Newspaper Page Text
Special Sales
—AT —
At o' ; •» i -i tl* ?1 25, l’lack voil, all wool 50 inches wide.
A* 5 ' <»-lh ldc yd., Printed Organdies, beautiful patterns.
At 2 e v. •'i 1 33 1-3. Ladies black lace hose. Lisle thread.
At 5c worth ] 2/6, Mens collars Mantling and turn down.
At 0 5c worth 50c, Lmbroidery banos 10 inches wide, pretty patterns.
At 29c worth 50’, 36 inch Lingerie cloth silk finish very sheer.
.. At 20 dozen worth sc, pearl buttons in three of the most popular s*zes.
\t 5c dozen worth pic, pure whi e pearl butt >ns all sizes.
At 10c yard worth | l l / 2 and 15, all silk ribbons, bfack, white and colored.
At 10c worth 25c Ladles turn overs made of very fine lawn, embroidered.
At 9c box worth 15c, Amour glycerine toile s nap, box three cakes.
At lQc worth 15, t9x jt> Inch Turkish towels, plain, white and colored borders.
At 1 t l / 2 c w'orth 20c, pi low cases made of good quality muslin, full size.
At 69c worth 50, Embroidery edging, 18 inches wide beautiful colors
At 9 3“4 C w-rth 12 1-2 Dre*s ginghams, fast colors and beautiful patterns
At 12 l-2c worth 2\ Ladies w ash belts, silk embroidered back.
At 23c worth 25 to 35, Childrens perfection waists, summer weight
At 10c worth 211 to 25, remnants of white madras, 3 yard lengths,
At 10c w <rth 15, White Persian lawn regular width (none sold to merchants.)
At 50c worth 75c, $1 and $1.25, odd lot of men’s madras shirts ail sizes.
At 50c worth 75, the genuine Scriven knee drawers, all sizes.
At 10c worth 25, Men’s white four-in-hand ties of madras, white and colored.
At 35c worth 50, white linen lawn, yard wide every thread guaranteed linen.
At 95c worth $3, Ladies white parasols, full size, plain and hemstitched.
At 23c worte 35 boys shirts made of percals and madras, all sizes.
At 25c worth 50, men’s suspenders, plenty of them, all silk plaited buckles.
At 2c worth sc, envelopes full XXX 6 1-4. packages of 25 for 2c.
At $1.25 wort*' £2.50, Ladies low cut shoes, mostly small sizes all styles
At 98c worth $1.23, Ladies and men’s umb ellas of twilled silk and steel rods.
At 85c dozen, worth 10c each, men’s hemstitched handkerchiefs of fine lawn
DUNCAN MERCANTILE CO,
*
s*s and t»7 Forsyth Street John k. Shaw’s Old Stano.
'ln After Life
is founded Uj. on what yoi s.ave
while young, whether you become
a busim aa man or woman, or enter
npoi: a professional career.
Without monej there can be no
Sr< (’h>S—what are 3 our chances?
Our Savings Department extends
a helping hand to you—it will keep
your savings safely, and increase
them with I per cent interest.
Why not start the account at
once!
The Planters Bankof flmericus
•SB*®®'"
ilUtbe
yBbIC'CLW
bTTcspoKds
WitlyYoxif
HOWARD
,W^TCH'
(itjs’accurate)
f 0 fi | lusaplelsureYo know that
I ' l4 the*right time to'
nd, but Vi ispos
and has been so
(Howard!
w Watch'
»in W 42
pßlctsy
J155J0 $l5O
rg in .diuMmcM, inj nun**]
iirsrly
S end,!o'?,
I LfiERT. HUBBARDS book
oiv HOWARDWAICHES!
• entitled WATCH ‘WISDOM
We a fine line of How
ard, ns well as all other makes
Watches. Largest'
sfocL in Southwest Ceot^rfa.
i’rices right.
& MU.
Watch Inspectors, Fifth
division, S. A.-L. Ry. Atner
icus, Georgia.
®*sy ":5
d , «ch.r«w. | L-- I ' ce r a , ionl
irritations *J r _JL fll h ran ««
of in uco u s I*l*l ««trtn*
Painlesn. » nd not aBl
gent or poiootiouw
sold hr
SaEtess*.
t 4
FOR SALE.
7 Room house, with barn, cribs,
e*c., Store house, 5 acres of land.
On one , f the best, streets, mm
place f«»r l’incking ami dairy. A
pleasant homo.
450 acres, 1 room house, 3 liorse
farm open, running water, $0 acre.
