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AMERICCUS TIMES=RECORDER
WENTY-NINTH YEAR
1 Your New Fall clothes are
| ready for you now in our
| store and we are going to •
I hold a special opening recep- i
| tion to introduce you to them.
1 You’re invited; and when you
| come you’ll meet a lot of the
| finest clothes you ever saw, We
I feel that our good friends and
1 our good clothes ought to know
i each other better.
ftfj ——mii—■■ . W
j_| _ -r-i ———»
I 4 "* These are Hart Schaffner & Marx clothes; and you
can put it down as a fact that better clothes, more st> 1- s
ish, more perfectly tailored, never came from the hand
I! of a tailor.
The new suits are in a number of very smart models, \
and the patterns are varied enough to suit every taste-- S
! grays, browns, tans, in stripes, plaids and check.
The new Fall overcoats are certainly very snappy; £
you’ll find your kind here. It is hardly necessary to say
that Flart Schaffner & Marx clothes are always all-wool; c
you get no cotton mixture stuff under that name.
n Other departments are full al- 1
!\ so of fine seasonable goods; hats |
J on the latest blocks; shirts and I
| neckwear like a regular [flower-1
L garden of color and rich design. |
j W. D. BAILEY, j
| Outfitter for Men and Boys. |
| Forsyth St. and Cotton Ave Americus, Ga. |
Don’t Swear
Just Smile.
Does that Corn
hurt? If every
thing else has fail
ed to remove it
just ask us about
it the first time
you are in and we
will tell you what
will cure it.
REMBERT’S
DRUG STORE
113 FORSYTH ST.
EVERY PLACE YOU GO AND FIND
THAW’S MALT
It’s good for the sick and old and excellent for the well.
A healthful tonic, an excellent stimulant, an ideal beverage
For sale by All Leading Dealers,
AMERICUS, GEORGIA, SUNDAY MORNING SEPTEMBER 22, 1907
LIFE SENTENCE IS IMPOSED
Upon Jones’ Brother at Eatonton for the Murder of
Robert Adams.
EATONTON, GA., Sept 21.—(Spec
ial) —The sensational trial of the .
Jones brothers, Porter and Albert
Jones, for the murder of Robert
Adams, a prominent and highly res
pected farmer of this county, was con
cluded this afternoon when the jury
returned a verdict of guilty with rec
ommendation to mercy, which con
signs the young men.,to life impris
onment. The murder was an atro
1,650 BALES IN TWO DAYS!
Represent the Receipts of Cotton Here Friday and
Saturday.
t
Sixteen hundred and fifty bales of
cotton represent two days receipts at
| Americus warehouses —Friday and
f Saturday, which was quite as good as
expected. Friday’s receipts totaled
782 bales, while to this was added the
868 bales which poured in yesterday
from Sumter and a half dozen other
counties as well. The streets in the
vicinity of the warehouses were piled
up with cotton bales and the sale of
HUDSON HOLDS TO FIGURES!
Insists That Georgia Cotton Crop Will Not Be Above
the Average.
Hon. Thmoas G. Hudson, of the
| state department of agriculture, came
' down to Americus yesterday to spend
a day at his home here. Commission
er Hudson, in discussing the cotton
crop prospect in the state, said yes
terday that he had no reason to
' change his estimate of 1,-500,000
bales, which he made several weeks
ago after having gone carefully over
j the greater part of the state. And
this, too, after the “hot winds” had
Wrought such fearful havoc with
DEPOSIT OF RAILWAY BONDS
Is Sufficient to Insure Protective Action for the Bond
holders.
SAVANNAH, Sept. 21.—(Special.)
Central Railway bondholders in this
city were today apprised of the fact
that income bonds of the company
had been deposited in New York in
amount amply sufficient to warrant
the holders in taking the protective
MINERS EIRE OUT JAPANESE
Bunch of Seventy-Seven Are Turned Back Yesterday
at Vancouver.
SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 21.—(Spec- -
ial) —Advices today from Vancouver,
state that white miners there had |
just overhauled a party of seventy
seven Japanese brought there to work
in the mines. The Japanese were
hustled aboard ship by the enraged
A MEETING OFSTRATEGISTS
Called on Monday to Consider the Condition of Coast
Defenses.
