albany and obstructed its onward
march to the position she ought to
have taken long tigo, among the
cities of the state.
Happily this state of affairs is
passing away, and Albany at the
eleventh hour will assert her right
to enter the column of the vigorou
and growing cities of the state.
Another city of the same section,
fifty miles further north, oue of the
oldest and, until a few years ago.
one of tho deadest and most stag-
uant village of the Btute, being an
unimportant way statiou on the
only railroad passing through it,
lias within the last five years
shaken otf her sloth, rallied, and
has bounded so rapidly forward In
•rogress, wealth and population as
to attract the attention and elicit
the admiration of the whole coun
try
Americusisa great and shiniiq:
example of what pluck, energy am
harmony in auy community can
and always will accomplish.
Tliis is the whole story iu a nut'
shell, aud every enterprise that has
been suggested for the growth and
development of Americus for the
past fouryenrs has beeu largely and
enthusiastically sustained and car
ried out by a united citizenship,
aud tile consequence is, she has
grown and prospered, aud has as
yet but crossed the threshold of the
greatness that awaits her.
The’Times then advises the peo
ples of Abbeville to pull together
for everything concerning the in
terests of the town
Aitfericus people are occasionally
divided upon local questions, but
when any'matter concerdiug the
welfare of the town is at stake,
they all pull together, and Amerl-
cus as she Is to-fiay is the result
But many people are so narrow
minded that if they could they
would tear down everything which
does not redound to their own ben
efit. Happily, such people are too
wise to openly show their jealousy,
or their heads (figuratively speak
ing) would be cracked at once, aud
thus the enterprising people lead
them. Americus is Indeed abright
example of an enterprising town.
SUCCESS OF THE ALLIANCE.
In this Issue we publish an art!'
cle from the Grifllu Call, in which
cotton buyer expresses himself as
to the eReotof the Alliance move
ment. Thia article has been copied
in several papers in this section.
While all that the cotton buyer
says may be true as regards the
members of the Alliance iu that
section, The Recorder does not
believe that he does Southwest
justice in that the farmers of this
section will bear uo comparison
with those of Bpaldlng county.
The reports of tho Commissioner
of Agriculture show that tlie pro
ducts of tills section average fully
us high as those of the section in
hlch Spalding county is situated,
and The Recorder knows that
the farmers of this nectlou are
freer from debt than they have
been since the war, many of them
being ehtireiy out of debt, and hav
ing a sufficiency until the next
nips are o'n->
There Is no dr,if ' hot (hat the
Alliance ha. fic-n ..i great benefit
i the mass or iuiucmoers. It lias
stimulated them to keep clear of
debt, raise most of the articles they
l>, and improve their furms. As
consequence western products
have been less in demand, and
when tile season ends it lias found
them in a better condition than
before. If tills work Is kept tip for
even a few years it will timl Geor
gia farmers raising all tiie supplies
they need, und selling cotton as a
surplus product, and as a result tiie
country will be free from debt, aud
everybody contented upd happy.
HOW THEY ADVERTISE.
Hardly a day passes but that
Northern readers see an advertise
ment in the dally papers calling at
tention to aonie cheap excursion to
the West, and stating that the
money paid for tickets will be al
lowed as part payment on any land
they may buy In tho West. Buch
an offer has never been made by
Northern railroads for excursions
to the Sottlb, and it has only been
In the last few months that any
effort of auy kind has been made to
secure excursions to the Mouth.
Rut in s late issue of the Dayton
tOliio) World, we flud the follow
ing!
GEORGIA EXCURSION'.
Will Leave Dayton
Mosday, JaxcahyWtii.
At 3:05 p. in., via the Rig Four route, In
chargeot M:»J. W. L. Glesandr, bleeper
will run through from Dayton to Atlanta
vl* # L. AN. to Nashville, thence by day.
light : hrough the mountains toCuattanoo-
ga and Atlant. following Sherman
n oue mareh to the aea, paeelng the nu
oue battle fields. The party will also take
In Fort Valloy, Amlersonvlllo, Tlioiims-
vllle, Augusta, Savannah, and other points
of Inter-e. For further Information apply
at the Rig Four ntnep, s West Third street,
or to MaJ.Oleeener, ftt the Phillips House,
or to F. G Withofl Dayton, Ohio.
.1.1,. Milleb.Jt.T. P. A.
This is probably tho first time
that a great railroad like tho Penn
sylvania system lias ever adver
tised a Southern excursion. The
Recorder is also informed that
the Louisville & Nashville system
has made a low rate to Georgia for
first time. All tills goes to
show that persistent effort and per
severance will wiu in the end. In
five years the Northern roads will
be fighting to see which road can
offer the best inducements to
Southern excursionists, while three
years ago they would not offer a
rate unless a certain number was
guaranteed.
