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Official Organ
Thomas County
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YOU 1. Xo. 73.
THOMASVILLE!, GEORGIA, TI KSDAV, SIUTHMHKII 80, 1013
*1.00 PER ANNUM.
H0DDE1KRY FUNERAL ATTENDED MILLION
’ BY THOUSANDS OF
CONGRESSIONAL DELEGATION PRESENT AND FRIENDS FROM EV
ERY SECTION OF THE SECOND DISTRICT—OFFICIAL DELE
GATIONS FROM ALBANY AND VALDOSTA—REV. M. BUSHIN
PAID BEAUTIFUL TRIBUTE TO “Ills ROV”—FUNERAL PROCES
SION OVER MILE LONG AND THREE HUNDRED VEHICLES
WERE IN THE LINE OF .MARCH. _ • x [
I
MAN FOUND APPARENTLY DES-
TITUTE WITH OVER A MIL
LION IN GOLD BONDS INSIDE
OF HIS SUIT—WOULD SELL
FOR TWENTY DOLLARS.
SCENE OF RIOT
S
TARIFF SILL NIK TESTIFY
STILL LEADS, DEARS ITS EDO ID SULZER CASE
NEGROES SHOOT DOWN WHITE MISS MURPHY SECOND IN THE COTTON TAX AMENDMENT THE PROSECUTION GETS OVER FIFTY
The funeral of Congressman S. A. i nessee, Hill of Illinois. In the dele-j
Roddenbery was conducted Sunday £ at I° n were also Messrs. Talrcloth,
I Lcmbdin and Waylaad.
morning at eleven o’clock from the, .. .. .. . .. . .
• j They left the city at seven thirty
house. Long before the apopinted | over the A., U. & A., for Atlanta,
hour, the house was crowded to its going thence to Washington
capacity and people were standing in [there Tuesday, when a tariff vote is
*i , . 'expected. Congressmen Tribble and
tl.e yards and streets. There were Howard were -f ot able t0 alten(i the
vehicles of all sorts, £ asjoral. Mr. Tribble fell on the via-
many
completely blocking Hansell • Street, duct, In Atlanta and severely sprain-
In order to allow those who came cd his arm, the injured member gi
In order to allow those
to the city to view the body, t he I in S Wm usual pain during the light,
, , . ... i ..n'and l.elng so sore that he was una-
* funeral service was not started until j b]e dreg „ or g „ ollt durlng the
eleven o’clock, over two thousand I morning hours. Mr. Howard was
people going through the home and, suffering with a severe case of indi
looking for the last time upon the fr j*sMon, and could not leave the car
fc; face of their beloved Congressman a S0 ‘
and friend. | T!,e Funeral Procession.
Immediately at eleven o’clock,! The * uner »l Procession was over
,, , „ . . . .. a mile long and it was estimated
Ucv. .1. M. Rushin began the ser-j that ful)y three hundre(I vell , cle , fol-
vices, a prayer by Rev. W. M. liar- j lowed the body to the grave. When
rls followed by n song by Mr. Han-(they arrived, Laurel Hill cemetery
sell Watt, “The Christian's Good-1 »as already half fl'led with many
night,“ and then the short talk by
Rev. Mr. Rushin. This beloved
Thomas county gentleman paid
most beautiful tribute to “his boy.” I four thousand, either at the house
It was from the heart-sincere, true ! ° r , the ^ to ‘>° honor to t!rts
.. , a , , . ’ i beloved Wiregrass Congressman,
to life and portrayed the deep re-j
! Many Visitors.
San Francisco, Sept. 29.—Edward
McDonald, a plainly-dressed, middle-
aged man, was found ill In a cheap
lodging house here last night, with
one million, two hundred and seven
ty thousand dollars of negotiable
bonds and securities sewed i iside his
pocket. He had but live cents in
his purse.
The man today is in a stato of
comma and little can be learned
about him. However, the papers in
nls possession are said to be securi
ties of forty-seven bona-fide com
panics, all drawing interest.
MEN AND ARE LATER KILLED
WHILE RESISTING ARREST—
TROOFS ARRIVE TOO LATE.
/
Harriston, Miss., Sept. 29.—The
ghastly sight of two bodies hanging
from a coal shute was practically
tne only outward sign today of the
riot Sunday which cost ten lives. Of
the seriously injured, all are still
alive today.
