Newspaper Page Text
TUESDAY, MAY 27 1913
BAPTISTS Will
HAVE PICNI AT
NYRTLEJiPRINGS
n SCHOOLS EDM THERE
• Wednesday and Thursday for
Their Outings
Wednesday and Thursday will he
kala days at Myrtle Springs, as bot'i
Baptist Sunday schools of Americus,
the First Baptist and Furlow Lawn;
will have their annual picnics at that
popular resort. The Frist Baptist
school, with a large number of invited
guests is going there tomorrow.
The picnickers will assemble at the
church from 7:30 to 8 o’clock, where
conveyances will be in wailing to take
them to the picnic grounds. Ample
provision in this line has been made
by the committee in charge.
Furlow Lawns Baptist school will
go out to Myrtle Springs Thursday.
The start will be made from the
church at a seasonable hour, 7:30 to
8 o'clock, and a gala day is assured
all those who attend. Conveyances
will carry the Sunday school folks and
their invited guests to the picnic park.
Both schools will be largely repre
sented by members from their own
ranks and friends of other denomina
tions who will enjoy the day at Myrtle
■with them.
• USE ALLEN’S FOOKASE,.
The antiseptic powder to be shaken Into the shoes.
If you want rest end comfort for tired, aching,
swollen, sweating feet, nse Allen’s Foot-Ease. It re
lieves corns ana bunions of all pain and prevents
blisters, sore and callous spots. Just the thing for
Dancing Parties, Patent Leather Shoes, and for
Breaking in New Shoes. It is the greatest comfort
dlscovervof theage. Try It to-day. Sold every where,
25 cts * Don’t accept any mbatitute. For FREE trial
package, address Allen S, Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y.
I The One Man Store Success I
It costs money to buy advertising space in the newspapers, and not I
infrequently I meet a merchant who sees nothing but the cost side I
m
;; t tSUALLY such a man believes ii !: HPHE man with a wide calibre
i; U in being his own janitor, er- WVV m a T sees that such expenses are i;
rand boy, clerk and general man- j! | IIP i| incidental to increase volume of ;
:i ager. He lives in terror ot a pay- ji %| ■LI L I|( ||4 % <: business, may be the very best in
i' roll, and the expense of expansion jj I §1 I II ll* ii vestment that he can make. He j;
i: improvements fairly palls him. j; ill! 88 8 1 IJlf Ijil j: is willing to pay clerks good wages
i; A man of this type is just as big ii M A j! to double his stock if necessary, j:
ii today as he will be 20 years from i; ii to pay out money to maintain ;
: now, if providence grants him life ■: r ii an attractive store if, ai the end of
ii and unlimited prosperity. He is ji T 1 j: the month he is able to show a
i! carrying a portion of the same <i JL :i net profit above the net profit of
J: stock that he had five years ago, j: ii the one-man store. He is the type ; ;
:i and unless he happens to have a ;i that sees the relationship between
call for these articles, he will hold ii * m ms business and every other sue- ;;
:: them on his shelves indefinitely, j: I¥\lT| "| 1¥ f* F 1 ii cessful enterprise, and he reasons
:i He will tell you in a confidential j: A I 11/L 1/ I |\L i: that selling methods successfully ~
ii way, that it might be alright for -ii UIIVI' W\ I :i used by his fellow merchant,even j;
«: merchants in other lines to adver- fill f I ill 11111 J ii though the latter be in a totally ;;
:i tise and make special offers, but 1 *** * M j: different line of business, may
ii his lines is “different you know.” ii ji be used with profit to himself. Jjj
■ Some men can understand the reason for, and the necessity ot adver- I
tising* They know that money invested in a business message in the
I COLUMNS OF THE TIMES-RECORPER |
I today will go out in the highways and fill their store with buyers tomorrow. Os I
course it costs him money to advertise, so it does to hire clerks, to keep a delivery
service .and to rent a building in a choice location.
fl s
But these things are part of his plans of doing business, and if he should fal
■ ter in doing any of them because it cost money, he would not be the man that he |is I
I —he would be running the 11
I ONE MAN STORE I
There’s a world of satisfac
tion in buying Uneedaßiscuit
because you know you will
get what you want —soda
crackers that are oven-fresh,
crisp, clean, appetizing and
nourishing.
Uneeda Biscuit are always uniform
in quality —they are always alike
in crispness, in flavor —they are
soda crackers you can depend
upon. And all because Uneeda
Biscuit are uncommon soda crack
ers packed in an uncommon way.
Five cents everywhere in the
moisture-proof package.
NATIONAL BISCUIT COMPANY
PRESIDENT OF ANDREW
COLLEGE IS QUITE ILL
President Malone is Threatened With
Appendicitis.
