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THE AMEKICUS WEEKLY TIMES-RECORDEK: FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 1891.
THE TIMES-RECORDER
Dally unci Weekly.
The Amkkicuh Recorder Established 1879.
The ASeiucita Timka Established 1890.
Consolidated, April, 1891.
SUBSCRIPTION :
ailt, One Year, |6.i
Daily, One Month, i
Weekly,One Year, . - l.<
Weekly, Six Months, I
• For advertising rates address
Hahcom Myriok, Editor and Manager,
THE TIMES PUBLISHING COMPANY,
Americus, Oa.
BusinesM Office, Telephone 99.
Editorial Rooms, alter 7 o’clock p. n
Telephone 29.
Americus, Ga., Nov. 13, 1891.
tv.
TO OUR SUBSCRIBERS.
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and we have not asked you for money
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Hut our creditors are now pressing
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PLEASE READ THIS.
A blue pencil mark around your nan
and date means that you are in arrear
and that ^e are very much in need of
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lars duo us, and as it takes fifty dollar
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once. Please send the money by regis
tored letter, P. O. money order or ex
press.
None of the newspapers have yet pub
lished Blaine’s telegram of congratula
tion to McKinley. Why this ominous
silence on this auspicious occasion?
The Age-IIerald 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
recent elections.
Eight bales of cotton, of 450 pounds
each, picked from four acres of ground
and twelve bales from twelve acres, is
the achievement of a Cobb county far
mer, Mr. M. L. Green, this year.
Jonnie McLean has not yet wired bis
congratulations to McKinley. He should
bavo been among the first to do so, be
cause ho did a groat deal in Cincinnati to
help defeat the gallant Campbell.
It is an undisputed fact that the most
posporous farmers in Houston are those
who raiso their own farm supplies, and
cultivate their farms according to the in
tensive principle.—Perry Journal. Same
in Cobb county.—Marietta Journal.
Occasionally something happens to
indicate that Rutherford 13. Hayes is still
in the land of the living. Up in Augusta
last Saturday Mr. Patrick Walsh played
the ex president for all he was worth as
a spectacle and got a really good speech
out of him.
A gentleman from Sand Mountain
was in the city a few days ago with
dozen eggs and 75 chickens, lie sold
them for $30 cash. A friend sold a bale
c.' cotton for $30 and li'ad to pay a part
of this for guano. Which did best?
Herald, Attalla, Ala.
The Savannah Morning News is au
thority for the statement that Gen. W.
W. Hums, 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 annual report of the cotton ma
chine’s trial comes from Atlanta, Ga.,
this year. It has at each of these trial*
heretofore, as in this case, worked satis
factorily, and the report concludes as
usual: “If it is a success it will have
the effect of greatly reducing the cost of
production.” But no prophet foretells
how long wo must wait for the promised
reduction.
One of the best farms in Dodge coun
ty is managed by Mrs, W. H. Garret at
Godwinsville. Besides conducting
mercantile business, dealing in almost
Anything kept in a stock of general mer
chandise, she has made with one plow
this season ten good, heavy bales of cot
ton, 200 bushels of corn and plenty of
peas, potatoes, etc. to last her through
the season.*—News and Dispatch.
ON THE ELECTION.
The Herald maintained a neutrality of
silence during the canvass just ended be
cause no important issues or interests
were at stake.
Both candiJates for Governor were
personally beyond reproach. No scandal
attached to the record of either. This
gratifying fact gave the people an unus
ual freedom in the expression of opinion
and allowed them to breathe more free
ly than they had done on some previous
occasions of the same kind.
But it must be conceded that, though
the candidates were personally on a par,
the forces which pulled the wires be
hind them were not equally good and
did not commend themselves with equal
mphasis to the common sense or pa
triotism of the people.
We are therefore convinced that the
lection of Mr. Flower will prove to be a
ort of boomerang to the Democratic
party in the presidential campaign next
year and a blessing in disguise to the
Republicans.