As a lesson to those criminally in
clined the bodies of Walter and Will
Jones, the negro boys who started
CONTEST for the great
PRIZES FROM LOCAL MER
CHANTS.
ONLY MATTER VET UNDISPOS
ED OF—SENATE WORKING ON
MANY AMENDMENTS — WONT
VARY MUCH FROM ORIGINAL
PROGRAM.
AND DEFENSE THE SAME NUM-
RER IN TODAY’S PROGRAM.
Miss Minnie Weldon still leads in)
the merchants contest, according to
tre count made last night by the j ———
Committee. Miss Kitty Murphy Is j Washington, Sept. 29.—The Dem-
second, and Miss Hopkins third. i ocratlc tariff revision bill, as revised I
The following Is the official re- . , „ , ,, ... i
suit of (ho second count: hy the < - onfercn<0 Committee, was
Miss Minnie Weldon, Thomas- ! presented to the House today by Re-{
vine 320,323 ! presentative Underwood. It was said t
Miss Kitty Murphy, Cooildge! 207425 I today the House would finally dis-j
Miss Eleanor Hopkins, Thom- -I’ 080 ot the measure by Wednesday.
asvllle 197,600 Senator Kern today obtained the
.Miss Gladys Cardin, *Ochlock- ’ | unanimous consent that the adjourn-j
nee 115,075 men t of the Senate extend until tli
»f the
Assembly,
ver certain
bandoned hope <
jieople who had been unable to get
; near the house during the cere
-, mony. There were in the city about
a ! a thousand visitors and fully three ’<
gavd which Mr. Rushin feit for this j
successful young man. whose lifej offlclnl delegations came from the
had been taken In the mifi.~t of its i cities of Albany and Valdosta. Those
glory and usefulness. i from Albany were Mayor H. A. Tar-
, ........ , , ' ver, H. M. McIntosh. Joseph Ehrlich,
This concluded, the body was tak-, A , uppltt, T. N. Wolfolk and
en from its resting place amid thel c . C. Harbre. The Valdosta dele-
hundreds of floral offerings in the gation was composed of Judge \V. E
reception hall and through a lane of Thomas and Messrs. O. M. Smith,
" West, C. L. Smith, J. B. Cope-
Man Says Bonds Cost Him 1*80.
San Francisco, Sept. 29.,—Bonds,
1 til u face value of more than one
million dollars, may he bought from
Edward McDonald, at the Emergen
cy Hospital here, for twenty dol
lars. They were found sewed in
his clothes when he was taken to
the hospital last night.
When questioned today, he said:
”1 paid eighty dollars for the lot,
but ?ot bitten. I think I ought to
have twenty dollars for them, but I
might take less.”
people, -carried to the waiting hearse C.' Ash ley ami
The family followed the casket and | A T woodward,
then came the Congressional delega- Representatives from every town
tion which came to do honor to his of any size In the district ware pres-
memory. j ent - M »ny came in from Thomas,
and Grady counties during the morn-
The services at the grave were, lng There was a noticeable absence
(included In a short time, and all | of mere curiosity on the part of
Vhat was mortal of Anderson Rod-[those who attended. They came to
den bevy was laid to rest. As the • l°°k f° r the time upon the
. . i • . .. .1 face of their friend who had left
body was lowered to the grave, not L^m. llnd ther0 was a feeling of awe
a murmur was heard, the stillness. aa d reverence, both for the power
that death brings pervaded the whole which had called him and the great
place and thousands held their. goo-d which he left behind as a
breaths as the body was being low-j ".onument to his life work,
ered, nevermore to rise, on this j Floral Tributes T-n Conntlcss
earth. ! Numbem
The Congi esslonnl Delegation.
Sunday’s riot, and the bodies of j Miss”saVah‘ Am'a'soii.' Thomks-* "| tlni
two desperados were left hanging] ville 112,730 Democratic Leader Underwood, In
all night. They will be cut down Kev. J. M. Outler, Thomas- presenting tlie report, said the man-
ami buried today. | ..110.700 agers might wish to debate it for! O ,. lo ber sixth
iMiss Luclle Crovatt, Thom- i.some time, and lie obtained an i
It was said today that no further asvllle 91,700 agreement for the House to meet at.,
depredations would hay? been com-1 Master Earl Redfearn, Pavo. 85,050 | eleven o’clock, instead of noon to-:
mitted yesterday, had the Natchez! *^ rH - Melvin H. Goodwin, .morrow.