If the Southern States only knew
what boundless opportunities they
have, they would spend their mon-
ey liberally in advertising the dif
ferent sections. As it is, the
Northern papers are filled with
such announcements as the ono we
present above, and thousands of
people go West on account of low
rates, when they would prefer to
go South.
Aud the great Empire State of
Georgia spends not l cent to help
tiie cause!
AMONG THE EDITORS.
The Carroltou Times is the latest
daily In the State. Ills small, but
newsy.
Editor Christopher, of the Marl
ton County Prftriot, is down with
the la grippe.
The Albany News Ipu entered Its
thirteenth volume, and Is still
hustler for Albany.
Democratic Senators are still
making a brave fight against the
force bill, bat Georgia is not repre
sented among them.
Larry Gantt will only be assist
ant editor of the Alliance Farmer,
while Harry Brown will he the ed
itor-in-chief.
Dsve Isn’t F. M. Yet.
From the Montezuma Record.
Americus wants the negro col
lege located in that city. When
Dave Dudley gets the post office,
Americus ought to be satisfied on
tills line for a while.
An4 Why Shouldn't It ?
From the Htchlnnd Gazette.
The Albany News and Advertls
er seems to be greatly worried be.
cause Senator Joseph E. Brown is
not able to fill his seat in Congress
and will not resign and let some
ono else be elected In his place.
Larry Gantt writes a three column
article lu tho Southern Farmers
Alliance, telling why he was de
posed from the AthensJIanner. He
4ias purchased an interest in the
Alliance papor, and will hereafter
edit it, Harry Brown being asso
ciated with him.
Editor Branhan, of tho Tribune-
of-Rome, thinks that Southern
Governors are paid full salaries,
"because,” says he, "little men can
only expect little salaries.” Won
der what brother Brnnhani is mad
with Governor Northen about?—
Athens Banner.
Branham wants big salaries paid
to school teachers, but small ones
to Governors. Is this not a
little Inconsistent?
Augusta has surpassed all former
Carnival efforts. One hundred
thousand people were on her streets
Thursday night, and only twenty-
live arrests wore made, they being
released after tv few hour*. All
praise for Augusta ami lier ear-
nival.
The only true and safe intestinal
worm killer Is Dr. Bull's Vegeta
ble Worm Destroyers. It has
brightened the lives of many chil
dren and gladdened many a par
ent's heart. .
Heart Failure, audden Death.
The prayer of the Christian pleads
for guardianship against sudden
death, and yet alas, how many
leavo the world for better or worso
without a single moments warn
ing. He died of heat failure. The
tired and weary heart failed while
engaged lu its momentous task of
pumping the blood from tiie arteries
and forcing it into every big and
little vein that the wasting tissues
of the tlesli might be replenished.
How important then that the groat
stream of life be kept pure and its
corpuscles red and active, lest the
iluid grows clogged and sluggish,
and tiie heart. In un extraordinary
effort snap without a signal the
thread of its muscular etreugth. It
is your duty as ono who loves tiie
life that God aas given him, to as
sist nature 111 maintaining free ac
tion of the circulatory system by
keeping the blood In a state of pu
rity and health. Nature Ifes sup
plied heating and strengthening
herbs for this purpose. Hclence^has
discovered what they nre aud the
eminent Dr. Bull, of Louisville,
Ky., lias blended them in his supe
rior preparation known as Dr.
Bull’s Kareaparilln. Demand it of
your druggist. Take no other.
Emma Abbott’s bequest of *5,000
each to eight churches has raised
the question of whether churches
shouM take money iiiado in a then?
tre. Tho Christian Advocate says
the church should take any money
oiuntarily oftered by anyone—the
church deals with the offering, not
the act of making, aud charity
should never be lefused. Thia
seems a very sensible decision.
To tho HutTorinp:.
Over one hundred columns of
oluntary certificates have been
printed in the Atlanta Journal from
such people as ltev. J. li. Haw
thorne, Rev. Bam 1*. Jones, Hon.
H. W. Grady, Maj. {’has. W, Hub-
ner, late of the "Christian Index,”
Gen. James Longstrect, Col. IV.
Avery, lute editor Atlanta “Consti-
tion,” and hundreds of prominent
divines, editors, doctors, specialists
and others, certifying to remakablc
cures performed by Dr. King’s Roy
al Germutuer, after eminent physi
cians and nil known remedies had
failed. Send two-eent stamp to
King’s Royal Germatuer Co., At
lanta, Ga., for hook of particulars.
