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Official Organ
Thomas County
SEMI-WEEKLY EDITION
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VOL. li No. 70.
TIIOMASVILLE, GEORGIA TUESDAY, OCTOBER, 81, 1013.
$1.00 PER ANNUM.
SUICIDE IS
THE VERDICT
I
OlilWl LUST FRIDAY
I ill ! j fl 11 P P fl L L ! GRAND JURY GIVEN STRONG i GKE.'
Hu nUIlh llU.ir CHARGE—MR. J. L. BEVERLY, MA
III IlnUU UllUL MADE FOREMAN OF THAT I EX
! BODY. | 1TC
AT DISPLAY OF CORN ANI)
MAGNIFICENT CANNING CLUn
EXHIBIT ATTRACTS MANY VIS-
1TORS.
One not knowing what was
JURY CAME OUT AFTER SHORT The O.tober terra ot the Thomas
-CONSULTATION WITH DETEC. County Superior Court was called to
T1VE AND PRONOUNCED MYS* order this morning at ten o’clock by hand might have concluded that
TERIOUS DEATH SELFINFLICT* Judge W. E. Thomas, Solicitor Gen-, there was a fair In progress in . the
ED. ; eral John A. Wilkes, Sheriff Single- room on the third lloor of the court
■ — ' tary and Clerk Groover being In houso today where the Girls' of tho
GEORGIA, Thomas County, their accustomed places. j Canning Club and the boys of the
Oct. 10th. 1913. , After the routine work of organ!- Corn Club were having their exhib-
VVe the jury cmpannelled to hold nation, the Grand Jury was sworn . its an d contests for the best display.
U-1 inquest on tho remains of Dorothy In and allowed to leave the court’ The Canning Club exhibit won in
jiatig, after an exhaustive and thor- room and select a foreman. They charge of Miss Lilia Forrest, of Bos-
ough investigation, covering four returned In a short time, Mr. J. L., ton. Miss Forrest has charge of all
days, find that the death of said Beverly being elected to fill that ini- tho territory south of Columbus. Au
Dorothy Haug, was caused by a pls-jpotrant position. Mr. Perry
Dot wound In tho head, and we; designated ns the bailiff for
COMMITTEE WILL DO THE WORK
NEXT WEEK AND ON THE
AMOUNT THEY GET DEPENDS
THE CHARACTER OF THE
SHOW.
1ST BE RAISED GROWS RAPIDLY
IVEH A MILLION I1Y ONE CANDI
DATE ESTABLISHES NEW REC
ORD IN TIIE 1IIG AFFAIH Tills
WEEK.
ASSISTANT CHIEF CLERK OK 1
THE HOUSE WHITES LETTER j
IN ANSWER TO NEWS ITEM
FROM FITZGERALD.
TO
further find that said shot was fired bod
by Dorothy Haug with suicidal
The .fudge’s Charge.
tent.
The following is the count in tho
The subscription committee of the•, Merchants voting contest, as an-
Thomas county farmers fair, which j pounced by the committee that has
is to be held on tho 18th. 19th, and tho matter in charge. Thb list as
20th, of November, will start tho. they prepared it is as follows:
work of raising the money next j Miss Minnie Weldon .. ..1,033,200
eek. They hope that the people I Miss Eleanor Hopkins . . .. 918,600
of the town will have made up their Miss Gladys Cardin . . . . 751,100
minds how much to give and will be I Miss Kittio Murphy .. .. 691,600
willing to sign the subscription list'Mrs. .1. T. Chambers .. .. 658,150
without «7iy delay. Itev. J. M. Outler 605,825
This work is usually arduous and j Master Earl Rcdfearn .... 471.900
. takes a lot time. The Fair this year t Miss Sarah Aronson
was; pusta and Macon and her eminentKoing to be three days and will; Mrs. Van Valkenburg,
that ; fitness for the position has been ef- have have many unusual and varied ; Mrs. B. L. Hudson .
