Newspaper Page Text
TUESDAY, MARCH 7, 1916
A Scant or a Rill'Tablespoon
WHICH?
A scant tablespoon of Luzianne goes ex
actly as far as a big heaping table
spoon of a cheaper coffee, for you use
only half as much of Luzianne. That’s
so positively guaranteed that if, after
using an entire can of Luzianne as
directed, you are not entirely satisfied
with its economy and goodness, your
grocer, on your say-so, will gladly
return your money. Write for our pre
mium catalogue.
COFFEE
/The Reily-Taylor Co. New Orleans
Bk Practical
for the care of baby from
birth to three years old. “How
Long Should Baby Nurse,” “How Of
ten," “Overfeeding Dangerous," “Nurs
ing from the Bottle,” “Baby’s First Tooth,”
Summer Care of Baby,** are a few of the sub
jects treated in this free book, which will be
mailed to any mother asking for it.
Write for it today, giving name of your druggist,
C. !• Moffett* 26 First Ave., Columbus. Co.
Seaboard Air Line
The Progressive Ballway of the SiHitl
Leave Americus for Cordele, Ro
chelle, Abbeville, Helena, Lyons, Col
tins, Savannah, Columbia, Richmond.
Portsmouth and points East and South
12:81 p in
2:80 a m
Leave Americus for Cordele. Abbe
rlit-j, Helena and intermediate point!
5:1» p m
Leave Americus for Richland, At
anta, Birmingham, Hurtsboro, Mont,
f ornery and points West and Northwe*'
8:10 p m
Leave Americus for Richland, Col
ambus, Dawson, Albany and interme
f iate points
10:05 c. m
Seaboard Buffet Parior-Sleeplng Cai
>n Trains 13 and 14, arriving America:
from Savannah 11:25 p. m., and leav
ing Americus for Savannah 2:30 a. m
Bleeping car leaving for Savannah at
2:30 a. m., will be open for passen
gers at 11:25 p. *j.
For further information apply to H.
P. Everett, Local Agent, Americus.
Ga. C. W. Small, Div. Pass. Agent,
Savannah, Ga.; C. B. Ryan, G. P. A.,
Norfolk, Va.
MONEY
Remember when you
want to borrow money on
your improved farm on long
time that I can get it for you
at Six per cent interest.
The contract carry 7 with
them the privilege of paying
SIOO, or any multiple there
of, or of taking up entire
loan, on any interest day,
without bonus.
J. J. HANESLEY
Li’mar Street
\mericus, :: Georgia
ATTENTION
AUTO
OWNERS
Do you know that it will save you
money to have your damaged tires re
paired before the place gets large?
Take a hint from us and have your
vulcanizing work done right. All of
our repair materials are made by the
"MOHAWK” Rubber Co., them akers
of the highest-priced tire on the mar
ket. We can therefore GUARANTEE
every job done by us.
"We are here to serve you.”
Americus Tire & Rubber Co.
Dan Chappell, Mgr.
Opposite Postnffice ■ Phone 66
5,000 HEfiH GOVERNOR
SPEAK OWP
PAVO, Ga., March 7. —Governor Nat
Harris opened his campaign here Mon
day before fully 5,000 people of
Thomas and Brooks counties. Gover
nor Harris spoke for two hours, out
lining fully the platform of his com
ing campaign, and plank by plank, he
made plain his policies to the people of
this section. Not once throughout his
entire speech did he assail his oppon
ents, neither did he criticise those
who had started recent rumors that he
would not run again should he be
elected the first time, but denied ’most
emphatically the reports.
Governor Harris was met at Moul
trie by his cousin, Dr. J. Frank Harris,
of this place, and a number of other
Thomas and Brooks county citizens.
He left here last night for Thomas
ville, stopping over in Boston for a
ten or fifteen minute sojourn between
trains. Governor Harris’ speech
marked the opening of a series of
chautauquo lectures to be given by a
number of Georgia’s most prominent
men.
[ Hopes Women Will j
j Adopt This Habit |
j As Well As Men i
• *
i ?
| Glass of hot water each mom- •
I Ing helps us look and feel •
• clean, sweet, fresh.
i I
♦ i
Happy, bright, alert—vigorous and
vivacious—a good clear skin; a nat
ural, rosy complexion and freedom
from illness are assured only by clean,
healthy blood. If only every woman
and likewise every man could realize
the wonders of the morning inside
bath, what a gratifying change would
take place.