The canvass has made it evident that
however popular Tammany may he
among certain classes within the city
limits it is very unpopular with 9II
classes outside of the city. This un
popularity will rouse a strong opposition
when we come to the more important
elections of 1892, A large number of
democrats who believe in the policies of
their party, and under ordinary circum
stances throw their whole weight for its
support, will be either lukewarm or go
over to the republicans with the hope of
defeating Tammany. They distrust the
organization, and will not have it at any
price. They are members of a party,
but they are not partisans, and claim the
right to vote as they please.
They argue, and very naturally, that if
Tammany has acquired intluence enough
to travel from New York to Albany and
shows a determination to extend its
journey to Washington something must
he done to check its greed of power and
patronage. The same battle cry which
has been raised in this canvass will be
come the cry of the future—“Down with
Tammany.” It would be a grave calam
ity, therefore, to be compelled next year
to throw* tho national issues aside in or
der to fight a defensive battle with Tam
many as our handicap. —New York Her
ald.
SOUTHERN DEVELOPMENT.
The Manufacturers’ Record, of Balti
more, of November 7, in reviewing the
industrial progress of (he .South, says:
“The general business situation
throughout the South shows no material
change, Industrial interests continuing
to make satisfactory progress. The
movement of cotton is still very heavy,
and foreign shipments active. The in
dications show a very decided tendency
of western produce to seek outlets to
foreign markets through South Atlantic
and Gulf ports, and railroad capitalists
are more and more showing their appre
ciation of this fact. Thus, in addition
to the many large inland manufacturing
and trading cities which are growing up
THE FARMER’S ALLIANCE.
Senator John T, Morgan of Alabama
has a leading article in the November
Farmer on the Farmers Alliance, whteh
he thinks is in danger from the political
aspirations of some of its leaders. He
says :
'‘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 for political
CRISP AND FREE SILVER.
There seems to he an effort on the part
of the anti-free coinage element in the
East to boost Mills, because 01 his re
cent hedging in Ohio, on the free silver
question; and thereby, by implication,
belittle Crisp’s candidacy.
The Times Recorder does not be
lieve that the New York Recorder, a
Republican paper, has any authority to
speak for Mr. Cleveland and his friends
as to their attitude on the speakership
question, especially as based on Mr.
Mills’ vacillating utterances on the sliver
question in the late Ohio campaign.
The New York Recorder in speaking
of Mr. Mills candidacy, says:
! Mr. Mills’ speeches In Ohio h .ve attracted
. Ills declaration in
resistance to political wrong and injus*
in the South, this section is certain toltice. It was inspired with the thought i si vor cvnuge was
build up great seaport cities at New-1 in which the higher liberties of the peo 1 | K . ct<}l | f or |,is attttu le *n this im
port New’s, Norfolk, Charleston, 1 pie have often had their birth—the re- , h«en known I11 Wa-liington f-»r s
Port Royal, Savannah, Pensacola, dress of grievances. It was made ncccs- In a speech delivered atAu* I ,T>
Mobile, Galveston and probably ! sary as a means of resistance to legalized I
tin
SOME PROPHECIES.
Tiie polititical prophet of the Atlanta
Constitution prognosticates as follows
Mr. Blaine’s health is all right now
and he will not resigu from the cabiuet
but will* remain just where he is, push
ing his plans of reciprocal trade between
the United States and other countries,
until Mr. Harrison is defeated and re
tires to private life.
The man from Maine has long ago
giveu up all idea of ever being president,
Instead his idea now’ is to make a great
name for himself in his declining days
by extending the trade of the United
States over all the civilized world.
Perhaps the only candidate In the Re
publican convention against Harrison
will be Russell A. Alger of Michigan,
who will again have his barrel on top,
and who will find himself just as far
from being president when the conven
tion adjourns as now, though he will be
poorer by a few’ thousand.
The next contest for the presidency
will be between Harrison aud tho man
New York agrees upon as the best for
the Democratic nominee.
