Newspaper Page Text
PAGE TWO
I BOTTLED
It’s the drink that sati
fits.
It’s Eure.
It’s Wholesome.
It refreshing.
It’s always the same
in flavor and in good
ness.
15c
AMERICUS COCA COLA
BOTTLING CO.
J. T. WARRtN, Mgr.
MISS LILLIAN CHANDLLR *
FIRE AM) LIFE INSURANCE
HEALTH AND ACCIDENT.
Office: Allison Building, Phone 45.
Americus, Ga.
WONDER PRESSING CLUB
A. HENDERSON, Prop.
Next Chinese Laundry.
Suits pressed and Cleaned 50e
Suits Pressed 25c
Ladies’ Work a Specialty.
Work done and delivered same day.
C. F. DAVIS,
Dental Surgeon.
Orthodontia, Pyorrhea.
Resident Phone 218. Office Phone 811
Allison Bldg.
DR. M. H. WHEELER.
Dentist.
Office in Bell Bldg., Lamar St. Just
opposite Postoffice.
Mfice Phone 785. Residence Phone 284
F. and A. H.
ft AMERICUS LODGH
F. and A. M. m
& ■ F- an<l A ’ M ‘ meetß ev ‘
ery second and fourth
Friday night at 7
..o’clock.
S. A. HAMMOND, W. M. *
CLOYD BUCHANAN, Sec’y.
i M. B. COUNCIL
<l. . .LODGE, F, and A. BL,
meets every First and
Xjwfe'vk ..Third Friday nights.
K * Visiting brothers are
invited to attend.
H. B. MASHBURN, W. M.
NAT LeMASTER, Secretary.
LHLKHLS CAMP, 202, KUODMKJ
OF THE WORLD.
Meets every Wednesday night in tn<
Wheatley Bldg., Windsor Ave. All vi*
|twg Sovereigns invited to meet wlti
fie. J. M. TOBIN, C. C.
NAT LeMASTER, Clerk.
i'ASHIAGTON CAMP, NO. 14,
P. 0. S. OF A.
Meets oc Thursday nights, Wheat
ley Building, at 7:30 o’clock. All mem
hers are urged to attend Visitor*
welcomed. E. F. WILDER, Pres’t.
O. D. REESE, Recording Sec’y.
NAT Jr.-MASTER. Financial Sec’y.
F. G. OLVER
Sewing Machines and Supplies; Key ;
wd Lock Fitting; Umbrellas Repaired '
Mid Covered.
LAMAK STREET NEAR WELL. j
The Union Central Life’s
reduced rates and The Un
ion Central Life’s liberal di
vidends offer you the best
insurance at a lower cost
than you can buy it else
where.
Lee M. Hansford
Agent
oom 18 Planters Bank Bldg.
’Phone 715 Americus, Ga.
i
MONTE SIRLD RETURNED
TD HLIINTft ON THE 0.1.
ATLANTA, Ga., March 21.—S-sli
Hold your ears close. This is a straight
tip and it’s strictly on the Q. T. Monte
Carlo is a long way off and the Med
iterranean Sea is infested with sub
marines. Come to Atlanta instead.
Get in'touch with the right parties
v. hen you arrive, and you’ll find your
favorite. If it’s the rattle of the dice
you prefer, well and good; or, the pat
ter of the cards in a poker game—all
O K.
9fter a dull period of seven or eight
years, the fraternity have returned and
opened several places where devotees
of Luck and Chance can find genuine
runs for their money. It is said one
cf them is owned by av ery prepos
sessions gentleman that operated for
several years on trans-Atlantic,stearu-
i
ers—until Scotland Yard gave him a
tip that another crossing might be his
last. Os course, this is strictly on the
Q. T., as previously stated, and is not
to te mentioned to any but your clos
est friend, and then only in strict con
fidence. In a word, it is being passe l '
down the line that there is big gambl
ing going on in Atlanta. Officers of
the law may eventually catch some big
game.
i
Stenog. and Manicurist
Refuse To Mix 1
I
ATLANTA, Ga., March 31.—What
should a manicurist do when a sten
ographer refuses to room with her?
Miss Helen Andreas, is a striking
blond who is employed in one of At
Junta's leading tonsorial parlors. She
decided the question In her own way.
and proceeded to trim Miss Laura
Keeler, the typewriter expert, to a del-,
icate point and remove numerous rag
ged edges of cuticle from that young'
lady’s physiognomy. Whereupon Miss ,
Keeler called the police and had a'
case made against Miss Andreas for
assault and battery.
