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Strong Healthy) Women f|
If a woman - v omanly way, moth* w] |
erb'iod i ~> i e.' hat iitt’ - suffer «. The trouble lies
in the fa. t . he many women sulTer from weakncs, and si
disease o >: -• -tinctly feminine organism und are unfitted 2; y|5 * ’Y
for moth i <> . Ibis can be remedied.
Dr. ’: rce’s Favorite Prescription
Cures ij v. er'messes and disorders of women.
It acts c'rectly cn (■ o delicate .ad important
orfrot concerned in motherhood, making them — — Uji
healthy, strou', vigorous, virile and elastic. Hi Jj
“Favorite IV ,-t r -:!on” banishes the indispositions of the jS |
period of e ; ■ 'ey and makes baby's advent easy and
almost pa . ‘ess. I: quickens and vitalizes the feminine
orga- .i ■■ ■ ns a he. and robust baby. Thousands of women have
testified c* i's marvelous merits.
/< s . ome i Strong. It Makes Sick Women Well.
Honest d. ' do i o .st . Jtes, and urg' them, upon you as “just.
•s good.” ch-secret remedy. It
contains not adin of •v 1 >1 si.d not a grain of nbit-forming or injurious
drugs. Is acu e s,iv re: 'o ax', act t f healing, native American roots.
AMERICUS AUTOMOBLE CO.
AGENTS FOR THE
MAXWELL, E. M. F., FLANDERS,
BUICK and HUPMOBILE
Dealers in General Supplies. Repairing a Specially. Anottu r carlced ot
"E. M. f” touring cars to arrive today. Carload Baby Maxwells lo ar
rive Saturday.
AMERICUS AUTOMOBILE CO.
WALTER RYLANDER, Mgr.
. A! mLJSU .. . OK
If You Do Not Bank With
Us It is Your Fault.
Americas National Bank,
Capital $100,000.00
Stockholder liability (under U. S. laws) $100,000.00
Security to Depositor* $200,000.00
W. S. &G. W. ANDREWS.
34 & 36 PLANTERS’ BANK BUILDING
FARM LANDS,
TIMBER LANDS,
CITY PROPERTY
Sell, Swap or Buy. Loans Made. Security
Bonds. Fire and Life Insurance.
Special Values!
French Shriner and Urner Oxfords for
men. Hamilton Brown Shoes complete
all. Old and young.
Spring Clothing, the Blue Ribbon Brand, excellent qualities, the prices
are right. All new, clean goods, no old stock to advertise cheap to get
you in my store. You take absolutely no risk when you buy of me. Satis
faction guaranteed. Accounts charged payable the Ist of each month to
people of responsibility. Come in and see if you don’t believe. No harm
done. 2,’S
W. E. WOOD, 213 Forsyth St.
SEABOARD AIR LINE
. i
SCHEDULE.
Leave Americus: AH Trains Daily.
For Cordele, Rochelle, Abbeville, Hel
-Is:s2 p. n\ ena Lyons, Collins, Savannah, Colum
-19-exp q bia, Richmond, Portsmouth, and points
*■ m ' East and South.
For Cordele, Abbeville, Helena and
5..0 p m. intermediate points.
1:00 a m. For Richland, Columbus, Atlanta,
Birmingham. Hurtsboro, Montgomery,
8:0? p m. and points West and Northwest.
9:35 a. m. For Richland, Columbus, Dawson
Albany and intermediate points.
Close connections at Cordele foi ail points Nortn and South. At Co
lumbus for all points East, and at Montgomery for New Orleans, Mobile an*
all Texas poln.a and the Southwest and Northwest.
For further information apply to H. P. Everett, Local Agent, Americus.
Ga.; W. P. Scruggs, T. P. A., Savannah; R. H. Stansell, Ass’t Ger’l Pas*
Agent, Savannah, Ga; C. B Ryan. G. P. A., Portsmouth. Va.
