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PHH)A¥, MAY 4, 1917
W J ""1
9 PLUGGI NG THE g
YEAR AROUND BEATS AN I
OCCASIONAL WINNING- g
TI 7E do not offer occasional bargains in furniture for
’ ’ the purpose of getting rid of undesirable stock,
but at all seasons of the year we sell the sort of home
comforts that a life time at prices you are very will
ing to pay. We invite you to open an account with us.
Beginning on May the we will give our PROFIT
SHARING COUPONS to all customers settling their accounts by
the fifth of the month, or on any part of the account
that is paid by that date. Your account is welcomed
here.
Allison Furniture Co.
J. W. RENFRUE, Bgr.
P O. BOX 1223. Phones, Ivy 4531, Ivy 3250. LONG DISTANCE 9922
C. H. ARTHUR '
303-304-305 CANDLER BUILDING, ATLANTA, GA.
ORDERS EXECUTED ON:
Correspondent of New York Stock Exchange.
A. A. HOUSMAN & COMPANY, New York Cotton Exchange.
Established 1884. New York Produce Exchange.
20 Broad Street. New York Coffee & Sugar Exchange.
NEW YORK. Chicago Board of Trade.
Every Attention In Our Pre
scription Department
We bend every energy of our entire force to perfect
ing the prescription department of our store. Be as
sured that the proper mixing of pure drugs comprises
the leading feature.
When'you get a prescription from our store we have
special pride in telling you that it is right.
No matter when you plant or what you plant remem
ber we handle seed of fir& class quality grown by repu
table seeed houses. Give us a trial on your next seed or
der.
Alien’s Drug & Seed Store
Phone 148, Forsyth St.
Save Money!
iff by having your old Mattress made new, also
Jfl consider the more comfort you will enjoy. Call
120 our prices be quoted you.
Pope Mattress Company
I CENTRAL OF GA. RAILWAY I
"THE RIGHT WAY” I
Americus To Atlanta I
VIA —
COLUMBUS I
Leave Americus .3:40 a.m. ||
Arrive Atlanta 10:45 a.m.
Jor full information, phone No. 1 or 137 ||
GEORGE ANDERSON. Agt. I
AMERICUS, GEORGIA
' - £ -- - • : -■ - -
FOR RENT
5-room bungalow in 7-acre grove; 3 acres open
land; 21 acres under fence with branch through it. All
for sls month. Here is your opportunity to hedge
against the high cofft of living. See me at once.
A. C. CROCKETT
Office —Windsor Hotel
HONOR ROLL FOR
ORAMMAR SCHOOLS
FURLOW SCHOOL.
First Grade—Section One.
Louisa Cole, Ruba Gammage, Mary
House, Virginia Moreland, Frances
Reeves, Barclay Allison, Richard Alli
son, Byron Bell, Darby Dudley, Elton
Gammage, Ralph McDaniel, Wallace
Sheffield.
First Grade—Section Two
Lee Adkins, Robert Barnett, Frank
Buchanan, Charles Council, Ainsworth
Gatewood, Sam Heys, Coney Oliver,
Walton Stewart, Teresa Daniel, Mar
tha Duncan, Thelma Guy, Louise Heg.
wood, Ruth Hightower, Eugenia John
son, Winnie Mask, Annie Turpin.
Second Grade—Section One
Janette Slappey, Mary Will Stevens,
Lottie Livingston, Helen Hosselton,
Mildred Hines, Doryth Fetner, Ruth
Brady, Daniel Everette, Ralph Herrin,
Roy Oliver.
Second Grade—Section Two
I Elizabeth Andrews, Edith Bahnsen,
j Jane Broadhurst, Virginia Davenport,
Mary Harris, Iva Lee Herrin, Cordelia
Hooks, Bertha Sawyer, Nell Schneider,
Frances Warlick, Helen Witt, John
Allison. Carroll Ansley, Tom Capien,
Jerome Cohen. Charles Davis, Laney
McMath, Forrest Nicholson, V. P.
Young.
Third Grade—Section One
Massie Lane, Mary E. Morgan, Nelle
Prance, Charlie Mae Sieg, Anne
Walker, Henry Mayes Coleman, Hawk
ins Dykes, Tom Gatewood, Chas Sulli
van, Claude Yearwood.