Thomasville. 72,575 | The report was presented with the!
Mrs. J. T. Chambers, Thomas- ! signatures of all the Democratic |
■vHle 58,025 J members, but none of the Minority
Mrs. T. 3. Singletary, Thom- t members signed it. Senator LaFol-|
asv Hle 46,350 j lette announced tii.it lie refused to,
Miss Madle Lilley, Metcalfe. 34,500 * endorse the measure, not because he
Mrs. Felix A. Crawford, [disapproved It, but because he was i
Thomasville 31,750, not consulted In the preparation of I
M*ss Irene Kennedy, Coolldge 28,425 (the report.
Miss Louise Higdon, Thomas- _ _ ; Cot ton Futures in the Rnlance.
' Hie 25,850 j \o definite agreement has been
v Hle 28,500 | reached to.lav by the conference'
Mrs. J. T. Scarborough. I menibers as to what to do regarding
Thomasville 25.000 t).,. <*. tton future tax. It was g**n- ■
es * Miss Fannie May Mali, Meias 21.500 expected, however, that when
af-jMiss Katie Hinson, Thomas- co opd eonforen. e j s ’ arranged
20,075 that amendment will be dropped
1 ».90« from the bill.
1 i,7^o. President Wilson made it plain to-
17,Tii.i I day that he favored *hfi proposeil
15.000 compromise plan
Albany, N. Y., Sept. 29.—A dozen
detectives were busy this morning
senlng subpoenaes to the Sulzer
Impeachment trial, scores of Jogis-
lators and politicians are wanted on
the witness stand by the prosecu
tion, a id fifty persons are being
soiurht by the defense.
James E. Garrison, a personal
friend of Gov. .Sulzer, who is being
held in the county jail, for contempt
hen he refused
questions, has
freedom until
militia not arrived. The negroes.'are
apparently as anxious to restore or
der as the troops. The trouble was
practically over when tho militia, ap
peared.
Trouble Began Early Sunday Morn
ing at Harriston.
On that date, tne /\.ssembly re
convenes, and Garrison is said to bo
anxious to mako peace with the
members.
CLflBKSTON BUILT A JAIL
Rut Has Not Had a Prisoner in th©
Past Twelve Month*—Only One
Giber Case in Existence.
'•Hug the
BRITISH GOVERNMENT T6l»AY
ANNOUNC ED ITU WITHDRAWAL
FROM FIVE-POWER AGREE-
MENT—UNITED STATES HAD
PREVIOUSLY WITHDRAWN.
London, Sept. 29.'—The British
Government today announced the
dissolution of the Chinese loan
agreement.
The agreement has not worked to
the advantage of any of the five
powers concerned—Great Britain,
France, Germany, Japan and Russia.
The United States ^withdrew some
time ago.
The five powers will still act to
gether in making loans to China for
offe:
The numbers of magnificent floral ' general Administrative purposes,
ferings came from various parts o* jKach power has been left free, how-
The delegation from Congress ar- the country, and were remarkable, evei . f to sul>po rt any of its citizens In
rived at nine twenty-five, being j both for beauty and quantity. The float i ng loa n 8 for raiIroa(1 s and other
three quarters of an hour late. They casjket was covered with quantities! jmiiistrlal projects.
'•were met by a committee of citizens of these lovely Mowers and the room
and taken to the Tosco where break- 1 where It was placed, was banked
fast was served them. Tho same j with them.