, fectively demonstrated. [attractions if s.ifflcient omney; Miss Lucile Crovatt .
The exhibit of tht^ Canning Club I is raised. It is hoped that the com-i Mrs. M . If. Goodwin
295,2.50
220,450
213,200
188,950
The following letter has been re
ceived by the Times Enterprise from
Mr. John G. Faircloth, assistant
Chief Clerk of the Houso of Repre
sentatives, of Congress, relative to
the statement from Fitzgerald, that
two congressmen, on the train en
route to Itoddenbery’s funeral wore
intoxicated. Mr. Faircloth makes a *
complete denial of the charge
his letter is given space for
purpose very willingly.
Dear Sir:—Having just read
following article in your issue
October 11th:
“To tho shame of
; KNOWN' DEAD ON FATAL MO-
I BILE AND OHIO WRECK, WITH
SOLDIERS EN TRAINED FOB
STATE FAIR, NOW NUMBERS
i TWENTY-TWO.
Mobile, Ala., Oct. 20.—The vic-
yesterday's troop train
reck on the Mobile and Ohio Rail
road, at Ruchanna, Miss., were
that brought to Mobile early today on re
lief trains.
the! The list of known dead at eight
! ot o’clock tills morning was twenty-two,
most of them being members of the
tlo-n, tliere 170th Coast Artillery. Seventy-four
L. L. COCHRAN, Foreman.
W. F. CLARK,
JOHN MILLER,
W. A. LINDSEY,
A. B. CLARK.
J. G. CALIFF.
j Judge Thomas then delivered one this year is very much ahead of thatfmRtee will meet with generous and | Miss Fannie Mae Hall
! of the. best charges that has been of j ast year, not only be-au.se the! hearty responses. Miss Susan Palmer
beard in a Thomas'county court. It. < ro ps hav« been liner, but because! i Mrs. Bessie Stewart
| was not couched in flowery lan- the girls *«re trying their ’prentice ! EPISCOPAL RESOLUTION : Miss Ethel Rehberg
jguage, but was straight to the point hand In the work last year and this I . UNUSUALLY RADICAL,, mj bs Grace Porter . .
— concise, forceful and Imperative. year they have learned very much; Miss Annie Herring
| He called to them? each and every i ;nore j n regard to the work from j Unllvd For More Equitable Distrihtu Mrs. A. H. Baker . .
The above verdict was rendered one, to respond'to the call of citi-, their lormer experience. j t ion of Wealth In This Country. .Miss K tie Kinsr.i
and signed by the members of the | zenship which had placed them on The exhibit, consists of everything; Miss Norma Hines .
Coroner’s jury, sitting on tho case Hie granu Jury list. He informed | n the way of vegetables and fruits j' (By Associated Press.) ! Mrs. T. G. Floyd ..
of Miss Dorothy Haug, who was ^cm that their duties were not per-'that it is'possible to put up and some J New York, Oct. 20.—The Protes-jMfss Lucile Gunn • •
found dead, in her room, on the functory, buf^that their every ar ^|that had not been thought of as be-, taut Episcopal Church, in its gen-j.Miss Julia Johnston
third floor, of the Southern Home, j Wfls "ulded by the law and as such ‘ j n g capable of being fanned or pre-Jeral Convention here, was today'Miss Iren
where she was spending <r.ie night 'vmr'the guide for the conduct of t.ie J served. called on to d’emand a more equita-iMrs. F. M. Welch
with her mother. ‘court and the enforcement of law Among the vegetables were noted | ble distribution of wealth. This reso-lMiss Sallie Jane Alderman
This decision was reached’ yester-! "• the county. . i corn, tomatoes, okra, peas, both j lution was one of the most j Miss Madio Lilly
day afternoon as soon as Mr. Peace j Murder Discussed. (English and field, beans, beets, cab-, ever brought before an Episcopal | Mrs. T. S. Singletary .. ..
