Newspaper Page Text
Twenty-Eighth Year.}
Attractive People
Your clothes ought add
CJWfS* t 0 > OUr attraclions ; not by
1 b inff noticea *>le but by be
|jj? ing correct * ls you come to
Us and ask f° r Hart Schaff.
ner & Harx clothes you’ll
' u you want; it will
(' be corrcc t * n style, all-wool
ln qUaUty ’ and a!l ri 2 ht in
P'*ce. Look for the label—
- fIpST a small thing to look for, a
big thing to find.
Copyright 1906 by f
Hart Schaffner fcS 1 Marr
W. D. BAILEY
Arrow Brand Collars in Quarter Sizes
Forsyth St. and Cotton Ave. Americus, Ga.
Light on the Complexion
FRECKELRATOR
Is a deiightfully perfumed
perfectly harmless beau
tifier. It pleases everbody,
contains ro grease, causes
no hair to grow, removes
freckles permanently
cures pimples, purifiesthe
skin, makes you pretty;
cures rough kin. 25c.
REM BERT’S
DRUG STORE,
Next P. O
WARE & LELAND
Americus, Georgia.
New York, New Oileans. Chicago.
MEMBERS:
New York Cotton Exchange,
New Orleans Cotton Exchange,
Liverpool Cotton Association.
Chicago Board of i rade.
Chicago Stocs. Exchange,
New York C Exchange,
St. Louis Merchants Exchange.
Milwaukee Chamber of Commerce,
Private wires to principal points,
l ocal office !o4 Forsyth street, next door to
Cotton Avenue, Phone 21,
W. C. WIMBISH, Mgr.
Anti-Germine
A LIQUID
applied with a sprayer
Sure to Kill
Disease Germs, Bed Bugs, Moths, Fleas, Lice,
Roaches, Ants, mosquitoes, and a'l kinds
of insects germs.
ELORIDGE DRUG COMPANY
PHONES:—Jackson Street 33. Lamar Street 70. _
0 U BHWWriILD, C**h*«*»
Bank of Commerce,
AMERICUS, GEORGIA
THE AMERICUS TIMES-RECORDER.
WHYTE IS GIVEN
GORMAN’S PLACE
Political Foe of Dead Senator
Succeeds Him.
APPOINTMENT CAUSED COMMENT
V
Whyte Will Enter the United State*
Senate for the Third Time—He Hae
Also Been Governor of the State of
Maryland.
Baltimore, Md. t June 9. —Ex-Gover-
nor William Pinkney Whyte has been
appointed to till the unexpired term
of the late United States Senator
Arthur P. Gorman, whose death left
a vacancy in the federal congress.
The appointment of ex-Governor
Whyte by present Governor Warfield
has caused much comment on account
of the impression which is general
that Whyte was the bitterest enemy
of Senator Gorman.
Ex-Governor and ex-Senator Whyte
will enter the United States for the
third time, and for the second time by
appointment to fill an unexpired term,
he having been named by Governor
Swann to fill out the term of the late
Reverdy Johnson upon the appoint
ment of the later as United States
minister to England in 1868.
William Pinckney Whyte was born
in Baltimore August 9, 1824. He began
the study of law with a prominent law
firm, later entering Harvard law
school and he was admited to the bar
of Baltimore in 1846. In May, 1847,
he was elected to the house of dele
gates of the* Maryland legislature, this
being his first public office. He re
fused renomination for the legislature
in 1849, was defeated for congress in
1851, was elected comptroller of the
treasury of the state of Maryland in
1853, was again defeated for congress
in 1857, was a member of the Demo
cratic national convention in 1868 and
was in that year appointed by Gov
ernor Swann United States senator to
fill out the term of the late Reverdy
Johnson, appointed minister to Eng
land. In 1871 he was elected governor
of Maryland and in 1874 United States
senator.
He declined re-election as senator
in 1880, and in the following year was
elected mayor of Baltimore. In 1883
he became attorney general of Mary
land, and in 1889 was appointed by
President Harrison a delegate to the
congress of American nations, which
he declined. In 1898 he was made
chairman of the commission that pre
pared the new charter of the city of
Baltimore and in 1900 he became city
solicitor, that being his most recent
office. It is related that his first meet
ing with the late Senator Gorman,
whom he is to succeed, occurred in
1871, when the late senator called at
his office to tender Mr. Whyte his sup
port in the contest for the governor
ship of the state then in progress.
