About Americus times-recorder. (Americus, Ga.) 1891-current | View Entire Issue (Jan. 21, 1924)
PAGE SIX PPMIOH ' «■ BOYS Courts Established by Juvenile Protective Association Helps to Reclaim Many Children ATLANTA, Jan. 21.—Child wel-j fare workers in Atlanta today 1 pressed great gratification over the records of juvenile, courts as s ' forth in figures received here fron the National Probation and which they claim, bears out ie- r markable results done by the juven- H° urs I i [breaks that gold! I Hili’s Cases". Bromide Quinine will I | • break vour cold in one day. Token i promptlyitprcventscolds,lagnppe | I and pneumonia. Demand red box | bearing Mr. Hill’s portrait. All j druggists. Pnce | cascaraAquinine W .H H.L- TOILET SETS In D’jer Kiss, Mary Garden and Many Other Lines NATHAN MURRAY Druggist 120 W. Forsyth St. Phone <9 ■ 1 L 1 Si t■ MW *i> » DINNER SETS V, Ltv ■ |(r» liecc Haviland Dinner Sets at $50.00 each. i'L • , div - • time von have been able to ■mt Ha- . and China at this price. We will be glad to show you these sets at any time. THO MA S L. BELL |M 1 1 Wi Win We Weld Anything, Any Where Any Time Nc Job too Large, None too Small. A Trial is all we ask. AMERICUS WELDING AND RADIATOR WORKS 122 Jackson St. Americus, Ga. Phone 943 pV- G * ■ Y. ■ - - - Giving the Telephone Life Wherever your thought There must be the guardians goes your voice may go. of the wires to keep them ntal You can talk across the coati- with speech-carrying electrical nent as if face to face. Your tele- currents. There must be those phone is the latch to open for who v.atch the myriads of tiny you any door in the land. switchboard lights and answer There is the web of wires. ur commands. There must be The many switchboards. The tei onicians of every sort to con- maze of apparatus. The millions f timt, repair and operate. of telephones. All are parts of a A quarter of a million men country-wide mechanii m for far- and women are united to give speaking. The equipment has nation-wide telephone service, cost over two billion dollars, but With their brains and hands more than equipment is needed. they make the Bell System-1 : :. Bell System • One Policy • One System , //,' And All Directed Towards Universal Service Better Service Southern Bell Telephone and Telegraph Co. ile Protective Association in the South. , , Figures, now bemg analyzed here, show that 200,000 children under 8 years o£ aße ’ > iaS^ (l | through the juvenile, courts of the I United State.’ last year. More than : l"5 per cent of the children were 1 placed on probation and given an (opportunity"- under groper super l?ion to prove that, they were not 'basically bad and' eighty per cent 1,,f those placed on probation made i good. 1 Establishment of juvenile courts in Atlanta and in many other cities during the last few years has been largely due to the .work of the Juv enile Protective Association, of which Rev. Crawford Jackson is general secretary, with headquar ters in Atlanta. It is stated that | all but two states in. the Union, I Maine and Wyoming, provide for I specially organized juvenile courts . with probation work as a corner- I stone. ■ aOvtm H MiuionJars UseoYearly*. W VAPORMB For All Cold Troubles ’ THE AMERICUS TIMES-RECORDER MKRSWILIf NIGH I BESTS COIN ffl / . 12th District Champs Lose to I Sumter Rural School Five by j 39 to 22 Score , ANDERSONVILLE, Jan. 21. ■ Cochran A & M. school, winners of 12th District championship in the Dublin tournament last year, prev ( cd easy for the local high school . basketball team here Saturday ai'- i’ ternoon. The champions were oaU '< lusscd in every department of tl -;.rame. While Cochran returned OV : Vry man of her last year’s team’ and , has one of the best coaches in Geor- ; r (;ia, the team was swept from their i ?' feet by their much lighter oppon -' ents. Maurice Holloway, for the loci.ls, was the outstanding man on offense | with ten field goals and live fouls to his credit. His dribbling was ren :ational at times going entirely, through the strong five-man defen v < f the visitors and looping an easy shot from under the goal. His running mate, William, and . IL Holloway covered the floor in. 'grand style and the passing of these i three was spectacular at times. On defense Justice at standing guard proved to the fans that no t asy shots can be made at his goal. I He rarely failed to secure the ball J when a shot was missed and always l ad the ball out of danger before (tire opponents could force held ball. 1 Many here pronounce him the be.t guard ever seen on a high school team. ’ Andersonville plays Vienna High _ i e next Friday at three P. M. The will he played on the new; . • :r; ; w bev •: i-r.-i the be .s ■ in the .'