Newspaper Page Text
JOYNER’S * JOYNER'S
Have you been to see us in our new quarters? We are
now ready to serve you in the best maimer with merchandise
f quality. Then too we make lower prices without cutting
out the quality. How about your shoes for fall?
Children’s Nice Shoes.
Our line of Children, Misses and
boy's shoes are made of solid leather
and built to fit the foot without pinch
ing.
Childs Shoes l's to s’s 50c pair.
Childs Shoes s’s to B’s 65c to 81 pair.
Childs Shoes 8] to 12 90c to $1,25 pr.
Misses Shoes 13 to 2. sl. to 81.75 pr.
Boys Shoes 3 to 5] 81.25 to 83 pail.
Ladies Fine Foot Wear,
Tbe ladies shoes we carry are the
most serviceable and stylish you
They are comfortable and give entire'
satisfaction.
Our Viei Kid “Mascot” 81.25 pair,
our Solid Leather “Sensation.” 81.50.
Our Solid Leather “Music” 81.75.
Our Solid Leather “Greatest” 82.50.
our Solid Leather “Mayflower” 83.
Our Extra Fine Society 83.60.
W. A. JOYNER
114, 116, 118 Cotton Avenue.
You can buy a straw hat for a quarter, a suit of
clothes for $6.75, and a grand piano for $59.
But you get what you pay for. You can buy a
straw hat for S4O, a suit of clothes for SBO, and
a grand piano for SIB,OOO. And their again, you
get what you pay for. Strictly speaking there
are no real “bargains.” The cheap man gets
what he is looking for--cheapness. And the man
who wants merit, pays for it. Our goods are of
the latter class and sold at the lowestjprices pos
sible, consistent with quality.
JAMES FRICKER & BRO.,
409 JACKSON ST. JcWClerS. PHONE 280.
Americus, Ga.
Lumber, Sash, Doors, Blinds,
FINE CABINET MANTLES A SPECIALTY.
Full stocks of cement, lime, plaster, shingles
and all builders supplies. Paints, in car load lots.
Grates, medium to the finest.
I yoaveie I
1
rmmy M & before yon
| ,|jj| /li married lierk
I ijjj I If / J Have, you nought
1 M mUi tier a Ga§ Bailee
| li Ijy j I «ii*ee?
;
Americus Illuminating & Power Co,
Phone 83.
FARMERS GF COUNTRY
form rp:al TRUST
WORCESTER, MASS., Nov. I.
Special)—Four hundred farmers of
Worcester county have taken steps to
fona the Farmers’ Co-operative As
sociation, which will control the out
hut and price of all farm products of
this county. The movement started a
few weeks ago, when the milk- pro
ducing farmers broke off relations
? with the milk contractors of Boston
a result of a dispute over prices,
one of the objects of the organ
isation will be to send milk to Boston
for distribution independent of the
•contractors, who now control the dis
tribution of the products to retailers.
A telegram was read from Gov. Guild,
sympathy with the efforts
°f the farmers to become independ
ent of the Boston contractors.
Men’s Swell Shoes,
For men we have a line of so twear
that you can depend on. They are the
shoes that wear and satisfy.
Our satin calf gold band at BLSO pr.
Our solid guaranteed victory atsl.7s
Our Solid Viei Pacemaker at 82.50.
Our Solid Viei Pluck at $3,00.
Our Extra Swell Pilgrim at 83.50,
Our Extra Swell Patriot at $4.00.
Heavy Wo r K Slices.
We make a specialty of heavy every
day shoes for the whole family. They
are built for service and will certainly
give it.
Children Heavy Leather shoes
75c to SL2
Women’s Heavy Leather Shoes
$1.25 to $1.75
Men’s Heavy Leather Shoes
$1.50 to $2.50
All our shoes are the celebrated Star
Brand. Every pair with a star on tbe
heel fully guaranteed to be solid leath
er. Star Brand Shoes are better.
SEVEN WANT TO BE
GOVERNOR OF MASS.
BOSTON, MASS., Nov. I.—(Special)
—Seven candidates seeking the gov
ernorship in Massachusetts, including
the Republican Governor, Curtis
Guild, Jr., who is seeking re-election
for a third term. Henry M. Whit
ney, millionaire and brother of the
late William C. Whitney of New
York, is the regular Democratic can
didate. Charles W. Bartlett, who
failed to secure the Democratic nomi
nation, is running on an independent
ticket and a platform which has as
its chief issue opposition to the pro
posed merger of the New York, New
Haven and Hartford Railroad and
the Boston and Maine Railroad. In
addition there are candidates on the
Socialist Labor, Socialist, Prohibition
and Independence League tickets.
THE AMERICUS DAILY TIMES-RECORT>ER. SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1907.
OKLAHOMA’S STAR
PUT ON FLAG JULY
Renders Readjustment of
Order Necessary.
WASHINGTON. D. 0., Nov. I.
(Special)—Although Oklahoma will
be admitted to the Union of States by
a proclamation of the President on
November 16, that fact will not be
formally recognized in the American
flag until July 4, 1908. On and after
that date the blue field of the nation
al emblem will contain forty-six stars
instead of forty-five, as at present.