J. W. SHEFFIELD, President, FRANK SHEFFIELD, Vice Pres.
E. D. SHEFFI ELD, Cashier.
BANK OF COMMERCE
Americus, Ga.
A general banking business transacted and all consistent courtesies ex
tended petrous. Certificates of depo sit issued earning interest.
Physicians Advise
thfM’c? c " £Va!laxative, to keep the bowels open and prevent the poisons of undigested
foea rrom gettinginto your system.
L*e latest product of science i- VELVO Laxative Liver Svrup, purely vegetable, gentle,
reliable and of a pleasant, aromatic taste. Velvo acts on the liver, as well as on the
stomach and bowels, and is of the greatest possible efficacy in constipation, indigestion,
headache, feverishness, colic,flatulence, etc. Try VF 1
VELVO LIVER SYRUP
THE TIMES-ktCOHDER.
DAILY AND WEEKLY.
THE AMERICUS RECORDER,
Established 1879.
THE AMERICUS TIMES,
Established 1890
Consolidated April 1891.
Entered at the postofflee at Ameri
;us as second-class mail matter.
CHOS. GAMBLE, Editor and Manager
I. W. FURLOW City Editor
W. L. DUPREE, Asst. Business Dept.
Official organ of the City of Americus.
Official organ of Sumter County.
Official organ of Webster County,
j Official organ of Railroad Commis
sion of Georgia for Third Congres
sional District.
Official organ U. S. Court, Southern
i I District of Georgia.
Editorial Room, Telephone 99.
i Americas, Ga., April 9, 1919.
LOVERS’ LANE
f _
Sarah N. Cleghorn (in Everybody’s.)
In April, when the moon is full.
How many a dress of bright delaine
Goes arm in arm with some dark coat
Along the woods by Lovers’ Lane.
The newly plighted farthest roam,
And latest in the wood remain;
But brides and bridegrooms seldom
* leave
The homeward end of Lovers’ Lane.
[ Sometimes a troop of children'stray
And follow in their parents’ tra’n,
To pick the sweet anemones
That grow so thick in Lovers’ Lane.
Sometimes a lady walks alone,
With head inclined, as if again
She heard a voice to us unknown;
(She seems at home in Lovers’ Lane.)
A stranger, banished long ago
From this green path, forgives his
pain,
And sends a little prayer to heaven
For all who walk in Lovers’ Lane.
- BROTHER OGDEN’S DIREFUL PRE
DICTIONS.
Brother Robert C. Ogden came South
l this year in a somewhat billious mood.
Evidently the long winter, with its ab
sence of out-of-doors recreation, has
stagnated his liver and provoked that
pessimistic tendency that comes from a
condition approaching jaundice. Even
the bright sunshine of spring in the
- South, with its refreshing, stimulating,
balmy air, and the sight of the happy
faces of its people and the bright flow
-7 ers of its fields and gardens, seemed
unavailing to tear away the gloom
from his soul. Darkness shrouded his
face and he stood ready to array him
self in sackcloth and ashes when he
. reached Little Rock, where he attended
I a Southern educational conference.
Instead of opening the windows of
) his mind and heart and “lett’ng a little
sunshine in,” Brother Ogden seems to
have wrapped himself even closer in
the cloak of dismal forebodings with
which he left home. Everywhere he
looked the New York dispenser of
funds saw a gray cast to the landscape,
a darkness on the horizon, gathering
clouds that shadowed the earth and
refused to be dissipated. And out of
the depths of h s own misanthropic
1 state Brother Ogden proceeded to read
1 the horoscope of the coming years. The
conjunction of the planets, as Brother
Ogden read the answer in the stars, is
all opposed to peace, prosperity and
happiness. Instead, there looms be
fore the land an era of doubt, anxiety,
, perhaps bloodshed and ruin.
‘‘The outlook for social and political
affairs in this country,” said he to the
assembled educators, “is at present
ominous. It would be easy to make
statements morbid enough to suit the
version of the deepest dyed pessimist.