Tho Democrats candidate will be one
of three men—Cleveland, Hill or Gor
man. The man of these three that all
the factions of New York combine up
on will be ♦he nominee. With the Dem
ocracy combined upon any one of the
three there will be no difficulty in the
Democrats winning the next presidency.
at other points where good harbors can
be created at a moderate cost. The
development of a larger trade with the
West Indies and South America and the
construction of [the Nicaraguan canal
will both prove of enormous value to
the South by furnishing new’ markets for
Southern agricultural and manufactured
products, and by making Southern ports
great shipping and trading centers,
every direction evidences are accumulat
ing of the solid growth of Southern
business interests of all kinds and the
outlook is very bright. In North Caro
lina, where there is considerable nickel,
there are rumors of a nickel steel-mak
ing company: at Greensboro, in the
same State, the corner-stone has been
laid for the first largo modern furnace,
and the first one built for coke, ever
constructed in that State; the building
of this furnace is an event of great im
portance to the two Carolinas, where
high-grade Bessemer ores are found in
abundance, the development of which
will add immensely to the prosperity of
both States.”
OFFICIAL NOTICE.
The Evecutive Committee of the Con
federation of Industrial Organizations is
hereby called to meet in the city of In
dianapolis, Indiana, on the 10th day of
November, 1891, for the purpose of de
ciding upon the basis of representation
to the groat 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, I). C. By tho
tortus of the law’ of the organization the
chairman of the executive committee of
every organization of producers w illing
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
the Alliance Committee of Arrange
ments by 10 o’clock a. m., on Novem
ber 10. Ben Terrell,
President C. of I. O.
TARIFF REFORM THE ISSUE.
If anything is more clearly demon
strated than another in the result of the
Tuesday elections, it is that tariff re
form is the issue that towers above all
all other questions that concern national
politics.
Governor Russell, iu speaking of the
result In Massachusetts, said, that it
was an emphatic endorsement of tariff
reform, and the call of tho business ele
ment of his State for sound money.
All the leaders iu New York, from
Mr. Cleveland along down the line, say,
without hesitation, that tariff reform is
the issue, and they emphasize the im
portance of demanding sound money in
preference to free silver.
This is encouraging. It shows that
the thinking men of the country are
still in control of the party, and it show s
that all the efforts of the politician will
never commit Democracy to free silver,
nor will they over succeed in taking from
the party the tariff reform slogan given
it by Mr. Cleveland.
Tariff reform is the issue, and it is a
winning Issue. The sound sense of
adopting it as the main issue has been
shown in New York, Massachusetts and
Iowa, where the Democrats won decis
ive victories, and the folly of attempting
to supplant It with free silver is also
shown in the result in Ohio, where Gov
ernor Campbell met with an overwhelm
ing defeat.
The party must keep its head and
make the tight In 1892 on the issue that
its greatest leader forced to the front,
and if this is done, nothing can stand in
the way of Democratic victory.—Atlanta
Herald.
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 and great combines by
the legislation of the country. It was
the (irst 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, an inliuence that would oilier
wise have blessed the country, The sin
cere defenders of the people against the
aggressions of monopoly, trusts and
combines, armed with the control of
taxation and finance, will miss the pow
erful support of the Alliance, when its
noble mission has been degraded into a
disreputable hunt after office.”
THE NEGRO IN THE NORTH.
The Philadelphia Times in speaking
of the fact that the negroes hold the
balance of power in Pennsylvania and
have generally voted the Republi
ticket blindly, says:
“There is not a Republican district in
Pennsylvania where a colored man could
be elected to the Senate, to the Assem
bly or to Congress. Indeed, so well is
tliis fact understood, that we do not re
call a .single instance of a colored man
seeking a nomination for any of the re
sponsible representative offices in the
State, nor has one ever thought of being
a candidate for any one of the many lu
crative offices In the various counties.
We have seen more colored men sitting
in a single Legislature in South Caro
lina, elected on Democratic tickets by
Democratic votes, than have been elect
ed to the Legislature of all the Northern
States since the enfranchisement of the
black man. In only a single instance
has a colored man been nominated for a
State office, and that was for Auditor
General in Kansas. He was elected, but
was saved only by the extraordinary
party majority, as he fell over 20,000 be
hind his party In the State. In this
State no colored man was ever appointed
to the police force until Mayor King set
the example to the Republicans, and
there are more colored school teachers
employed in any one of the Southern
States, and paid out of the State treas
ury, than are employed in all of the
Northern States from Maine to Califor
nia. It is very evident that the negro is
not wanted in the North except on elec
tion day.”
pressed
field utterance
dare thet lie n
e village man,«
he adjou
iselfuH ford»> y»a\n his Maas-
, and his friends here now* (le
ver b is been an ardent free
MkmuIi he has always favor
ed it and will continue to do so. I* is believ
ed here that ire has greatly strengthened his
candidacy for the speakership by his pro
nounced attitude, and the solid delegations
of New \ork, New England, and Pennsylva
nlaare now placed to ills credit. Congress
man Hemphill of South Carolina expects to
deliver the delegation front that state intact,
and the Cleveland inliuence throughout tho
South and West will be turned enthusiast ic
ally into the Mills column. Aside from Its In
fluence on the speakership canvass, however.
