Newspaper Page Text
PAGE SIX
JOHN
ROBINSON'S
10 BIG
SHOWS
Writes a Letter
Read what they say:
H. 0. Jones Medicine Co.,
Americus, Ga.
Gentleman: We have need
I and are using your Balsam of
I Benzoin for cuts, sprains,
bruises, wire cuts, galled should
ers nd sores of various kinds
among our stock and we feel no
hesitancy in recommending it to
large horse and mule owners
and dealers
JOHN ROBINSON’S SHOWS,
By Claud Orton Boss Hostler.
Large stock owners and deal
ers should not be without this
valuble remedy.
Equally good for man and >
household purposes. Call for It |
by name, JONES BALSAM OF
BENZOIN.
For sale by druggists and
dealers everywhere.
C. of Ga.Ry
THE RIGHT WAY*
Trains Arrive.
From Columbus
(Seminole) 12:10 a ra
From Jacksonville
(Seminole) 8:40 a m
From Atlanta-Macon 5:22 a m
From Albany --....* 8:40 a ai
From Columbus ! 110:00 a m
From Columbus _ 1111:45 a ■
From Macon •• * 2:17 p ■
From Montgomery-Albany *.2:17 p.m
From Columbus 7:15p m
From Mrcoo •• * 7:55 p ffi
From Montgomery-Albany *10:52 p m
l\r Jacksonville
(Seminole) 12:10 a m
For Chicago (Seminole) 8:40 a m
For Montgomery-Albany * 5:22 a m
For aMcon-Atlanta * 6:40 a m
For Columbus 1 7:15 a m
For Montgomery Albany ..* 2:17 pm
For Columbus 1 2:30 p B
For Albany * 7:85 p m
For aMcon-Atlanta "10:52 p ta
•Daily. ’Except Sunday. !!Sunday
only. GEO. ANDERSON.
Agent.
■■■,■ -
The
Fragrance
of Orange
Blossoms
no more pleasing to
the nostrils than the fla
vor of the sun-smacked
California oranges which
makes
ORANGE
CRUSH
at once the most palata
ble and ths most whole
some of fruit drinks.
Risk a nickel on our
recommendation.
5c the Bottle
AMERICUS
Coca-Cola
Bottling Co.
T. MBH, IMuagcr
LIGHT COMES TOO LATEI
FOR MINOR MAGNATES
By H. C. HAMILTON
(United press Staff Correspondent.)
NEW YOR, May 2.l|—Those minor
league baseball magnates who last
November refused to sanction the re
districting of minor leagues during the
meeting at Louisville probably are
beginning to see the light now—when
it is too late.
Several leagues which are steering
nearer and nearer the rocks of de
struction, and those which went over
the brink, might have been saved if
the vote had gone differently.
The day has gone now when a con
certed effort can be made to save the
minors. They must live or die to
gether, and the territory they leave
open if they do succumb may be picked
up when better days come again.
The international League, one of
those to vote in favor of a redistrict
ing, offers an object lesson to other
leagues. When this league skidded
i around the corners of mid-winter and
voter to disband, the territory was
left wide open, and players were de
clared free agents. The Toronto club,
for instance, lost heavily when Napo
ileon Lajoie signed to manage the
| Indianapolis club and se’-eral other
* players were snapped up by the Am
erican association. If the best cities
■of this league had been combined with
the best of the American association
there never would have been any trou
ble. The team s dropped from each
circuit could have been embraced in a
stronger and more compact organiza
tions.
. .Now Lincoln and Denver have faded
from the scenery in the Western
League. Providence has gone into
the Eestern League in the east. Rich
mond has been left without a club.
Montreal has no baseball of the pro
fessional kind. These cities could
have been taken care of in the dis
tricting plan figured out by Ed Barrow.
The men who fought the redistricting
(knew they were ready for the skids,
I but they grimly held on, hoping
jagainst hope that something would
happen.
Gun Metal Plentiful.