Third Grade—Section Two
Robert Culpepper, Jake De Bruyne,
Lucile Summerford, James McDaniel,
Elizabeth Joyner, John Carruthers,
Harriet Rylander, Louise Reeves, Hal
Harris, William Cox, Frank Weaver,
Anthony Council.
Fourth Grade—Section One
Henry Everett, Carl Humber, George
Oliver, Theoditus Stukes, Melvin Tye.
Mildred Clark, Willa Sanborn, Fannie
Love Stevens, Florence Stevens.
Fourth Grade—Section Two
Alton Poole, Joe Poole, Roy Dawson,
Alice Harrold, Martha Johnson, Mil
dred Mackey, Dora Riley.
Fourth Grade-Section Three
Emmett England. Joe Sutton, Thelma
Lansford. Charlotte Turner, Virginia
Nicholson.
Fifth Grade—Section One
Ann Heys, Mary Elizabeth Easterlin,
Ruth Everette.
Fifth Grade—Section Two
Claire Harris, Christine Brown,
Mary Frances Evans, Mary Earle Al
len, Mary Glover.
Sixth Grade—Section One
Mildred Warlick, Katherine Turner.
Seventh Grade—Section One
Elizabeth Sheffield, Hallie Walker.
Seventh Grade —Section Two
Susie Jonhson.
East Americus—First Grade
Rachel Carruthers, Mamie Claire
Speer, Ardelle Stanley, Alice Azar,
Eugenia Bragg, Wade H. Johnson,
James Wheeler.
East Americus—Second Grade
Elizabeth Clarke, Lizzie May Gam
mage , Anton De Bruyne, Coleman
Coleman Speer.
Prospect School—First Grade
Vivian Jones. Caroline Mathis,
Douglas Tye.
Prospect School—Third Grade
Lillian Cannon, Elizabeth Smith,
Ruby Johnson, Frances Jones. Frances
Belcher, Kelsey Howington.
HOW TO BET STRONG
A Simple Remedy.
Whatever the cause, we want to say i
to every person who needs strength, 11
you need Vinol, as it is the most effi-j
cient strength creator we have in our j
store. Here is the proof from Dorches
ter, Mass:— ' 1
"I don’t know what we would do
without Vinol in our family. I was
weak, nervous and run-down as . the i
result of an operation, and Vinol re
stored my strength. Then grandmoth-:
er had a nervous breakdown and Vi-j
no! built her up and restored hery
health and strength after everything .
else had failed. We have psed Vinolj
for 13 years in our family and would j
not be without it in the house.” Myrtlej
1.. Healy, Dorchester, Mass.
We believe in Vinol because we
know it is a great strength creator —
due to the beef and cod liver peptones,
iron and manganese peptonates andj
glycerophosphates, all dissolved in aj
pure medicinal wine, so we always (
return the purchase money if Vinol
fails to benefit those who buy it.
Hooks’ Pharmacy. Also at the lead-,
ing drug stores In all Georgia towns.
ScmcoC Solve
REMOVES SKIN AFFECTIONS |
Ono package proves it. Sold and
guaranteed by above Vinoi druggist.
THE AMERICUS TIMES-RECORDER.
jYz/? s
Ml
■k
Dreadnought or the Canoe?
The dreadnought plows without a tremor
through a storm which would mean ship
wreck for a frail canoe.
What a tremendous moral in this comparison
there is for us all!
Be it the purchase of an investment bond or
a suit of clothes, put your faith in the institu
tion which posesses the ballast, the even
keeled stability of the dreadnought. Invinci
ble steel instead of fragile birch bark!
Behind the production of Kirschbaum
Clothes, there is an institution with the
strength, the size, the weathering power to
hold true to its course in the face of a veritable
hurricane of difficulties which have been rain
ing upon the clothing world.
CHURCHWELL’S DEPARTMENT STORE
J HIS MAN WOULD FIGHT
FOR A CHANCE TO FIGHT
LOS ANGELES, May 4.—There’s a
strapping youth here who wants to
fight for Uncle Sam, and who will fight
if the war lasts long enough. There
are two extremes in this fighting busi
ness—the slackers who won’t fight and
the fellows who will almost fight for
a chance to fight.