Gorky !a In Chicago.
Chicago, June 9. —Amid scenes of
wild enthusiasm, a Jewish audience oi
2,200 persons, many of them women
and girls, showered gold and silver
coins and paper money on the plat
form of the West Side auditorium, on
Center Avenue and Taylor street, in
response to an appeal of the Russian
refugee Gregory Gorky, for funds In
aid of the Russian revolutions. For
more than 20 minutes the showers of
money descended and rolled at the
feet of the visiting Russian. It took
a force of 20 collectors to gather up
the coins. The count of the money
was rot completed until after midnight
and it was said to foot up a handsome
amount, augmenting considerably the
fund of SS,OOO that Mr. Maxim has col
lected during the two months of his
speech-making tour in this country.
Bookmal er Fined SSOO.
Kansas City, June 9.—ln the crim
inal court here, Charles Oldham, a
bookmaker, wa sconvicted of violating
the law passed by the last Missouri
legislature prohibiting the registering
or recording of bets on a horse race,
and was fined SSOO. He immediately
took an appeal. Dr. J S. Gardner,
president of the Elm Ridge Jockey
club, of Kansas City, at whose track
the races were run in order to test
the law, and who was indicted jointly
with Oldham, was found not guilty.
The judge instructed the jury to dis
charge Gardner on the ground that the
law does not prohibit horse racing nor
betting on horses, but simply probihits
the registering or recording of bets.
A Square Deal
Is assured you when you buy one of Dr.
Pierce’s family medicines—for all the in
gredients entering into them are printed
on the bottle-wrappers and their formula
are attested under oath as being complete
and correct. You Jmow just what you are
paying for and that the ingredients are
gathered from Nature’s laboratory, being
selected from the most valuable native
medicinal roots found growing in our
American forests and while potent to cure
are perfectly harmless even to the most
delicate women and children. Not a drop
of fflcohol enters into their composition.
A much better agent is used both for ex
tracting and preserving the medicinal
principles used in them, viz.—pure triple
refined glycerine. This agent possesses
intrinsic medicinal properties of its own,
being a most valuable anti-septic and anti
ferment, nutritive and soothing demul
cent.
Glycerine plays an important part in
Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery in
the cure of indigestion, dyspepsia and
weak stomach, attended by sour risings,
heart-burn, foul breath, coated tongue,
poor appetite, gnawing feeling in stom
ach, biliousness and kindred derange
ments of the stomach, liver and bowels.
Besides curing all the above distressing
ailments, the "Golden Medical Discovery”
is a specific for all diseases of the mucous
membranes, as catarrh, whether of the
nasal passages or of the stomach, bowels
or pelvic organs. Even in its ulcerative
stages it will yield to this sovereign rem
edy if its use be persevered in. In Chronic
Catarrh of the Nasal passages, it is well,
while taking the "Golden Medical Dis
covery” for the necessary constitutional
treatment, to cleanse the passages freely
two or three times a day with Dr. Sage’s
Catarrh Remedy. This thorough course
of treatment generally cures the worst
cases. - . . .
In coughs and hoarseness caused by bron
chial, throat and lung affections, except con
sumption in its advanced stages, the "Golden
Medical Discovery” is a most efficient rem
edy, especially in those obstinate, hang-on
coughs caused by irritation and congestion of
the bronchial mucous membranes. The " Dis
covery " is not so good for acute coughs aris
ing from sudden colds, nor must it be ex
pected to cure consumption in its advanced
stages—no medicine will do that—but for all
the obstinate, chronic coughs, which, if neg
lected, or badly treated, lead up to consump
tion. it Is the best medicine that can be taken.
AMERICUS, GA., SUNDAY MORNING, JUNE 10. IVO6.
“I STAND PAT,”
SAYS ELLERBEE
South Carolina Congressman
Talks About Cotton Report.
JORDAN ISSUES STATEMENT.
Ellerbee Says Charges Were Not In
spired by Harvie Jordan, and That
They Were Made Because He Can
Sustain Them.
Washington, June 9. —Representa-
tive Ellerbee says that he proposes
to stand pat on the resolution intro
duced by him charging the manipu
lation of the cotton acreage. An at
tempt has been made to discredit him
by the statement that the idea was
inspired by Mr. Harvie Jordan in an
effort to bulldoze the department of
agriculture. -
“As a matter of fact,” continued Mr.