.adv:, nvilie School. The iiiu. r; I '. ■? j § 11 .. v f Nogai 1’ j g V ...a.,.,. 2 !i MeNaii S I. Holloway 12 Meadow ■ .Itubbs Harrvli ! ■ , Justice I. " Rec-.-•■>> j 11' t' ' •1. * .la I M, school. |.ORY LAW CONVICT PREFERS PEN TEAM • SAVAVNNAH, January !. I Because he preferred physical (bor to forced inactivity while -sw ing a term in the Chatham count; jail, Reuben Tennenbaum petitlo’ ed the court that he be transfer-' red to the federal penitentiary - - Atlanta at a recent session of court here. Judge W. H. Barrett grant ed the prisoner’s request and chivvi ed his jail sentence to a peniten iary term. Tbnrxnbaum is • Inga sentence of six months’ con finement on a charge of violating 3 :he prohibition laws. CPISP FMiS GETS GOOD COM KIMI Tom Wright Nets $243.30 in Cream Sales OH Three Cows During 10 Months Last Year CORDELE, Jan. 21. Tom Wright, a young farmer of the Penia Community of Crisp county, started milking three cows in Oc tober 1921 November Ist, he added tXo more cow . 1-rom the :> cows in ten months he shipped $334.00 worth of cr-.-am. His ex penses, ’ including iced and tickets lor shipping, amounted to $91.70 which gives him a profit of $243.30 for cream. During this time is 11 worth of skim milk was ted to hogs and two calves w we -.old for SIO.OO which run his profits to $300.30 tor the live cow. tor ten month-. Wright estimated manure to be forth $50.00, which will increase his feed crop yields the next sea son. Besides, milking- and taking care of these cows, Wright took care of his crop just as well as he did b\- fore he began malting. These ms of Wright’s were allowed to run i n his carpet grass and Lespedeza pas tures, and through his be,.n fields after he had harvested his corn, wit El a little coin--ntt re* being fed at night. Other small farmers in Crisp and other South Georgia counties are succeeding equally as well as Wright. BUENA VISTA phis, ■ . v. u-tuii •:-■ , v to Mr. an . E. H. M • i Mi-. •■ o Vai i ) t.r ' To Curea Cold in One Day Take taxa* rßroofl I tablets BROMO QUININE Tablets begin immediately to counteract the activity of Cold, Gnp and Influ enza Germs and bring to a sud den stop the dangerous work of ! these dreaded disease germs in the human body. BROMO QUININE Tablets quick ly render these germs powerless and completely destroy their organic existence. The Tonic and Laxative Effect' of Laxative EROMO QUININE Tablets is very beneficial to the system at all times. The box bears this signature Price 30c. ———— ' -t. $5,000 TO LOAN On Americus Residence Property Phone 830 LEWIS ELLIS ADVICE IS AS VALUABLE AS INSURANCE Our first business is to advise you. We will -'ppraise you: prop v We will recommend wise trii':-". We will figure out comph ie insurance pro tection. We will figure low est premium’'rates for fullest protection. Our advl-e i valii-ilde be c si: our experience ha'- been valuable. Our adv ce is free on all question, f Property Pro tection. I; for it. BRA LEY HOGG i one 185 Rcpr renting the ALLIANCE INSURANCE CO., OF PHILADELPHIA HAVELUNCH With Us Sandwich s. Hot Chocolate, i omato Bouillion, Hot Cof ‘ fee. all hours during the day, at Americus Drug Co. father, Dr. W. B. Hair, Mr. and Mrs. Brown Moore spent Tuesday in Plains. Mrs. Lula Reese has been visit-, ing relatives in Plains the past two weeks. Mrs. Anna Jennings of Plains hasl been the guest of relatives here re- b oo * hyAmerica's besl vifomanWriter QD'Bjlack ©xem Ay Gertruds Li (Continued) , Ho had always felt that the im- F agination, what is called for want I of a better term, the "creative faculty,” was there, but it was lethargic; it sometimes roused it , self to spurts and flashes dur ing wakeful nights, but slept like a boa constrictor that had swal lowed a pig when he tried to 1 invoke it. No doubt, as Gora had i told him, his life had been too easy ;.ii,l agreeable; he made a. good deal of money with no particular effort, ho was a favorite with the cleverest men and women in New York, and he'had no one to think of but himself. His mother was dead and his sisters married. And there/'was no doubt that if you were on top. a personality, New York was the most enchanting place In rhe world to live in. just as it must be the most unsatisfac tory for the poor and insignificant To have cci.'j.ier I '■ v York nc ant more s.. .i.-i thousand • ■ - v . n :• "ing all ; ■ ■ .»f t States put - ti.c 1 . Xew y. ; left .ut. -n o■■■ i i - . ... j.; ice . ' .. I ■ .1. EuU, ' > •; ;t: 1 •; I :.n « ? • ■. < . .. . • .....: .. .rt.iil to N. .-. v ■ < ;..i pz-r; - i ...» 'i.it’jralh s ci rims went to H' v e. : ... a. , ■ ■■ .in. Wasl.t ■r ct course. -.-. I lie c 'oai, but th.’.:, in ;ils ■ •). W : l.'.