Cuthbert, Ga., May 26. —Friends of
President J. W. Malone, of Andrew Fe
male college, who is in an Atlanta'
Hospital threatened with appendicitis,)
rejoice in the news that his condition
is much improved and the prospect ot
escaping an operation is good. The
illness of President Malone, at this
time, is more regrettable for the reason
that the college is in the midst of its
commencement exercises. However, J
Profs. Kemp and Dumas Malone, sons
of the president, have the affairs of
the institution well in hand, and are
carrying forward the exercises and
the work, without the least confusion.
MUSICAL RECITAL AT
ANDREW IS INTERESTING
Sumter Young Lady Was Among Par
ticipants.
Cuthbert, Ga., May 26. —The recital
given by Misses Vernon Ti’ara and
' Stella Wade, graduates in piano, and
I Miss Eunice Rustin, graduate in ex
pression, was a pleasing and creditable
feature of Andrew Female college
commencement exercises, now in pro
gress. These young ladies were as
sisted by Miss Matalie Hayes, vocalist,
and Miss Horne, accompanist.
The hour spent before the mirror Is
about the only hour some women ever
spend for quiet reflection.
Character needs no monument erect
ed to it, for it lives forever.
THE AMERICUS DAILY TIMES-RECORDER.
RED SOX MAKE FORTUNE
EVEN IF THEY FAIL TO WIN
THE CHAMPIONSHIP AGAIN
(By L. R. Murdoch.)
Boston, May 26.—With their season
just about one-fifth finished tne
world's champion Red Sox have plat -
ed before about a quarter of a million
spectators. If the team returns to
anything like its old form it should
have no difficulty in keeping up this
atendance throughout the season. That
would mean a total atendance for the
year of about one million and a quar
ter.
Should the Sox gradually improve
until they fipally strike their old gait,
thereby getting actually into another
pennant race in the final month or
two of the season, this attendane ■
would jump tremendously. A close
finish throughout the final weeks of
the season would mean crowds of
enormous size day after day, and the
jThat’sAll! j
A A good profit can be £
a made, out of a small flodc A
of chickens, by giving care-
ful attention to their feed, ]
• and by giving them, every ]
# day, tome doses of V
Bee Dee
STOCK & POULTRY MEDtCIRE
4| This will increase egg 41
a production, help make win- f|
ter layers; put broilers and a
roasters in prime condi
• tion, during season of ]
# highest prices, and prevent, V
4| or cure, disease. Try it r 41
£ « Price Sc. 50c »nd SI.OO per cut. jg|
• "Hat given as better results than an? A
other pouttri tood or powder. —Clover »
A Bloom Poulin Yards. Owensbgro, Ky. 4b
I figure would go beyond a million and
a half.
So you see the winning of the cham
pionship of the world in baseball
means very much more than the re
ceipts of thq year in which the title is
taken. It means greater profits the
succeeding year, even if the team
falls behind its standard of the tri
umphant season.
A total attendance of a million and
c quarter means receipts of more than
three quarters of a million dollars, a
million and a half will leave about
8900,000 at the gate.
The Red Sox will receive consider
ably more than half of the total re
ceipts, because their home crowds will
be greater than these on foreign
fields.
It is safe to predict that the Red Sox
this year, not considering the possi
bility of a world series, will make a
greater profit than they did last
year when a world series and its net
gain of about $90,000 left about a quar-
I ter of a million dollars “velvet” in
I the club treasury.
I The group of men who invested in a
I half interest in the Red Sox a year
I ago last winter—among them James
R. McAleer, Robert B. McKoy, C. M.
Randall, of Chicago, Jake Stahl, Ban
Johnson (presumably) and some of
| their friends—made nearly enougn
profit last year to return them their
investment.
Os course all the profits were not
I divided. But they stand to the owners’
I credit, nevertheless. So what the club
| makes this year will be principally
| “velvet” to the men mentioned above
| who own one-half, and to the Taylor
I interests, who hold title to Fenway
I Park and a half interest in the club.
Start Your Summer Trip
On a Comfortable Ship
Whether you are going to the mountain or seaside
resorts of the north and east, or visiting New York, Boston
or th; other great cities for sightseeing, the ocean voyage
makes you fit for the pleasures that follow.
I the invigorating sea breezes quiet the nerves and supply
an appeti e that the splendid meals satisfy. There’s no end
o amusements aboard and you meet the most congenial
pl“ imaginable. In Tact a trip to the North or East
;. d etm ni n a Savannah Line steamer is one longdelight—
Il’a a Cplendid Vacation in Itself
fu'tpar icuhn, fa es and literature from
)„i.r local or upon application to
DOCTORS ENDORSE NEMO'S
HERPICIDE FOR THE HAIR
When a doctor endorses a prepara
tion it means more than an ordinary
testimonial. His opinion is always that
of the professional man devoted to the
welfare of the people.
Ur. J. J. Boyd, of Covington, Tenn.,
says: “1 feel it my duty to write this
for the benefit of those suffering from
dandruff. In the average case a few
applications of Newbro’s Herpicide will
remove all dandruff. It is advisable to
continue its use for several weeks.”
