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Our Clearance Prices THE SALE YOU HAVE EXPECTED ...Palm Beach Suits... II
I: ON Our Semi-Annual At Practically Give-Away Prices ;|
H LABIES’AND CHILDREN’S SKIRTS AND DRESSES ===== 1-2 PRICE ===== Men’s and Ladies’Suits i;
| PUT SEWING MACHINES TO “SLEEP” MILLINERY SALE $7.50 to values 04 cq
H Buy Here, Now and Save The Making La and s stte d et C Ha?s ren s Dress Half Price Clearance Price v 4 a
.... HAMILTON’S CLEARANCE SALE ....
I | 25c R s cents le °q | BEGINS TOMORROW, JULY 21 [ 50cR^^ eonly |
J Clearance Bargains SENSATIONAL READYTOWEAR BARGAINS Things You Need |l
I SdLrakefUty cents“siiout’Mike a Dollar Embroidered Voile JQp $2.00 Palm Beach Qo_ T A “ Under Priced Here
h $1.50 Silk Shirts g ßc Waists .... 4»C and Pique Skirts
i Clearance Sale . . $2.00 Sport Waists QC_ Childs 75cand IQ c Good 5r ai la
i 15c Suspenders Qq This Sale ... “<>C $1.50 Dresses Handkerchiefs ... I
:: ri e r a oSwu ;t J m SI.OO Linene AQ p $7.50 Voil Dresses <N.9B Boy’s 50c nn o :
!! 15 tc2so White |Qq Skirts ™ This Sale .. . Suits .. . dBC I
II ' 61c 01iverT "^* This 25c
I SBt . .' .' .' DC 23C t 0 >L29 5 CC " tS
I! Best ioc Huck To weiis 7c "W" “W“ • H j < Silk and Voile in Ass M
Suit Cases - - “SPECIAL” Clearance Prices ■ M ’W I ■" Presses ... IUVI I
!• Tor JL JL W/W JLJLJL JL JL JLJL ILjf White Middy Cloth 9c, II and 14c
Im***************************************** s
EMORY UNIVERSITY ACADEMY
WILL HAVE FULL ENROLLMENT
(Special to Times-Recorder.
OXFORD, Ga, July I.—The popu
larity of the new Emory University
Academy here is already evidenced by
the number of applications for ad
mission received by the head master.
Professor R. C. Mizell. The univer
sity authorities have resolved not to
crowd the dormitories nor the acad
emy, and consequently on account of
limited space, only about 100 more
applications for admission can possi
bly eb considered.
Those in close touch with educa
tional affairs believe now more flrmlv
than ever that the new academy will
meet a widespread demand in the
south for institutions offering the best
PEACHES! PEACHES!
-FROM—
PLEASANT VALLEY FRUIT FARM
I will be pleased to receive orders for Carmen’s
and Gov. Hogg from about Jure 25th to July sth,
Georgia Bells from about July sth to July 15th.
Elbertas from about July 10th to July 25th.
By the crates, bushel or basket delivered in
Americus are carerully packed and shipped by express
Your order solicited
F. D. MITCHELL, Proprietor
P. O. Box 324 Americus Ga.
N B:—The above orchard and farm is offered for
sale at bargain price.
Farm Loans made |
at six per 'cent in- i
sb mb ss ■■ (BBS bm v terest. Partial or
HhAIT ■ ’ full payments al-
|U I■ ■ |>| V lowed. Wi tho u t
IWII Illi ■ bonus. No yearly
1 installments requir-
ed.
J. J. HANESLEY,
L—————————— 829 Lamar St
preparatory courses for students ex
pecting to enter college.
In response to many inquiries, the
university authorities have authorized
the following statement:
■ “The establishment of the academy
abolishes the sub-freshman depart -
1 ment at Oxford and offers courses of
• study framed with direct reference ti
■ subsequent collegiate work.
> “The faculty of the academy con-
■ sists of experienced instructors. The
school will be conducted under its
■ own government apart from the col
r lege, and all non-resident students
I will be required to lodge in Haygood
s Hall, a commodious new dormitory.
i “In order that the students may have
THE AMERICUS DAILY TIMES-RECORDER
If Your Hstir is Falling Out
we know of no better remedy than
Tonic
A preparation which we gladly recom
mend to you. 50c. a bottle. t
Murray’! Pharmacy.
r——i i .■ 1 . ■■ - »
an instructor within easy reach at all
times, three members of the faculty;
also will have rooms in Haygood Hall.
