Newspaper Page Text
■WEDNESDAY, MARCH 19, 1914
ROUUi
Baking Powder
I Absolutel/Pure
There is a remarkable interest
in Home Baking and Cooking
throughout the land.
This is a most encouraging in
dication that the battle against
impure, improper food is going
to be won.
The credit for the victory will
belong to the women of the
country.
Home cooking has the backing
of science and the approval of
fashion. It adds to housekeeping a
pride; to our food, healthfulness.
It is acknowledged by experts,
and by the women who know,
that the best cooking in the
world to-day is with the aid of
Royal Baking Powder.
DARNETT SEES BRIGHT DAYS
AHEAD FOR SOUTHERN FARMERS
Atlanta, March 17.—“ Current reports
to the effect that the country is in the
throes of a business slump do not bear
■out my observations,” said President
Charles Sr Barrett, of the National
Farmers Educational and Co-operative
Union of America, in Atlanta recently.
According to President Barrett the
country is now settling itself for one
of the most prosperous periods in its
history.
“I have visited more enterprises
from one end of the country to the
other than ever before. I have made
personal investigations, talked with
men at the head of enterprises and
have seen the work they are doing, i
want to say with all the emphasis pos
sible that nowher? have I found ought
to feel discouraged over. More of these
enterprises are prospering and giving
satisfaction than ever; we have had as
few, perhaps fewer, failures than in
any other time of business endeavor."
Great strides are being made
along co-operative lines by the farm
ers in all parts of the country allied
with the National Farmers Union, said
President Barrett. The work of bet
tering agricultural conditions in every
section of the country is being con
ducted along persistent yet quiet lines.
The latest co-operative effori or the
Unicn is the publishing of The Na
WHENEVER YOU NEED
' k BENCH TOPIC - TAKE SBOVE’S
The Old Standard Grove's Tasteless chill Tonic is Equally
Valuable as a General Tonic because it Acts on the Liver,
Drives Out Malaria, Enriches the Blood and Builds up
the Whole System. For Grown People and Children.
Yon know what you are taking when you take Grove’* Tasteless chill Tonic
as the formula is printed on every label showing that it contains the well known
( tonic properties of QUININE and IRON. It is as strong as the strongest bitter
tonic and is in Tasteless Form. It has no equal for Malaria, Chills and Fever,
Weakness general debility and loss of appetite. Gives life and vigor to Nursing
Mothers and Pale, Sickly Children. Removes Biliousness without purging.
Relieves nervous depression and low spirits. Arouses the liver to action and
purifies the blood* A True Tonic and Sure Appetizer. A Complete Strengthened
No family should be without it. Guaranteed by your Druggist. We mean it. 50c.
Residence Phone No. 759 Office Phone No. 7*'
DR. JOHN R. SCULLY
VETERINARY SURGEON
Hospital Accommodations for Horses, Mesand Dog«
Office and Hospital West Lamai St
tionai Field, a weekly devoted to the
'interests of the farmer from the Atlan
tic to the Pacific, and from the S'.
Lawrence to the Gulf. Started a few
i
short months ago, the publication is
gaining momentum at an astounding
* rate. The paper is not a “money-gut
ter.” No one is paid to solicit sub
scriptions. At the last annual con
vention held in Salina, Kansas, the
members of the Union authorized the
publication of the National Field, and
immediately baced up this action by
personally soliciting farmers every
where for subscriptions. As a result
from two to four hundred new readers
are added to the lists daily and it
will be but a short time before The
National Feild will be one of the most
influential co-operative publications in
the United States. The weekly is pub
lished in Atlanta and is attracting the
attention of publishers in every sec
tion of the country.
To Cure a Cold in One Day
Take LAXATIVE BROMO Quinine. It stop* the
Cough and Headache and works off the Cold.
Druggists refund money if it fails to cure.
3. W. GROVE'S signature on each box. 25c.
Royally Neighborly.
Temple, Texas, March 18. —The state
convention of the Order of Royal
Neighbors of American will be held
here today.
, New Era
(Special to Times-Recorder.)
| New Era, March 17. —Among those
going from here to quarterly meeting
at Pleasant Grove Saturday were, Mr.
and Mrs. R. D. McNeil, Willie and Rob
ert McNeil, Mr. B. S. Parker, Misses
Della Parker, Nancy Me Neil and An
nie Willis Morris.
Mr. and Mrs. R. P. Parker had as
their guests Sunday, Mr. and Mrs. W.
A Bray and Miss Frances Bray, Mr. W.
M. Parker, Mr. W. A. Parker and
Misses Nomie and Zelma Parker.
Mrs. Sam Ledger and little Mary
Ruth Ledger were week-end visitors at
the home of Mr. and Mrs. D. C. Griffin.
Mrs. S. M. Parker had as her guests
Saturday, Mesdames B. S. Parker, M.
H. Griffin, Sam Ledger, R. P. Parker
and W. A. Parker.
Miss Lucile Parker was the guest
last week of her sister, Mrs. Clay Mur
phy, at h-r home near Huntington.
Mrs. S. J. Bradley, Mrs. W. A. Parker
and Master Bernard Bradley attended
the Bradley-Peak marriage Sunday at
the home of the bride’s parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Jesse Bradley, near Americus.
Master Grady Duckworth spent the
week-end with Mr. and Mrs. A. .7.
Ledger.
Mr. Duke Parker was a Sunday vis
itor at the home of Messrs. Alva and
Esmon Grant.