The words of J. B. Thompson, M. D.,
No. 2, Burroughs Place, Cor. Hollis St.,
Boston, Mass., are not less enthusias
ic: ‘‘l can only speak in praise jf
Newbro’s Herpicide. It is all that is
claimed, and, perhaps, more. Herpicide
not only cleanses the scalp but bright
ens the hair, gives it life and makes
it soft.”
Dr. T. A. Moore, Duncan, Ariz.,
This is the reason why the mag- 1
nates who control the world’s chans
pions are not stricken with worry ov.
er the slump of the club. Os course,
they want to win again, both for the
increased profits that another victory
would bring, and for the sake of good
sportsmanship, as well. But they stand
to make a fortune, win or lose.
The relation of this is meant is
show that the Sox owners have a tre
mendous intrest in this year’s club
from now on. The team will come
home June 3 for a long stay. Every 1
club in the league will visit Fenway 1
Park before they go West again. The
showing of the club in tire next twa
: weeks will determine the size of ths
early crowds at Fenway Park. And the
I work of the Sox, after they return
: home, will affect thousands of later
daily atendants, one way or the other. ,
POOR POLLY SHOULD
AND DID WORRY
i Expression of Deep and Abiding Sal
i Isfaetion on the Face of a Cat.
Chicago, May 26. —Polly was the S3OO
j
parrott that has for ten years been
lively inmate of the home of the Rev.
I
j. w. Libbettson, pastor of the Sacra- ■
|
mento Boulevard church, met an un-,
usual finish today. She flew out of a
i
window and with a shriek, ‘‘l should
|
worry!” entered the home of Mrs.. C. P.
Hall, somed istance off. A large brio-'
die cat was in the room when Poll A
landed. The parrot's yells could
heard above the growls of the cat. Mrs. 1
Hall ran for the police and met Mrs. ■
Libbertson. •* ** ' (... J
“’There’s a ghost in my house,” she;
said. “It cries like a child, but it flies
around like a spirit and hollers, ‘I
should worry!’ ” t j
“It’s not a ghost,” said Mrs. Lib
bertson. “It's my polly.”
She burst in the door. The large
brindle cat occupied the immediate
foreground. There was an expression ,
of deep and abiding satisfaction on the
cat's countenance.
There were a few feathers and a
beak on the carpet. )
PAGE THREE
writes of his experience: “My scalp
was in places covered by patches a*
dry, scaly material and the itching was
incessant. Since using Herpicide all
these evils have disappeared and my
hair is soft, smooth and growing. Hair
has grown on spots before but thinly
covered.”
Newbro’s Herpicide is ‘‘the original
remedy to kill the dandruff germ” and
stop falling hair. The terrible itching
which goes with dandruff is allayei
almost at once.”
Newbro’s Herpicide in 50c and SI.OO
sizes, Is guaranteed to do all that is
claimed. If you are not satisfied your
money will be refunded.
Applications may be obtained at the
leading barber shops. Be sure you get.
genuine Herpicide.
Howell’s Pharmacy, Howell-Prather
Drug Co., Windsor Pharmacy, Special
Agehts.
(URL, SIX YEARS OLD,
DIES OF “OLD AGE.”
Cleveland, 0., May 26;—Clevelan t
medical circles today are deeply inter
ested in the death of Dora Grzybeck, a
G-year-old girl, who died of “old age.”
The child's hair was as white as that
|ot an aged person, 'her face wrinklej
and her whole appearance that of a
woman of 70 years. The disease of
which the child died is known as Rav
naud’s disease, and is rare. The cor
oner said he knew of only one oth :r
! such case during his years of practice.
FREE ADVICE
TO SICK WOMEN
Thousands Have Been Helped
By Common Sense
Suggestions.
Women suffering from any form of
female ills are invited to communicate
promptly with the
woman’s private
correspondence de
partment of the Ly
dia E. Pinkham Med
icine Co., Lynn,
Mass. Your letter
will be Opened, rear!"
and answered by a
woman and held in
I
strict confidence. A woman can freely
talk of her private illness to a woman ;
1 thus has been established a confidential
, correspondence which has extended over
many years and which has never been
> broken. Never have they published a
( testimonial or used a letter without the
- written consent of the writer, and never
1 has the Company allowed these confi
| dential letters to get out of their pos
i session, as the hundreds of thousands
j of them in their files Will attest
Out of the vast volume of experience
. which they have to draw from, ft is more
1 than possible that they possess the very
knowledge needed in your case. Noth
ing is asked in return except your good
will, and their advice has helped thou
sands. Surely any woman, rich or poor,
should be glad to take advantage of this
generous offer of assistance. Address
Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co., (con
fidential) Lynn, Mass.
I'jerv woman ought to have
Lydia E. Pink ham’s 80-page
Text Book. It is not a’ book for
general distribution, as it is too
expensive. , It is free and only
obtainable by mail. Write for
it today.