the detective on the case, reported Murder was the first specific crime i bage, potatoes, butterbeans, and oth- Convention. i Mr. Jack Cox
thaUofter an investigation, he be- to which he called their attention, ers. } --— ; Miss Lagretta Floyd . . . •
lievcd the facts pointed positively to j u this connection, he mentioned the: Among the fruits canned and pre-j i Ml«s Stella Drew
suicide. The Jury returned t/ie ver- f ae t that there were from nine to served were peaches, pears, grapes. J O ■ I nil |L|rtl|TflA| ‘Mrs. Felix Crawford
diet immediately. ten thousand persons killed in tnia | »i>i»!e**. oranges, watermelon -rind, | U III MU 111 r 1111 I 11 111 Mrs. T. J. Scarborough ..
This concludes the case which country last yeah In six months, melon pulp, cantaloupe, blackberries, 111UI rll IU | till I 11 |U ; Mrs. Lucy Carter
mystified and interested the people he stated, in fifty-seven counties of' strawberries, jam of all sorts, mar- j 1111 La I II I W II Miss Elsie Round
of this state, since Monday morning Georgia there were over eight hun- • malade, jellies including very _ _ _ _ B ‘Mrs. Minnie Jones -. . .
when the girls body was found by dred indictments resulting from the Iicious varieties made from tlu» may- T l| || ji I|||||hI || I 11’ Ml s « Minnie Shepherd ....
her mother. The details of the facts carrying of pistols. This was an-1 pop. pawpaws, aud tupdos. There | 11 ML I 11 K III II 11 MIkb Ethel Cone
were given in almost every paper in other crime which he urged them to wore also canned peanuts which had I Ml .1 III III IU III 1111 Miss Katy Parramore ....
the state and in tho South, and the diligently investigate and enforce, jl-een boiled and salted and there j I Wl U UVMIII UUUM.mIkh Pearl King
interest was intense when the theory The illegal sale of liquor was also were sausages and other things in. 'Mrs. W. A. Curtin
ef murder was advanced. discussed and he told them of Tho j that line. In fact the exhibit 1 ..... Lillie Mae Ri e . . ..
The Southern Home, was of course many horrtble disasters to which the! prised such a variety of things that | ^ Dl.NL MAN \\VS NKIM1Wi Mrs. Mattie Will Kirkland
•Placed l-n an embarrassing position combination of liquor and pistols it was hard to get the names of ev-
by the case, but no one for an Instant has led. ‘ erything. ...
attaches any blame to the house or, False swearing was also the «ub-j Miss Forrest states that the in-
Mr. Duren who conducts it. His ject of a forceful talk and it was . terest In the work has increased very'
friends will be delighted to know there that the foundation of the greatly from Its inception and more
that the murder theory has been ex- court was most seriously endanger-j and more of the girls of the
ploded and that such a crime, as *»t ed . Every phase of their work wasjty are^ going into it.
first believed was committed, did not ’ discussed in this connection,
occur either in his house
175,5751 were several drunken Congressmen seriously injured soldiers are today
170,600 aboard the spot Ini train, sent hy tho in Mobile hospitals, while a number
152,075 | government to the funeral of the late of the less seriously hurt were taken
137,325 Congressman Roddenbery. One was the government hospital at Fort
122,250 so debauched that a physician had Morgan.
117,075 to bo summoned as the train was' PhyaMang who arrived on the re-
116.675 I enroute. A Congressman guilty of ! lef . , ^J n sai(1 they feared that at
1 14,600 ! such debased conduct should be i
1 10.550 I j Kited h\ his self-resue< tng
10,325 ! sfituents to resign the ofTh-e he
9.100 ; di»-raced.” which was copied from
29,850 (|,e Fitzgerald Press, [ feel it my
6,250 j duty, as one of the officers of the
Kennedy .. .. 52,125 House of Representatives in charge
1 1,050: of the trip, to reply to this utterly
17,675 j false and unwarranted attack of the
90.600 Fitzgerald Press and respectfully ask
that you print the same.