committee, with autos escorted them f One that attracted special atten-
to the house at ten twenty-five and • tion was a huge wreath, sent from
they were taken at once into the j t h e House of Representatives, at
room where the body was, and re-j Washington, a tribute from the
malned there throughout tho service.' members to their late colleague,
Roddenbery were members. There
were three beautiful designs sent
| by friends at Cairo, a beautiful
[wreath from Bainbridge, one from
[the W. C. T. U., a handsome design
! from the Bar of Thomasville, and
. | ; « y(numbers ot beautiful designs too
In the party were V/. .T. Davis.! This wreath was composed of Killar-, llumeroilB to mentlon from the many
Sargeant-at-Arms, Senators Thomas, ney roses and llllles and was a work : f r j e nds in Thomasville of the ho
of Colorado, Martine, of New Jer- of art. Another beautifitf wreath < j 0VC( j Congressman
poy Smith and Bacon, of Georgia,;- a. of white roaee and lilies, and; 3ome of tbe80 ‘,,ower 8 were taken
and Congressmcm Hardwick, Adam- was a tribute from the City or Thom- j (q tho cenietery a71(l placed upon
son. Lee, Hughes. Walker, Tribble, 1 asvllle. A pillow of beautiful[ flow-, , he grave , n the m0 rnlng and the I William McCaleh. shot ly leg
Howard. Bartlett. Crisp, of Georgia, e- s war 8 fnt from Athens by the A. i remalnder were oarrlP(! 0 „t m the thigh: William Kelnstley, shot l.i
McGuire of Nebraska, Godwin, of T. O. Fraternity, of which both Con- . afternoon . . . , . , .
North Carolina McLaughlin, of Ten- gre3sman Roddenbery and Mr. John. ‘ ‘ * ihand: William Dennis, shot In leg;
l'W. C. Bond, shot In leg.
'he shooting was start 0 ** by Wal-
Jones in the negro quarter
Harriston, Miss., Sept. 29.—Two
drug-crazed mulatto boys, brothers,
began a reign of murder here yes
terday morning that ended only
ter three white men, four negro 'HI©
men and a negro woman, had been i a !T 8 ' 'J; »V« xVtH’
, , , , 'Miss Mattie Will KIrkla
shot to death, several wounded and j ^j ss sallle J. Alderman
the two boys lynched. j Miss Lagetta Floyd. ...
Hie trouble started at about 3 ! ?!! sa Susa*n Palmer. .. .
, , . _ , , , .Miss Grace Porter. . .
o clock Sunday morning and contln* I m j 88 R * ho j c one
ued Intermittently until 10 o'clock I Miss Elsie Round. ....
that day, when Walter Jones, the Mrs. J. T. Stewart. .. .
elder of the two hoys, who started j ^J* 8, Y. an ' all ^? n ‘ ,org *
the firing, wsa lynched just alter I Mr , n ,, , 7ud90n . , .
the soldiers arrived. His brother, Miss LU’le Mae Rice.
Will had been shot hy citizens ear* * Mrs. A. If. Balter. ...
Her in the day. j Miss Minnie Jones 7.000 | jg probable that, the cotton futures V °H i n Johnson City. Texas
Twenty persons were injured. ,1*. JJi'Hni'ta Joh«W '. i!' flioon |;£y. dment may " B M,n « ,dere<l ^ ■ T “»=» »av
teen of-them negroes. Moan ofc thajMlss Stella Dm* 1.1-731 Tho House memlters were .. . . , -
negroes were dangerous liu"*.. (Mrs. T. O. Floyd -1,0501 tioned by Leader Underwood today aocorang 0 re P° r ^ s . every cell Is
” 2.82">'nnt to Icnve Washington before f "H ot corn nnd wheat.
I'nro ! Thursday. It Is said that It Is ex- Clarkston, up until now. had held
LOeO I period the Senate will art on the bill th(1 prolld ti tlo alone.
but
t it bo put in the bill.
Representative Underwood, In a i
statement issued today, expressed ,
gratification at the outcome of the.’
tariff negotiations. “I am heartily. 1
jMUlHflcd with the bill as repo-ted 1
9.a75 j from the conference,” he said.
O.aftO , it | s expected that, when the House j,
meets tomorrow, two hours for each,
ill be set apart for debate, ft!
1 2,72.’
11.12"
10.02.'
rne j it t le tow a
ling in the shadow
n. has the dlstlnc-
lolinson City, Tex.,
y village in tho
°rl*l whose calaboose or jail has
°od empty for more than a year.
The Clarkston jail, a little one-
tom affair, was built two cr three
•nrs ago, and so moral ban the lit-
© community been that it has only
id one inmate, and he was a chance
igrant who made the mistake of
opping there.
The same condition is said to pre-
u*. the
made their jail useful
by storing grain In it. and today.
List of the Dead.
Mrs. F. M. Welch
, Miss Lillie Smith
Sheriff G. B. Hammet, Jefferson ! Miss Lifcile Gunn
county, shot as he was leading a [Miss Annie L. Fleetwood.
posse to where the negroes were '!] 88 J* 01 *!**
Miss Mario* Spence. . . .
aiding. Miss Katie Parramore . .