Ellerbee, “Mr. Jordan w r as not con
sulted one way or the other before
the introduction or my resolution. He
was not in the city and knew nothing
whatever concerning my intentions in
the matter. What I said at the time
I introduced my resolution I adhere to,
and I have not been to the white
house in regard to the matter and I
have no intention of discussing the
subject with President Roosevelt. My
views were celarly set forth at the
time I introduced the resolution in
the house, and any assertion made I
am prepared to substantiate at the
proper time and place. But I do not
think it incumbent upon me to call at
the white house with anybody, for the
reason that it has not been indicated
to me that such a course will be nec
essary.
“My sources of information were
sufficiently satisfactory, in my judg
ment, to justify me in taking the
course that I did and my aim was ac
complished when I brought the matter
to the attention of congress and guar
anteed my ability to substantiate every
statement contained in my preamble
and resolution.”
Statement by'Harvi*© Jordan.
Washington, June 9.—President
Harvie Jordan, of the Southern Cot
ton association, has made the follow
ing statement:
“In view of the present misinterpre
tation of my position on prices of spot
! cotton which has been given general
circulation in the press during the past
few days, that I have advised farmers
I or others to sell kpot cotton for future
delivery or to deal in cotton futures at
all. My position in favor of higher
prices is unchanged, and will continue
so long as present splendid trade con
ditions last, and no probability of ab
normally large crops being produced”
Continue Investigation.
Newcastle on Tyrne, June 9. —Mem-
bers of the municipal ownership com
mittee of the National Civic Federa
tion of the United States Friday con
tinued their investigations of munici
pal and private enterprises and espe
cally means of providing electricity.
They visited various works in this city
and on the Tyne, receiving much valu
able information. They will go to
Manchester tomorrow. The commis
sion is strictly adhering to the resolu
tions adopted at the beginning of the
trip not to express any opinions form
ed from observations ki the various
cities of Great Britain. Necessarily,
there will be a great diversity of opin
ion on details, and the commissioners
are not willing to express themselves
until they have fully digested all the
information obtainable in this country.
They speak enthusiastically of the roy
al treatment they are receiving on all
hands.
Defeats American Yacht.
New York, June 9. —A dispatch
from Hamilton, Bermuda, says that
the visiting New York yachtsmen
were very pleasantly entertained in a
regatta Friday. In a race of 45
miles, the 35-foot Bermuda yacht
Dante, won, defeating the American
yacht Tamerlane, which won the race
from New York.
Men Were Caught in Ruins.
Pittsburg, June 9. —A lO,OOD-gallon
water tank crashed down through the
three-story brick building at 537-545
Liberty street, causing the rear
wall to fall out and injuring seven per
sons so badly that they had to be
take to hospitals. The crash came
with a few moments of warning, which
acounts for the smal llist of injured.
Americans Leaving Mexico.
Bisbee, Ariz., June 9. —As a result
. of the strike at Oananea, Mexico,
| mines of Colonel W. E. Greene, last
I week, the American miners in the
camp will be very few in number in
the future, it is believed. They are
crossing the line now in droves, and
several hundred have arrived in Bis
bee during the last 48 hours.
216-Foot Wireless Mast.
San Francisco, June 9.—A 216-foot
; mast has been erected on Russian Hill
j by a local wireless telegraph compa
ny. It will be used as a station in
this city to connect with a branch of
the same system in Colorado, connect
ing this coast with the east by wire
less telegraph.
Negro Lynched Despite Troops.
Ocala, Fla., June 9.—JJim Davis,
alias “Dago,” the negro who murdered
| Mr. Russel and his negro servant at
Felicia, Tuesday, was lynched at In
verness by a large party of masked
men. The soldiers sent from Brook-3-
Ville to protect him arrived too late.
Broke Arm While Buttoning Dress.
St. Louis, June 9. —Miss Annte
Weisenbaum, a prominent young so
ciety woman of Ellaville, 111., while
dressing for a party broke her left
arm while trying to button her shirt
waist up the back. A physician put
the arm In a splint.
)
Will Sail for New York,
i Washington, June 9.—Mr. Nabuco,
the Brazilian ambassador, will sail
from New York for Rio Janeiro, via
Southampton, on June 15. He is one
of the Brazilian delegates to the third
Pan-American conference.