“Among special advantages, the
college library, gymnasium, etc., will
be open for the free use of students of
the academy, the same as students in
the college of liberal arts.
MIL courts 10
DECIDE FATE
OF RIOJERS
(Special to Times-Recorder.)
ATLANTA, Ga., June 30. —When the
Fulton county grand jury meets to
day the cases of the twenty-six pris-
I oners arrested by the militia during
the rioting around former Governor
. Slaton's country home, will be turned
I over by the military to the civil au
thorities for prosecution in the crim
inal courts.
It is anticipated that Judge Ben
Hill will take the question up in his
charge to the grand jury today. In
the meantime all evidence gathered by
the militia is being turned over to
Solicitor Dorsey.
The men who were arrested may be
indicted either for “riot,” which is a
misdemeanor and punishable by fine
or chaingang sentence, or for “rioting
and refusing to disperse,” which is a
felony and may be punished by a long
term in the penitentiary.
There will be no military courtmar
tial in connection with the case. All
the prisoners and all the evidence in
the case are now in tb<» hands of the
civil authorities.
SUNLIGHT BEST
REMEDY FOB MM
SAYS PHYSICIAN
l
j (By Associated Press.)
CHICAGO, June 30.—The National
Society of Physical Therapeutics con
vened today for its twenty-second an
nual session, in joint meeting here with
the American Institute of Homeopathy,
President E. P. Mills, of Ogden, Utah,
in his address reviewed various me
chanical and physical measures in the
treatment of disease, dwelling upon
the value of sunlight, X-rays and rad
lum. In part Dr. Mills said:
“An exposure to the X-ray of a can
cerous growth may either destroy it
and induce fibrosis-natures method of
cure—or stimulate it to renewed
growth, the technique deciding what
the effect will be. The hands of al
most any of the earlier workers with
the X-ray bear immutable evidence of
the dangerous effects cf this useful
agent. If they did not possess the
power to do harm, they could not
have the power to bring health.
“Sunlight is one of the great gifts
of nature. It is the greatest disinfec
tant in the whole list and is necessary
for the healthy development of all
forms of life. Deprived of it, either
vegetable or animal forms of life do
not reach their normal growth. Yet
this beneficent agent has another as
pect: Sun burns may be the irritative
agent required to start up the activity
of cancerous development. A word of
warning can be uttered against too
much of even so good a thing as sun
light.
I “As to radium, its effect on the
i
nervous system, if applied for a short
I period, is stimulative; if applied for a
number of hours it produces paralysis.
I The length of time of application there
fore, is one of the most important
points for study, for opposite effects
are produced] by long and short ex
posures.
I “Radium has rewritten physics ani
Bon every
ETHINA
Cnown for
early Half
a Century
a. a Safe ■
edicine for ■
Teething I
Babies. |
ill directions I
■ in each box for B
Cholera Morbus, Cholera Infantum, Worms, Hives, ■
Dysentery, Constipation and other ailments that ■
make baby suffer during the teething period. ■
Look for thw Trade Mark. Sold by all drug- K
gists—2sc. Write for our Free“ Mother's Booklet. B
C. J. Mofiett Medicine Co., St. Louis, Mo. P
PARROT WARNS OWNER
TO GET HIS GUN ANDI
BURGLAR IS ROUTER
CHICAGO, July 1. —“Lonie, Lonie,
get your gun; he’s a devil,’' screamed
a parrott as the door of a Hat at 6545
St. Lawrence avenue was pushed open
and a burglar entered.
Lonie M. Blank leaped from a couch
on which he had been sleeping, paying
no attention to the ringing of the bell.
The burglar faced Lonie, who had a
revolver. The burglar ran for the
door. Just at that moment John B.
Blank and his wife, who had been to a
cemetery entered. The burglar almost
upset Mrs. Blank as he rushed past
her.
Behind him was Lonie with a re
volver. Lonie chased the thief to the
street. The burglar escaped unhurt.
But the parrot had won fame
Three weeks ago burglars tried to
enter the flat of J. H. Rafferty, who
owns the building and lives on the
second floor, while the Blanks live on
the first. When the burglars reached
the Blanks’ flat the parrot shouted and
screamed when he heard a noise at the
door. The burglars fled.