They appear on every side.” And then,
when the gleams of gladness died out
of the eyes of his audience, and each
man felt for his purse and looked as
kance at his neighbor, he gave the re
assuring intelligence that it might yet
be possible to check the avalanche of
woe by an application of the remedy
of a wise and patriotic citienship.
Brother Ogden is suffering unneces
sary distress. The country is not on
the verge of a catastrophe. It is not,
to quote his words, in a state ap
proaching the “ominous.” The only
ominous state is that of Brother Og
den’s liver. A blue mass pill would re
lieve it. It is really a pity that so sin
cerely a good man should be so terri
bly distressed over things that ain’t
so. The sun is shining j.:st as pleas
- antly as of yore, the fish are biting just
as freely, the peach crop is coming
along with an abundance, strawberries
■ are ripe in the gardens, the melon
i crops will probably be the most lus
trous and largest known, corn tbreat
ens to outstrip cotton in value, babies
are being welcomed with old time af
fection in countless households
throughout the land, the young people
i are courting just as lovingly as when
Brother Ogden tried his ’prentice hand
in that direction, and soon, from Ken
ebunk to ’Frisco, the hoarse cry of the
umpire will be heard as he calls “Play
ball.” No, no, Brother Ogden, there is
nothing ominous in the outlook. What
you need is to look at your tongue in
the looking glass. There is where the
trouble lies.
TO CURE A COLD IN ONE DAY
Take LAXATIVE BROMO Quinine
Tablets. Druggists refund money if it
fails to cure. E. W. GROVE’S signa
i ture is on each box. 25c.
Heats the Sphinx.
(Baltimore American.)
The Pyramids—What did you think
of Roosevelt, now we’ve met Mm?
Sphinx—Humph! Shows what these
mortals are! He's gained more fame
in the tew years he’s been talking than
I with all my centuries of wise silence.
There is no cough medicine so pop
ular as Foley's Honey and Tar. It nev
er fails to cure coughs and colds and
is especially recommended for chronic
and bronc Mal coughs. Sold by all
druggists.
WIDENING THE SPLIT UP IN
INDIANA.
Republican division means Demo
cratic opportunity. And the opportun-i
ity to place Indiana back in the Dem- \
ocratic column grows stronger every
day. Try to conceal it as they may, ex- 1
plain all they will, the widening of the
gulf between the factional elements of
the G. O. P. becomes more apparent
right along. On top of the recent re
fusal, for such it really was, of the
Republican State convention there to
endorse the Payne-Aldrich tariff,
comes the refusal of the President tc
| visit Indianapolis and make a speech.
Evidently Taft regards the actions of
the recent convention as, in a sense, a
repudiation of his administration that
no amount of salve can cover up. He
has endorsed the tariff legislation, a
refusal on the part of any branch) of
the party to do likewise is consequent
ly in effect a public disavowal of the
President’s own position. (
Republican papers are becoming
more and more alarmed at the pros
pect. The course of events in Indiana
, has opened their eyes as nothing be
; fore had done to the abyss into which
the party seems about to fall. Some
are applauding the President’s action
in refusing to visit. Indianapolis under
the existing circumstances, while oth-*
ers are decrying his position as calcu
lated to add fuel to the fire of dis
content and dissatisfaction and in
creases the tendencies toward an open
revolt.
Senator Beveridge makes no bones ■
of his opposition to the existing tariff
law. No Democrat has analysed it
more pitilessly, or denounced it more
scathingly, and no Democrat is apt to
be more unsparing in his criticisms of
its iniquities. With Beveridge tearing
the tariff legislation of bis party into
sbreds, exposing its weaknesses and
shams and demanding its reform, all
that is needed for the Democracy in
Indiana is to nominate good men and
appeal fearlessly to the people on the
old lines of a tariff for revenue with
incidental protection, for greater econ
omy in the conduct of the government,
and the ruthless rooting out of cor
ruption in all departments, to assure
the party a splendid victory.