Judge Rosser, in the criminal di
vision of municipal court, heard their
testimony yesterday for an hour,
while a large and interested court
room audience leaned forward in their
seats to get a glimpse of the two bean
| ties. It appeared that the landlord of
the young ladies’ boarding house, who
was J. H. Miles, recently acquitted of
the murder of Anderson Eady, or
dered Miss Keeler to “double up” wp.h
Miss Andreas and Miss Keeler flatlv
‘refused. Miss Andreas didn’t like the
implied reflection upon her charac
ter and personal habits. Judge Rosser
bound her over to the higher courts.
J She was given liberty upon making
bend.
I
Atlanta Has
Rat Killer
ATLANTA, Ga., March 31. —Dr. L. H.
Hirsch, of New York City, professional
rodent exterminator, and an official rat
catcher of the government, is in town,
accompanied by an assistant. He will
give demonstrations here. He was
made rat catcher for the government!
five years ago when congress passed a
bill providing for such an office.
LADIES $3.50 : GENTLEMEN $5.00
FOX TROT ONE STEP
BELL STUDIO
L. M. RUD ICH
I Guarantee. All Latest Dances
. Military Prize Waltz a Specialty
Charlie Chaplin Pigeon Walk
CASTLEBERRY JUNK SHOP
T ELEPHONE 813
Will pay highest market price for Scrap Metal,
I Rubber, Tallow, Beeswax, Copper, Zinc, Allumi
num, etc. Write, wite or phone for our prices be
fore selling. We are in ereat demand for bones
and old rags, also burlap bags. Yarn near Sea
board Shop, 7*l Elm Avenue
■MHBBMBIMBMHmBHBaMBaaanUMWaHnKXaMBnMBaHHMMaHi.
IHt AMERICUS DAILY TIMES-RECORDER
FORM CHARHY PUNS
MIGRATION PROBLEM
Charity organizations all over the'
Country are uniting in an effort hav
ing for its purpose the handling of a
very perplexing problem, that of the
migration of the poor from one county
to another.
These organizations are so planned
as to afford protection to each other.
When a city decides to pay the trans
portation of some of its poor out of the
city, the charity organization at the
destination of the traveler is notified.
After nine months' stay, if the mendi
cant is still unable to support himself
or herself, the charity organization at
the starting point is notified to call
him or her home. Thus the burden is
divided between the two organizations.
The following is an excerpt from an
ordinance drafted at the recent may
ors' convention at Jacksonville, Fla : |
“If an applicant who lias been pro
vided with charitable transportation
without the approval of the charita-,
I Je agent at the point of destination, 1
shall there become dependant on
charity within nine months after his
arrival, then the charitable organi
zation or individual who sent him |
thither should be notified and re ,
quested to provide for the applicant’s!
necessities, or to remit the money |
necessary to return him to the place;
from which his transportation was !
provided.
"If an applicant has been forward i
ed in violation of any of these rules, 1
the charitable agency which provided
him with transportation should be I*
requested to bear the reasonable nec
essary expense of providing for him
temporarily, pending investigation’
and the proper disposal of the case.”
i BE®M HOT WATEIE j
BMHHH6 W TOD
D©NTTFEEILM®Enr
Says glass of hot water with
phosphate before breakfast
washes out poisons.
-
If you wake up with a bad taste, bad I
breath and tongue is coated; if your
head is dull or aching; if what you eat
sours and forms gas and acid in stom
ach, or you are bilious, constipated,
nervous, sallow and can’t get feeling
just right begin inside bathing. Drink
before breakfast, a glass of real hot
water with a teaspoonful of limestone
phosphate in it. This will flush the
poisons and toxins from stomach, liver,
kidneys and bowels and cleanse,
sweeten and purify the entire alimen
tary tract. Do your inside bathing im
mediately upon arising in the morning
to wash out of the system all the pre
vious day’s poisonous waste, gases and
sour bile before putting more food Into
the stomach.
To feel like young folks feel; like
you felt before your blood, nerves and
muscles became loaded with body im
purities, get from your pharmacist a
quarter pound of limestone phosphate
which is inexpensive and almost taste
less, except for a sourish twinge which
is not unpleasant.
