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SATCBDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, 1913
J SMART COATS AND DRESSES
FOR TINY TOTS
If tiny tots do not have their new
tall coats designated as “sport coats.”
like their grownup sisters, they look
Just as smart and happy when seen
playing in Central park. Just a half
hour there on a bright morning will
make one acquainted with these fasci
nating miniature fashion plates, from
whom the busy mother can get ideas
for the clothes she must make. Here
are two sketches of stylish and warm
full length models for children. The
younger child has on a one-piece plait
ed dress (7947) In a serviceable beige
color poplin with a deep collar and
cuffs of brown and white check silk.
To obtain either pattern Illustrated fill No gj ze
j out this coupon and Inclose 15 cents In
j stamps or coin. Be sure to state number Name
lof pattern and size, measuring over the Address
■ fullest part of the bust for dimensions.
Address Pattern Department.
Greatest Prospects in the World
For Greater Georgia
Every farmer in the State of Georgia should take a well earned the
work on the farm has been finished. If you will spend this vacation on the
grounds of the State Fair at Macon, not only will your vacation be a but
it wili be a season of learning for the entire family. The chi . ■ rh t w :n
that will be of interest to them. The good wife will learn many things that wi
benefit her at home. MAKE YOUR PLANS TO COME.
Fifteen Thousand Dollars In Cash Premiums
$5,000 in cash premiums for Agriculture $ 1,000 cash premuiums for Swine
$5,800 in cash purses of 6 days’ racing $1,750 premiums for cattle
$1,300 cash premiums tor Poultry S 125 cash premiums for Sheep
SI,OOO cash premiums for Horses and Mules $ 700 premiums, Boys Corn Club
SI,OOO Special Corn Premiums $ 225 premiums, Girls Canning Club
REMEMBER Isl RIP DAYS- OCTOBER
THE DATES . 21st TO 31st
*
a , <.'ivnT\n. OF 4 000 GEORGIA SINGERS ON SATURDAY, OCT 2.>, 1H“.
Among the great special features in the amusement line are the *jL GI. j ’ TH .„ ..jifat pavat AI I IN MOTION
REPLICA OF THE GREAT PANAMA CANAL, SHOWING THE SHIES ENTERING AND LEAVING THIS GREAT CANAL-ALL IN MOTION.
THE MIDWAY WILL BE ONE .BLAZE OF GLORY, FOR THERE WILL BE AN ARRAY OF THE BEST '
BLY BE BROUGHT TOGETHER ON AN OCCASION LIKE THIS. HANAFOUR.DS SHADO\V OF THE CROSS;
CATED HORSE; SORCHO’S GREAT DEEP SEA DIVERS; BUCKSKIN BEN S FAMOUS rni T TFR’S* OLD PLANTATION' PEKIN
PONY SHOW; DREAMLAND-CIRCUS SIDESHOW; EBERTS TRIP TO THE UNDERWORLD; COLLIER S OLD PLANTATION, PEKIN
PEKIN SHOW; HATCHER’S MOTORDROME; TRIP TO MARS; MITCHELL’S MERRY GO- ‘ .
Georgia’s Greatest State Fair
Auspices Georgia Stale Agricultural Society
Macon, Ga., Oct. 21-31
JlillllS H. OTTO, President HARHV t. HOBEOT, Sec'y and (ien, Manager
■ which is also used for the belt. It is a
■ warm dress to be worn without a coat
• on mild days. For a child of six years
[ 2% yards of 42 inch material will be
, sufficient. The pattern is cut in four
sizes and costs 15 cents.
1 Soft and beautiful in texture, but
light in weight, is the mixed tweed
1 used for the older girl’s long coat. It
i has a straight one-piece back and coat
( sleeves. The shawl collar and cults
i are made of one of the latest kinds of
i trimming plush in seal brown. This
■ pattern will require 1% yards of 54
s inch goods for the coat and IV6 of 24
1 inch plush. The coat is cut in five
, sizes. Fifteen cents.
O Gaßy
Current Schedules Effective 11th Sept
Central Time. .
TRAINS ARRIVE.
From Savannah, Augusta,
Atlanta and Macon * 7:30 p it
From Columbus and in
termediate points 12:30 a m
From Lockhart, Dothan,
Albany, Troy and Mont
gomery *10:45 p iu
From Lockhart, Dothan,
Albany, Troy and Mont
gomery * 2:05 p ra
From Atlanta ana Macon.* 2:15 p tn
From Augusta, Savannah,
Atlanta and Macon * 5:25 a in
Froth Columbus and in
termediate points 1 7:10 p a
From Columbus and in
termediate points *10:00 a u
From Albany and Jack
sonville *3:53 a in
From Albany * 0:50 a in
TRAINS DEPART.
Tor Macon, Augusta and
Savannah .. * 0:50 ahi
For Albany, Dothan.