In bis denunciation of the present
tariff Beveridge had this to say:
The only way to keep a party solid
I and growing is to keep it right and
• progressive.
McKinley saw this when he declared
. in his last speech that in tariff mat
’ j ters “the period of exclusiveness is
' | past.”
L ! Senator Morrell, the father of the
| war tariff of 1864, saw it when be de
, dared in 1870: "It is the mistake of
the friends of a sound tariff to insist
’ on extreme rates to secure the neces
' sary revenue.”
Garfield saw it when he said: “The
I I wisest thing protectionists can do is to
! unite on a moderate reduction of du
'! ties.”
! Roosevelt saw' it when he said:
■ "What we really need in this country
» is to treat tbe tariff as a business prop-
I osition from the standpoint of the in
terests of the country as a whole and
not from the standpoint of the tem
' porary needs of any political party.”
s The great masses of Republican vot
, ers understand it today when they re
fuse to permit the great doctrine of
1 protection to be used to excuse and
I cloak tariff excess. Use a principle
: to perpetuate a fraud, and the friend
. of the principle thus misused is more
offended than tbe enemy of the prin
’ c’ple itself.
; *****
II Compromise on purely economic de-
E tails is often wise; but compromise
with sheer injustice is always wrong.
I was for a law that w'ould protect
1 the wages of every workingman in In
i diana and yet enable that workingman
• to get his clothing and creature com
forts cheaper—and such a law could
have been written, and it shall be
L written.
I was for a law that would bave giv
en every manufacturer in Indiana am
ple protection, and yet enable him to
get his raw materials cheaper—and
' such a law could have been written,
i and it shall be written,
t 1 was for a law that would have
, taken the tariff out of the way of busi
ness for ten or a dozen years—and
J such a law could have been written,
• and it shall be written. Business needs
, tariffstability, and only a satisfied peo
, pie can give tariff stability. Tbe dic
tates of justice; for the people obey
1 justice and defy bosses.
* * * * *
1 voted against the bill and for
plighted honor. 1 voted against ex-
J cess and for protection. I voted
against the interests and for the peo
ple. I voted and fought for the genu
ine republicanism of Lincoln, the foun
. der of our fa th; of Morrell, the father
of our tariff; of Garfield, tbe interpre
-1 ter of our principles; of McKinley, the
’ apostle of protection; of Roosevelt, the
■ soldier of righteousness.
OPEN THY DOORS.
(Arthur Wicher, in Sunset Mag.)
Open thy doors, O my soul,
To ocean and sky and plain,
To shelving shore, and breakers’ roar,
And the mountains that shout again.
Open thy doors, O my soul,
To the scent of the climbing rose,
To the meadow’s sweep and the
drowsy sheep,
And the wonderful deep repose.
Wider, wider, my soul,
The winds through the pine tree
blow;
’Tis the Word of God that moveth
abroad,
And deep to deep will go.
Open thy doors, O my soul,
And the fret and pa : n of care,
And the futile stress and the pettiness.
Will vanish into air.
Cocaine which dulls the nerves
never yet cured Nasal Catarrh. The
heavy feeling in the forehead, the
stuffed up sensation and the watery
discharge from eyes and nose, along
with all the other miseries attending
the disease, are put to rout by Ely’s
Cream Balm. Smell and taste are re
stored, breathing is made normal.
Until you try this remedy, you can
form no idea of the good it will do you.
Is applied directly to the sore spot.
All druggists, 50c. Mailed by Ely
Bros., 56 Warren street, New York.
_____________________ ____________ *
He is a lucky man who can stretch
the truth without breaking Ms word
AYER'S HAia* VIGO&
Stops Falling Malr An Lilegaiii: Dressing
Destroys Dandruff Makes ISalr Grow
Oocs not Color the hi air
Composed of Sulphur, Glycerin. Quinin, Sodium Chlorid, CaMcum, Sage, Alcohol.