Just as soap and hot water act on
the skin, cleansing, sweetening and
freshening, so hot water and limestone
phosphate acts on the stomach, liver,
kidneys and bowels. Men and women
who are usually constipated, bilious,
' headachy or have any stomach dis
order should begin this inside bathing
before breakfast. They are assured
Itl ey will become real cranks on the
| sr‘ ject shortly. ,
ft——M—■
■"■——Hl rum —in
-
THE LATEST DRESSES ■
BY THURSDAY’S EXPRESS
Some special new models in Taffeta;
colors—Rose, Silver, Gray, Reseda.
Ashes of Violet and Black
Priced $15.00 to $22.50
Come in to see them.
f
MEMBER AMERICUS CHAMBER OF COMMERCE.
th ——1-r-r rnim—irTT WTirnni
s 11 I MW
SCHOOL FOLKS Ml
BESPUNOING MUCH
FDR FAIR BUILDING
| The Children's, and Educationad
building at the Third Agricultural Dis
. trict fair continues to interest the
' schools of the nineteen counties, and
money is coming in right along for this
great project that is being pnshed for
the benefit of education at the fair.
Prof. E. T. Moore was in yesterday
afternoon and brought $1.20 from his
school at Andersonville. He stated
that he would have a great many more
ten-cent pieces after the first of the
month and said that the school was
very much Interested in this matter.
The money from this school came
from the following children:
In Miss Beulah Pennington's room:
Charles Slappey, Aubrey Easterlin,
Lewis Easterlin, Ora Mae Gwynes and
Rena Duckworth.
In Prof. E. T. Moore’s room: Francis
Easterlin, Alton Peek, Jesse Peek, J.
\V Peek, Laura Mae Peek. Willie Hol
loway and Pearl Duckworth.
Prof. E. W. Dupree, of the New
Point school, which is on the Plains
road, out of Americus, brought in $2.20
from his school and stated to Secre
tary Hyman that his scholars were
very much interested, and he would
HOUSEKEEPERS TAKE NOTICE!
HOW MANY DELEGATES TO ELK’S
CONVENTION CAN YOU ENTERTAIN?
Name
Residence NoStreet j
Will roomonly
i ’ Will feedonly
Will feed and room
UNIFORM PRICE AGREED UPON
Rooms, SI.OO each per person per day
Room and Breakfast $1.35 per person per day
0. F. MARSHALL, J. E. SHERLOCK, ALLEN |
Rooming Committee
Fill out this blank at once and mail to
E. H. HYMAN, Convention Secretary
Chamber of Commerce . •
-L ■ —. i
Jiave more money in a few days and
would send it in. It is impossible for
all the scholars to bring in their money
at once, but they will all contribute
the ten cents, said Prof. Dupree.
Those sending in their money from
this school are: James Nicholson, J.
T. Nicholson, A. D. Clark, Joe McMath,
Bertha McMath, Nannie Sue McMath,
Bessie Taylor, Robert Taylor, Myra
I Taylor, Macy Grey, Alvin Salter, Agnes
Salter, Ruth Salter, Dennis Hall, Deal
. Jordan, Earl Jordan, Eva Jordan, Mil
dred Deriso, Mary Deriso, Robert Der
iso, Orioen eDriso, Jesse Deriso.
From Prof. Thos. J. Barrett, superin
tendent of Plains public school, sends
in seventy cents more from his school
and states that he will have a good
many more children send in more
i money the first of the month. Those
i sending in money today are: May
i Belle Cook, Georgia Wise, Arnold Wise,
Leland Wise, Alton Rayfield, William
I Rayfleld, Sarah Crawford.
Prof. U. S. Lancaster, of Leslie High
school, of which he is principal, sends
> in $5.10 more and says that this is not
I all his children are going to send in,
states that he expects every member
i of his school to be a stockholder in
■ the Children’s and Educational build-
■ ing. From the first and giades, Mrs.
Hines teacher, sends the following
names of children who have sent in
I their money: Willie Jones, Joe Tom
i Pilcher, Durward Jones, Frances Sims,
■ Nellie Bradley, Virginia Perry, Lois
i Bigham, Jeanette Simms, Nunn Reeves,
I Pope Bass. Reba Laramore, Jodie
Young, Walter D. Deriso, Ethel Cocke,
Samuel Gardner, Carson Bass, Mur
ray Suggs, Edna Bolton, Ernest Bolton,
Evelyn Ranew, Mrs. Hines.