- I C , n -' f;-0 „ : ili-iow-) to . b.’ one, ■ . be t',>t’-;- 3 .... he (lid not have ;to a pi . • i '.-e there vvnt milliing ;a. and society. '.: . a York you : . 1 only to help . - . of lif . you •v a n t c d .. . - titled ae she us of in- thr New York convert: ’ Oh, ’.Vurh.m is merci; an Island ’it: iii of New York.” and she fell w ....-i.ieriti't what New York . ... own like.!; it bad not ft- • so persistently by those ■ . :.is es eager d aml.itious , debouching into it from ev ;-:r' of ,1 by no means ttnarnbi- • • . ■<l negliglbio ccmmonwealtji. Xi >thet island, probably. Certain ly it w.-is the most exhilarating place in the world today, with its atmosphere of in-.incib'e”security and prosperity, its surging tides of i:’ i s.’t> vyotid -r it was impossible for the inter, ive New Yorker to realize that four thousand miles away a greater world was falling to ruin. She told him something of the I political life of Vienna, contin . ’.ly agitated by some "Dalkati Question,” of the general dislike of 'lie "Heir,” whose violent death at Sarajevo had been the death knell isf Europeafi peace; apprehensions of the day when he should ascend 'he throne, for he was intensely clerical and reactionary. If he had urvjved until the old Emperor’s death, and there had been no war, It was doubtful if there would not have been a “jialace revolution” within six months of his succes sion. it was also possible that the people would have had their revo lution, for they were becoming en lightened . and discontented, and powerful men in the highest offices of the Government were in sympa thy with them. “1 suppose you mean this Prince Hobenhauer for one,” said Claver ing. •'Hohenhauer believed that every throne in Europe would be over turned before the middle of the twentieth century, and that it was the part of wise leaders to prepare not only themselves but the people for a rejtublican form of govern m< nt. He had the greatest admira tion fur the principles or which this republic was founded, and said ■l at Europe was to be congratu lated that w« had made the mis -tikes for her to avoid. Much as the rest of the world congratulates itself that Bolshevism was tried out in Russia and made a ghastly . mess of improving the condition of ! the underdog before the masses in other countries had time to lose their heads. I’ve no doubt that he will be the next Chancellor of Aus tria, and that when he gets the reins of power in his hands, he'll keep a firm hold on them, which is more than any one else has done.” “What do you suppose has brought him to this country?” ”1 sane) he Las come to obtain the moral support of the American Government in whatever plan he may have made for putting Austria on her feet again.’’ “Have you any idea of v?hat that plan may be?” Clavering was watching her intently, his ear at tuned to every inflection ot her voice. But her tones were as im personal as if reciting a page out of ancient history, and her gaze was frank and direct. “I can only guess. Personally I should think his present plan would be an alliance with Bavaria and other South German States—a MONDAY AFTERNOON, JANUARY 2T, 1924 I cently. Airs. B. L. R incy was the guest of relatives in Ellaville last week. Mrs. B. W. S’evens assisted by Mrs. Minnie Weaver entertained the Marion County Chapter of U. D. C. | last Thursday afternoon. An inter ■ esr ng- program on Robert E. Lee South German Confederacy. That ' would make a powerful combina j tion, and as Bavaria has always , hated Prussia, she would be the I last to lend herself to any schemes of vengeance the north nt.’.y cher ish—particularly if she r<-nains a republic. And, of course, she would assume her share of the Allied debt. ... It would be a won derful thing if it could be brought off’. Vienna”—her eyes sparkled— " Vienna, of course, would be the capital—and again one of the great capitals of Europe. Perhaps the greatest/’ “Were you ever closely associ ated with Hohenhauer in any of his schemes?” “He had no immediate schemes then. He only awaited events While the old Emperor lived W>o move was possible; he was most ’[logically adored by his people. But Hohenhauer told me more than once that he was only biding ! his time." * “And what of that preposterous estate of his in the old (Jalicla— sixteen million acres wa -n't it? Did he expect to hang on to that under a popular C">rnt of govern ment?” “H? wo" 1 have r'-.iined the : i-nstle and a few hundred acre.'., for I he uatoi'ily hod a .it affcidon I for his birtapii.iic-; .ii ided the ' rest aniong the pe< . wljo- - natu ral inheriiance it w.--- But he [ could do nothing until the proper ' time, for such an act would tm ; dcabtodly have resulted iu c n'ls 1 < >t'.m and banisltmeni.. ft-‘ v. it.’id ; have accomplished no gortii, and j lost his immediato power for use- ■ fulness beside--;. Li!