Water, Perfume. Ask your doctor his opinion of such a hair preparation. 1
“DIGESTION WAITS ON APPETITE"
Three centuries ago Shakespeare
j wrote “Digestion waits on appetite,
• good health on both.” Science has re
j cently strikingly demonstrated that
| Shakespeare was eminently correct in
his statement. Inasmuch as Shakes
peare is not supposed to bave been a!
scientist his remarkable success in
striking off a volume in eight words
must be attributed to a remarkable in
tuition into tbe process of nature, or
toe accepted as further confirmation
that Bacon was really the author of
the plays and three hundred years
ahead of science.
Professor Pawlow, a noted Russian
savant, has demonstrated that all that
is necessary to set tbe gastric juices to
flowing into the tomach is to think of
something that is pleasing to the pal
ate and for which the desire to eat
exists. The old Idea that the mere in
flowing into the stomach is to think of
f thing that would irritate its lining
would set the juices into action he has
shown to be false. Appetite must first
exist before digestion begins its pecul
iar process. Even easily digested foods,
like eggs and bread, he found lay in
the stomach untouched for hours, with
no gastric juices coming to their re
lief, when the desire for tbem did not
exist, when appetite had not preceded
their introduction into the stomach
One of his most interesting experi
ments along this line is told in a re
cent article in McClures, as follows;
Professor Pawlow discovered that it
• was possible to bathe or saturate the
stomach witb digestive juice without
giving it any food at all. He perform
ed the interesting operation known as
esophagotomy; that is, he divided the
esophagus—the tube that connects the
mouth with the stomach, and serves as
the passageway for food —so that, in
stead of leading to the stomach, it
lead to an artificial opening in the an
imal’s throat. His purpose in doing
this was to prevent the food naturally
swallowed by the dog from getting to
the stomach; after slipp’ng into the
gullet, it would drop through this
opening, unnoticed by the dog, into the
pan from which it was eating.
Professor Pawlow now let his ani
mal go hungry long enough to acquire
a healthy appetite. In spite of tbe
operations that had been performed
upon his stomach and esophagus, the
dog was entirely normal, as was evi
denced by the aterest that he
displayed in th/'r’iPSs.(.ration of his
meal. The foocr selected was of the
daintiest knd—sausage, raw meat, and
other morsels especially Intended to
stimulate appetite. It was prepared
and chopped ostentatiously in full
view of the dog; some of it was passed
under his nostrils. The animal show
ed his interest by jumping about in the
cage, barking, yelping, and licking his
chops—the saliva that overflowed his
lips betraying bis epicurean anticipa
tion of the approaching feast. When
the pan was finally placed before him,
tbe dog fell i pon It voraciously, eating
long and constantly. Every mouthful, j
however, after being swallowed fell
through the artificial outlet of the
esophagus into the same pan—over
and over again. ,
The important fact is this: Although
not a morsel reached the stomach, the
gastric juice poured into that organ tn
enormous quantities. Professor Paw
low ingeniously arranged tubes for
the collection of the saliva and the
gastric fluid, and obtained enough to
digest perfectly several large meals.
He found that other substances, pass
ing through the moutb and gullet, but
not reaching the stomach, had precise
ly the same effect. He even trained
the animal to swallow pebbles; and
these, falling out of the opening, like
wise started the gastric juice. In fact,
:,f the animal were sufficiently hungry,
anything placed in its mouth accom
plished the same results. The stomach
would fill with liquid at the mere sight
of food, or at a whiff of the hands of
the person wbo brought it. Sometimes,
if this attendant simply passed
through the room, the same influx
took place.
In other words, the process of diges
tion furnishes a beautiful illustration
of the influence of mind upon matter.
