Newspaper Page Text
SUNDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1913
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I Dainty Perfumes J
| Just now the delicate refreshing ' g
( odors of tropical flowers are considered
1 in best form, and are suggestive of
j§ refinement and good taste. i|g
| We have practically all of the
newer odors. . p
1 You'll like them. 1
1 Gardeuglo,
| Mary Garden, j
II Rigaud’s Lilas, j|
|1 Flower Days. ig
I unmt ir/n/n nm j
1 t? J j
“HAMILTON’S STORE
Millinery Department—Second Floor
d/Bj/srimfr New arrivals this week
in charming new shapes
from Gage Bros, Knox
and Fisk in velvets’and
velours, in black and
all leading colors.
JSpSjfc New dresses, suits
and coats, rain coats
and capes. Ladies,Miss-
es and Children's
1 Queen
Quality
Shoes
in all the new styles
W r «nd leathers. The best
|§k shoe for ladies. All
New Royal Wor
cester Corsets at popu
sl.oo to $5.00
HAMILTON’S
AMERICUS - GEORGIA
McCullough Seed Oats
1 have for sale 1,000 bushels Prime McUnllough Seed Oats
—the very best. Get your seed oats early and sow last of Oc- (
tober for best results. Will deliver in Americus if ir. large
lots, 50 bushels up. Will sell in any quantity desired at my
farm.
A. B. CONNORS, Smithvlllc
iffIK3MK§gaWBWBBBIMM—IBIBPffIUBMWiIMir'IIHIMHIM I
IVfoNEY Loaned
I am prepared to make loans on improved farms
at 6 pet cent, interest, and allow yearly payments
on same. If you have an old loan to renew or wish
a new one, see me before concluding your ar
rangements.
J. J. HANESLEY. Americus, Ga.
CONDITION OF WOMEN IN UNO
OF THE SOUTHERN CROSS
STIRRING APPEAL FROM MISS FLORENCE SMITH, IN
CHILE —CHALLENGE FROM IRE ORIENT TO YOUNG
MEN OF AMERICA--LEADERS WANTED FOR A NATION
OF 30,000,000 PEOPLE.
BY SOUTHERN MISSIONARY NEWS BUREAU
Ida Clyde Clarke, Editor.
lam glad of the opportunity to offer without stint my tribute of
praise and respect to the missionary effort which has wrought such
wonderful triumphs for civilization. Th. story of the Christian misions
is one of thrilling interest and marvelous results. The services and sac
rifices of the missionaries for their fellow-men constitute one of the
most glorious pages of the world's history. The missionary, of whatever
church or ecclesiastical body, who devotes his life to the service of the
Master and of mien, carrying the torch of truth and enlightment, deserves
the gratitude, the support and the homage of mankind. The noble, self
effacing, willing ministers of peace and good-will should be classed with
the world’s heroes.
‘‘Who can estimate the missionaries' value to the progress of nations?
Their contribution to the ownward and upward march of humanity .s
beyond all calculation. They have promoted concord and amity, and
brought nations and races closer together. They have made men better.
They have increased the tegard for home; have strengthened the the
sacred ties of family; have made the community well ordered, and
they have been a potent influence in the development of law and the ?&•
taiblishment of government.”
HON. WILLIAM M'KINLEY,
President Os the United States, 1897-1901.
One of the most striking appeals of
recent months is that of Miss Flor
ence Smith, a well known missionary
in Valpariso, Chile, who tells of the
condition of women in The Land of
the Southern Cross. She says:
"From Monterey to Putna Arenas,
from Peru to Uruguay, a Woman is
exalted and enthroned. In the cathe
dral of every metropolis, in every
church in towm and village, in every
chapel of the country-side, a woman
reigns supreme. From the top of
Mount Cristobal, the mountain which
dominates the entire Santiago plain, a
colossal statute of the Virgin Mary
looks down upon hundreds of thous
ands of devotees. . . .
“Surely in a land which has exalted
the deal of a sinless, unstained wom
anhood above every other ideal, we
might hope to find actual womanhood
raised to a level of purity, of intel’i
gence, of culture unknown elsewhere.
"But ask the women of Colombia as
they work with pickax and shovel on
the highway, or stagger under bur
dens too heavy to be borne. Ask the
women street car conductors of Chile.
Ask the multitudes of women in the
whole continent who have lost honor,
self-respect and hope. Ask the moth
ers of the 40,767 babies who died .‘n
Chile alone n a single year less than
one-year-old because of alcoholism
and anti-hygiene conditions.’’
Miss Smith stresses the need for
more women workers in Latin Ameri
ca. She says: "There are actually
j working in South America, Central
America and Mexico, 354 married wo
:
! men missionaries, and 234 single wo
men, including all America. British
, and international societies of every
i
denomination. Os these 241 married
women and 151 single women repre
sent the American church. There is a
great work for married women to do
Miss Smith believes that the foun
dation of real missionary work among
the women of Latin America is in ed
ucation, and especially the training of
native workers.