Lockhart, Troy and
Montgomery * 5:25 a ni
For Albany, Dothan,
Lockhart, Troy and
Montgomery * 2:15 p m
For Macon and Atlanta . ..* 2:05 p m
For Macon, Atlanta, Sav
annah and Augusta *10:45 p m
For Columbus * 3:45 p m
For Columbus I a m
Por Columbus, Birming
ham and Chicago * 3:55 a m
For Albany * 7:30 p m
For Albany and Jackson
ville *12:30 a m
♦Daily. '.Except Sunday.
SI eping cars between Americus and
Atlanta on trains leaving Americus
10:35 p. m., arriving Atlanta 6:25 a. m
Leaving Atlanta 11:45 p. m. Connects
at Macon with sleeping cars to and
from Savannah.
Pullman sleeping cars between Chi
cago, St Louis and Jacksonville on
“Seminole Limited,” leaving Americus
for Jacksonville 12:30 a. m. Leaves
Americus for St. Louis and Chicago,
via Columbus and Birmingham at 3:55
m.
For further information apply to S.
B. Ellis, Ticket Agent, Americus, or
John W. Blount, District Passenger
Agent, Macon, Ga.
THE AMERICUS DAILY TIMES-RECORDER.
mm RECEIVES
BOMB IB MAIL
But it Has Filled Only With
“Hot Air”
Atlanta, Sept. 19. —If the little steel
bomb .that was sent to Mayor Woodard
was sent as a joke and not as a sample,
the point of the joker is not difficult to
see: the tube was filled with air, effer
vescent gas, the same thing that
Mayor Woodard and Lincoln McCon
nell, and Chief Beavers and Marion
Jackson and everybody else connected
with vice reform and city government
has been filled with for the past six
months.
When the tube arrived through the
mails, the mayor and the postoffice in
spectors honestly thought it was an in
fernal machine, filled with nitroglycer
ine, but having satisfied themselves
that it is absolutely harmless, it has
been suggested that they reason out
the moral of its contents.
When it comes to an overproduction
of effervescent gas and “hot air,” the
mayor and the people he has been
quarreling with have had all the car
bonating companies backed off the
map.
It has been suggested that the little
tube be preserved, and that it be given
a prominent place, like the old-time
skeleton at the feast, at every future
council or board meeting and which
the possibility of a wordy wrangle is
likely—and that means all of them.
THIS CAT REARS
RABBITS AND RATS
Butler, N. J., Sept. 19.— “Tankuay."
a pet cat in the Hotel Butler here, .s
i ’.Tsing three rabbits. Recently she
reared a litter of rats.
give
a « II A Ball Bearing, Long VC r eart'ng Tyj*writ^
operating extort
TKink of everything that is modem and useful in typewriter con
struction —then add twenty to thirty per cent, for increased efficiency I
The L. C. Smith 3ros. Typewriter I
It s compact, complete, easy to operate, durable and proof against inexperience and
Ball Bearings permit closer adjustments without binding than any other form of I
bearing. Expressed in human effort, this means that the operator can cU more work I
—better work, with the least physical and mental strain. ■
MAIL THIS COUPON M
gentlemen: —I am interested in a Typewriter for | | General Correspondence
■ a □Bat* □T,un tu * DIsUW*, l|
I k Ajjr < !s A BI
V U To L. C. SMITH & BROS. TYPEWRITER COMPANY /flli
I HOME OFFICE AND FACTORY AT SYRACUSE. N. Y. B ||| |jl
B 121 North Pryor Street
ajpslto w a ™ ° a - 4 11111
H 336 SECOND STREET, MACON, GA.
CHURCH BOARDS START
A REAL NEWS BUREAU
Nashville, Tenu., Sept. 19.—A co
operative news bureau, operated under
the auspices of the Southern Baptist,
Southern Methodist and Southern Presr
byterian foreign mission boards, op
ened here today with Mrs. Ida Cilyde
Clarke, a local newspaper woman, in
charge. The object is to furnish secu
lar papers with news of the foreign J
mission field. It Is an innovation i.i
church work.
WORTH OF UNIQUE MARRIAGE
CONTRACT PROVEN AFTER YEAR
Principals in California Ceremony Cel
ebrate Anniversary and Reaffirm
Tenets of Pact.
Los Angeles, Sept. 19. —Today is the
first anniversary of the wedding of
: Carleton and Eloise Chandler Wash
bourne, who created a nation-wide sen
sation last year by being wed under
a unique marciage contract, in which
provision was made for the entire per
sonal freedom of each in all matters
of love and conduct of life. Thus to
| commemorate the first year of liappi
'ness they invited a number of their
closest friends to their vine-covered
bungalow this evening where they en
-1 joyed an all-round good time.
| “We are the personification of happy
domesticity,” they both declared happi
ness shining in their eyes. “If we were
I to marry again we’d do it just the same
, way.”