WASHINGTON, Sept. 21.—(Spec
ial) —The National Board of Strategy
has been summoned to meet here in
special session on Monday next. The
call for the assembling of the Board
I 1 #-//"» A ?>'■' s-- -r. Se!e:t the best or?, then stand by B
! SJL ULs ; ..V Do nc'. delay, but consult him in timeg
■ v .er. "ouareelck. Ask bis opinion of Ayer’s |
1 Fectorai for J cuiaS. ihciig
bit At i t or, J t v-- V.■■■ ,n.i <<>oretst Wj piUUiih J.O. l jrtrCo..■
ST *" u* LowdU, Ma»«. g 1
cious crime, Mr. Adams being shot
' down in his field while at work. He
1 survived long enough to tell his wife
j that one of the Jones boys had shot
him. The prosecution showed that
j both young men participated in the
crime, and both were conviicted in
, the trial ending today. Owing to the
' prominence of all the parties invol
| ved the trial excited greatest interest.
I The murder was the result of a fam
' ily feud of long standing.
the greater portion of this large lot
poured a stream of wealth into the
coffers of the merchants here. Prices
yesterday ranged from 11 3-8 to 11
1-2, and probably $50,000 of “cotton
money” was circulated in Americus.
Up to this date the local warehouses
have received a total of 8,215 bales
wagon cotton, which keeps Americus
far ahead of ail other interior towns
in Georgia in point of receipts.
the crop. In middle and north Geor
gia, Mr. Hudson says, the crop pros
pect is not nearly so good as here in
south Georgia, and it has deteriorated
here greatly within the past month.
Mr. Hudson feels safe in putting his
estimate at 1,500,000 bales, or 1,600,-
000 at the very extreme figure as the j
result of late frost. Georgia's great
est yield in history was the bumper j
crop of two years ago, and even then
the total did not go beyond 1,900,-
000 bales.
action proposed. Holders of certain
income bonds upon which no interest
was paid this year thus seek to en
force payment at the hands of the
railway company, and tjie bonds de
posited in New York are held in
trust pending such united action as
may be taken in the courts.
- miners and ordered to get out of the j
, country without loss of time. The
| attack upon the Japanese was so i
sudden and determined that resis
tence was impossible. The conflict
did not result in bloodshed, and the j
situation at Vancouver is quiet now.
created some little excitement for a
time until it was explained that the
meeting was only to consider the
condition of coast defenses in the
eventuality of possible trouble on the
! Pacific side of the continent.
All the Approved
Fashions in Men’s
Clothes for Autumn
la || shown here, are the
ktiflllf product of the world’s
jflllfi most notet l makers of
IT 'Bain men’s wear and worth
coming to see.
II y° u are satisfied*
*wi;' |lf|| with nothing less than
fljgljH the very finest clothes
luff* that can be had ready
ill I* to-wear, then yoo
troy should examine at your
earliest opportunity.,
FORM ONE t j •
TheFECHHEIMERFISHELOO. tll6 SUpCI*D prOUHCtiOIIS
NEW YORK
•ra&pCg-tf the custom tailors
art which we have ready-for-your
service in noted
“EFF-EFF” Fashionable Clothes
*t will g ve us much pleasure to show you the
garments, which you will find upon trying-on, are
far better fitting than most tailors could make to
your measure,to«av nothing of the price-difference,
“This price-di^ference’ , is being save \ by sonw
the bpst dressed men in town--why not by vou?
CHAS. L ANSLEY.
I' Of** 1 ' ’ «
SEE THOSE 1
Fish and Game Sets
at I
THOS. L. BELL,
The Leading Jeweler. J
| PARKER WAREHOUSE |
w ELTON C. PARKER, Prop. (Successor to Council, w
t Parker & Co. m
I desire to extend thanks to the farmers for their patronage *
V in the past, and ask a continuance of same, promising courteocc ■
A and prompt attention to all business entrusted to me. {■
tMr.Charles C. Sheppard will weigh cotton for me, and will be ,;A
glad to serve you. Respectfully,
| ELTON C. PARKER. f
♦mm »» »»»« w a i ■»»#
WHEN READY TO BUILD
Whether a Mansion, a Store or Cottage, see
JOHN W. SHIVER.
WHEN READY TO PAINT
Shiver Has the Goods, the Best goods and
Largest Stock.
Everthiug irb Lumber, Mantles, Grates and, in -fact, all that g«
In a house. Buying Paints in Carload Lots, His prices are the Lower
where quality courts. Mills and office Church street, Phone 117.
Jl L Ji Ai: / . .'teUv
NUMBER m