Challenge to Young Mqn.
The situation in China today offers
a great challenge to the educated
Christian men of America. It calls for
the best of cur university graduates
to reinforce the telling work of those
already in the field. Within the next
fifty years men. are to be trained who
are capable of leading 350,000,000 peo
ple. "The Chinese leaders are face to
face with the greatest task which ever
confronted men .in authority,” says
Prof. Treat, a profound student of his
tory, after two visits to the Orient,
where be had opportunity of studying
at first hand the trend of Chinese po
litical and social movements,
"But the challenge is not alone to
those who can work in China in per
son,” says The Spirit of Missions.
“Every churchman who appreciates
the importance of Christian educa
tion, every churchman who realizes
that the secudity of his home and to •.
i large extent the possibility of his bus
THE AMERICUS DAILY TIMESRECORDER.
iness rests upon a Christian founda
tion, must, if he be true to his profes
sion, endeavor to identify himself with
the church’s educational enterprises
in the Orient.”
“Westeiln (civilization,” says Prof.
Theat again, "in its richest develop
ment is Christian civilization. The
successful solution of China’s prob
lem will require men with knowledge
i
and spirit to grapple with difficult
political and economic questions. Chi
na may easily take upon herself a ve
neer of western civilization but it will
take men. with a realization of th.»
need of Christian civilization to lead
China out into a worthy national des
tiny. China’s past educational system
has not produced such men. For cen
turies the best brains of the nation
toiled laboriously through long years
of study, and through somewhat gro
tesque, if searching, examinations to
win political place and power. But
Chinese officials, though highly edu
cated, have been notorously corrupt.
This condition is the inevitable result
of divorce between mental and moral
training. The mere recasting of Chi
na’s educational system into a west
ern mould will not in itself produce
the type of leadership the Orient
needs.”
It takes all kinds of people to make
a world including the woman who,
when she has nothing else to fret
about, worries for fear some stray
comet will hit the earth.
PROFESSIONAL CARDS j
r rrf f r
Dentists.
& P. Davis, Dentist
OFFICE. RESIDENCE.
Fo’-syth Street Over Western Union
Phone 262. Phone 212.
Physicians.
J, WADE CHAMBLISS, M. D„
flee Allison Bldg. Telephone 4t
tesidence 512 Hampton St Phone 4S
\ _________
Seaboard Air Line
Tbe Progressive Railway of tbe Sooty
Leave Americua for Cordele, Ro
chelle. Abbeville, Helena, Lyons, Col
f,rn, Savannah, Columbia, Richmond.
Portsmouth and points East and South
12.31 p. m.
1:25 a. m
Leave Americua for Cordele, Abbe
ville, Helena and Intermediate point*
6:20 p.m
Leave.Americus for Richland, Atlan
ta, Birmingham, Hurtsboro, Mont
ornery and points West and Northwest
1:50 a. m.
2:12 p. m.
T«avt Americua for Richland, Co
l-mbuß, Dawson, Albany and Interne
rtlate points
10:06 a. m.
For further information apply to H
P. Everett, Local Agent, Americus
Qa.; C. W. Small, Dlv. Pass Aft
Savannah, Oa.; C. B. Ryan, O. P. A.
Portsmouth, Va
UMBRELLA HIDES
APPROACHING AUTO
AND GIRL IS HURT
Atlanta, Oct. 25. —Miss Jack Weav
er, an eighteen-year-old girl, tripping
lightly along the street with an um
brella shielding her face, stepped oh
the curb last night directly Into the
path of am automobile.
She was picked up for dead but
when taken to the hospital it was
discovered that she had simply faint
ed, and that beyond being knocked
down and bruised she was unhurt.
The chauffeur, named J. M. Rol
ander, was arrested, but was released
by the police when the umbrella fea
ture of the accident was recounted at
police headquarters by witnesses.
MEAT CAUSE OF
KIDNEY TROUBLE
Take Salts to Flush Kidneys If Bladder
Harts or Bladder Bothers.
If you must have your meat every
day, eat it, but flush your kidneys with
salts occasionally, says a noted au
thority who tells us that meat forms
uric acid which almost paralyzes the
kidneys in their efforts to expel It
from the blood. They become slug
gish and weaken, then you suffer with
a dull misery In the kidney region
sharp pains in the hack or sick head
ache, dizziness, your stomach sours,
! tongue is coated and when the weataor
is bad you have rheumatic twinges.
The urine gets cloudy, full of sedi
ment, the channels often get sore and
Irritated, obliging you to seek relief
two or three times during the night.
To neutralize these irritating acids
to cleanse the kidneys and flush off
the body’s urinous waste, get so ir
ounces of Jad Salts from any pharma
cy here; take a tablespoonful in a
glass of water before breakfast for fi
few days and your kidneys will tihea
act fine. This famous salts is made
from the acid of grapes and lemon
juice, combined with lithia and has
been used for generations to flush and
stimulate sluggish kidneys; also to
neutralize the acids in urine, so it nj
longer irritates, thus ending bladder
weakness.
