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Americus times-recorder. [volume] (Americus, Ga.) 1891-current, November 02, 1915, City Edition, Image 6

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Persistent link: https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn89053204/1915-11-02/ed-1/seq-6/

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PAGE SIX
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> ’''n/, I,l ' Internationa) Cartoon Co.. N. Y 14®
HERBERT HAWKINS
Insurance And Surety Bonds.
Specialty—Autos at 2 per cent
CL INTERS BANK BLDG. Phone No. 186
ww
n I J
The Gas Way
The Way.
The gas range will do this: ’ ji
I - wii’ ■■■?y« f* -. : ."tying \lCk / /li
you I kltCl.r- »■'. - • ■ [;
will sar* .- v:! H' EBBS. /
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sk>* ■ v :.>■■ > v 4 {fa—
com*- ;; ”.<» v . -.a’-; >.; I ? -<
money. • "'-•'? S
■ - UlfcWWWUt*
Get oat *
V.> hu l-;l’. ' ® ,’ rtS 12 'IT ■•..!
prices. «,
s’TUUC *g>TKe COMPANY.
■■■'- 111 :.. ~i
• HARKOI D BROTHERS
1 Coal! Coal! Coal!
i Lay in your Kipp:. before the cold leather strikes
i you. We know we sell the two best coals money can
< buy.
’ MONTEVALLO: "The World's Best Coal”
for $7.00 per ton.
' BLUE GEM JELLI .0: free Burning, Hot
Fire. No Clinkers, &6.50 per ton.
f We also sell a slightly cheaper grade of Jellico Coal
| Good lump for $5.50 per ton. Spot Cash Only.
1 Trjifiniwwvii
DR. R. M. WILLIAMSON
VETERINERY SURGEON
dlosp-Ml Accommodations for Horses. Mules and Dogs
and Hospital, Hampton St. near Ball Park.
FELEPHONE - 235
THE AMERICUS DAILY TIMES-RECORDER
GERMANS MAKE WAY
INTO FRENCH LIFE
PARIS, Nov. 2. —The inhabitants of
l.oos, who have lived a year under Ger
man rule in sight of the British lines
before the town was recaptured Sep
tember 26th, have been transported to
the Pryenees to be sheltered there un
til! the town, now under the continual
fire of German batteries, becomes in
habitable again.
They brought with them copies of
papers published by the Gerfan author
ities in the French language in Belg
ium and circulated in Northern France
in which there appear numerous ad
vertisements that are occupying the
attention of the French authorities on
the supposition that they refer to war
gooty taken in France and Belgium and
put on asle by the Germans.
O e advertisement runs: “A thous
and second-hand electric motors and
dynamos for sale.”
Among the others are the fololwing:
‘Sensational offering of 3500 machines,
new or nearly new, at half their value,
i eluding crushers .rolling mills, mix
ers and hydraulic presses, pumps,
steaf boilers and locomobiles.”
“Selling out at factory prices 500
I pianos, first makes.”
‘ One hundred and fifty thousand bot
; ties of Champagne for sale at prices
' that defy competition.
The houses inserting these advertise
ments are said to be German firms that
have established themselves in Brus
sels since the occupation.
GETTING HOME 81
CHRISTMAS—WORRY
ATLANTA, Ga., Nov. I.—“ Will we
get home by Christmas?” is the ques
tion that the Georgia legislators are
pondering as they begin to arrive in
Atlanta for the extra session which
opens day after tomorrow, and no
body seems to be able to predict
whether the assembly will last thirty
days or twice that long.
The regular sessions are limited by
law to fifty days, but there is no spe
cific limit as to how long an extra
session can last, and there is some
doubt whether the fifty-day limit
could be enforced on an extra session
Opera House
Saturday, Nov. 6
MATINEE & NIGHT
F &IFFCQD.S
Mb J| LA SALLE OPEQA MOUSE
BIG
L 3 FUM PLAY
|7j WITH TUNES
n a 11
111 I TAbRjOfA
I a < fW ty AUbßpy STAUFFER
I P J &/WKURQILLESPIE
TH r snow THAT
I ANDSANG
rrilTs WTO POP-
INADA/
Matiuee Prices: Entire floor
$1.00; Children 50c; balcony
50c. Night: 50c, 75c,51.00
and $1.50.
Seats at Hooks’ Pharmacy,
Thuisday a. m.
or not.
Os course it all depends on what
happens in connection with the prohi
bition fight as to whether the session
will be prolonged. But even suppos
ing the prohibition legislation goes
through without a long filibustering
fight, which is by no means likely,
there still remains enough work, it is
believed, to keep the legislators busy
for more than thirty days. And if a
month is spent in wrangling over pro
hibition there is simply no telling then
how long they will be here.
MONEY TO LEND
We are in position to obtain
money on farm lands in Sumter
county promptly at reasonable