WINNEPEG, Man., May 21.—Moly
-1 denum, a metal used for hardening
big guns, now at a great premium in
all warring nations, exists n large
quantities in Canada, according to R.
('. Lett, colonization agent for the
I Grand Trunk railway.
Mr. Lett has collected samples of
this metal, and of iron, copper, gold,
and lead, in which he says Alberta and
British Columbia are particularly rich.
He says there is enough mineral
wealth in these wealthy provinces
Ito make the British empire wealthy
(for all time.
Sunshine Pours
Into Our Lives
Over the Wires a
“With all the
children married and
living in different gi|L
places the Bell Tele- y
phone is essential to our
happiness. We can call any
of them, day or night, and
hear them as well as if they were right here.
“Very often one of the girls calls me
by Long Distance and we have a pleasant
visit of five minutes or more. You’d be
surprised to know how little it costs as
compared with the joy and satisfaction.
“When any of the grandchildren are
sick and I am called at night, I simply
reach for my extension telephone and talk
without moving from my bed. Often I can
give advice and direction that saves lots of
worry.’’
Every Bell Telephone is a Long Distance
SOUTHERN BELL TELEPHONE
AND TELEGRAPH COMPANY
P. E. Westbrook, Manager
AMERICUS TIMES-RECORDER.
MQHE MSB CLtTHtS
TO MITCMIOSIS NOW
PHILADELPHIA, May 21. The
noiseless piano is on the way, and
the young lady in the above soon
will cease to terrify.
Mrs. Mary Hallock Greenwait has
been demonstrating to friends here a
mechanical apparatus which plays
piano music in colors. It simply
gives the “correct color value’’ of
each note, and makes you feel as
though you were listening to music
when, as a matter of fact, you’re only
looking at music.
Mrs. Greenwait, before her mar
riage, was a concert pianist of some
standing, and therefore doesn’t play
ragtime in colors, but her ‘ Triumphal
March’’ from “Aida” is said to be a
fine combination of rich purples and
high carmines, and on the same
theory it is predicted that a very par
ticular bridal pair may have the
Lohengrin music in white and con
ventional black, or may choose a pro
gram to match the bride’s hair.
In future, when you attend a
musicale, you may have a dress to
match the music.
American military bands, equipped
with variations of Mrs. Greenwait’s
device might drive the foe into a
fronting range by projecting over
his lines such airs as What’ll We
Do With Him, Boys?” or might blind
while regiments with jazz music, it
is pointed out.
“A SPLENDID TONIC”
Says Hixssn Lady Who, On Doc
tor's Advice, Took Cardui
And Is Now Well.
Hixson, Tenn. —“About 10 years ago
I was...” says Mrs. J. B. Gadd, of
this place. “I suffered with a pain in
my left side, could not sleep at night
with this pain, always in the left
side...
My- doctor told me to use Cardui. 1
took one bottle, which helped me and
after my baby came, I was stronger
and better, but the pain was still
there.
I at first let it go, but began to get
weak and in a run-down condition,
so I decided to try some more Cardui,
which I did.
This last Cardui which I took made
me much better, in fact, cured me. It
has been a number of years, still I
have no return of this trouble.
I feel it was Cardui that cured me,
and I recommend it as a splendid fe
male tonic.”
Don’t allow yourself to become
weak and run-down from womanly
troubles. Take Cardui. It should sure
ly help you, as it has so many thou
sands of other women in the past 40
years. Headache, backache, sideache,
nervousness, sleeplessness, tired-out
feeling, are all signs of womanly trou
ble. Other women get relief by taking
Cardui. Why not jmu? AH druggists.
NC-132
The next time
you buy calomel
ask for
(Qs
The purified calomel tab
lets that are entirely free
of all sickening and sali
vating effects.
Medicinal virtue* vastly improved.
Guaranteed by your druggist. Sold
only in sealed packages. Price 35c.