The inspiring stimulus is not mechan
ical, but psychic. The preliminary es
sential to tbe orderly assimilation of
food is the keen desire for it. “The
passionate longing for food, and this
alone,” says Pawlow, “has called forth,
under our eyes, a most interesting ac
tivity of the gastric glands. * * * We
are therefore justified in saying that
the appetite is tbe first and mightesl
agent of the secretory nerves of the
stomach. *** * A good appetite is
equivalent to a vigorous secretion of
tbe gastric juice.
Beware of Ointments for Catarrh That
Contain Mercury.
as mercury will surely destroy the
sense of smell and completely de
range the whole system when enter
ing it through the mucous surfaces.
Such articles should never be used ex
cept on prescriptions from reputable
physicians, as the damage they will
do is ten fold to the good you can pos
sibly derive from them. Hall’s Catarrh
rh Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney
& Co., Toledo, 0., contains no mercury,
and is taken internally, acting directly
upon the blood and mucous surfaces
of the system. In buying Hall’s Catarrh
Cure be sure you get the trenuine. It
Is taken internally and made in Tole-
Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney
monials free.
Sold by druggists. Price 75c per bot
tle.
Take Hall’s Family Pills for consti
pation.
Obliging.
They were a very young and obvi
ously bride-and-bridegroomish couple.
On entering the tea shop the maid
tactfully led them to a little side
room which chanced to be unoccupied.
Tea was ordered and served. As the
waitress was leaving the room the
young man discovered an important
fault in the service.
"Oh, waitress,” he said, “may we
bave a spoon?”
“Oh, yes,” said the girl. “I won’t
come back for ten nrnutes, and I quite
think you will be able to have the
room all to yourself.”—Scraps.
Why Do You Suffer
With headache billiousness, consti
pation and the ills it entails. when
Foley’s Orino Laxative will relieve and
cure you. It tones up all the digestive
organs, carries off the waste matter
and stimulates the bowels to their nor
mal activity. It Is a splendid spring
medicine. Sold by all druggists.
The average man’s ship doesn't get
in until after his funeral.
:
pi rnffipiit m You Have
yiggHß Always Bought
; ALCOHOL 3 PEK CENT. {
1* A\£ge(able Reparation (crAs- J x> n #
QP | sirailaimg the ISearS 1116 ; V
tmg (lie Stomadis andßowdsd (\/ f\J*
j| iWftuUifcfaWM Signature /A,)*
ll'. Promoles DigpstionJCheeifii i rif get /iff*
c ness and Kest.Contains ueittur | gl\ IM
P 0 piuxu .Morphine nor MiacraLl fll * *
Y Not Narco tic. t'ft
pi; JtetpeofOM DcSMWnum t Blf \
Z Pmp/ci.7 Seed*
n jUxJmnn * 1 *SLI §
Jkckfft Satis- j m T. 1 $ in
jUsrSted* I I i ft V
lOlZli! i ftmrmw!- } I 1 I IS ■■■
JSq‘ : BuarimifeSiih* J l \ '{'r B
/% $ Use
Si.*-® Aperfect Remedy for Ctmsfipa- | tg.S/
ip« < tion, Sour Stomach,Diarrlioca 1 r* *».
iliiU Worms .Convulsions .Feverish- \ fj fefif 111/ P T
|jP® ness and Loss of Sleep. *La Df Ol
m “Sis' I Thirty Years
|o C |! NEW YORK. . J S W
| I
Exact Copy of Wrapper. the cintaur cokpany, new york city.
g—jlsdar'i'fllWrilT I HfiWi WMlil'l 1 »llb M
SEED! SEED!
FRESH GARDEN, FIELD AND FLOWER
SEED NOW IN STOCK.
D. F. DAVENPORT,
AMERICUS, GA.
410 Lamar St., Opp. New Postoffice. Phono 16
SEABOARD
Air Line Railway
Shriners
New Orleans, La.
APRIL 8-9-10-11. 1910.
$13.00 Round Trip. Tickets sold April
8-9-10-11, and are good to return until
April 24th, with privilege of extension
until May 10th by paying SI.OO.
Full information at Ticket Office.