As the party was hoarding ’he
train in Atlanta Depresontative Trib
ble slipped and fell on the steel
steps of the stairway leading down
to the errs, severely injuring his
arm and side. The train left im-
•u din’oU : fter lie boarded it and
: ofore lie realized the extent of his
injury. He suffered so much pt
enroute that It
head for ;
3 S.050
1 1.125 :
7,000
13.54 5
72.150 !
19.950 |
least fifteen among the injured could
estimation of the cause of
continued today. It is
believed to have resulted from *
derailing of the locomotive tender,
which dragged the baggage car and
three coaches off the track and over
:*o twpr.ty-^ve foot trestle.
The Injured r,.?,-> members of the
178th infantry, who were en route
from Forts Morgan and Parancas to
^tnto Fair it .Meridian. Missis
sippi.
Demi Bodies Carried to Mobile.
Mobile, Ala., Oct. 20.—Seventeen
bodies of United States soldiers from
tb ' wreck of the s' ecial Mobile and
Oh*o troop train, which was wrecked
■Pessary for yesterday afternoon near Buckan-
physician. On na . Mississippi, have been brought
An examina
J tion of the cans and jars snows <*v
In' The protection or the churches and erythinx very neatly and satlsfactor- |of , he „ M of tho Jud
Thomaavllle. schools and the law which prevents | ily done and the girls seem to tak-
Girl Was Dcmcnte.!. ! the sale or_the girt of Intoxicants, j great pride in the work
The yung woman »as apparently Pistols or cigarettes to minors was
The Judges of tills exhibit were! marked, the number
■SIMILAR CONTESTS TAKES. Mr , Kmlly ... .
FIRST FRIZE—AUBREY WERll; Mtfls Ellen Barrett
<>KTS SECOND I'RIZE. Mi S s Llxsle Hnrvey ...
1 ! Mrs. W. A. Cone
.... „ , ,, . ! Miss Ruth Williams ... .
nie result of the Hoys Corn tilth t , Benton
lonteHt this year was announced yea-’Miss Annie Bell Singletary
terday afternoon after a compilation ■ Miss Margaret B. Yates . . .
There I w I"* e Cheek
jnre four points on which they are)”™; £ „ s!ng?e°tary'!
. „ ! this account Mr. Tribble was unable hero. The last relief train reached
.47.77;j to leave tho train when wo arrived Mobile at 6:30 this morning,
4 9,3-^ , nt T hnm
24.000
at Thomasville, Representative How- Seventy-one persons are In hospi-
ard remaining on the tr: in with him tals here, and thirty were removed
the physician.
I am sure that there
61,800
79,775
| (umstanre which justified the Ure:
,),3.>0 an( j it give a prominent space
in making tho charge above quoted
in its next issue to a retraction of
this hasty and unwarranted accusa
tion.
Respectfully,
7 2.050
2,350
33.300
89,1 5*1
11.300
4 1,700
29,800
bushels ' M |„s r.rnce Newton 23,R0j
demonted. Her early school Ufo and touched on, nnd gambltng and other .Mrs. Z. 1. Fitzpatrick, Mrs. Willis counting thirty per cent., tho not’MIss Nancy Hargrave
the unusual amount of time (the crimes which directly result there-1 .Moore and Mrs J. t. I’nrkor profit from the acre, thirty per cent; Mrs. Ruby Jones ..
snent thereat, tho abnormal develon- fro" 1 called to the attention of their, Tn theCorn C.ub exhtuit the hojsj^ , vr „ |eii work connectcd wUh I JJ«iter D. Hines
ment of hw mlnd (n °a”rv Rfo Lnd minds and consciences, ns true and showed that they had not been be-l—' — . ‘jMIs. Lille Russell
u£^re^llxatton that could or wouM upright jurors . i hind the girls In their Interest and their efforts, twenty per cent, aod ■ rlny F „ lnllnc
not be able to attain the highest do- The charge was delivered tn about j ">e work they had done and there the exhibition or ten ears from their | Miss Carrie Sandford.
velopmcnt which she knew she was half an hour, after which the| was a line lot of corn on dlspaly. ncrP patch twenty per cent. (Leo Clark ••
capable of, probably brought on the Grand Jury returned to rommence J The corn crop tn Thomas county was Th( . hl „ he8t Dum | )er <>f bushels ^J 8S Mattie Um Yawp
melaacholla which caused her to their-work and the court went Into a good one :nN year and the cxfnntt (1 . nr t K , ... Miss Clara J. Datls, .
commltt suicide.