The
Redpath 100 per cent
Program
“FULL TO THE BRIM”
SPEND YOUR VACATION AT HOME
■ ' ■ :if ‘ « t***- ♦ I»' *3
First Afternoon
Introductory Exercises
Concert - . The Croatian Orchestra
Children’s Hour In Charge of Children s Worker
First Night
Concert • The Croatian Orchestra
Lecture, “The Sunny side of Life”... J- Beauchamp
Second Morning
Children’s Hour ....-• -
Second Afternoon
Grau Concert Alfred Hiles Bergen and Assisting Artistes
Second Night
Grand Concert Quartet
Lecture “Business and The War” Frank Mulholland
Third Morning
Children’s Hour ..
Third Afternoon
Concert - Violin and Piano
Lecture, "Rebuilding The World” Chancellor Geo. H. Bradford
Third Night
Grand Concert Miss Margery Maxwell, Sopran o of Chicago Grand Opera
• z Company, with Assisting Artists
Fourth Morning
Children's Hour '
Fourth Afternoon
Baritone Recotal Knight MacGregor (Scotch Baritone and Pianist.)
Lecture, “Economics in the Home”.... Mrs. Christine Frederick
Fourth Night
Recital in Scotch Costume ; Knight MacGregor
Lecture, “The Checkerboard of Europe”. .Sir John Foster Fraser, F R. G. S.
s ! j tfh irmTsnri London, England
Fifth Morning
Children’s Hour
Fifth Afternoon
Concert Chocolate Soldier Orchestra
Lecture, Tn Other Men’s Shoes” Oney Fred Sweet
(Chicago Newspaperman.)
' Fifth Night
"The Chocolate Soldier” Light Opera
(Complete production by company of 30, including orchestra.)
Sixth Morning
Children’s Hour ••
* Sixth Afternoon
Concert Chicago Orchestra Band
Exhibition of War Posters of the Allied Nations.
Sixth Night
“Circus Time in Fairyland” In Charge of Children's Workers
Lecture, “A Soldier of the Sky” ...Capt. George Frederick Campbell
Seventh Afternoon
Concert -....Dunbar’s Orchestra
"The Man Who Stayed at Home” .». Clarissa Harrold
(Thrilling Readinf of War Play Showing Ramifications of Geman Spy
System.)
Exhibition of 100 Raemaker’s War Cartoons
Seventh Night
Dunbar’s Revue, Featuring the Grana Parade of the Allies...
Starts, IVlay 25
PART TIME LOAFERS
HELD AS SLACKERS
BALTIMORE, Maq 21.—The indus
trial slacker who finds that under the
prevailing high rate of wages only a
few Gays’ work each week are re
quired for his needs may shortly learn
•hat lie is violating the compulsory
work law. The complaint against this
sort cf slacker is becoming general.
The compulsory work law requires
all men and boys between eighteen
and fifty, with a few exceptions, to be
regularly and continuously employed.
Regular and contiuous employ
ment of the compulsory work bureau
means forty-eight hours of work a
week. Hence a man who works only
three or four eight-hour days and
“rests” for the remainder of the week
is obeying neither the letter nor the
spirit of the law. Steps to check this
sort of slacking will be taken short
ly •
. TUESDAY, MAY 21, 1918.
BECOMES I
SOFT,SILKY,LONG IT®,
like picture (from an
actual photograph)
by UHing
HEROLIN MR/1 ;
Pomade Hair Dressing. ‘/WBr W
This elegant Hair Po- (IJJ
made makes stubborn,
coarse, wiry or kinky hair soft, silky,
fluity, long and pretty, so you can do
up your hair in any style. Also stops
dandruff and falling hair, and grows
lots of new hair soft and beautiful
to behold. Herolin is not sticky or
truminy. SEND 25c (stamps or coin)
for a box. Also sold by drug stores.
DUVAL HOTEL
JACKSONVILLE
100 Rooms ——so Baths
Opposite postofflee. All modern im
ipovements, elevator, telephone ser
vice. Rates without bath. $1 and up;
with bath, $1.50 and up per person.
W. S. Jones, Mgr.