Former Constable Frank Keinstly. j L. C. Jones
shot at his home after being called Miss Minnie Shepherd. . .
to a door . Miss Ethni Rc'nberg. . .
.Miss Florence Green
Claude Freeman, of Faye'te, shot‘s n Dixon
at railway station, while waiting I yr r jt/. Arnold
for a train. . (“Bull" Stewart
Johanna Aiken, Tom Weeks, Jesse j Colored Division.
... , . Lil le Mae Thomas. . . .
Thompson, Teller Warren and P red | ^j rB yj ( j a jjttlo
Grayson, negroes, killed during pro-Up 0 j a Fountain. ... .
miscuos shooting. I Mary Raeklev
Walter and Will Jones, negroes, ^ W^Hams
lynched. j John Roe
List of Wounded. Eliza Howklns
Orrin Glllis, former sheriff, snot Mrs. S. W. Jameson. . ..
in shoulder nnd may die; E. B. Ap-i*^®^ /ester™
pleby, conductor of the Yazoo and j Franl{ Delaney...
Mississippi Valley railway, shot in Jonas Goss..
breast, leg and arm, dangerous:. Allie Anthony
and Charlotte English
Mack Montgomery
1 by that time.
Pinal Action Expected This Week, a proniine
Monday.
Jordon, of Boston, was
visitor to Thomasville
40ft
33(1, Washington, Sept. ill.—Tho Demo
300 , oratic tariff revision, which was Im-:
273, gun Inst April, approached its final „f general usage
30 1 stages today. , In its present form, the hill car-
»- 'L ,! fu , ' '’'l^evico Committee of ries many changes front the original
-“the Senate and House met to adopt draff, as introduced hy Representa-
-- n ' th0 flnal report on the bill. The tive Underwood
30700 I Dem0 n atlC I " ,eml i er8 of th0 Confer - The Conference report, which was
at's-.o o nC ?hf°,'!',I n , t,ee haVn , lieen at made public today, shows the gen-
22*530 ! half h we»J. for ™ or ® tl,a " two ani] a oral average of rates were reduced
i aa ^ we ©ks. Tlic Republican mem- *
1 * berB were Cft H©d In today, merely to
7.90ft j K | ve a formal expression upon the
a,non report.
•*,400 j The Six hundred and sixty-nine
*.000 amendments passed by the Senate
4...Oft have been settled by the Oommltte
n.6( u *r;,e Clarke amendment, taxlnc eottc
futures alone remained
1.175 of today.
’'700 ,„, Aa th '', h l l "„ l 3 n ""', rf,vlsP ' ! ' 11 f-an- iin t i 1 W J ii n." 1 0* I 1 *, * * a s * t li'e "ti
i 'l tains practically all the reductions In the
by aoout four
MM4
WE HAVE EVERYTHING YOU
NEED FOR YOUR
Irish Potatoes
Onion Sets
All kinds of small seed
and Buists Winter
Lawn Grass.
Our
seeds of proven worth always make good,
and you never miss a crop that is a
credit to any gardener.
Agents: NUNNALLY’S CANDIES.
Two Sons Left For Collej
Mr. John Roddenbery le.'t last I
night to resume his law studies at t
the University of Georgia. Mr.
Yates Roddenbery returned this
morning to his school at Danville,
Va. It was the wish of Judge Rod
denbery that the boys should return
to their studies as soon as possible
after his burial.
Mrs. Roddenbery nnd Miss Ruth
Roddenbery will go to Sylvester thi
FAMOUS SURGEON DEAD.
Se;*t. 2ft.—Dr.
3 an fluty which President Wilson Insist-
pon. Sweeping reductions havo
pon nearly all articles
by the Senate chang
per rent advalorein.
Two amendments were offered by
the Minority members of the Con
ference Committee. 1 t both were
rejected. Representative Murdock,
a ^Progressive, moved for th«* acrec-
taxlng cotton tnnee of the Clark amendment, wV!°
undisposed Representative Fordney, a P.epubli-
an, offered an amendment to extend
lien
ugar tariff becomes . ffcctlv
, been made
Representatives Fordney, Murdock
nd Payne, and Senators Lodge, I.a-
ollotte didn't -Ign the rerjort.
iern
the negro woman and Fred Grav-j
son were shot and killed. Walter
then went to the home of his moth-|
er and aroused his brother, a boy 18
years old. Together they went
through the main street of**he little]
town firing nt every one In sight.