NINE DROWNED
DURING HEAVY STORM
Several Persons Perish While
Crossing River.
IT SWEPT NEAR NIAGARA FALLS
Around Race Track at Hamilton, On
tario, the Wind Reached Proportions
of a Cyclone, and Spectators at the
Races Laid on the Ground.
Detroit, Mich., June 9. —A report
has just reached police headquarters
that during the height of a heavy
storm which swept over Detroit early
Friday evening, a youjig boy was
blown of# the Belle Isle bridge and
drown while a crowd wos on their
way across the river to a resort in
Canada.
a resort in Canada.
Trees are down all over the city
and much damage has been caused to
wires and telephones. No one has ds
yet been reported as seriously injured
In this city.
Cyclone at the Race Track.
Buffalo, N. Y„ June 9. —A terrific
wind and rain storm swept over the
country between Hamilton and Niag
ara Falls, Ontario, late Friday after-,
noon. All direct communication be
tween this city and Hamilton and To
ronto was cut off for several hours.
It was reported that the wind storm
reached the proportions of a cyclone
around the race track at Hamilton.
The horses were parading past the
stand for the race when the
storm came up.
They were sent back to the paddock
and everybody sought shelter.
The skies were overcast with heavy
clouds and the wind tore over the
course at the rate of 75 to 80 miles
an hour.
Many of the crowd ran to the infield
where they laid flat on the ground to
avoid being struck by flying debris.
The rain fell in torrents. It w r as all
over in 20 minutes and racing was
resumed. So far as known no lives
were lost.
Will Graduate with Honors.
New York, June 9.—A special to
the American from West Point, N. Y.,
says that it was learned Friday that
to Cadet Herald S. Hetrick, of Connec
ticut will fall the much coveted honor
next Tuesday of being graduated at
the head of his class at the United
States military academy. Hetrick
is a member of the cadet commitee
on athletics, is editor-in-chief of the
class annual, the Howitzer, and is
lieutenant of company B. A year ago
he stood second in his class. His
name and those of the next four men
in the class will be attached in the
army register as the name of the most
distinguished members of the class of
1906. Besides Hetrick, the other four
to break into the “distinguished” quin
tet are W. A. Johnson, of New York;
James J. Loving, of Arkansas; Fred
erick B. Downing, of Virginia, and Ed
mund L. Daley, of Massachusetts. All
four rank in the order named.
An Epileptic Dies in River.
Savannh, Ga., June 9.—Harold Mc-
Donnell, a 19-year-old son of Mr. and
Mrs. J. F. McDonnel, was drowned in
the Savannah river. He went in
swimming with a number of friends
and was seized with an epileptic fit.
He sank immediately. His body was
recovered in about an hour. Mc-
Donnel had created excitement at va
rious places by having fits. He was
nearly drowned at Isle of Hope when
attacked by one and was almost kill
ed while the city hall was under con
struction, beng saved by a friend who
saw him about to fall from the cupola.
In public places he had away of
creating excitement by having a fit.
Made Inquiries of Root.
Washington, June 9. —Mr. Bermu
dez, the Uruguayan charge, called on
Secreary Root and inquired whether
Luis Melan Laginur, whose name is
under consideration for appointment
as Uruguayan minister to this coun
try, will be accpetable to the United
States. Mr. Lafinur is one of the most
prominent lawyers in Montevideo and
an author of note.
Judge Parker Admited to Practice.
New York, June 9. —Former Judge
Alton B. Parker and his law partner,
ex-Judge Edward H. Hatch, were for
mally admitted to practice in the U.
S. circuit court Friday. Neither had
appeared before as an attorney in the
federal courts of this district, but
both were qualified to do so as mem
bers of the supreme court of New
York.
Christian Scientists in Boston.
Boston, June 9. —The vanguard of
more than 1,000 Christian scientists
who will atteifd in the new Christian
Science temple here Sunday, arrived
in the city last night. They came on
eight special trains from the west.
Named by President.
Washington, June 9. —The presi
dent Saturday sent to the senate the
following nomination of George Du
relle to be United States attorney for
the Western district of Kentucky.
Guests of Ambassador Tower.
Bad Klssingee, Bavaria, June 9.
Assistant Secretary Adee and Consul
General and Mrs. Thackerin, of Berlin,
arrived here Saturday. They are the
guests of Ambassador Tower.
i
Miss Sutton Defeated.