Mr. Mills’friends here are not sanguine In
regard totheeflect of his presence In the
Oi io campaign, and much disappointment
■s expressed in the tariff argument which he
lias prepared for delivery there. There is no
longer room for doubt that there is a per
fectly clear understanding between Mr.
Cleveland and the friends of Mr. Mills. There
will be n »division in the ranks of Mr. Cleve
land's supporters when the time comes for
ballotinj* for a speaker of the house.
A WISE STEP.
correspondent from Oglethorpe
county writes the Athens Banner that
the farmers down In that section are de
termined to plant more small gain this
year than they have put under the ground
for many a year gone by. Almost every
farmer in that entire part of Georgia has
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
the over production of cottou and the
shortage in the production 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 have lately been suffering very
much from 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-
iu Europe by the announcement that
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
discove^d to be indubitably the mi
crobe of lepfosy. When this important
information was communicated to Pas-
ur by a Paris journalist he manifested
surprise whatever an 1 stated that the
report merely confirmed what he had
long expected.
Ireland resembles a good »*ized 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 up or home rule aban
doned. The people can’t have both, and
it's about time for them to make their (
choice.—New York Herald.
Augusta, Ga., has $4,010,000 invested
in thirteen cotton mills. The pay rolls
of these mills aggregate $959,300 per an
num paid out to 4,385 operatives, and
they consume 72,(352 bales of cottou per
annum. Columbus, Ga., has about
$3,000,000 invested in eight mills which
employ about 3,000 hands. These mills
started on a very small scale, have paid
good dividends and have grown to their
present proportions through the re-in
vestment of protlits. Not a bale of un
manufactured cottou ought to leave the
South, and as the country grows and
AN EXPLODED FALLACY.
And exchange says:
Itiacleur that McKinley could have car
ried tho Buckeye State ty a much larger ma
jority if his high tariff doctrine had not in
jured him among the farming classes.
This is one of the fallacies of politics
that people seem loth to give up.
McKinley’s high tariff doctrines did
not lose him a vote in Ohio, and If ho
had been a free trader, his vote would
have beeu the same. The Republicans
voted for their ticket, regardless of the
doctrine, because they knew that Mc
Kinley’s defeat meant the wreckfof the
Republican party; and they voted to
save the party, not to endorse this, that
or the other doctrine.
All these campaign speakings and ral
lies and processions never change a sin
gle vote; their only effect being to stir
up the voters and get them to turn out
freely on election day.
Any campaign that is so vigorously
prosecuted as was that in Ohio brings
out the full vote, but it does not turn a
single ballot.
The Times-Reuordkr offers a year’s
subscription free to every voter in
Ohio who will state on oath that he
changed his politics either way in conse
quence of any speech he heard, or any
thing he read during the campaign.
Each side simply whoops up its own
and brings in the stragglers, and that is
the sum and substance of politics these
days.
THE NEWT CONGRESS.
Congress will convene four weeks
hence. A few changes in the personnel
of that body are interesting.
Mr. Edmonds, who was in the Senate
twenty-five years has voluntarily re
tired, and Mr. Ingalls, who served
eighteen years with signal brilliancy,
will bo succeeded by Peffer, a man of
mediocre ability who will have little in
tiuence in that august body.
General Wade Hampton’s presence
will also be missed. Ho will be suc
ceeded by a new and untried man from
South Carolina, Irby who his most san
guine friends say will never startle the
world with his conspicuous ability.