It is truly a great remedy, and
surely euros when nil else falls
Tho Romo Tribune will have to
he satisfied with somothing less
than it advertises for in the item
below. There are very few such
men, and those aro generally filling
'positions somewhat better than a
reporter:
"The Tribune of Rome wants a
first-class newspaper man to fill a
position on its city staff. No "jour
nalist” need apply. Applicant
must be unmarried, and must un
derstand the printers’ art, and
know the dilference between a
news item and a libel suit. The
applicant must come and see the
mnuaging editor.
uros In newspapers, the’ Ledger
says:
“The reason for so mauy failures
in journalism wa9 noa’ly summed
up by Editor W. T. Cbriatopher
some years ago, when he remarked
that there was very little profit in
printing a seven column paper In a
five column town. It Is the height
of folly to publish iu any commu
nity a more expensive paper than
a vigorous management ran bring
In money to pay for, and when a
newspaper goes to the wall, the
blame la with the management and
not with the people.”
AN INTENSIVE FARM.
IVliat a strange mixture of popu
lation Milledgeville will soon have;
lunatic patients at the asylum,
bright boys at the branch college
of the State University, pretty girls
at the Normal and Industrial col
lege, and big, black niggers at the
negro university. Truly, Mil-
ledgevilie will be a cosmopolitan
city.—Athens Banner.
Yes, Millcdgevillo has got her
hand in tho Stato treasury, and
Seems loth to take it out. Can’t
she even give up the negro college
to Americus, which Is fur the best
place?
Tiie Constitution figures it out
that the force bill will-cost the gov
ernment $17,000,000 per election. It
Is not tho financial cost that the
people are kicking about—it is tho
indignity of taking away tho free
dom of the franchise, tiie boasted
liberty of the American Republic
Mai.aria cured and eradicated from tin
system !>y Brown’s Iron liittcrs, which en
riches the blood, tones the nerves, aids diges
tion. Acts tike a charm oil persons in gener
al ill health, giving new energy and strength, '
Tills is the way the Anniston
Hot Blast explains an explana
tion :
Wo regrot exceedingly a ludi
crous mistake which appeared iu
"Citizen's” article in yesterday’s
issue advocating Col. George Mil
ler for Mayor. Tt was the devil's
ow.ti mistake. As printed, the arti
cle referred to Col. Miller as
“battle scared veteran.” ' It is one
of those caaes where the little let
ter "r” makes all tho diflercnce In
the world. We haste to do Col.
Miller justice. It should have read
"bottle scarred.” .
The Amekicl'sRecorder thinks
the farmers of its section just as
well oil’as those of Spalding coun
ty. If that Is tile case, why doc's
the Recorder have so many plain-
tivo articles about hard times and
the scarcity of money? There
have been no hard times in Spald
ing county iu years and money was
never as plentiful as it is now.
And with every rise in the market
cotton stilt comes in as plentifully
as in tile fall. There are very few
counties kt the Bluto as well oil as
Spalding this year.—Grlllln News.
Sueli a plentifulness can only be
accounted for because of Griffin be
ing a suburb of Atlanta.
H. R., iu Atlanta Journal, speak
lug of a visit to Geo. Truitt’s farm
nearLaGrange, says:
I took occasion to ask a few ques
tlons about how the prolific cotton
seed are raised.
You noticed a large harrow as
you came along? Well, that is
called a cut-a-way harrow. I am
breaking up with that now. I have
taken up all the stumps and rocks
out of my place, and I can use the
most improved aud latest farm 1m
plemcnts. Well, tills harrow tears
up the ground thoroughly, und in
rows four feet apart, usiqg a John
son wing and following it with
bull tongue.
On eighfy acres on which I make
the prolific seed I put as a fertilizer
2,500 bushels of cotton seed. This
goes in tho furrow immediately be
hind the “bull tongue.” I like to
let it stand tills way, and let the
ruin wash In and mix the soil with
the cotton seed. Then I put in the
same furrow tiie acid phosphate
using twenty-tivo tous on the
eighty {teres. I then list on this
forming tho bed. I plant with
Dixie planter, using a bushel of
seed to tho acre. 1 plow all the
time, never lotting any grass grow
or get the 9tart of me. I select the
seed from the largest and most
thrifty pIuutB, and iu consequence
my seed is getting better and bet
tor every year. The department of
Agriculture ut Washington last
year gave me *300 for 100 bushels of
these selected seed, to be used on
tlieir experimental farm.