H. P. EVERETT, Agent.
j
DEMoT
A Runabout you will be proud to, drive.
HOOKS & COMPANY,
Times- Recorder
Supplies the home news fully
day by day. To keep abreast with
the local happenings, with the cur
rent events of Americus, with the
movements for its upbuilding, for
the story of its development.inany j
and every line you must take
The Times-Recorder
Gives all the home news and all
the important happenings of the.
world. Send us your subscription.
The Wise Man
Buys Now
You may think you can wait a few
months and huy the farm you are
thinking of cheaper than you can now.
This may be the case one time in ten
but nine out of ten times you will
have to pay more by waiting than you
would have to pay now.
You, will be sure to make a good
trade by buying either of the following
farms:
400 acres, 5 miles west of Americus
lot of fine timber, dwelling an tenant
houses, $15.00 per acre.
! 130 acres south east of Americus.
All can be cultivated, no waste land,
$4,000.
405 acres, 6 miles of Leslie, $12.50
pr acre.
560 acres near Smithville, well improv-l
ed, fine land. $25.00 per acre.
We have many others, it will pay
you to see us now if you want any
; farm lands.
i THE WISE MAN BUYS NOW.
W. 5. & 6. W. ANDREWS
34 and 36 Planters Bank Building.
~~ LAND
BARGAINS
Snider land Sold.
Little Land Sold.
Come quick for others or
say “1 Am Sorry,”
| 125 acres 3 miles of Plains, adjoin
| ng Jno. A. McDonald old home place
j Dwelling, tenant house and crib.
112 acres 3 miles Sumter, adjoining
Chapell, Rogers and Countryman
Good land and good improvements.
Lots of land 223 and 224 in 17th dis
| triet of Lee Co., adjoining Sumter Co
line, and touching lands which se!
j for S3O to S4O per acre. Ample build
| ings put up 3 years ago.
ißank of Soiitiiwsstern Geo^gie
A Bank Account for giving you a
feeling of prosperity, a feeling of
self respect, a feeling that you are
[ making use of your opportunities In
life.
I lu every state in the Union more
people are opening Savings Accounts
and increasing them weekly than
ever before.
Can you afford NOT TO share in
the general prosperity and SAVE
MONEY when Dollars or more will
start your account.
The Planters Bank
, ol Americus.
For Sale
5 room house, large lot, price $1.000.00
6 rom house, large lot, price $1,500.00.
7 room house, Lee street, price $3,300.
450 acres, largely level land, 4 room
house, 7.00 acre.
200 acres, 2 miles of R. R„ red and
gray soil, running water.
600 acres, 3 miles of R. R., 8 miles of
Americus, $12.00 acre.
1,000 acres, 5 miles of R. R., 500 acres
open, $9 acre. Rent 16 bales cotton.
If you want a large or small farm,
house and lot, or vacant lot, for a
home or investment, come to see me,
or w r rite
P. B. Williford,
526 Cotton Atc., Under Allen House
Headquarters for Bargains In
Heal Estate.
SHARPEN THE
GRASS SHOVEK.
Tom Westheimer, the barber, wiil
sharpen your lawn mower while you
wait. New machine for the purpose
just received. 22-1 m
j
9
IS YOUR I
MONEY
INVESTED
WELL ?
, Next to having money, the most
important thing is how to take care
of it—how best to invest it.
A Banking Institution of this kind
cannot only care for your financial j
interests in a careful, conservative j
way—giving you abundant banking
facilities in every department ol I
finance—but can also give you valua-!
file aid and advice about investments
and securities. Open an account with j
the
BAKE OF SOUTH-WESTERN GEOH-
I GIA’S SAVINGS DEPARTMENT 1
and enjoy the advantages that accrue.
rT'r' •'
h ' .tisilfnY ■ ■ ’
SIR 8 .
gplpr .