The House loses McKinley, Butter-
worth and Cannon, causing a considera
ble void on the Republican side There
will be a tinkering w*lth the tariff and
with silver, as well as an investigation of
the pension bureau; while the energies
of the new Speaker, Crisp, and the Com
mittee on Appropriations will be chiefly
devoted to keeping the expenditures
under the billion mark.
Altogether it will be quite an interest
ing session of Congress, and will be
watched with interest—not so much for
what it may do, as for what it will un
dertake to do.
With a Republican President and a
Republican Senate, it can hardly accom
plish any of the leading reforms so earn
estly demanded by the people.
The Democracy of 1893 will see to
these.
IS FRIDAY UNLUCKY? ^
Friday, long regarded as a day
omen has been an eventful one in f ^
ican history. -
On Friday Christopher Columbn.
ed on liis voyage of discovery,
On Friday, ten weeks later, h« h;
ered America. ' C:1,
On Friday Henry VII of England „
Cabot his commission which ledt
discovery of North America.
On Friday St. Augustine,’ ti, e
town In the United States was foun *
On Friday the Mayflower, with'a.
pilgrims arrived at Provincetowo- ^
on Friday they singned that august, **
pact, the forerunner of the present
stitution.
On Friday George Washington ,
born.
On Friday Bunker HIU was seized
fortified.
On Friday the surrender of s ara ,,,
was made.
on Friday the surrender of Cornwall:,
occurred; and
On Friday the motion was madei,
Congress that the United States wen
and of right ought to he, free and in,),,
pendent.—Roseleaf.
W. C, Bussell, druggist desires to in.
form the public, that he is agent forth,
most successful preparation that lias5,t
been produced for coughs, colds and
croup. It will loosen and relieve 1
severe cold in less time than any otld
treatment. The article referred to
Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy. It j, |
medicine that has won fame and pop t .
larity on its merits and one that caa
always be deperded upon. It Uth,
only known remedy that will pret®
croup. It is put up in 50 cent and j'
bottles.
Harvard College is having construct#!
the largest and finest photographic tel#
scope in the world.
PROFESSIONAL CARDS
T.
L. KLUTTZ,
Architect and Scperistendest,
Americus, Georgia.
Lamar street—Murphey Building. 2-1-1,
I M. It. WESTBROOK, M. D.
PH YMICI AN AND SURGEON.
' Office and residence, next house te C.i
Huntington, Church street. febttf
Mrs. Jefferson Davis, who is now
in Uichmond, has decided that the body
of her distinguished husband, the cx-
Prcsident of the Confederacy, shall have
a final resting place in Hollywood ceme
tery, In that city. The monument to the
capital accumulates mills will spring up j memory of Jefferson Davis will not be
WHERE THE MONEY 18.
There arc 0,711 banks in the United
States, and that by the report of this
year these banks have on deposit $4,(00,'
100,202. Of this great amount the banks
of the state of New York hold more
than one-third. The bank with the
largest deposit In tills country is the
Bowery Savings Bank of New York,
which reports $47,914,754. There are
thirty banks in New York city with de
posits exceeding $10,000,000. Tho total
amount of wealth deposited in the banks
of New York state is over a billion and
a half of dollars, or about $25 per capita
for all tho people of the United States,
Those figures arc from tho Financier,
and indicate two things: First, that
these $25 per capita of idle money now
in existence lessen what is in the hands
of the laboring classes and country peo
ple who don’t kcop bank accounts; and
scconil, that nearly all the idle money In
tho United states is piled up in the
North.
Suppose the Government wore to coin
or print a billion mure dollars to-mor
row, how much of it would over llnd its
way into the South under present econo
mic conditions;* Not a million dollars
of the thousand millions; and yet we are
constantly howling for an increase of the
per capita circulation.
I A. FORT JI. I>.
, Office at Dr. Eld ridge’s drugstore.
J be found at night In his room, i
\H. T. J. KENNEDY, M. D.
I PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON.
Office at Dr. Eldridge’s Drug Store. Cu
DOCTORS J. B. AND A. B.
Eye, Ear, Throat and Nose
A Specialty.
E A. HAWKINS,
ATTORNEY AT LAW.
* Office op stairs on Granberry corner.
W p -
" • Amerlcui, Oi
Will practice In all court.. Office on:
National Bank.