The brain of the young,
woe abnormal according to the
statement of the detective who
watched the operation. The brain
was closer to tho eyes than Is usual
and other features made' firm the
conviction that she was demonted.
Mr. Peace also stated that as lsusual
with people not normal moonlight
had Its share ot olfect, the combina
tion of her desire to end tt all and
the civil business, which la on the
woman week’s docket.
M SALOONS IN TENNESSEE
day. The prohibiting of liquor ship
ment became effective Immediately
.and the bill making n saloon a nul
the moonlight season bringing about : sance to he abated on the motion
the crisis which caused the end. lot ten citizens Is effective March 1.
CARD OF THANKS.
Nashville, Oct.
Hcerer today signed the prohibition .
uw enforcement hills, missed J' r,s t- r ' I the hoys to Improve their land by a
To all those people of Thomasvllle - hour of nffliction. wo extend many
who have endeared themselves to us j tunny thanks.
multiple kindnesses,'flowors, sympa-j Mr. and Mrs. Tltbs. H. Haug and
thy and deeds of love In our deep. daughter.
We Fit Glasses
Perfectly
DON'T OVERLOOK. '
The importance of having glasses
or spsctaclss that correctly fit the eyes.
Jobe careless on this respect often
brings on serious eye trouble.
Come here for any kind of lens
known to science. We’ll mount them
with or without rims of Go'd. or Gold-
Filled and adjust them perfectly to
your eyes.
nt ails by the boys shims it. I «’ns 91.2B by Ralph Newton: the. Evn n n nt
Xbls Is In charge of Mr. Oliver, | next highest wits S4.ti hy Aubrey I Miss Margaret JonM .. ..
Demonstrator for tile district. Mr. j Webb. The greatest net profit was i J. B. Imogen
Oliver stateR that in the district over,... , s . I Miss Rlssa Zangwlll ... .
which he has supervision there are l»5fi.3S by Ralph Newton and t^oj^ E<mh Tllttlfi
two thousand names enrolled as j hex! Jt.,91 by Aubrey Webb. Tnn Miss Gladys Atkinsnn ... .
r ,members of the corn clubs and the j best ten ears were shown by Her- j Miss Lilly Johnston (Grady
1 interest in the work Is constantly in- bert Shepherd, whose percentage out' countyl
reusing. His Idea 'now Is .o tearh| nf n „„„ , n „ r . .Miss Clarion Waterman. ..
Miss Leo Shepherd . .
, Mrs. L. O. Maxwell
i Miss A. L. Fleetwood ....
Isaiah McCormick ...
Jones
U mired. Second j pearl'Bow.nan
prize went to Aubrey Webb and this ( ^Tra. Lucy Cobb
Is a free trip to the corn show in At-1 Mrs. Kate Wilson ...
bints. His percentage of 86.9. Colored.
Third prize a seven dollar and a Lillie Smith ...
lnlf corn sheller to Elmo Duren. Georgia McLoud
Marv Raeklev
300
57.450
9,200
20,100
7.700
25.175
4.050
10,925
71.875
56,625
5,006
60.356
to the government hospital at Port
ir- Morgan, on the Government steam
er Holablrd. At least six of the in
jured, It is believed, will die.
The known dead are:
Privates Joe Leber, Ernest P®-*
quette, Clyde Tweel. W. H. Brin,
G. W. Goodes, Van Stebbens Gruld-
ruehlki, G. C. Burleson. Acres Ed
ward Paneka, Virgil Remson, Jos
eph Provance, A. T. Klovinsky. H. B.