By the husband: “Neither husband
nor wife should have the least power
of coercion over the other, the one
bond between them being that of the
mateship love. We have done all in
our pow'er to bring about this equality
and freedom In our marriage, our
whole agreement was simply to secure
this, and it has succeeded.
By the wife: “Os course we think
the agreement was sound for the hap
piest kind of married life has gone far
to prove it. The chief virtue of the
agreement, which is indeed the basis
of it all has been in the sense of free
dom and equality it has given and in
the consequent continued romance. We
do not think we have solved the whole
marriage question, but if we had the
marrying to do over again it would
certainly be under the same agreement.
Our little daughter will be rpared with
ian ideal of marriage such as our has
proven to be.”
WHITE PLAGUE MAY
SAVE SOLDIER OF
FORTUNE FROM JAIL
Atlanta, September 19. —J. Wylie
Smith, soldier of fortune, and alleged
embezzler and absconder, will probably
never be arrested again, no matter how
many separate indictments are re
turned against him.
He has been arrested two or three
times, on successive warrants, during
the past few weeks. Each time he
makes bond on a new charge, another
is brought against him by the men
who are bitterly endeavoring to keep
him behind the bars.
The last warrant was served on him
by Plennie Miner, deputy sheriff. Mr.
Miner refused to arrest Smith and
was afterward sustained in his action
by the sheriff and the solicitor general.
He found the former adventurer lying
almost dead, in th e advanced stages of
tuberculosis. The sheriff’s office has
taken the position that it is not within
human posibility that Mr. Smith
could make his escape from Alanta, in
the condition he is in, and that it would
be useless and inhuman cruelty to take
him to the jail again.
Those who are prosecuting M.\
Smith, however, are still doing every
thing they can to force the sheriff to
put. him in Jail. It was for the pur
pose of getting him behind the bars
and keeping him there in spite of suc
cessive bonds, that the several new
indictments were sworn out. The
likelihood is now that Smith will die
before the time comes to face any one
of them.
GOOD FARM SALE.
We have for sale one of the best
plantations in the county, containing
330 acres, located on Seaboard Air
Line Ry., and one of the best graded
roads in the county. Is convenient
to good school and churches; only 12
miles from Americus, and near thi
thriving little town of Leslie, Ga.
This farm has two deep wells, six
room dwelling, barns and plenty of
tenant houses. If you want one of
the best and well located farms in
the county, this is your chance.
Address or see us at Leslie, Ga.
H. L. SPEER & R. J. SIMS,
Administrators.
431-30c-d&w-advt.
The cheerful loser stands next to
the cheerful giver.
PAGE THREE
I SECRET SOCIETIES I
F. * A. 1L
A AMERICUS
LODGE, F. & A.
fe M., meets every
2nd and 4tb Frl
J W,' \ dfty night at 7 "l.
tu. Visiting brethren welcome.
8 L. HAMMONM, W. K.
W. P. SMITH, Sec'y.
£ M. B. CO UNCI*
/\ , LODGE, V. ft A.
'Jj'tijjffljjF Ist and 3rd FrMai
' N.V A nights. Vi alt! mg
brethren invited.
J. E. MATHIS. W. M.
NAT LeMASTER, Secretary.
OUGHTS TEMPLAR.
#DeMoLAY COM
MA NDERY, No. 5.
K. T. meets every Sd
Wednesday night ftt
7:00 p. m. All vis
iting Knights are cor
iially invited.
A. B. HOWARD, E. a
P. G. OLVER, Recorder. « *L
ROYAL ARCH MASON*.
WELL’S C HAPTEB
4§jk No. 42, R. AM. meets
Ist & 3d Monday night
t at 7:00 p. m. A 1 vis*
\< iting companions qual,
iht-d are cordially ln
vited.
clnsing burrows, h. p.
F. G. OLVER, Sec’y. - ■
IMEKICUS CAMP, 202, WOODMES
OF THE WORLD.
Meets every Wednesday night in CM
.ey building. AH visiting Sovereigns
nvlted to meet with us.
G. M. BRAGG, (J. G.
M. K. FORD, Clerk.
Washington Camp. No. 24.
Washington Camp, No. 24, P. O. S.
of A., meets every Monday night in
Cotney Building at 8 o'clock. Visit
ing brothers cordially invited to at
tend. E. J. M’MATH,
B. H. M'Math, President.
Secretary.
WASHINGTON CAMP, NO 14
P. 0. S. OF A.
Meets on Thursday nights. Wood
men’s Hall, in Cotney Bldg. All mem
bers urged to attend. Visitors wet
'omed. PHILO H. SMITH. Pree’t.
O. D. REESE, Reed. Sec’y.
Most of us prefer friends who are
close-mouthed rather than close-fisted
The finding of a $15,000 pearl in %
California oyster strengthens a con
viction long established that It s always
v. good idea to bite ’em once.