Instead .of the thousands of sickly,
anaemic-looking men, women and
girls with pasty or muddy complex
ions; instead of the multitudes of
"nerve wrecks,” “run-downs.” ‘brain
fags” and pessimists we should see a
virile, optimistic throng of rosy
cheeked people everywhere.
An inside bath is had by drinking
each morning before breakfast, a glass
of real hot water with a teaspoonful of
limestone phosphote in it to wash
from the stomach ,liver, kidneys ad
ten yards of bowels the previous day’s
indigestible waste, sour fermentations
and poisons, thus cleansing, sweeten
ing and freshening the entire alimen
tary canal before putting more food in
to the stomach.
Those subject to sick headache, bil
iousness, nasty breath, rheumatism
colds, and particularly those who have
a pallid, sallow complexion and who
are constipated very often, are
urged to obtain a quarter pound of
limestone phosphate at the drug store
which will cost but a trifle, but is
sufficient to demonstrate the quick and
remarkable change in both health and
appearance awaiting those who prac
tice internal sanitation. We must re
member that inside cleanliness is more
important than outside, because the
skin does not absorb impurities to con
taminate the blood, while the pores in
the thirty feet of bowels do.
Bishop Reese Writes Very
Interesting Article About
Lent To People of Church
Rt. Rev. Frederick F. Reese, Bishop
of the Episcopal diocese of Georgia,
and one of the most prominent church
men in that denomination, has writ
ten the following partoral letter de
fining the observance of Lent, which
begins Wednesday, March Bth, or Ash
Wednesday. The latter, appointed to
be read in all the churches throughout
the diocese, reads:
To the Baptized and Confirmed Mem
bers of the Church in the Diocese of
Georgia. My Dear Friends:
It has been my custom for several
years, as it is now my privilege , to
send you at the beginning of Lent a
few words of counsel and encourage
ment.
One of the perplexing things we ob
serve in life is how indifferent and in
sensible we are apt to become to the
most valuable and blessed opportuni
ties which God gives us. As parents
and friends of the young, we oftentimes
lament their indifference to their edu
cational advantages. But life is to
everyone and always an educational
opportunity. Experience, w.e say, is
the great teacher, and extended to pro
duce in us a capacity for a right judge
ment in’ all things, to enable us to es
t'mate truly life’s values. I feel that
much wrong and sin, much waste and
wretchedness arises from a perverted
judgement, a misinterpretation of life.
Is not this awful war in Europe a
most terrible instance of a perverted
judgement on somebody’s part How
frequently do otherwise capable and
successful people make colossal errors
of judgment, made possible not only
from the common human limitations of
foresight, hut because the judgment is
perverted by the conceit of success. A
perverted will, selfishness, pride, sin,
affect the judgments of life and its in
terests and issues. If w.e could see life
truly and see it whole, we should, I
am sure, be saved from much error
and wrong and misery. But in order
to see life truly, we must get per
spective. We must detach ourselves
as wholly as possible, sometimes and
always, in some measure, from the in
terest and passions, the fascination
and excitements of our usual interests
and experiences. W.e must get another
point of view. We must place ourselves
in a different environment.
Now, religion gives us that different
point of view. Religion we will defend
as the consciousness of God and Etern
ity and of our relationship to Him. As
such it sets our life in a larger envir
onment. It alters the perspective of
life. It changes the emhasis.
The sense of our own inner life in
touch with God and Eternity, the con
templation and appreciation in that
light of our motives and ambitions, of
what we understand mb life, all this
detaches us for a time from these fam
iliar and necessary but one-sided in
terests, which we are prone to assume
exhaust life’s experience and possi
bilities.
My brethren, no man can have a
right judgmeent, a sane mind, who
does not see life truly and see it whole.
Nor can the process of life’s discipline
be making us wiser, richer and nobler
unless we are keen to observe and
dllligent to avail ourselves of every
opportunity by which we can find more
of God in the world about us and de
velop more of His life within our
selves. This is our great task, to use
life and its opportunities so as to en
rich and deepen and ennoble life, not
only for ourselves, but for the sake of
duty to God and our brethren.
This sense and vision of God gives
us true wisdom. This appreciation of
our relationship to Him and of our
capacity for intimacy with Him, alone
gives true value and dignity to life and
al! of its interests and experiences.