I see you have a large pasture of
Bermuda next to your barn. What
do you think of Bermuda.
Bermuda is the grandest thing
for stock I know of. I never fed
my stock from May to November
except ut dinner and If I don’t put
up the bars then they will leave
their troughs and go to the Bermuda
grass.
When 1 began intensive farming,
my father was told that I intended
using 2,000 bushels of seed and 20
tons of phosphate on 30 acres, and
he said the boy will ruin himself.
Go and tell him to self the 2,000
bushels of cotton seed and the phos
phate and not farm auy tills year.
Ono of the neighbors told me I
was ruining my laud when he saw
me sending a plow along knee deep
turning up the clay and said to me,
“George, your laud will not get
over that in twenty-five years; stop
turning up that clay—you arc ruin
ing your land.” 1 told him I was
going to put a plow right behind
the oue that was then going so
deep and go that much deeper; that
we were all ruined any way if we
did not do somethlngdlflerent from
what our fathers had done.
Why, it don’t hurt the ground a
bit; you can make a soil any depth
you want by plowing deep and us
ing plenty of lerilllzers.
Mr. Truitt, on your cultivated
land of 150 acres, how much cotton
did you sell last year, aud what
amount clear money do you esti
mate that you made on your farm?
One hundred and fifty bales of
cotton, ho said. The way 1 esti
mate tho farm’s earning is easy.
I have on hand $1,200 more this
Christmas than 1 had lust, not in
cluding my premiums, which
amount to *1,209,
Amlthi. on Georgia hills ! What
would Georgia be like tills in every
county. . H. It.
LAWYERS.
SIMMONS & KIMBROUGH.
A TTORNEYS! AT LAW. OIRce up stAIr
In Harlow Block.
E- A- HAWKINS.
A ttorney at l\w. omce up stair
on Cranberry corner.
BUTT & LUMPKIN.
A ttorneys at i.aw, America., a»
Ofllee In barlow Block, up stairs.
W. P. WALLACE.
ATtORNEY AT LAW Amerlcui, Oa
ty Will practice In nit courts. Office over
National Hank
CHAS- M. TISON.
ATTORNEY AT LAW—OfJtce in Bag*
r\ley Block. All business promptly nt«
tended to entrusted to his cure.
J. A. HIXON,
ATTORNEY AT LAW, Americus, Oa.
A. Office In Bugley building, opposite
Court House. Prompt Attention given to
All business. |un5-tf.
E. F. Hinton. I. H. Cutts.
HINTON & CUTTS.
A TTORNEYH AT LAW. Practice In the
Htate and Federal Courts. Office ove-
Hart Building, on Forsyth street, marl-iy
W. K. WlIEATLHV. J. H. FlTZOKKALD.
WHEATLEY & FITZGERALD.
A ttorneys at law omc- m
Jackson street, up-ftalrs. Will prac
tice In all courts Julylh-ly.
BT. L- MAYNARD,
A TTORNEY and Counsellor at Law.
Americus, Ga. Prompt and careful at
tention given to nil business entrusted to
•IQi, Jackson Htreet, up
stairs.
i at No
epi9-d&w3m*
T. L. HOLTON, «
A T X?1W
tice in all (be counties of the Htate. Prompt
at Ion given to all collections entrusted
ANSLEY & ANSLEY.
A TTORNEYH AT LAW, Americus, Oa
Will practice In the counties of Hum-
ter.Hchley, Macon, Dooly, Webster, Htow
art, lu tb« Hupremo Court, and tho United
W. B. Guerhv.
Americus, Ga.
GUERRY & SON;
L AWYERS, Americus, Ga. Office in Peo
ple’s National Bank Building, Lamar
itrcet. Will practice In Humter Huperior
mdCounty Courts, and in the Supreme
Court. Our Junior will regularly attend
tho sessions of the Huperior Court. Tbe
ttrln will take special cases In any Huperior
Court on Houthwcstern Railroad.
HUDSON & BLALOCK,
Lawyers,
Americus. - - Ga.
Partnership limited In evil cases. office
ll|> stair, on corner or I-eo end L&inar
streets, near Artesian Well, In’Artesian
UecS-ly.
DKATI8TS.
DR. W. P. BURT,
TVENTIST. Dental parlors over Gran-
JLr berry's store.
DR. J. J. WORSHAM.
[AENTIST. Dental parlors oVvr National
U hank. dec 10 tf.
INSURANCE.
T IFEAND ACUIDF.NT. Tho cheapest
li nnd hest. W. T. A. DUNN, Alt-nt.
SHOEMAKERS.