The law governing the addition of
a star to the flag provides that such
addition shall not be made until the
4th of July following the admission
of the new State. The forty-fifth star
was added July 4, 1896, following the
admission of Utah to the Union in the
preceding March.
Several months ago a joint board of
the army and navy, of which Admiral
Dewey was chairman, adopted a plan
for the rearrangement of the stars in
the flag, providing for the admission
of a new State, and the scheme was
approved by the secretaries of war
and navy and by the president in
turn. The forty-five stars now in the
flag are arranged in six rows, the
first, third and fifth having eight
stars, and the second, fourth and six
having seven each. Under the new
arrangement, which was effected
without materially altering the gen
eral scheme, the first, third, fourth
and six rows will have eight stars,
and the second and fifth rows seven
stars each.
Cured of Bright’s Disease
Mr. Robert O. Burke, Elnora, N.
Y., writes: “Before I started to use
Foley’s Kidney Cure I had to get up
from twelve to twenty times a night,
and I was all bloated up with dropsy
and my eyesight was so impaired I
could scarcely see one of my family
across the room. I had given up hope
of living, when a friend x'ecommended
Foley’s Kidney Cure. One 50 cent
bottle worked wonders and before I
had taken the third bottle the dropsy
had gone, as well as all other symp
toms of Bright’s disease. Sold by all
druggists. e o d —w
WIFE PROVED A
POOR MARKSMAN
EAST LIVERPOOL, Nov. I.—(Spe
cial) —Bert Brady, a business man in
this city, owes his life to the fact that
his wife is a poor markswoman. Ear
ly yesterday morning she fired all the
chambers of a revolver at him, re
loaded it twice and repeated the at
tempt, then a double-barreled
shotgun and fired it until her supplv
of cartridges became exhausted. She
hit everything in the room except
her husband. Finally Brady escaped
to the barn in his pajamas and for
two hours after that every lime he
stuck his head out of the door his
wife blazed away with the shotgun.
Finally a policeman arrived and
Mrs. Brady was arrested.
Mrs. Brady was the onl-y victim.
She had fired the shotgun so often
that the recoil had bruised and black
ened her shoulder until she could
not raise her right arm. Brady re
fused to make any charge against, his
wife and she was fined for discharg
ing firearms within the city limits.
Jealousy was the cause of the wife’s
anger.
This Is Worth Remembering
As no one is immune, every person
should remember that Foley’s Kidney
Cure will cure any case of kidney or
bladder trouble that is not beyond
the reach of medicine. Sold by all
druggists. e o d—w
DEPARTED GLORY
OF OLD REGIME
NEW YORK, Nov . I.—(Special.
The departed glories of the old
regime in insurance was in evidence
at the recent sale of the furnishings
of the private office of Richard A. Mc-
Curdy, formerly president of the Mu
| tual Life Insurance Company.
Included in the furnishings were
I six arm chairs costing $15,000, a $6,-
000 clock, a solid mahogany overlaid
with the finest gold leaf, with a num
ber of cabinets and tables costing sl,-
000 each.
Feel
Bad
Can’t think? Got
.Pains all over yourr w
h,ck b!«'»
liquid <0 ct 3
IMMEDIATELY
REMOVES THE CAUSE.
Relieves Indigestion, Pains also.
Regular size 25e & 50c at druggists.
ROOSEVELT CANNOT
ACCEPT NOMINATION
Speaker Cannon Finds Some
Comfort.
BOSTON, MASS., Nov. I.—(Spe
cial) —It is in Danville that the Can
no n Presidential boom attains its
greatest significance. In his big
house, on North Vermillion street, he
sits part of each day busy with an en
ormous correspondence. Every Con
gressman who is expecting to return
to Washington expects “Uncle Joe’’ to
“do the guessing,” as he expresses’
the making up of the committees.
They are all seeking their best
chance.
Not only do they write, but they
come in person, from all over the
country, Democrats and Republicans,
to see him. Danville is full of them.
These men are all of strong political
influence. Many would like to get
him out of Congress. All owe him
favors. All will have authority in
shaping the next convention. And out
of their presence and out of the work
he can do for them one of his neigh
bors has evolved this summary of
the Presidential situation:
“There is only one candidate today
with the people. That is Roosevelt.
He cannot run. Though the Wdst is
unanimously for him now, he cannot
accept the nomination. If he does,
the fact that lie has broken his word
and that he is a third-term candidate
will cost him hundreds of thousands
of votes, and probably defeat him.”
We have secured the agency for
Orino Laxative Fruit Syrup, the new
laxative that makes the liver lively,
purifies the breath, cures headache
and regulates the digestive organs.
Cures chronic constipation. Ask us
about it. Sold by all druggists.
e o d—w
SOCIOLOGISTS DISCUSS
TRAFFIC IN GIRLS
BATTLE CREEK, MICH., Nov. I.
(Special)—With the Rev. Wiley J.
Phillipps, of Los Angeles, chairman
of the committee on white slave traf
fic, in the chair, the National Purity
congress will tomorrow resume its
consideration of the traffic in girls
for immoral purposes.