200 acres, ’evel laud, one 3 room
and one 4 room house with barns,
cribs, $8 acre.
Tluee 4 room houses (new) large
lots, rented to prompt paying ten
ants at S3O 00 month, only $l,lOO,
each. S3OO cash, balance 15
months 6 per cent. Cheaper than
paytng tent,. Street, cars will ran
near this property.
10 Room house centrally located
rented to reliable tenants for $360.
Price $3,250. This is a safe place
for yonr idle money.
New 5 room house with bath,
large lot; rent, slß'*, price $1,750.
Safe investment.
P B Williford.
103 Cotton Ave.
-(is-'"" 'A
Fancy Cattle
supply all the beef we handle. That
is why our beef is so much choicer
than the ordinary. We follow the
same practice with
All Our Meats.
Our lamb, mutton, veal, pork,
etc come from fclie stock of the
highest grade. So if you trade
here you get the best the market
affords. It's just as easy, too.
Our prices are no higher thin
much poor meat is sold for.
"SHERLOCK & CO.
VhONE No. 32.
D. M. MAYO,
Expert Bricklayer and
Contractor. Estimates
made on brick and con
crete,
Cemeter? Work a Specialty.
BIT HIMSELF OUT OF JAIL.
Prisoner Wears Out Teeth Gnawing
Through Wooden Bars.
The police have captured a man
named Schaarschmidt, who escaped
from the Cera jail, in Germany, three
weeks ago. The manner of his flight
makes one of the most remarkable of
all of those told in the romances of
prison heroes.
Crossing the one window of his cell
within was an oak beam 7 by 7 inches
square. Outside of the window' was
another beam, nine inches thick. These
were his only bars besides the massive
masonry of the building— that Is to
say, there were no metal bars between
these wooden harriers.
But the wood, toughened by age, was
enough to make any prisoner without
tools despair. Schaarschmidt had not
even the metal shank from his shoes
to make a saw' of, for lie had only felt
slippers in his dungeon.
He got to work with his teeth, how
ever, upon the inside beam. It took
him three months to gnaw through
tlris formidable harrier. He could only
work when he was certain that his
guards were out of sight and hearing.
Before their expected return he always
covered up the ravages his teeth had
made with a structure of brown bread,
saved from his rations. This bread
patch closely resembled the color of
the wood, and as his work progressed
it had to be handled with extreme care
to prevent its crumbling and betraying
him.
Schaarschmidt spent seven months
in the same patient toil, gnawing like
a rat through the outer bar. One night
he judged that the apertures were
large enough, and he squeezed through.
The space was so small and the sixteen
inches of jagged ends of the beam
were so tough that he tore his body
frightfully.
When he was caught, the prison sur
geons who examined him found that
he had worn his teeth down to stumps.
His jaws were developed abnormally
iy his superhuman exertions to win
his way to liberty.
Notice to Public.
I will be absent from niy place of
business until September 10th.
14-2 t. MISS ROEBUCK.
Your Own Body.
Think deliberately of the house you
live in—your body. Make up your
mind not to abuse it Eat nothing
that will hurt it; wear nothing that
distorts or pains It. Do not overload
it with victuals or drink or work.
Give yourself regular and abundant
sleep. Keep your body warmly clad.
At the first signal of danger from any
of the thousand enemies that surround
you defend yourself. Do not take cold;
guard yourself against it. If you feel
the first symptoms, give yourself hero
ic treatment Get into a line glow of
heat by exercise. This is the only
body you will ever have In this world.
A large share of pleasure and pain of
life will come through the use you
make of it Study deeply and diligent
ly the structure of it, the laws that
should govern it, the pains and penal
ties that will surely follow a violation
of every law of life or health.
“Everybody Should Know’ 4
says C. G. Hays, a prominent busi
ness man of Bluff, Mo., that Buckler's
Arnica Salve is the quickest and sur
est healing salve ever applied to ' a
sore, burn or wound, or to a case
of plies. I've used it and know what
I'm talking about.” Guaranteed |Lv
Eldridge Drug Co., 25c. vim.
IDA TARBEII
NOW REJOICES
Hopes Oil Trust Wil Be Forc
ed to Pay Bio Fine.
RtSILT OF A 35-YEAR FIGHT
Says Standard Oil Magnates Have Al
ways Thought They Were Strong
er Than the Government-Thinks
John D. Rockefeller is a
Fanatic.
(From the New York Press.)