Liverpool, June 9. —In the final
rounds of the women’s singles, Miss
Douglass beat Miss May Sutton, of
California, 7-5, 6-2. This robs the
American of the northern counties la
dies’ championship.
"JT TT WJT , Perhaps your mother has thin hair!
r — NtH/'flV But that is no reason why you must
A. A(4 /(W /%M JL. ii// go through life with half-starved
4 J hair. If you want long, thick, heavy
hair, you must feed it. Feed it with a regular hair-food —Ayer’s Hair Vigor.
Well-fed hair stops falling out, keeps soft smooth, and grows long and
heavy. Feed your starving hair with Ayer’s Hair Vigor! Low<n£ e .M°°-’
FOLEY’S
HONEYmTAR
The original
LAXATIVE cough remedy.
For coughs, colds, throat and lung
troubles. No opiates. Non-alcoholic.
Good for everybody. Sold everywhere.
The genuine
FOLEY'S HONEY and TAR is in
a Yellow package. Refuse substitute*.
Prepared only by
Foley A Company, Chicago.
F. M. M’LAUGHLIN « CO.
Nasal
CATARRH
In all its stages there aCL*!,- 0( o(n\ JjtftD §
should be cleanliness. ffj’AY-FEVZR
Ely’s Cream Balm jp*
cleanses, soothes and heals C 'V * a
the diseased membrane.
It cures catarrh and drives J? r\\
away a cold in the head »V Iji.iia jk
quickly.
Cream Balm is placed Into the nostrils, spreads
over the membrane and is absorbed. Relief is im
mediate and a cure follows. It is not drying—does
not produce sneezing. Large Size, 50 cents at Drug
gists or by mail; Trial Size, 10 cents by mail.
ELY BROTHERS. 50 Warren Street. New York.
“PARKER’S
HAS 3 BALSAM
[Cleanses anil beautifies the hair.
■*" wjti Promotes a luxuriant growth.
Never Fails to Restore G>ay
Hair to its Youthful Color.
f-Yv-NAX.-'t «C«C3 Cures scalp diseases & hair falling.
_so(nan^£hooa^^ruggist^^^
THOMPSON DIES OF WOUND.
Special Officer Reese, Who Shot Him,
Under Arrest.
Atlanta, June 9.—Sam Thompson,
aged 23 years, died Friday at the hos
pital as a result of a bullet wound in
the left side received Wednesday
night.
The shot that killed Thompson was
fired by J. T. Reese, a special police
officer at the Fulton Bag and Cotton
mills, called at 56 Wyman street to
arrest Thompson, who had been ter
rorizing the neighborhood with threats
and curses, and was at the time lying
In the steps of the house in an intox
icated condition.
The officer proceeded to arrest
Thompson, who pulled what was sup
posed to have been a billy from his
hip pocket and hit the officer a hard
blow on the head. The officer pro
duced his pistol and the two had a
hard light for the possession of it.
Thompson, who was much the larg
er of the two men, began to get the
best of the fray, and produced a
knife. The officer then fired.
Coroner Thompson investigated the
circumstances and stated that it was
out of his jurisdiction to handle the
case Thursday night Chief Jennings
ordered Officers Hulsey and Hood to
investigate the circumstances of the
case, and they rendered a report that
Officer Reese was justifiable in shoot
ing Thompson in self-defense.
Officer Reese has been arrested and
will have to stand trial before Justice
Cook. It is generally thought he
will be acquitted.
Statute of Washington.
New York, June 9. —A heroic eques
trian statue of George Washington will
be unveiled next Saturday at Brooklyn
end of the new Williamsburg bridge
and be formally presented to the city
of Brooklyn by James F. Howe. City
officials, members of military organi
zations and officials from Washington
will be present. The statue was cast
in eight pieces and is said to have
cost $50,000. It is 18 feet high, weighs
seven and a half tons and will be
mounted on a granite pedestal 18 feet
high. The statue represents him in
continental uniform as he appeared at
Valley Forge.
En Route for San Jose.
New Yorklc, June 9. —A cable dis
patch to the Herald from Panama
says that the cruiser Marblehead, an
chored in this port, got urgent sea or
ders at 2 o’clock Friday and after tak
ing on a quantity of supplies, sailed
Friday night. No information was
given out as to the cruiser’s destTha
tiou, but it is thought she will pro
ceed to San Jose, Guatemala, to pro
tect American residents of that city
in the event of fighting and to capture
the empire, the American ship now
being used by the revolutionists.