Broadway Central Hote?,
Broadway, corner Third Street
IX THE HEART OF NEW YORK
. Only Medium Brice Ho‘el left
in New York. Special atten
tion given to ladies unescorted
Special Rates for Summer
Our Table is the foundation of our
enormous business
I American Plan, $2.50 upwards
European Plan, SI.OO upwards
Send for large colored Map of New
York—Free
BAX C. WEBB, Proprietor
I The Only New York Hotel Featuring
American Plan. Moderate Prices. Ex
cellent Food. Good Service.
PROFESSIOHAJL CA KBS
C. VY. WALKER, 31. 1).
I Office over Daniels Jewelry Store.
Jackson, near Forsyth.
Office Phone 587. Res. Phone 13.
I Practice limited to diseases of the
EYE, EAR, XOSE and THROAT.
Office Hours 9 to 1; 2 to 5 p. m.
AT OFFICE XIGHTS AX’D SUNDAYS
BY APPOIXTMEXT.
Dlt. L. F. GRUBBS,
Specialist
EYE, EAR, NOSE AND THROAT.
; Office in Plasters Bank Building,
| Phone 353. Residence Phone 452.
| Office Hours 9 a. m. to 1 p. m.; 2 to 6
■ I p. m.
HEXRY B. ALLEY, 31. If.,
Office in Cotney Building, Opposite
Postoffice.
Office Phone 363; Res. Phone 466.
Practice limited to diseases of the
j EYE, EAR, XOSE and THROAT.
j Office Hours: 9t01;2t0 sp, m.
AT OFFICE XIGHTS AXD SUNDAYS
BY APPOIXTMEXT.
DR. J. YY. ELLIOTT,
OS TE OPATH IS PH 1 Sit IA X.
Office at Windsor Hotel.
MONDAYS AXD THURSDAYS.
; J. WADE CHAMBLISS, M. D.
Physician and Snrgeoa.
Office Aillson Bldg. Res. 115 Jackson
Telephone 429. Telephone <5
MORRIS K. FORD,
DE.VIIST
Office in Cotney Building, Opposite
Rembert’s Drug Store.
Office Phone 363.
Residence l lione 355.
C.F. DAY 13, r entist.
II DENTISTS.
t . .OFFICE RESIDENCE
j | Tlmes-Recoider Bldg 2*B . ackson St,
Phone 262. Phone 218.
J. R. HAIR, Dentist.
. i
j Office over Dodson's Pharmacy. Tel
j ephone 275. Residence, corner Col
! j lege street and Forrest. Phone 80.
j DR. HENRY GLO\ ER.
Dentist.
Ob f emar Street, over 8!F t Clo!bi»*
[ Store. Phone 488
Honrs 8 a. m t» 5 p n,
ATTORNEYS.
I\S Y HIXON,
! '*crncv W Counsellor ml Let*.
°?ffce In Rvite Building.
■j LA HAWKINS.
I ito i ne \}~ut-SMW,
1 U.tr ,n A ..fuiU-s Buldiiag.
I
.1. A. AXSLEY,
• Attorney-at-Lan, Americus, Ga.
Bankruptcy,
; Collections and Estates..
Office Byne Building.
! The
Union Central
Life Insurance
Company
Organized 1867. Assets $71523. 966.28
Earns the Highest Interest Rate on
, Its Investment.
Has Extremely low death rate.
Paye the Largest Dividends to pol
; icy holders, and thereby furnishes in
| suranee at the lowest cost. f
Let me show you.
Lee M. Hansford
Room 18.,
Bianiers Bank Bldg.,
Americas, Ga.
Repairing Gins
I overhaul and whet saws, replace
| ribs, refill or fill brushes and gener
j ally repair gins. Address
J. 31. McELHEXXEY, Eliaviile, Ga.
20-1 m
BRAY LINE.
All orders for drayiug and hauling
given prompt attention. Reliable ser
rtee. , ‘I : £391
1 have bought the dravlng out
ness of Mr. Williams, combining ••
with my own line. Phone No. 286
M rs. Maud Smith