“The day of the Standard Oil Com
pany in its old form is vore. It
must either conform now to justice
and fair dealing or it willfallutterly.
1 don’t mean that its day is over
this year or will he over next year,
but it is as surely ended as right is
right.”
Miss Ida M. Tarbell, in an inter
view to the World last night,
thus expressed her satisfaction at the
assessment of the $29,000,000 fine on
the Oil Trust by Judge Landis. Miss
Tarbell is regarded as the greatest
authority on the workings of the
Oil Trust.
“After 35 years of such practice as
the Standard Oil Company has been
found guilty of,” said Miss Tarbell,
“it is entirely just that, after convic
tion, the maximum punishment should
be imposed. I am only sorry that
the punishment cannot be something
more than a fine.
35 Years of “Investigation.”
“It was just 35 years ago that the
United States Government had to in
vestigate the Standard Oil Company
for its illegal contracts with rail
roads. The State of Pennsylvania
arose in what was almost a revolu
tion against the Standard's practices.
Pennsylvania, Ohio and New York in
the 70s passed laws to iry to stop
the trust’s drawbacks and rebates
which it was receiving.
“It was very largely the rebating
of the Standard Oil Company that
led to the passage of the Interstate
Commerce Act in 1887. In Ohio the
Standard violated the laws until the
State ordered it to be disbanded.
“1 do not believe that there is a
single year in the whole 35 in which
some State or the United States has
not had some suit on against the
trust, and in the last 15 years a doz
en States have been trying to pass
laws to force it to decency and fair
ness.
“Individualism Gone Mad.”
“The difficulty with the men in the
Standard Oil Company seems to be
that they have no sense that the pub
lic has any part in the conduct of
corporations. They utterly lack the
collective sense.. It is individualism
gone mad—reduced to an absurdity.
“it is rather interesting to notice
that they put out now the same sort
ofaggrieved message to the public
that they always have given out
when they have been caught break
ing laws. They always point to the
great number of men they employ,
to the large amount of money which
they bring into the country and to
the immense sum spent in various
charitable and educational under
takings, with the inference that it
is impossible for such good men
to he guilty of such offenses as
those with which they are charged.
“it seems never to occur to them
that this is something the public can
see through, and that nobody would
sympathize with them when they
complain, even if they were not
guilty.
Trying to Make Trust “Play Fair.”
“The point is that the public for
35 years has been trying to make
the Standard Oil Company play fair.
It has given the trust repeated
warnings in the way of public up
risings, the passage of laws and
adverse decisions. But every time
the trust has snapped its fingers
and gone on in the same old way.
“it is a sort of insolence which a
people would be a very supine to tol
erate indefinitely. It is being demon
strated clearly that the American
people do not propose to endure it
any longer. The Standard Oil men
are not only insolent, but they are
stupid as well, and show that they
entirely misunderstand the power of
public opinion and the genuineness
of the public’s sense of fair play.
“They have had every chance to
readjust their business and conduct
it as gentlemen should, and all they
have ever done, after a public ex
plosion, is to readjust it so they
could carry on their same old prac
tices in a new line.
Alleged Spy System.
“It is not merely taking illegal
rates— the misdemeanor of which
they were convicted in Chicago—
that the public has against them.
Their methods of competition are
perfectly well known in all parts of
the country. There are hundreds
of towns in which their citizens have
seen these methods in operation.
They have a spy system which
they apply to shipments of indepen
dents which would do credit to the
robber barons of the Middle Ages.
“They have no pride in the quality
of their product, but always give as
poor a grade as they can work off
on the public. The oil sold in the
Southwest at high prices is of the
very poorest quality, as it is every
where that the public has not been
educated up to the higher grades.
“Commissioner Herbert Knox
Smith charges them with persistent
ly underweighing and undermeasur
ing. This is one of the oldest
charges made against tjie Standard,
but it has been one very difficult to
prove, and I hope that Commissioner
Smith will be able to show good
evidence on this point,
lulls Rockefeller A “Fanatic.”
“Mr. Rockefeller never has taken
BOND ISSUE IS THE ISSUE
For Determination at the Polls Tomorrow
Election Will Be Most Important One-Committee of Citizens Presents the
Issue Fully to the Voters.
Tomorrow the voters of Sumter will
determine the issue of SIOO,OOO of
bonds for public improvements, and
the election, a; might be expected,
will be one of the most important ever
held in the county. Greatest inter
est is manifested upon all sides as
to the result, as much depends there
upon.
Sixteen hundred and six voters are
registered and qualified to vote upon
this important question.