After the first attempt to break into
the flat Lonie, the son of Mr. and Mrs.
Blank, had provided himself with a
new shotgun and an old revolver.
When the parrot warned him he grab
bed the revolver, though he had al
ways planned to use the shotgun.
has opened new avenues for human
thought, which may lead to the solu
tion of the mystery of life itself.”
ELECTRIC VIBRATOR
IS LATEST DEVICE
FOR WINNING LOVE
SALESMAN DEFENDS DIVORCE
DEFENDANT AFTER DETECTIVE
TELLS OF RAID ON BEDROOM.
(Special to Times-Recorder.)
NEW YORK, July 1. —Whether Wai.
ter a. Vaughn, a young salesman,
wooed and won the aeffctions of Mrs.
Essa M. Whitehead with an electric vi
brator was the question submitted to a
jury before Supreme Court Justice Del
ahanty when the trial of John T.
Whitehead’s divorce suit was begun
yesterday. I i- ’ i
Whitehead is general European man
ager of a typewriter company. He is in
Europe. Just before he sailed, how
ever, his detectives reported that they
had found Mrs. Whitehead and Vaughn
together in the Whitehead apartments.
Before young Vaughn took the wit
ness stand to defend Mrs. Whitehead
against the charge, Miss May Brewer,
a retty detectibe, told how, posing as
Mrs. Whitehead’s friend, she was pres
ent at dinners given by Mrs. White
head for Vaughan. When the propar
time came, Miss Brewer testified, a
raid was made on Mrs. Whitehead';
bedroom, and, with the aid of a tiny
spotlight, Vaughan and Mrs. White
head were surprised.
Vaughan sells electro-therapeutic
appliances. Smilingly he related to
the jury how he met Mrs. Whitehead
several years ago at Manhattan Beach
When she complained of pains in the
back he suggested that she try the vi
brator.
There being no electric battery in
Mrs. Whitehead's apartment, she went
to his office in Brooklyn, and treatment
was given there, he said.
The magnetic wave treatment de
fense made such an impression upon
the jury that they returned a verdic: 1
for the woman defendant in two min- 1
utes. I
URSDAY, JULY 1, 1915.
MISS BESSIE WINDSOR
. . Insurance . .
Fire, Accident and Bonds: Of
fice Forsyth St. ’Phone 313
F. and A. JI.
Ji AMERICUS LODGE!
F. and A. M. meets ev
ery Second and Fourth
XwHOT Friday night at 8
* i o’clock.
S. A. JENNINGS, W. M.
CLOYD BUCHANAN, Sec’y.
Jk M. B. COUNCIL
LODGE, F. and A. M,
meets every First and
FHday nights.
1 / \ Visiting brothersc Jn-
. vited to attend.
■ W. F. SMITH, W. M.
NAT LeMASTER, Secretary.
I. 0. 0. F.
. every Tuesday night at 8
j o clock. K. of P. Hall. Visitors al
ways welcome. W. J. BROOKS,
S. H. EDGE, Noble Grand.
? Secretary.
i
AMERICUS CAMP, 202, WOODMEN
OF THE WORLD.
Meets every Wednesday night in ths
i Wheatley Bldg., Windsor Ave. All vis
iting Sovereigns invited to meet with
i us - J- M. TOBIN, C. C.
NAT LeMASTER, Clerk.
WASHINGTON CAMP, NO. 14,
P. 0. S. OF A.
Meets on Thursday nights, Wheat
ley Building, at 7:30 o’clock. All mem
bers are urged to attend. Visitors
welcomed. E. F. WILDER, Pres’t.
O. D. REESE, Recording Sec’y.
NAT LeMASTER, Financial Sec’y.
C. P. DAVIS “
Dental Surgeon.
Orthodontia, Pyorrhea
Res.lent Phone 218. Office Phone 818
Allison Bldg.
DR. M. H. WHEELER
Dentist
Office in Bell Bldg, Lamar St Just
opposite Postoffice.
Office Phone 785. Residence Phone 284
F. G. OLVER
Sewing Machines and Supplies; Ks>
“ d Lock Fitting; Umbrellas Repair®!
and Covered.
lamar street, mah well