Startling charges of a luridly sen
sational nature were embraced in pa
pers on the subject presented by the
Rev. Ernest A. Bell, of Chicago, and
Mrs. Charlton Edholm Sibley, of
Tucson, Ariz.
Dr. Bell is the head of the mid
night mission in Chicago and has
spent years in working among the
denizens of that great city’s red
light district. Mrs. Sibley is the
author of “The Traffic in Girls,” and
is an authority on the subject through
charitable work among fallen wo
men. Memorial services in honor of
departed leaders in the anti-vice cru
sade will be a part of the program.
A New York dramatic critic says a
certain actor in his death scene is
“not convincing.” Some critics are
satisfied with nothing less than the
real thing.—Washington Post.
BOOKKEEPING COURSE
$3.00 per Month.
SHORTHAND COURSE
$3.00 per Month.
TELEGRAPH COURSE unlimited
Scholarship s3ojoo.
Write SOUTHERN BUSINESS COL
LEGE <k SCHOOL of TELEGRA
PHY, Newn n, G *.
FOR SALE
400 acres 3 miles of railroad, 5-room
house and two 3-room house. 5-horse
farm open, 50 acres in original forest,
would make half bale cotton per acre
without use of fertilizer, if put in
cultivation, 25 acres under fence.
300 acres with 5-room house, near
church and school. 50 acres under
fence. 60 acres original forest. Lands
lay well. SIO.OO acre.
470 acres, 1 1-2 miles of DeSoto, 6
tenant houses, 30 acres in pasture.
Lands productive. Rented for 1908, 16
bales cotton. Safe investment.
8-room house close in, large lot,
barn and cribs, $1850.00.
7-room house, with 4 acres land, good
location.
5-room house, new, large lot, $1750.
2 beautiful building lots on Felder
street, 75 x 250 feet.
Real estate is the safest of all in
vestments, it cannot evaporate or run
away. Many of the collossal fortunes
of the millionaires have been made
out of real estate. If you want an In
vestment or home in this city or coun
try property come to see me.
P. B. Williford.
m> aMWWWgl^rifMritiwrnitiiiTyi'iinmruiri ri»mi (n-o , m4i‘> , i)’iiiiUtftfiinft~Wi»ij(^niinr''iyiriTf-»i»r»™wmTmTnriniwisp | <Wl
T ' • •—' L
1
|
I co * iißpr jsj§§
8 'Balllmcrt and N*w York ' Y** '±
N Jh’ilViVilin .■.«a*V9VV»v . .-—'-
.mviART FALL SUITS.!
Do it now! Buy your New Fall and Winter Suits today
A long, cold winter is before us. Be prepared for it- Have
the advantage of wearing your New Clothes the whole season.
You can buy right here now to best advantage. We carry
a larger stock, more fabrics, more shapes, more sizes than you
can find elsewhere. Moreover, every Suit we sell has an un
usual style about it—a look of genuine smartness that you’ll
find it hard to equal.
We are showing all the latest Browns, Blu es
Greys and the new mixtures in fancy fabrics. We can fit any
body and no matter how much or how little you pay we will
give you the greatest value your money can buy. Come in!
$7.50 to $35.
Hamilton & Co.
Sell it For Less.
j,
It’s Only a Question oTTims
when every one having financial
matters to look as er Mill realize
the need of a Bank Account.
To the modern businesr man it is
simply-indispensable. He p-*ys
his bills by check and has a receipt
and the correct change every time;
and it promotes habits of system
and accuracy in the conduct of his
affairs. Open an account with our
SAVINGS DEPARTMENT.
Bank of Southwestern Geoma.
c^ J
**msmrmmxsso<msm. < **
Regrets Having a Savings
Account—m my hwe lived to re
y<• et their not h iving one.
The year of 1907 will go down
in Bauk History as the greatest
year ever [.for the dep siting ol
savings. If yon havn’t a bank ac
count start to build one today,
start it at Our Savings Depart
ment with a d>Uar or more.
4 per cent paid on all savings.
The Planters Bank of Americus
Fish Tales
are often exaggerations, but we have
no need of stretching the truth in our
business as
FISH DEALERS
Freshness Is an absolutely Indis
pensable quality in unsalted or un
smoked fish and we handle none about
which there may be the slightest
doubt. We keep every kind in sea
son from the gamely trout to solid
mullet. And we don’t try to make a
fortune on every pound of fish me sell
either.
SHERLOCK & CO.
PHONE No. 32.
W. H. LASSETER
Contractor and Builder, Estimates
given on
Brick, Wood or Stone Houses,
Bolton Bros. Store, Lamar St.
DR. W. H. BOWDOIN.
OSTEOPATH.
Office over Sparks-Mashburn Co.
All diseases treated without use of
drugs. Chronic diseases a specialty.
Consultation free. Office phone 416.
Residence phone 133.
Robt. L. Miller,
Tin work of all kinds, repair work a
specialty. Cotton avenue, opposite
Harrold & Johnson warehouse. Phone
522.
Painting and Calcintining.
Filter CLASS WORK.
ISRAEL JOHNSON,
119 Cotton Ave. 10-11