rates. If you desire a loan call
on or write us.
las. A. & John A. Fort
Planters Bank Building.
ACTON FIGHTER
HONORS THE TORKISH
LONDON, Nov. 2. —An enthusiastic
tribute to the Turk as an honorable
fighter comes in a letter from an Aus
tralian officer to a relative in London.
“The Australians will hear nothing
said against the Turk,” he writes. “I
want to warn you against the tales of
Turkish atrocities in Gallipoli or else
vhere. We know about the Turk.
Haven’t we fought against him for
months? He may be a colored infidet,
but he fights like a Christian gentle
man. One of our fellows went out to
get a Turk supper. Something went
wrong and the Turk got him. But he
put a good fight against numbers, and
the Turks were so pelased with him
that they dressed his wounds and gave
him a bottle of wine and water and
sent him back to us.”
The same officer remarks that at
first the English Indian troops regard
ed the Australian troops with contempt
and considered it almost undignified
*o be asked to fight alongside them.
“The Gurkhas bucked when they were
first put beside us,” he says. “They said
that we were not trained soldiers and
that it was not fair to have to fight
with us. Then w e got into a charge
together, and now they admiringly call
ns the White Gurkhas.”
WEEKLY NEWSPAPER
APPEARS IT GEORGIA
__
ATHENS, Ga., Nov. I.—The Red and
Black, the official organ of the Ath
letic association anl the student activ
ities of the University of Georgia, has
made its second appearance this fall.
The Red and Black is an eight page
paper and is issued weekly, except
during the months of December and
January. It is edited by a staff of
competent students elected by the Ath
letic association. The staff this year
is as follows:
Editor-in-chief, Thomas Thrash,
Greenville, Ga.; associate editor, T. J.
Smith, Jr., Ga. Mcßae.; athletic edi
ted, E. M. Braxton, Newport News,
Va.; exchange editor, Howard Mc-
Call. Atlanta, Ga.; social editor, H. F.
Longino, Aalanta, Ga.; business man
ager, W. M. Watson, Eastman. Ga.;
circulation manager, J. P. Stewart, At-
lanta, Ga.; assistant business mana
ger, Frank Kempton, Atlanta; assist
ant circulation manger, E. E. An
drews.
/ Z
I
j I i ® w j
“Now Remember -
hurry to your grocer’s for a
can of Calumet—learn your
final and beet lesson in baking
“--he everything_v.;ith Caju- -Not
that prove d a failure with Hl Y ¥ T>
‘ pWMET
proves Calumet the surest,
safest Baking Powder in the
world—the most economical hi
to buy and to use. My
mother has used Calumet for h
years and there’s never a
bake-day failure at our house.” if IIP *
Received Highest Awards r
Ntw Cook Book Free —■ /
See Skip i„ Pound Ca n
VgßWUuuvuoy. ■■/*****
CALUMET
mMPQWDER!
Cheap and big can Baking Powders do not save you money. I
umctc oes it s Pure and far superior to sour milk and soda.
TUESDAY, 50VEMHEK 2, 1915
TBIMGLE mCHim
WILL MAKE 10118
ROUTE SHOUT TIME
BAINBRIDGE, Ga., Nov. 2.—Presi
dent Akin of the Thriangle Highway
Association has notified Secretary
Quimby Melton of that organization
that the first official tour of the Tri
angle Route will be staged the latter
part of November or the first of De
cember. The secretary has in
structed to arrange all details for-the
tour and to receive entries for the 500
mile run that will be conducted by the
association.
The Triangle route runs from Macon
t 0 Bainbridge to Brunswick and back
to Macon. The roads traveled form an
imperfect triangle, consequently file
name. From Macon to Bainbridge the
distance is’lßo miles. Fort Valley,
Marshallville, Montezuma, Oglethorpe,
Andersonville, Americus, Smithville,
Leesburg, Albany and Camilla are on
this leg of the triangle between Bacon
and Bainbridge.
The distance from Bainbridge to
Brunswick is 200 miles. Cairo, Thom
asville, Waycross, and Valdosta, are
the principal cities along this leg of
the route.
From Macon to Brunswick is 180
miles. The road from the central city
to the home of shrimp and oysters
runs parallel with the Southern rail
road, Eastman, Mcßae, Hazlehurst,
Baxley and Jesup are the principal
cities along this leg of the Triangle
Route.
The slogan of the Triange Highway
is “Good roads now but we’ll make
them better.” The Macon to Bain
bridge road and the Macon tb Bruns
wick road were chosen by the state
chamber of commerce as two of the
twelve good roads to compose the sys
tem of state highways endorsed by the
state booster organization.

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