Mrs. Dan Autrey and little Eunice
Autry spent Wednesday with Mrs. W.
F. O. Bray.
Mr. and Mrs. M. C. Veal, Bessie and
Cortez Veal, and Mr. and Mrs. B. S.
Parker spent Sunday afternoon with
Mr. and Mrs. C. N. Bailey.
Miss Eddie Lou Parker was a Sat
urday visitor to Miss Nomie Parker.
ANOTHER POSTOFFICE
CROOKJNTEHS PEN
Atlanta, Ga., March 17— For wrong
fully appropriating several thousand
dollars belonging to Uncle Sam, for
mer Postmaster W. J. Brice, of Merid
ian, Miss., has been sent to the At
lanta penitentiary for four years, and
has begun has servitude.
The evidence in the case showed
that the postmaster not only got the
money, but that he appropriated it to
his own use, and that no other postal
official was connected with the affair
in any way.
The federal authorities say they
want the sentence of Price to be a
warning to every person handling
United States funds.
IF BACK HURTS
BEGIN ON SALTS
Flush Your Kidneys Occasionally If
You Eat Meat Regularly.
, No man or woman who eats meat
regularly can make a mistake by flusn
ing the kidneys occasionally, says a
well known authority. Meat forms uric
acid which excites the kidneys, they
become overworked from the strains,
get sluggish and fail to filter the wasce
and poisons from the blood, then we
get sick. Nearly all rheumatism, head
aches, liver trouble, nervousness, diz
ziness, sleeplessness and urinary dis
orders come from sluggish kidneys.
The moment you feel a dull ache in
the kidneys or your back hurts or if
the urine is cloudy, offensive, full of
cediment, irregular of passage or at
tended by a sensation of scalding, stop
eating meat and get about four ounces
of Jad Salts from any pharmacy; take
a tablespoonful in a glass of water be
fore breakfast and in a few days your
kidneys will 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 the kidneys, al3o
to neutralize the acids in urine so it
no longer causes irritation, thus end
i ing bladder weakness.
Jad Salts is inexpensive and cannot
injure; makes a delightful effervescent
lithia-water drink which everyone
should take now and then to keep the
kidneys clean and active and the blood
pure, thereby avoiding serious kidney
complications. Hooks' Pharmacy.—
advt
THE AMERICUS DAILY TIMES-RECORDER.
Arrow
Kotch COLLAR
2 lor 25 cents
GEORGIAN’S STRONG M
D. K. SAYS AUDITOR
Atlanta, March 17. —The annual au
dit of the Georgia state treasury de
partment by the company bonding the
treasurer in the sum of $2,000,000 has
just been completed, and the audit
or’s report show's everything at the
treasury in ship-shape. The count of
money, bonds and securities held in
the great vaults has all be checked ov
er, and the affairs of the state are in
thlcir usual normal condition.
It is an interesting fact that not
once since the reconstruction days has
the state treasury’s affairs ever been
angled or involved. The annual audita
and reports, whether by legislative
comittees or bond companies, have al
ways found the department in com
mendable condition, and never has a
breath of suspicion arisen against
any public official connected therewith.
Valuable Circulation
One paper that goes into the HOME is
worth more than ten that are sold on the
streets.
The paper that goes into the home is
read from cover to cover by every mem
ber of the family.
The advertisements in the home paper
are read. The advertisements in the paper
sold on the streets are seldom noticed.
THE TIMES-RECORDER goes into prac
tically every home in AMERICUS. It also
reaches a large number of Sumter county
homes.
If you want your advertising to bring
results, advertise in the
f
Times-Recorder
DAVID LIND, ONE-ARM SKIER, SHOOTING SLIDE AT 80 PER
A
*
fj
h| fl
In the contest of skies at Stough
ton, Wis., where there is the ste?pest
slide in the world, David Lind, a one
arm skier of Mount Horeb, Wis., show
ed remarkable daring. He competed
with the professionals in feats that
astonished thousands of on-lookers.
Since sking requires a balance, ob
tained to some extent by stretching
out both arms, his undertaking was
considered very dangerous. As shown
in the illustration, he had to balance
himself with one arm.
In this photograph he is shown go
ing at eighty miles an hour as he
reaches the foot of the slide.
PAGE THREE
FEW FOLKS HAVE
ORAYJHAIR NOW
Druggist Says Ladies Are Using Re
cipe of Sage Tea and Sulphur.
Hair that loses its color and lustr»,
or when it fades, turns gray and life
less, is caused by a lack of sulphur in
the hair. Our grandmother made up
a mixture of Sage Tea and Sulphur to
keep her locks dark and beautiful, and
thousands of women and women who
value that even color, that beautiful
dark shade of hair which is so at-"*
tractive, use only this old-time re
cipe. t
Nowadays we get this famous mix
ture by asking at any drug store foN
a 50 cent bottle of “Wyeth’s Sage an l
Sulphur Hair Remedy,’’ which dark
ens the hair so naturally, so evenly,
that nobody can possibly tell it has
been applied. Besides, it takes off
dandruff, stops scalp itching and fall
ing hair. You just dampen a sponge
or soft brush, taking one small strand
at a time. By morning the gray hair
disappears; but what delights the la
dles with Wyeth’s Sage and Sulphur
is that, besides beautifully darkening
the hair after a few applications, i‘
also brings back the gloss arid lust r e
and gives it an appparance of abund
ance. Hooks’ Pharmacy. advt
“A man’s got to lose more than just
his money to be broke.