W T. LANE,
. ATTORNEY AT LAW,
• America., 0.
Prompt attention given to all bualMSi place*
In my hanrla. Office In Rarlow blocs, mom 6
Feb. s, tf
all over the South.
President Harrison is to visit Sa
vannah tills winter upon the invitation
of those interested in the promotion of
the deep water project. Tho President
is in political deep water at Washington
witli Seylla Blaine and Charybols Cleve
land on cither side; and it must be a re
lief to him to tell what he knows about
I the “deep water" question.
erected over tho grave, however, but on
one of of the prominent squares of Uich
mond.
An every day item at Bainbridgo now
is the receipt from country farmers of
large quantities of tobacco, and it is soil
ing for 40 cents per pound cash. It is
not likely that there will bo much cot
ton raised in Decatur county, Ga., next
year.
Tiie Iforalu’s Manclicstcr correspon
dent lias been interviewing various husi
ness people in the nortli of England to
day on tiie result of tho American elec
tions, especially in view of tho victory
of Major McKinley. Mr. Charles Wil
liams, one of tiie leading cotton brokers
in Liverpool, said: “There lias been
very littlo said on ’C'hango to-day about
tho elections, hut all are more interested
here in the silver question than in tho
taiitl views of McKinley. The silver
question, according to our friends in the
states, will come to tho front again, and
if tho silver party wins the result will
effect cotton seriously. For this reason
we look upon silver legislation with more
interest than wo regard the attaint of an
individual politician.”—New York Her
ald.
There are said to bo more widows in
Now York than in any other placo in
the world outside of London. Paris
comes next to New York.
A. DIXON,
, ATTORNEY AT LAW.
• America., 01
Office In Baxley building, oppo.lt. t»*
Court House. Prompt attention given w
all business.
lUnS-tl-
J^AYNARD_* SMITH, _
ATTORNEYS AT LAW.
Amerlcui, 01
Prompt and careful attention given to «U
business entrusted to us. Lamar .tree
over P. L. Holt’s. seplMiwSm
T. 1
Will practice in all tne counue. ■»
State. Prompt attention given to all
lections entrustedto my care. 11
ATTORNEY AT LAW
roctlce in all the counties of «j»
ANSLEY Sc ANSLEY,
A ttorneys at law, Americas, oj
Will practice In the nountie* of 8U“
ter, Schley, Macon, Dooly, Webster,
art, In the Supreme Court, and the Univt*
State* Court.
J C. MATHEWS,
. ATTORNEY-AT-LAW,
• 221 % Forsyth street, America*, oa
Will practice in *11 the Court*,and in the Coun
ty Court for the next twelve month*.
12-24 d&wly.
WELLBORN F, CLARKE. FRANK A. HOOP**-
CLAEKE * HOOPER,
ttornoys at Law
AMERICUS, ----- OEOROl' 4
mavl5-d«w-l.v
Walter K. Wheatley, J. B. FiTZOEiitr
Wheatley & Fitzgerald,
ATTORNEYS AT LAW.
Office: 405 Jackson 8t., Up Stair*,
AMK1UCUH, * GEORGE
jan7-tf ^
C. B. HUDSON, I L. J. BLAJAa**'
of Schley county. | of Americus.
HUDSON 3c BLALOCK,
“ LRWYBH S.
AMEAICU*. OK0B0 '
Will practice in *11 courts. Partnership
to civil cane*. Office up stairs, corner n**
Lamar street, in Artesian Block. dec2H^_^
E. G. SIMMONS, W. H. KlKBBOlOH
SIMMONS St KIMBR0U3S.
ATTORNEYS AT LAM
Harlow Bloolc, Room 4
Will practice in both .Itate and Federal
Strict attention paid to all buaines* el ?YrAgctf
them. Telephone No. 105. u ' —
ABL A NEFF, rER*.
CIVIL AND SANITARY E»OI>«“
Plans and e.tlmates for water
(;, U * ORRM Ykchit«ct.
offices
Plans and specification* f ur "}l l i ; build;
Dulldlnc* of all description* —P> by m* l!
ing* especially. Communication*?? #t .
to either office will meet with P n , a mer*'
tention. Wm. Hall, Superintendent a
cu* office. •