-” "1! t.';oa i old'W' <ld smtosn: n. In knows hew to play a waiting game." "Sounds like a great man—j/ there are any such.” “1 should certainly call him a great man," said Mary, but still with that note o’ complete per sonal indifference in her voice. “He not only has immense brain power and personality, but farsight and a thorough understanding of the people, and sympathy with them. Even the Social-Democrats liked and trusted him. And he has more than the ordinary politician's a>: uteness in trimming his sails: but coming out, nevertheless, at the end of the course exactly at the point he had .-timed for. If he captures the bridge, to change the simile, he’ll steer Austria out of her deep waters. No doubt of that.” “Exactly what was the part you intended to play in Austria?” he asked. “You have never told me.” 1 I Exhausting coughs that wear you out— you. can stop them quickly Day and night a cough wastes the secretions that are clogging your strength and steadily paves them. Harmlessly and effective the way for more serious and per- ly the throat and chest spasms nrc haps permanent complications. quieted and the irritation that is Yet you can step it quickly causing the cough promptly clears with Dr. King’s away. It has an NewDiscovery.lt z 'S< agreeable taste, breaks up coughs For more than fifty bystimulatingthe ‘"'j years, thousands mucous mem- f \i‘>V of families all over branes to throw off. j t * le countr y have ’ dAWkA eouffh can tc > 5 L a bottle todftV. All Y druggists. ’ hcvteholi remedy. ■ I AM DOING ALL KINDS OF | ELECTRICAL WORK NO JOB TOO SMALL OR TOO LARGE. Ido your work by Jie hour and save you money. Ask my ! customers. They KNOW my ability. ONE 3-4 H. P. MOTOR FOR SALE AT A BARGAIN J. C . BASS, Electrician TELEPHONE 533. I j Pickard China, Sterling Silverware, Sheaffer Fountain Pens, Whiting Society Stationery. \ AMERICUS JEWELRY COMPANY ’ One - .ice to Ail. k | Phone 229 Walk. . Mgr. BUY LAND For Sale er Ren! 140 Acres, 3 miles south of Americus on Lae Street road 6-Room Residence, 2 Tenant Houses, wind null; all under fence; 200 acres cleared. 200 Acres I 0 mil. south of Americus just off Lee street road; 5-roc.n Residence; 4 Tenant Houses; 140 acres Atlanta Trust Co., Farm Sales Department Room S, Allison Bldg. Phone 16 Americus, Ga. wa| re were CL li;<•• Batt spent last Saturday in j Americus. Mt. and Mrs. George Benson' ol Columbus were the guests of rela» tives here Sunday. •Mack Steed of Americus spent Sunday here. . » "I thought we were not to talk of that, it Is impossible to make delibir.it.e plans, anyhow. Only, there is a part for any one who loves the country (and baa the brains and the wealth and the po iftical knowledge to help tier” x “1 have never quite understood why it should be Austria. Why not Hungary? After all ” “I never cared for anything tn Hungary but the castle, which was wonderfully situated in the moun tains of Transylvania. The sur roundings were wild beyond de scription and the peasants the most picturesque and interesting In Europe. But even if Buda Pe-sth had appealed to me socially, which it never did. there were deep per —nl rca.sons-that made me dislike Ilimj ury’-rl n-t . spent a night in the Z.i ! ’ lat’.v palace until I turned into a hospital. But Vienna! I IwA-.s litjcd in Vienna, when I : could, even during|my first years i in Europe, and later I made it my . home. it. is the most fascinating cty, to me at least, in the world. I “-.si les. Hungarws in the hands I of Horiby and EStblen, who have j no mor.' idea of malting a republic >f it than of permitting any one else to le king. There is no role for ” “Hullo! Hullo! Hullo!” tVaveriug sprang to his feet. "Shall we take the bull by the tel:'a an,! go to meet them?” hp i.! 'Poor devils! '1 .isy'll Uato us for locking sc fresh." LI I Th' . were forced to submit to a vast amount of good-natured chaf fing. tor they had invited ft, but It - wa:- the sort of chaffing with which this amiable company would have victimized any pair that had re cently met. and found each other’s society suddenly preferable to that of the crowd. They were all very tired. Mr. Dinwiddle, after refreshing his guests and himself with hlghballe-, ?., • went to his room and to bed. Rollo Todd announced that it was time to go back to New York to rest, and al! fell down on the divans or floor for half an hour before going up to revive themselves with a hot l'.-I'l But away quickly in the mountains. They were as lively ss ever the next morning, al though they unanimously elected to spend the day on the lake or iullne In the woods. (To Be Continued)