But this is greatly dependent upon
periods of detachment, upon the prac
tice of the exercises of religion, of
prayer and meditation, of Holy Com
munion, of fasting and other bodily
discipline. I know God is with us in
the crowded thoroughfare, amid the
noise and fuss of life. We can find
Him in times of distress and in times
o r joy, too, in the manifold common
places of daily experience, in the acts
THE AMERICUS DAILY TIMES-RECORDER
find characters of the humblest men
and women about us. They are the
unhaloed saints who,‘while in the
world are not of the world, and whose
lives bear witness of God. It is true
life manifests God and soul and eter
nal issues. But, alas! How few of us
will find Him there, unless we some
how carry with us the sense of His
presence and His companionship? How
leng will our eyes be open to see Him
or our ears to hear Him if we never
pray or think or commune? If over
powered by the riotous or undisciplined
flesh or suffocated by worldly selfish
ness, the spirit of man, which is the
candle of the Lord, becames senile
with the decay of its capacity of faith?
Earnestly do I plead with you, my
people, to appreciate and avail your
selves of the opportunity offered you
bj the church in this Holy Season of
Lent. It is appointed for the very
purpose of helping you to see life truly
and see it whole, to acquire a right
judgment about it, to find its true rich
es and blessings. Lent means the
especial companionship cf our Lord
Jesus Christ. Even for Him it was
necessary that He should go into the
wilderiess, that He might come to
know Himself and to know what life
was to mean for Him. He fasted and
meditated and prayed; He struggled
with the temptation of the Devil. He
came out of the wilderness calm and
strong in the consciousness of victory,
and in the confidence of self-control.
He kept His forty days. He measured
life and duty calmly and completely.
He entered into the full relationship of
HiHs Sonship. He knew he was the
Son of God and must do His Father’s
will unto the utmost. From the wilder
ness of the forty days up to the cross
and victory was one unterrified, unde
viating loyalty of service to His Father
and to the world.
Jesus Christ, our Lord, was the one
man who knew life truly, lived it to its
Honor Roll For Pupils of
Thtee Americus Schools
FURLOW SCHOOL.
First Grade, Section One.
Elizabeth Andrews, Edith Bahnsen,
Jane Broadhurst, Mary Harris, Mildred
Hines, Jennette Lee, Nell Schneider,
Frances Warlick, Helen Witt, John
Wllison, J. p. Cannon, Jr., Josie
Ivey, Laney McMath, Forrest Nichol
son, Charles Davis.
First Grade, Section Two.
Tavis Armstrong, Kernwood Brown,
Wister Ellis, Joe Griffin, V. P. Young,
William Payne, Mary Helen Cleveland,
Vivian Easterland, Iva Lee Herrin,
Dina Hoffman, Bertha Sawyer, Jeanette
Slappey, Hazel Vorus, Lottie Living
ston, Martha Stackhouse.
Second Grade, Section One.
Henry Mayes Coleman, Robert Cul
pepper, Hary Jarrard, Henry McAr
thur, John Richard McDaniel, James
McDaniel, John Edgar Sheppard, Grace
Blakey, Emma Joe Lipsford, Ruth
Moorehead, Bessie Quattlebaum, Lou-
The laxative tablet
with the pleasant taste
If you are bilious
or constipated
They keep your
System as dean
as a stone jug
rinsed with cold
spring water
We have the exclusive selling rights
for this treat laxative
The Ston
MURRAY’S PHARMACY
fullness and won its perfect victory.
Lent is your forty days—to renew
the effort to find yourself and your
God and your place in His world. It
is your opportunity to enter into your
duty, to gain power, and to struggle.
Through it all, its pain and bitterness,
its restless rebelliousness and its
monotonous weariness, you will have
the companionship and friendship of
esus. You will be finding Him and in
finding Him you will be finding your
self.
My dear people, as your bishop, as
your shepherd, set over you by th3
Lord, who must give account of hi. 3
stewardship, I pray for you that you
may enter upon this Lent with an hon
est heart and purpose. If you are a
member of God’s church, heed Her
voice and counsel and recognize Her
wise and loving provision for your
salvation, render a free and loyal obe
dience to Her. Practice self-denial
and abstinence in such ways as may
best promote your victory over the
world, the flesh and the devil. Do not
injure yourself and humiliate your
Savior and His Church by flouting Her
counsel and discipline before the world
Read your Bible again. How long
since you last read it in private devo
tion? Pray oftener and more earnest
ly> both in private and in the public
worship of the Church. Give some
time to thoughtful meditation and try
to live a less frivolous and useless life.
Practice charity in thought and word
'and deed. Go about doing good. Con
tribute some of your joy and strength
and vitality, your faith and hope and
courage to some less fortunate and
happy soul. Help that soul to find God
and to gain eternal life in Him. Try
to be a Christian in fact. Be honest
with yourself and ask God to save you
from moral insincerity and spiritual
hypocrisy. And trust Him to the ut
termost to stand by you, to help you
and to bless you.