P. R. STANFIELD.
PRACTICAL SHOEMAKER and repair*
X er, Americus, Ga. Repairing uspccTrlty
S-H-H OLSEY.
pOOT AND SHOE MAKER. Repairing
JL> a specialty. Shop up stair* over Arthur
ltylauder's shoe store.
CONTRACTORS.
SAM STEVENS. COL-
/lONTRACTOR, is prepared to do any
\J kind;* of buUdlngaml moving ut reason
able prices. Wind mills a specialty.
PHYSICIANS.
J. M. R. WESTBROOK, M- D.
DIIYHICIAN AND HURGEON. Office
i residence, next bouse, to C. A. Hunting
ton, Ch .irch street. feb 7 tf
G.T. MILLER, M- D.
>HY8ICIAN ANDHCnGEON. Office at
- Davenport’s Drug Htore, nml residence,
corner Church and Prince streots.
J A. FORT, M. D.
OFFICE At Dr. Kldridge's drug store
l/Can ta found ut night In his room, over
Kid ridge's drug store, Barlow Block.
Tiie Columbus Ledger, in answer
ing a statement made by tiie Home
Tribune tiiat no paper In the state
made $2,000 profit a year, says tnat
the Augusta Chronicle lias over
$20,000 In bank, made in seven
years; tlie Atlanta Journal paid a
foly per cent, dividend last July*
the Coitstitution clears $50,000 a
year; and that the Ledger had
matie $1,000 profit the past year.
In commenting on the many falt-
Walter Bridges, ■ Athens, Tenn.,
writes: “For six years I have been
a filleted with i tinning sores aud an
enlargement or tho bones iu my
leg. I tried everything I heard of
without any permanent benefit un
til Botanic Blood Balm was recom
mended to me.. After using nix
bottles tiie sores healed, nnd I am
now ill better health than l have
ever been. I send tills testimonial
unsolicited, In cause I want others
to be beuetitted.
ABOUT THE RECORDER.
From the Augusta Chronicle.
The Americus Recorder has
wonderfully improved iu make-up
and matter. Its editorial side is
bright und engaging.
Lost manhood, Iost|energy, weak
ness, general debility are ull cured
by P. P. P. New life, new energy
are infused in the system by the
blood purifying aud cleansing
properties of P. P. 1\, the greatest
blood purifier of tbe age.
B. HAWKINS. Hr., C. A. BROOKS*
Telephone tUl. Telephone:.
Hawkins & Broks,
PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS
Americus, Gergia
COffice In second story In old Oranbery
orncr, Cal'.tj by telephone, or left at k
rnigfit'* Jru * * lore * rromptlyattcnttor
Itiiis J,
Have one of tho taut furnlsnc*! nnd lie*
equipped doctor's offices iu the Houth
No, 3i3 Moot Street, kmm, So,
General surgery und tho troaime . t of tlu
EYE, EAR, THROAT and NOSE a
Hpechjty.
Pernona having defective vlnlon will da
vrelltocall und have their eye* carefully
examined nnd ttided nnd glauHcs flltal
HUitnbto to the eye,
DR. A. B. IIINKLE has recently taken
a second extended courne of special in
struction at tho New York Post Graduate
School nnd Hospital
OFFICE HOURS:
8:30 A M to 1:30 P M and2:3b P.M to .1:00 P
M nmtson Tuesdays, Thursdays and Satur
days from 7 to »o'clock at night.
W, L. Bullard
(1108 5th Avenue, Columbus, G*-
Blindness, Deafness, Catarrh, etc , EP
Ear, Throat and Nose di*ea«< s exclusively-
Hospital advantage* In New York, London
Vienna. 0-dAWly*
ARCHITECT.
FOR impure or thin Wood, Weakness, Ma
nia, Neuralgia, Indigestion, and Riliotu-
Um, take Brown’m Iron Bitten—it give*
itrength, making old peraons feel young—
ukd young person* strong; pleasant to tax*.
(4. 1. N0BRMAN,
ARCHITECT.
OKKrcPu Peachtree Htreet Atlanta-
or 1 U EH ( Room7 Harlow lll’k, America*
Plans nnd specifications furnished {<JJ
to either office will meet with prompt •*'
tcntlon. Wm, IIall,
Superintendent Americus Omct
LOST NOTE.
Ail persons are cautioned not to tra»i ?
for a certain promissory note given by s *
M. Cohen to U. M. AdJlson, f3r|j0.00, J*J'
nble Jan. I, Note Is lost and I am U*'
Inf steps to have same renewed.
Jan.25, 91.-1 * R. M/Addiao**