Want Information Made Public.
Washington, June 9. —Representa-
tive Fulkerson, of Missouri, has intro
duced a resolution calling on the pres
ident and department of agriculture,
to make public any and all informa
tion from any source, that will tend
to cred j 1 or discredit any plant where
meat products are prepared. The res
olution also calls on the secretary
of agriculture to immediately give the
public his opinion of the sanitary con
dition of the plants and the health
fulness of the products coming from
the various plants.
Eight Victims of Heat in Chicago.
Chicago, June 9. —Although Friday
was appreciably cooler than the pre
ceeding day, the heat was given as a
contributing cause to eight deaths re
ported in Chicago. In addition there
were several prostrations. The tem
perature had a maximum of 81 de
grees and there was a rainfall of .11
of an inch. The wind atained a ve
locity of 40 miles an hour from the
southwest. The cumulative effect of
the last three days of warm weather
was the chief element in the deaths.
Brigadier General Dead.
Pasadena, Calif., June 9.—Briga
dier General Charles Alden, U. S. A.,
retired, is dead at his home here at
the age of 70 years.
| Stylish Outing Suits. 1
I The popular “two piece’’ models, fn single I
and double breasted shapes. Not a detail of
correct fashion is lacking, and thefabrics areall
exclusive patterns. Coats quarter lined. Trous
ers made with a “turn up” bottom finish, and
belt loop?. *
$12.50 to $25. I
Odd Trousers. I
This is the time of the year when we sell
more odd trousers than any season Most men
want an extra pair pants to wear with a light
summer coat, also for changing from the regu
lar heavier suits. This trouser stock of ours is
filled with choice designs, wed tailored, perfect i
fitting, correct weights, =trousers that wear,
$2.00 to $7.50 Per Pair. I
Negligee Shirts. I
Thiswarm weather should force you to defer no
longer the buying of Negligee shirts, We have
always been leaders in this line and this season
our immense assortment of the famous
“ECLIPSE SHIRTS” which are known from
ocean to ocean surpass any previous season in
our history
$( and $1.50 Each. |
Then we have the widely known “PRINCE
LY,” and “GARLAND.” two of the best
known and mod popular shirts i i the country.
50c and 75c Each. I
Hot Weather Underwear. I
Nainsook Elastic Seam Drawers and Undershirts,
All the popular siz s-extraordinary value 50c
Balbriggan Shirts aud Drawers, the best
values ever shown in Americus, All the popu
lar sizes 50c Each. I
CHAS. L. ANBLEY,
Successor to Wheatley & Ansley
See Ad on Fourth Page.
J. S. McREE & CO.
Both Phenes 276; AMERICUS, GA.
BROKERS Cotton, Stocks, Gram and Provisions.
) Leading Exchanges, with Private
MEMBERS >• Wires to New York, New Orleans,
) Chicago.
CORRESPONDENTS: MILLER & CO.,
MEMBERS with
I N. Y. Stock Exchange Home Offices in
N. Y. Cotton Exchange _
N. Y. Coffee Exchange oSew York, New Orleans, Chicago. I
N. 0. Cotton Exchange
Chicago Board of Trade Facilities for Prompt Service
Liverpool Cotton Ass’c Unexcelled.
Fine Cutlery
we have the finest line of
CUTLERY
, in Americus.
POCKET KNIVES in new designs and new ideas.
SCISSORS, the best in the world.
RAZORS, in regular styles, a'so the Star and Gillette Safety,
TABLE CUTLERY of all kinds. Prices Eight?
James Flicker & Bro.
JEWELERS,
Phone 280 - Americus, Qa.
Picnic Season is Here and
SPARKS’ STORE
Is the place to fill your Dinner Basket with the best. The
finest Canned Meats, Crackers, Cakes, Pickles, Preserves
Olives, Sfled Dressing, Catsups; in fact everything needed
for the Picnic Dinner. Call or phone us your orders.
Sparks’ Store, F T“
WALL PAPER.
House Painting, Graining, Hard Wood Finish
ing, Fltors Polished, Interior Decorating,
Jas. F. Butler.
316 Jackson Street, - Americus Ga.
No. 31