Will you not pray for your bishop,
ycur clergy, your diocese and your
parish, and the whole Church, that
God’s Kingdom may come into your
heart and unto the uttermost ends of
the earth?
Faithfully your friend and bishop,
FREDERICK F. REESE.
ise Reeves, Charlie May Sieg, Lucile
Williams, Ann Walker, Daisy Heg
wood.
Second Grade, Section Two.
Mary Earle Barnett, Elmer Bucanan,
Mattie Will Cleveland, Kathryne Har
ris. Nettie Herbert, Janie Claire
Johnson, Massie Lane, Minna Moses,
Harriet Rylander, Emily Thomas,
Harry Barton, Anthony Council, Haw
kins Dykes, James Furlow, Tom Gate
wood, J. R. Hamrick, Allen Hili,
Lionel Stukes, Frank Weaver, Marion
Young.
Third Grade, Section One.
Joe Poole, Maicon Andrews, Benja
min Davis, J. T. Atkins, Fred Comer,
Jane Armstrong, Frances Castleberry,
Mary F. Chambliss, Lillian Denham,
Mozelle Deavours, Catherine Good
man, Eutry Hammond, Mildred Mackey
Willa Sanborn, Amy Saliba, Eugenia
Walker, Orale Williams, Lucile
Schneider, Annie Belle Crabb.
Third Grade, Section Two.
Ruth Bailey, Mildred Clark, Elizo
beth Council, Alice Harrold, Virginia
Lipscomb, Elizabeth Moses, Frances
Shiver, Charlotte Turner, Ray Ansley,
Edwin Bell, Ernest Davis, Macon
Dudley, Robert Hooks, Carl Humber,
Joel Hightower, Horace Harper,
George Oliver, Alton Poole, Joe Sutton,
Joe Wakefield.
Third (trade, Section Three.
Theoditus Stukes, Virginia Nichol
scn. Mae Ellen Stanley, Florence Stev
ens.
Fourth Grade, Section One.
Dorothy Dunaway, James Collins,
Lee Verne Eason, Christine Brown,
Mary Earl Allen, Skillman Young, Le
loy Swain, Walter Reeves, Allen Me
.’ell, Cecil Howard, Mattie Lou Vaughn,
Janie Williams, Ruth Everett.
Fouth Grade, Section Two.
Mary Glover, Anne Heys, Mary Eliz
abeth Easterlin, Claire Harris, Flora
Buries, Sara M. Culpepper, Helen Her-
I
bert, Conrad Snell, Russell Thomas,
—l,
giilWw
\abigJ - i
■k y T Ikl IT” Require half the uffort. SSJ
iiniNr chil|)re "'»»» 4
SSS fIjWJaCBKIg \ i""" I '/ / CiveaqulcklastmgshiM. fej
WtWtwSHK'A \\\ I ; /A Contain no acid.
W v . '\\ l I /// Will »ot crack the Isatlwf. M
//' Fitserrt the leather and
s® ;■ L Increase the life of row Sss
i tbef FoaitEYca.iid.
BUFFALO, N.H.
Cotton Seed Meal
Seed HullsOSjSw
ICm\ /IS?) Phosphate and all other Fer- ICY. 'Si;', .iw js|
tilizer Materials. Write, wire or
phone for special delivered prices,
XjCfjiAAzX anywhere, any quantity not less
than car lots. : : : : ;
We will save you money on Cotton Seed Meal and Hulls
TAYLOR COMMISSION CO.
Healey Building : ; ; ATLANTA, GA.
CHICHESTER S PILLS
THE IM A BOND BB AND. X
I.cdk'Ht Ybk your DrutAelnl far
<’hbchc».tw R Brafid/zkl
I’Hla in Kid ami (Hold ineta;iic\V l
boxes « sealed w‘*h Blue Ribbon. \ T A
IM TrAe no other. Buy of your
1/ “ W r -•kfor«iri.©in£B.TE»«
I w 2g HRANB FILLS, for
VD* Jw y ears Best. Safest. AI way* Reliable
SOLD BY DRUGGISTS EVERYWHEK
Luther Ivey.
Fifth Grade, Section One.
Guy Allison, Purser Bivins, James
Crew, Frank Sullivan, John Bahnsen,
Coleman Tookes, John Zack Holt, Rosa
Azar, Gertrude Butt, Sarah Brannen,
Louise Dudley, Margaret Granberry,
Martha Ivey, Lucy Lane, Janise Mur
ray, Edith Oakley, Ruth Oakley, Myrtle
Poole, Lena Vaughn. Lucia Gilmore.