In Americus the voting will be done
at the county eourthouse, while at
many of the country precincts as well
the ))olls will he opened. A heavy
vote is generally expected.
A committee of citizens of town
and county have issued the following
circular letter regarding the proposed
bond issue, stating for what purpose
the proceeds will be used. Here is
the letter in full.
Citizens of Sumter County.
“On Thursday, August 15th, the
qualified voters of Sumter County
will have an opportunity of perform
ing an act of patriotism that can but
he of incalculable and lasting benefit
for their county, and it is inconceiv
able that any' good citizen can oppose
the issue of bonds which the interests,
and really, the condition of our Coun
ty affairs demand.
$50,000 to pay for the Agricultural
College.
$50,000 to improve our County
roads.
“While it is an indisputable fact,
that both of these enterprises, more
especially, contemplate a benefit to
the County, they are incidentally a
benefit to the City of Americus, and
every voter is urged to come to the
polls and work and vote for these
bond issues.
“Two successive grand juries have
recommended the issue of bonds for
the purpose indicated above, and it.
would appear that, our people should,
by this time, be convinced of the nec
essity and wisdom of such an issue.
Sumter County made a splendid
stride forward when it secured the
Agricultural College, which means the
scientific and practical education in
scientific and practical education of
any public verdict against himself
very seriously. His comment on
Judge Landis’ decision —that the
the Judge would be dead a good
many years before the fine was paid
—is characteristic of him. He al
ways shows the same confidence
that he will be able to prove him
self stronger than the Government.
“I hope the fine will he collected,
hut I think, with Mr. Rockefeller,
that it will be some time before it
will be paid. If it is collected, the
public will pay it—the public al
ways pays under present conditions.
“Mr. Rockefeller is a fanatic. His
great strength lies in his power to
concentrate everything on one re
sult and work to it without the least
deviation, lie has been doing that
from the first, but he never has
grown morally or socially. They
had such men in the Middle Ages,
but there are not many of them
nowadays.”
A STORY OF
...THE LAW.
[Original.]
Among the many advantages of con
centration of thought is one disadvan
tage. Such concentration leads the
thinker to place an undue relative
value upon the subject of his thought.
A specialist in throat diseases is apt to
refer all the ills man is heir to to the
throat. The professor of ancient lan
guages cannot understand how a man
can be properly equipped for any pro
fession without a knowledge of Greek
and Latin. To the merchant the chief
end of man is to buy cheap and sell
dear.
In the legal profession this species of
monomania tends to make the court
room a tournament of lawyers. The
real object of a court, to do justice, is
burled under a rank professionalism
that has grown up like weeds in a
flower garden.
Edward Avery, a brilliant young
lawyer, was especially under the influ
ence of this professionalism. Having
been elected state attorney, he consid
ered it his duty to convict alike the
innocent and the guilty. As soon as
his duty to the state had ended and he
became an independent attorney he
considered it his duty to secure the
acquittal of any client, whether inno
cent )r guilty. His friends used to re
monstrate with him on the want of
elasticity of his principles, but with
out avail. He was intensely logical
and could give the best of reasons for
his deductions. He forgot that logic
is but a machine which will grind out
anything that is put into it.
One day while Avery was practicing
on his own account a man whose trial
for burglary was to come off imme
diately sent for him and asked him to
make his defense.
“But I know nothing about the case.”
“Don’t want y’ to know nothin’ about
the case. The more you know about
It the wo’se for me.”
Avery’s fancy was tickled at going
into court to conduct a case he didn’t
know anything about. He prided him
self on his rendiness and resource. He
would add another to his already large
number of stories that he was used to
telling his friends illustrative of these
faculties. The accused man had but
$o to give him for a retainer, but
Avery was not after money. His ob
ject was to have an opportunity to
show whnt he could do impromptu.
The case came off the same after
noon. Avery wns somewhat surprised
to see in the courtroom several of his
chums, mostly of the legal profession,
and asked why they were there. He
was told thnt they had heard he had
taken a case he didn’t know anything
about, and they were curious to see
how he would handle it. Avery was
pleased. This meant that they were
thero to witness a bit of professional
fireworks.
’ Averv In summer llvsit in a_hand
her farmer boys, and as our County
has contracted a large debt in
this behalf, which we cannot afford
to repudiate, these bonds are neces
sary to a discharge of the obligation.
“it requires no elaborate argument
to convince the public of the County
of Sumter, outside the City of Am
ericus, of the value of good roads. I
They are necessary to our progress
and advancement, and our people are
practically a unit on this proposition.