This big fellow appeared at the re
cruiting station two weeks back, but
a sudden rush of work crowded him
away. Two days later he came back,
but the examiner found the scar of a
recent appendicitis operation, and he
was rejected.
A week went by. A familiar face
appeared at the recruiting station. The
man wanted to join the “soldiers of
the sea.’’ The examination disclosed
a wonderfully tatooed butterfly. Close
inspection showed this mark all but
hid an appendicitis operation scar.
The lad was rejected. He may yet
serve his country by becoming a far
mer.
To Drive Out Malaria
And Build Up The System
Take the old Standard GROVES
TASTELESS chill TGNIC. You know
what you are taking, as the formula is
printed on every label, showing it la
! Quinine and Iron in a tasteless form.
■ The Quinine drives out malaria, the
Iron builds up system. 50c. advt
CHICHESTER S PILLS
/if Diamond Brand/>y
Fill, in Red and €old r
boxes, sealed with Blue Ribbon. \/
fl
I L S DIAMOND BRAK» FILLS f t
\ C* known asay»
rC-r sold by drujGlsts evlr* watte
SAGE TEA TURNS !
: GRAY HAIR DARK
It’s Grandmother’s Recipe to Bring!
I
Color Lustre and Youthfulness to
Hair When Faded, Streaked
or Gray.
i
t That beautiful, even sahde of dark ■
J glossy hair can only be had by brew-\
i ing a mixture of Sage Tea and Sulphur. |
. j Your hair is your charm. It makes or j
, ! mars the face. When it fades, turns
• gray or streaked, just an application or
i two of Sage and Sulphur enhances its
. appearance a hundredfold.
Don't bother to prepare the mixture;
you can get this famous old recipe im
proved by the addition of other in
. gradients for 50 cents a large bottle. *
all|ready for use. It is called Wyeth’s [
Sage and Sulphur Compound. Ths j
can always be depended upon to bring I
( back the natural color and lustre of
your hair.
': Everybody uses “Wyeth's Sage and
r Sulphur Compound now because it
1 darkens so naturally and evenly that
I nobody can tell it has been applied.
• You simply dampen a sponge or soft
! brush with it and draw this through the
t hair, taking one small strand at a
! time; by morning the gray hair has
i disappeared, and after another appli
s cation it becomes beautifully dark
• and appears glossy and lustrous. This
rcady-to-use preparation is a delight-
’ ful toilet requisite for those who desire
. ! dark hair and a youthful appearance.
’, j It is not intended for the cure, mitiga
■ jtion or prevention of disease, advt.
Quality unveering and undeviating, today as
always—whether you pay sls, $16.50, S2O,
$25 or up to S4O.
A Man and His Colors
Every man has colors which become him best —
which complement the color of his hair, eyes and
complexion. He should follow these rules in the
selection of his clothes:
Light hair, blue eyes, fair skin—navy blue; medium
blue; any grey; black or black and white.
Light hair, blue, brown or grey eyes, florid com
plexion —warm deep brown, plain or in mixture;
navy blue; black.
Black hair, black or brown eyes, dark skin —brown;
warm grey; medium blue or navy; black or black
and white.
Brown hair, brown, grey or blue eyes, fair skin —
grey or dark brown; medium blue or navy; black
or black and white.
—®y the Spectator. ,
The Wagon You Can’t Overload
In this day and time with graded roads throughout the
country, it is not a question of how much can my mules
pull, but “How Much Will My Wagon Carry?” We have
used four of these famous wagons in our business for the
last eleven years without even having to shrink a tire.
Call and see our complete stock of the numerous mod
els and different width tires.
HARROLD BROTHERS., Agents
“Ask the Man Who Owns a Mitchell.”
Notice to the lax Payers
I will keep this tax books open until the night of
the 10th of May. I had rather lose 10 days than to be
cause of a single man being entered on the tax book as
a defaulter. So come on and return your property at
once. , „
Yours Respectfully,
GEORGE D. JONES, Tax Receiver, Sumter County.
PAGE THREE