Bishop, Weng, four unidentified.
Corporals Fritz Kohler, Frank T.
Chelowski, Joseph S. Johnson.
Ten Per Cent of Injured Will DftA,
Meridian. Miss.. Oct. 20.—All of
the victims of the troop train wreck
at Buchan na yesterday, hadn’t been
removed from the wreckage early
this morning. Passengers arriving
here from Buckanna said at three
o’clock they were certain they were
r.M60 j. more ''“d Iin ' 1 Injured than the llat
given out showed. Physicians
10.12
a possible twenty was 19.25.
nay. me proniDutng or liquor inn.-1 rotatlon 0 , eropa conalatlng of corn.i Orat prize, a scholarship ,
i cotton and onts and he wants to get the Agricultural school of the Sta
up to cultivating three acres university at Athens, was won 1
Ralph Newton
95 out of a po:
them
Instead of one. He is very inthusi-
?!«t|c over the work nnd there seems;
nothing in regard to it that, he does j
•ior know. j
Mr. P. 11. Ward, of Grady and Mr. '
B. W. Stone were the judges in this j
I contest. j
■I -
SOUTHERN CITIES THIS MORN*
A ACCORDING TO REPORTS j r j v j nK here from the scene of the
TODAi. | wrec k said they believed that ten
ft' r»©r cent, of the injured would die.
32,950; Atlanta, Oct. 20.—Thu earliest Most of the killed were badly man-
28,625 snow ever recorded w.-.n sum today gled, and arms, legs and heads were
8501 in many Southern cities. There scattered throughout the wreckage,
725 ‘were perceptible flurries in Atlanta, land it was almost impossible In some
300 i Birmingham, Knoxville, Chatta- instances to get the bodies together,
tnojnooga, Nashville, and Asheville. i The army discpllne came into vood
275 | In Atlanta, snow fell from mid-! service, immedlatey after the wreck
200'night to seven o’clock, but it melted |and the few left uninjured managed
100 I as soon as it reached the earth, and I to get their tents up to house the
25 none but the early risers saw it. j injured.
! The earliest previous snow fall The attending physicians believe
was in 1910, when snow was record- the death list wont be complete for
ed on October 2Sth, of that year, ‘several days yet.
Our Annual Sale Conies Soon.
Peacock - Alash
Drug Company
ExclusiveJOptical Dept.
Phones 105 - 106.
tin r rtnimfrf****-r-i
bins
Mrs. Vida
Eliza Ha*.
Charlotte E'ittli
Marv L. Willia
Leolu Fountain
Frank Delaney.
Thomas E.
Presidential
Augi sta, Ga., Oct. 20.
Watson, lawyer, publish
was at one time the
candidate of the People's Party, was I
today placed on trial in the Federal «,
ourt on the charge of sending ob
scene matter through the mails. !
Watson was arrest*d in the fall of
1912, on a warrant Issued on com-;
plaint of the Postoffice authorities.
Ho was given a hearing before Un-j,
ited States Commissioner W. H.
Godwin, and was bound over to the
Federal Grand Jury, which returned th>
an indictment November 12th.
Tho specific charge Is that Watson
published In his magazine, The Jef
fersonian. in July, 1911 and April
and May 1912, alleged questions
asked by Roman Catholic Priests to
persons in the Confessional The in
dictment alleges that these questions
are obscene. These questions ap
peared In a series of articles publish
ed in The Jeffersonian, attacking the
Roman Catholic Church, and espec
ially the priesthood of that chur.h.
That the case would not reach a
jury was the nredictlon made today
by Col 3. G. McLendon, the leading
attorney for the defense. He add
ed, however, that If the Government
wanted to go into the trial, he was
prepared to follow the same course.