Fifth Grade, Section Two.
Katherine Davis, Parmalee Davis,
Julia Allison, Minerva Allison, Ethel
May Hart, Onida Hatcher, Sarah Ham
fit k, Georgia Lumpkin, Lena Mayo,
Hazel Prather, Katherine Turner, Lou
ise Thayer, Mildred Warlick, Margaret
Wakefield, Denie Wakefield.
Sixth Grade, Section One.
Hulet Humber, Eva Lindley, Sara
Oliver, Elizabeth Sheffield.
Sixth Grade, Section Two.
Ralph Glover, Will McNeill, Pauline
Cleveland, Annie Ruth Jones, Cornelia
Shiver,
Seventh Grade, Section One.
Martha Hines, Olive Toward, Edith
Shy, Eva Weeks, Hertwell Barton, Joe
McMath, Elton Parker.
Seveth Grade, Section Two.
Roland Broadhurst.
EAST AMERICUS
First Grade—Ruth Howell, Jose
phine Leard, Lizzie May Gammage.
Second Grade—Elizabeth Joyner,
I ucile Sumerford, Mary Evelyn Carey.
Hal Harris, Jake de Bruyne, John
C. rruthers.
PROSPECT HEIGHTS.
2nd Grade —Frances Belcher, Lillian
Cannon, Ruby Johnson, Elizabeth
Smith.
Third Grade—Marvin Lansford, Mel
vin Tye, Ida Jones, Dora Riley, Annie
Ree Riley, Thelma Lansford.
The merchant who uses stationery
decorated with gargling oil, axle
grease or other cheap advertising mat
ter is, to the home printer, what the
mail order house is to the home mer
chant.—Hawkinsville Dispatch.
„ c gyisliuMM
There is a better taste —a zest —to food
cooked with Cottolene.
Used as shortening, it blends with the flour easily
and the result shows in the fine baking. Used for
frying, it makes the foods better tasting and* more di
|Tr lx gestible. Try it —realize the quality it gives to foods.
|l f Your grocer will supply you regularly—Cottolene is packed
II 111 111 in pails of various sizes.
SHI EHLksL FAIR BAN KlaaWJ
gmimmuminiuii i inn nTiwmTm niji i f rnqnyn nrriTTi i.i?i TTiw.' Lufli.a -
PAGE THREE
HU MSES OF
RHEUMATISM NOW
SAYS WE MUST KEEP FEET DRY,
AVOID EXPOSURE AND EAT
LESS MEAT
Stay off the damp ground, avoid ex
posure, keep feet dry, eat less meat,
drink lots of water and above all take
a spoonful of salts occasionally to keep
down uric acid.
Rheumatism is caused by poisonous
toxin, called uric acid, which Is gene
rated in the bowels and absorbed into
the blood. It is the function of the
: kidneys to filter this acid from the
blood and cast it out in the urine. The
pores of the skin are also a means of
freeing the blood of this impurity. In
damp and chilly, cold weather the skin
pores are closed, thus forcing the kid
neys to do double work, they become
v.eak and sluggish and fail to elimin
ate this uric acid which keeps accumu
, lating and circulating through the sys
| tern, eventually settling in the joints
and muscles causing stiffness, sore
ness and pain called rheumatism.
At the first twinge of rheumatism
get from any pharmacy about four
ounces of Jad Salts; put a tablespoon
ful in a glass of water and drink before
breakfast each morning for a week.
This is said to eliminate uric acid by
stimulating the kidneys to normal ac
tion, thus ridding the blood of these
impurities.
Jad Solts is inexpensive, harmless
and is made from the acid of grapes
and lemon juice, combined with lithia
and is used with excellent results by
thousands of folks who are subject to
rheumatism. Here you have a pleas
ant, effervesceent, lithia-water drink
which overcomes uric acid and is bene
ficial to your kidneys as well.
(GERMANS TO SUPPLY
ALL LOST BOOKS
BERLIN, March 7. —To supplant,in
some measure the thousands of books
in East Prussia that were destroyed
by the Russians, the Goethe Associa
tion of Berlin is in the near future to
send a number of “people’s libraries”
to the province. Other Goethe Associ
ations throughout Germany are work
ing along the same lines, and Herr
Krupp von Bohlen and Halbach of
Essen has given 5,000 marks toward
the purchase of literature for East
Prussia.