Jad Salts is inexpensive; cannot ln
jurev and makes a delightful efferves
cent lithia-water drink. Hooks’ Phar
macy. advt
JUICE FROM TALLULAH
IS NOW ON THE JOB
Atlanta, Oct. 25.—An invisible yet
very present mountain torrant rolled
and roared and swirled through the
main streets of Atlanta yesterday, its
outward form changed, but its mighty
power still intact. Every street car
that ran, every office building eleva
tor, every street light, every wheel i.i
many of the biggest factories, was
moved and turned by the waters
rushing through the turbines miles
away in the North Georgia mountains
at Tallulah Falls.
The modern miracle was accom
plished without any special ceremony,
and few people knew that the new
power bad been turned on, so smooth
was the change. But the actual de
livery of more than 90,000 horsepower
for commercial purposes in this terri
tory has commenced.
It is believed that the event will
usher in an electrical era of hither’j
unknown prosperity in Georgia.
WHITE MEN WILL
GET PLACES OF NEGROES
Atlanta, Oct. 25.—Another negro
has been put out of the Atlanta post
office to make room for a white man.
L. J. Price, a negro clerk, who for 12
years past has had charge of the
South Atlanta station, will step down
and out, and W. L. Jones, Jr., a white
man, will take his place.
Make Demand Forcible
Don’t Be Trifled With
Ask for S. S. S. and Don’t Stand for the
“Just as 6ood” Talk.
When a man has the short change
game worked on him, he makes a noise
that brings the Police, and yet that same
man may walk into a store and have the
“Just as good” game worked on him and
'. .MfIBj? *K&tUBBBM %
When You Ask for S. S. S. Do So
With Emphasis. They Will
Understand.
tamely submit. Why stand for It 7 The
only reason why any store will try to sup-
Btltute something else for S. S. S. is tne
lust for greater profit. 8. 8. S. la the
greatest blood purifier known.
■ lirarnr— namm — i ■ f <■ ~.- ZJ
J. W. WHEATLEY, President, CRAWFORD WHEATLEY, Vice Pres.
R. E. McNOLTY, Cashier.
COMMERCIAL CITY DANK
Depositors Are Protected By the Character
and Integrity of Our Directors.
DIRECTORS:’
J. W. Wheatley R. E. McNulty W. E. Mitchell
C. S. S. Horn Crawford Wheatley G. W. Nunn
J. F. Hodges F. W. Griffin W. D. Moreland
Interest Paid on Time Deposits
■s ################## t
KOMK
Theie’s a real Vacillation for young and old, in
i; picture-taking. The Kodak way makes it as sim
ple as it is fascinating. No bothei to learn. Day
light loading and unloading. No dark-room
I needed even for developin 3 and printing. Ko
daks, S6.UO to $i 10.00. Brownie Cameras, SI.OO
to $12.00.
WILL DUDLEY’S NEW STORE
WINDSOR HOTEL ||
j : Phone One, Two, Three. Kodaks—Talking Machines j|
Clean Bottles
■gt Are essential always, in bottling Coca
■ Cola at our plant. We consider this
‘Hi Ms matter of such primary importance
that every bottle is thoroughly cleans
-11l I * caielull y inspected before being
111 filled. Bottled
Mmk Gs&fwla
IlHrHtn"' * s sc * ent ificallv pure and wholesome;
fIU delicious and refreshing. When you
: use this popular beverage you get the
best that is made. Ask your dealer for
Coca Cola In Bottles
AMERICUS COCA-COLA
BOTTLING COMPANY.
J. T. Warren, Manager.
PAGE SEVEN
There Is not a medicine for any pur
pose more carefully made than 8 8. S. If
represents the highest type of medicine.
Its medical properties are Just as essen
tial to well balanced health, If the blood
be sick, as are the nourishing elements of
meats, grains, fats and sugars o's our dally
food. S. 8. S. Is prepared direct from
native botanical material. Not a drop of
drugs Is added. Not a drop of minerals
is used. This Is one of the most Import
ant things to know and to remember,
when your blood needs attention.
It is the most effective, the purest, the
quickest and most reliable medicine
known for poisoned blood, rheumatism
catarrhal Infection, malaria, skin disease,
old sores and all afflictions that show la
the blood, skin, joints and muscles.
An Interesting book on the blood la
mailed to those who write. Get a bottle
of 8. 8. 8. today. It Is the world's great
est medicine. Insist upon the dealer
handing you S. S. 8. and don’t let him
orate about something that he can’t ad
vertise as free from iodide of potash and
other destructive mineral drugs.
If you have trouble getting 8. S. 8.
write to The Swift Specific Co., 209 Swift
Bldg. Atlanta, Ga.. for Hat of square deal
stores.