Louis
. Eu gen
ral Albert.
Mitchell, who attended
sidnev Johnson,
afternoon with Mr. and Mrs. G. R. (Citizens aroused from their slnni-
N’ottlnghani for a snort sfay. Miss ( hers hv the shots, peered our of the
Mary Roddenbery will he with Mr. l ,. lndow , n ,„, then hasten,.,I to eover.
nd Mrs. A. H. S. Cooke during their 1
absence.
Fall Constable, Shoot IIin
To Erect Monument For Him.
Cairo, Sept. 29.—The officers
the W. C. T. U. held a meeting
yesterday afternoon. It was decid
ed to erect a monument to the
memory of the late Congressman
Roddenbery, who died at his home
in Thomasville Thursday. The W.
r. T. IT. thought a memorial of this
kind here, In the boyhood home of
Mr. Roddenbery, would be especially
appropriate and they have taken hold
of the matter with every promise
of success. Immediate steps will he
taken toward securing funds for this
monument and the matter will he
presented to all unions of the dis
trict. The people of Cairo feel
keenly the loss of Judge Rodden
bery and regard his death as a per
sonal Joss. He has two brothers, a
sister and his aged mother living
here.
Mr. Vereen Mentioned For Con-
gr©K«*
A telegram from Moultrie this
mornVng Rtates that many of the
friends of Hon. \V. C. Vereen are
urging that he enter the race for
Congress, to take the place made
vacant by the death of S. A. Rod
denbery. Mr. Vereen has made no
decision yet as to what he will do.
Should he decide to make the race
he would meet with hearty approval
for there la no cleaner man in the
Second district or one who commands
any more regard w respect from
those who know him.
{ The two hoys, soon after leaving
•their home, went to the horn.* of for-
j mer Constable Frank Keinsrly, who,
j .\hen he replied to their call. \
, rhot through tho head by Walter
! Jones. Death was instantaneous,
i Keinstly’s son, William, grabbed for
(a gun. when he saw his father fall
I Before he could fire, he received a
j bullet in one of his hands,
i The Yazoo and Mississippi Valiev
dept Is. near the Keinstly home and
(the two negroes walked in that
(rection. A train had arrived from
j Natchez just a few moments before
and E. B. Appleby, the conductor
was standing at the station, talking
to W. C. Bond, the flagman. With
out warning, the two negroes fired
on them and both fell. The boy?
then directed their fire at Claude
Freeman, who was waiting for a train
to take him to his home at Fayette,
Miss. He was killed. The negroes
turned to the train, firing Into the
cars. Passengers became panic
stricken.
Made Their La*t Stand.
The two slayers made their way
to a cotton se©d house nearby. It
s believed that they then realized
the wholesale killing oould not con
tinue and determined to make their
As a result of the investigation of j
the -Mate Game Warden, of depreda
tion, in Grady county, Judge John
K. Singletary, nas issued bench war
rants, against P. C. Andrews and
Bill Hudson, both of Cairo, for al
leged violations of the stale game
laws. The hearing has been set (or I
Fiidav, October third, In the City'
Court of Cairo.
ed ho
last stand at th©
Frightened citizens by Oils time
had telephoned for Sheriff Ham
mett, at Fayette. Summoning for-
»oer Sheriff Gillis to accompany him,
Hammett started for Harriston on
horseback, arriving about 5 o’clock.
A small crowd of men were firing
into the seed house, but no one had
ventured to lead the posse to the
pjace. Taking a few men Aith him.
Sheriff Hammett started toward the
building. Seeing this move, it is be
lieved, Walter Jones crept to the tall
grass near by and as Hammett ap
proached the negro fired killing him
Instantly. A shot from the seed
house brought down Gillis.
By this time the countrygido had
been aroused and the farmers came
pouring In from ever* direction.
Everyone opened fire on the swed
house. A call was sent to Gov.
Brewer for troops, and the troops
arrived sooi after.
Buy your clothes
Ready-made
and know what they are,
how they fit and how
they look on you
before not after you buy
Then you wont walk down the
street, with that worried looking,
“wonder if I’m dressed
right” smile on
your face.
Louis Steyerman,
The Shop of Quality
On the Corner.
.
- . -> .