Miss Nellie Siddall, Grammar school
department, sends in the following:
Alice Moses, Jennie Moses, Lena Light
foot, Augustus Morgan, Bettie Moses,
James Everson, Esther Stewart, Lu
ti er Roberts, Walter Lena Laramore,
Emmett Gardner, Madison Summer
ferd, Ella Young, Hugo Bradley, Idus
Jay, Ellis Park Green, Liston Glaze,
Edwin Hines, George Irwin Cox, Rob
ert Hines, George Irwin Cox, Robert
Hines, Elizabeth Bass, Rosa Lee Suggs,
Tom Alien Wade, Cato Wilson, Olin
Deavous, Clifton Anderson, Reuben
Hines, Nellie Siddall, A. B. Parry, Ola
Mae Suggs, Thelma Bolton, Bessie
Sims.
81] BATCH PRISONERS
CD TD STATE PRISON
ATLANTA, Ga., March 31.—A batch
cf prisoners, men and women, white
and black, were sent to the state prison
farm at Milledgeville yesterday. Among
the number was a giant negro who
packed a Victrola horn on his back
f Want Advertisements
~~~ . i _ _ - i _.
*•••••• WANTED— A wide-awake man ai
j . JES*. ... * agent for 01d Line Casualty Company
........a.. , Monthly premium Address p, j
One cent a word each insertion. Stilwell, Montezuma, Ga.
uimmnm charge of 25c. . '
i No classified advertisement will be
charged te any one unless their name hARM LOANS can give goot
appears on our subscription books. terms on farm loans; money plentL
— ! ful. W. W. Dykes. 15-ti
FARM LOANS—at 6 per cant, inter.
—■ — est - Terms satisfactory. R. i . May.
[ EASTER CANDY EGGS; large, big nard.
, fat ones, at Buchanan Grocery Co.
i 30-ts
1 FO/? RENT
LEWIS' Sixty-Three Cotton Seed; “
wilt resistant; SI.OO per bushel. C. C CICELY FURNISHED ROOMS--
Hawkins. 30-6 t in; $5.00 per month. Phone 38’
NASSAU GROCERY COMPANY— *
This side Seaboard Depot. Clark Bros. FOR RENT—Furnished rooms, with
eld stand. All kinds fancy groceries; raodern conveniences. Phone 592.
and fruits. Phone 576. 29-Im |
— ■ —■ ■■■ ,
FOR SALE—I,OOO Bushels Arles Im- \ SEE G ' M ' CRAGG >f you want to
proved Toole Cotton seed; price on I ™ nt a 6 ' room house, No. 713 Forrest
a], plication. Arles Plantation. Phone ’ ‘ ;,reet; screened and in good condition,
2703. 17 _ tf : with lar ge garden. 3i_i t
GOOD WORK MULE for sale cheap.’ A ’ TO FOR HIRE Ford service
F. G. Beavers. 22-ts an ywher.e in the city, twenty-five cents.
;—. Phone 75. Headquarters Hooks’ Phar
.WANTED—Misixllanean ai,l ’ M "- I *- tl
IOANS made on TTsTsTr- TV”'J “
Cent. Interest. J. J Ilanesiev L,\ ’ * occupied by J. T.
tianesmy. Stakes. See R E. McNulty. s . d
FRIDAY, MARCH 31, 1316
and carried six records in his hand,
There was also a boy, neatly dressed,
wearing a stylish suit, nose glasses
and a sporty white cap.
“He is the son of an ex-governor,”
said the guard to the passer-by who
stopped to stare. “Sent up for forgery.
They’re from all over the state—goin'
to the farm.”
"Why the phonograph?” a reporter
asked the giant bearded negro.
“Thought I’d have a little music
n on the farm,” and the negro’s
teeth gleamed. “I got six records. One
of em’s ‘Emaline.’ It’s some tune. Ever
heard it?”
“What’s your name?” asked the re
porter.
“Colonel Harris, from Adamsville."
The guard hastened toward them.
“Get away from that man,” he shouted.
“What are you in for?” shot the re
porter quickly.
“Murder,” shouted back Colonel Har
ris and the reported fled.
CkaJmens ’
Gelatine
BEST-BECAt'SE MADE BEST