“Sumter County has now the finest
opportunity in her history to secure
these blessings, and we urge the peo
ple to consider and to act.
“But especially does this matter
concern those people living out irt
the country, for they will get the
greatest benefit, at a nominal cost.
The taxable property of the County
of Sumter for 1906 was $5,939,937; of
this, the City returned $3,319,812, or
about 79 per cent of the total.
“The burden, therefore, of paying
these bonds will fall more heavily
upon the people living inside of the
corporate limits of Americus. In ad
dition to this, the City of Americus
keeps up her own streets without any
outside aid, and is now offering to
pay three-fourths of the amount which
it is prosposed shall be expended upon
the County roads.
“Certainly we cannot lose this op
portunity.
“Should these bonds fail to carry,
it will be impossible within one year's
time to raise the amount which has
already been expended in the erec
tion of buildings for the Agricultural
College, and will compel a levy of
the highest rate of taxation allowed
by the law for several years to come.
N. A. Ray,
J. L. Johnson,
G. A. Perry,
W. A. Parker,
Prank Sheffield,
J. C. Carter,
J. A. Hixon,
E. C. Speer,
E. T. Smith,
A. T. Johnson,
Albert Brady,
B. J. Methvin,
A. Robinson,
Crawford Wheatley.
some suburban residence. In winter
ho shut it up, went to the city and. lived
in apartments till spring. When the
prisoner was brought into court and
the witnesses were got together, the
counsel for the defense was surprised
to see among the latter faces of Ills
neighbors in the country. But what
was his astonishment when the pros
ecution brought out the fact that the
robbery had been committed in his own
house.
Avery’s friends were watching him,
and when this fact dawned upon him
they snickered. The young attorney
saw at once that they had placed him
In a position to defend his client from
robbing him. But he was game. Not
the slightest change of countenance In
dicated that his professional equanim
ity had been disturbed. lie listened
calmly to tho evidence against his cli
ent, while the expression of his face
and quick flashings in his eyes told
that he was straining his brain to find
some weak spot in the prosecution,
some technicality by which he might
secure the acquittal of his client.
The burglar nad been seen coming
down a trellis from an upper story by
a man with whom Avery was well ac
quainted. He had been chased, but on
the way had contrived to get rid of
some valuable articles. When appre
hended, he had nothing on him to con
vict him of theft. Os courso tho jury
were entirely ignorant of the situation
that had been brought about by Av
ery’s friends. When the prosecutor’s
evidence was all In, Avery took the wit
ness who had seen the burglar descend
the trellis and asked him how he knew
the prisoner was the same person. The
witness could not swear that he was.
He had seen him run, and he had been
followed by a pollcemnn and several
citizens, but the witness had merely
seen a man descend the trellis. What
man he did not know. Avery trapped
him into saying what threw doubt on
tho fact of tho Identity between the
man who had descended the trellis and
tho prisoner, then showed how easy it
would be for the one to be mistaken
for tho other. He closed by a powerful
argument against ruining a man’s life
by evidence that was defective and a
pathetic appeal for the prisoner. The
jury brought in a verdict of not guilty.
There was a dinner served that night
nt the bar association club rooms, giv
en by those who had played the joke
on Avery. He revealed the fact that
he had lost articles that had been in
his family for 200 years by securing
the acquittal of his client, but that he
would rather have suffered the loss than
do so unprofessional an act as to turn
against a client. He thanked them one
and all for having given him an op
portunity to prove that even under the
severest temptation he could not be
recreant to his duties as an attorney.
All of which is very fine, but it does
not add to securing the object for
which courts are organized—justice.
T. B. ANDERSON.®
Endorsed By the County.
“The most popular remedy in Otse
go county and the best friend of my
family,” writes Wm. M. Dietz, editor
and publisher of tho Otsego Jour
nal, Gilbertsville. N. Y., “is Dr. King’s
New Discovery. It has proved to be
an infallible cure for coughs and
colds, making short work of the worst
of them. We always keep a bottle in
the house. I believe it to be the
mos tvaluable prescriptition known
for lung and throat diseasdS.” Guar
anteed to never disappoint the taker,
by Eldridge Drug Co. Price 50c and
SI.OO Trial bottle free. lm.
LOANS.
Farm loans and loans on city
real estate negotiated at low
rates and on easy terms,
G. R. ELLIS, Americus, Ga
CLOTHES FMi
ALL WEATHERS.