In a statement issued early today,
Attorney McLendon said it was the
’Mirpose of the defense to avoid any
thing resembling a religious contro
versy, but they Intended to hold the
case to its meritv
When the esse was called by Judge
Foster. Attorney McLendon filed a
»>et!t!on requesting the government
to file a bill of particulars. This was
lone tn order to get before the court
the exact words of the alleged ob
jectionable articles
Fourth prize, five dollars to Harvey
Chastain. Fifth prize, pocket knife. Marv li
♦ o S. R. Robinson: sixth prize, six , Mrs. S.
pecan trees to Alva E. Martin. Her-, John It
bert Shepherd won five dollars for
le best ten ears exhibited.
It has been arranged so tba* each
oy who entered the club will gut
i small cash prize, this much having
been saved out of tin* amount do
nated for that purpose. There were
two entries whose corn had not
en Gathered. They wore John She.’-
:d nnd Claude Rei.liert. Rtihv Taylor
The Girls Cnnnln-. Club prizes i*. i. .Ta«*ksof
*re awarded as follows; Mrs. Win A
,, v , . , . Fannie Willi'
Graap Now-ton. first prize, si-liol- ,,„ n „ Wrv
ti p -strife Afrrletilturnl j. r p y
Athens.
nith. second prize, trij
Corn show.
7.69.)
9,050
134.675
32,17 5
1.5
Mile
Mac)
Lilly
Russell . . .
Anthony ...
Montgomery.
May Thomas
hip
Monroe, third prize
.-teel for
i The
; nothin': s
'girls ea
Jess!
suit.
Donia Reichert, fourth nrize, en:i- deserve
ning outfit. I work.
Della Hancoek, fifth prize, eappin
ijng purposes,
in this department was
of remarkable nnd the
I every one who enter-
great credit for the
The
m club percentag
! *
Memberr Yield 30^
Net I’rnf
JO' Writ.
Dept. 20 c
c Ex. 20
"i Total.
alph Newton .
91.26 bu.
355.3s, . .
. . 17. . .
. . . 18
.95
Aubrey Webb . .
. . S4.06
6 5.91
...IS
. 86.9
. Elmore Duren .
. .67.52
42.13 . .
. . 16...
. . . 18.5 .
.7:*
Harvey Chastain
. .84.
29.0').. .
. .18...
. . . 18.5 .
. 78.6
S. R. Robison
. .53.25
39.25. . /
. . IS...
. . .16.5 .
.73.8
Alva E. Martin .
. .77.38
26.6s,
. . IS. . .
... 16
.73.1
I.evkk Vann . .
. .57.58
37.68. . .
. .18...
...IS .
.73
Herbert Shepherd
. .65.22
24.88, . .
. . 18. . .
. . . 19.25
70.G
Wallace Hancock
. . 59.50
28.65. . .
. . 18. . .
. . .18
.70 j
Thomas Hough .
. . 59.9
25.45, . .
. . 17. .
. . . .15.5
..65 |
Dillard Gre^n
. .45
27.33. . .
. .18...
. . . 17.75.
.64.15 !
Thomas Logan . .
. .63.5
14 . . .
. .18. . .
. . .17.75.
.63.35 J
Lee Smith . . .
. .54.7
17.83. . .
. .18. . .
...17
.61.9
David Ferguson .
. .36.75
18.91. . .
. . 17. ..
. . .16.75.
.55.35 i
Herbert Moreland
. .31
16.90. . .
. .18...
...18.5 .
.55.2 1
Iva Hancock . .
. .23.61
10.01 . .. .
. .18...
...16.5 .
.50.5 j
Leonard Green .
. 25
7.35. . .
. .17...
...17.75.
.49.25
P*ul Green . . .
. 31
12.35. . .
. .11...
...16.5 .
41.3 j
A New and Complete Line
= of_
Prices from
$4.80 to $6.00
Ask to be shown our Red Cross
Shoes for ladies.
Louis Steyerman,
The Shop of Quality On the Comer.
MHGK&H£a»£BE&BH