Some Clothes seem to be [only fair weather Clothes
and cockel and droop in the midst and rain. Woolen Clothes
don’t, and ours are woolen—
STEIN-BLOCH MADE AND TESTED.
They fit you before your eyes, and they
keep on fitting till you are through
with them.
TRY AND SEE.
RILANDER SHOE CO.
Clothers and Furnishers.
LOOSE-FITTING
i-s “B. V. D”
i 4 nf Don’t Suffer in Hot Weather “B
Vs fil V. D.” Coat Cut Undershirt and
f,jl] Knee Length Drawer*and 1
pjM coolest for sujp Zs. Delivered to
iJ\A any part of Die United States upon
IT LI receipt of price S')., SI.OO, and *I.SQ
Wf m garment When ordering give ches
and waist measure in laches.
• Write for illustrated booklet to
Dept. No, 10. F CROSBY FRY CO
393 Broadway, New York, N. Y.
Bair 1 balsam
and beautifies the hair.
t a luxuriant growth.
Fails to Restore Gray
to its Youthful Color,
alp diseases fiulmg.
« Office hours
l j
DR. N. SEYMOUR EVANS,
| Dentist.
Successor to Wilkes <fc Evans.
OFFICE OVER HANK SOUTH-WESTERN
, GEORGIA.
* Jackson and Forsyth Sts.
i AMERICUS, GA.
|
1‘ ~ '
Dr. W. h. Bowdoin
i
OSTEOPATH
Offices in Allison Building.
, Treats all diseases, with
out use of drugs Spe
| cialty made of chronic
diseases. Phone 133 *
I
Photos Galore
I
! Come and see them
at
Keily’s Studio
Most any; gTßfi£_you woaf A
trial is all I need to co#ince you
of the superiority of ay work.
Viewing, enlarging auf framing
are my side lines. Fine portraits
my specialty. Come to KEILY’S
STUDIO and see for yourself.
207.Forsyth Street.
JOHNSON & HARROLD
COHON WAREHOUSE
AND COMMISSION MERCHANTS.
.AMI) DJBALJEBS IK,
Heavy Groceries and Fertilizers
Plantation Supplies Furnished
ON /.NAfIONABK TaBMB.
PROFSESIONAL CARDS
!Pkyaiaimna and Suryaant,
Douglas B. Mays. M. D.
Physician and Surgeon,
Telephone 479*
J. WADE CHAMBLISS, M. D.
Physician and Surgeon,
JAmericns, Uft.
OFFICE; -Allison Building. Phone 429.
Residence-115 Jackson St. Phone 451. Calls
left at McLaughlin’s drug store, (Phone 98)
will receive prompt attention.
DR. a. T. MILLER,
Physician and Surgeon,
AMERICUS, GEORGIA.
Special attention given to diseases of wc
men and children and to general surgery
Oflloe in Planters Bank Building.
R. E. CATO, M. D,
Physician and Surgeon,
AMERICUS, GEORGIA.
Residence 310 Felder St Telephone 80.
Tenders his professional services to the
people of Americus and surrounding coun
ties. Special attention given to general
surgery, diseases of women and children.
Office 40f>tt Jackson street. Galls left at Dr.
Eldrldge’s drugstore will receive prompt at
tention.
—: — . _
Danitsta.
C. J P, ‘Davis, Dentist,
ounce Residence
Tlmes-Recorder 1)1 Tg 118 Jackson Street 1
Phone *O3. ’Phone H 6,;
Jtttormaif*.
JAMES TAYLOR
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
.■AMERICUS, GEORGIA
Wheatley building, over McLaughln’s
Drug Store.
JAS, A. MIXON, "
Attorney and Counsellor at Law
AMKKICUB, HKOBUIA
Offce in Bvne Bulldlntf
E. A, HAWKINS,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
lm ||i;u"ri Georgia.
Office in Building,
W. T. Lane, K.l| KD >
F. A.
Lane, Maynard ‘*** s **r>^
Attorn ky
OFFICES—AUisJS" I
practice in all Dy
W, W. Dyke'*®
DYJORCHA.
ATStfed nad all consistent court
*pos!t issued bearing iDtore
Pls
CUI AiW.G-H r /a]
Ellis Building— ,■>! * g
Macon, Ga.
“Echo Springs” WhlsßSy,— Our lead
er 11-00 per quart, Also other hi K h
Rrade wines and whiskeys. Orders
given prompt attention.
18 e. o. d. U W. B. Hudson.