Newspaper Page Text
Social Activities
. THE GENTLE PEOPLE
Once I thought these things were fuir ‘
Pleasure with her wind-blown kair,
Place, which marks a man as vise
Dress, which lavish fortune buys,
But I'm older now and so
Finer things l've come to know.
‘
Some we love are bowed by care, i
oOld and worn the dress they wea®, !
Fame has missed them and I!lair|
speech
Lacks the rythm scholars reach,
But the beauty of their lives
Every paseing sham survives.
'
None o great but turns from fame
Love of such as these to claim,
Through the storm and stress o’
years
Brighter still their charm appears
Pleasures fade and glories cease
But the days their worth increase
These the gentle folks and true
Never spoiled their whole lives
tfirqfix‘gh :
Asking little, giving much,
Every day with God in touch, ;
Wherespe’ver they abide, |
Loved by all who walk or ride.
| S, =
Once 1 thought these things were‘
. were fair,
Pleasure, fame and gold to spare
1 am older now and know
These are shams which come and
gO,
More and more our hearts inclire
To the gentle souls and fine.
—EDGAR A. GUEST
TODAY’S RECIPE.
Macarconi and Cheese
Two cups of milk,’ two tablu-‘
spoons butter, two tablespoons
flour, one cup macarini, one-half cup‘
grated or finely cut cheese, one ta-‘
blsepoon fat, one-fourth cup bread
crumbs. Make white sauce. Cook
macorini in hot water (salted) until
tender. Rinse in cold water to kecn
pieces from clinging together. Oi:
baking dish, add a layer of cheese,
repéat until all are used, placing
bread ecrumbs on top. Brown in
oven, '
s
Mrs. Nellie Thorpe Patterson is
spending a few days with relatives
and friends at Arabi. She will leav2
Saturday for Miami where she wiil
teach this winter.
e R
THE (CIVIC CLUB.
If your family home was being
criticised because it was untidv,
what would you do? Cordele is un
tidy. It is your home. It’s sanitary
conditions are being eriticised.
Are you going to help the Wom
an’s Civic Club remedy this situa
tion?
THEATRE
Vaudeville Attraction
Thursday — Friday
And Saturday
LITTLE NICKY
The baby wonder dancer and
singer of the South. Feature
picture “Mike” Metro-Gold
wyn Meyer picture with Sal
ly O'Neal. A laugh in every
foot of reel.
See Three Faces East today.
Prices 10 & 25¢
Your Home Show
THEATRE
; Operated by Home Folks
HOW HOT IS YOUR IRON?
It is doubtful if but very few, if
any, women ever stopped to think
about the answer to the above ques
tion because they are only interest
ed in knowing that the iron does the
work for which it was made. Yot
there must be a correct temperature
for ironing—or at least, a correct
range of temperature between which
ironing can be done to the best ad
vantage. But how to get the iron to
the temperature and keep it there.
That’s the question,
Well, the problem has been soived
in a very successful manner bV
Westinghouse Electric engineers
who have incorporated in their
standard iron a simple little device
that automatically turns off the cur
rent when the iron gets to a pred:-
termined maximuin temperature, and
turns it on again when the tempera
ture has fallen to a certain minimuwm
For example, suppose a woman
while ironing is called to the phcne.
Ordinarily, she has to disconnect tha
iron, and very likely when she doe%‘
disconnect it and returns to her work |
it is too cool and she has to wuit|
until it heats up again. Or suppos>
she does go away to answer tle
phone or does any other errand aad
leaves the iron connected, when she
returns it is too ot and she has to
disconnect it and wait for it to cool.
All of these inconveniences ar:
entirely eliminated with this aew
Westinghouse automatic iron. She
simply leaves it connected, answers
the phone, returns to work and {'nds
the iron ready to use and at the ccr.
rect temperaure no matter how long
she has been away. No more waiting
The real feature of this wonderful
invention, that means so much to the
wonien of America, is its simplieity
and reliability. It is enclosed in t!.‘e]
body of the iron, so that the ad-|
justment cannot be tampered with
and no change is necessary, because
it always works. 1
L R |
SUGGESTIONS. ‘
For pickled pears use one-half pc ck!
of the Seckel variety. In a lnrge‘
saucepan place one pint vinegar, one'
ounce stick cinnamon and two
pounds brown sugar. Let this cook
for 20 minutes. Then put a few of
the pears in the syrup, cook until
soft, place them in a sterilized jar,
~and continue the process untill a!l
‘ are pickled. Take care lest they cook
to the mushy stage. They should
i be tender and still firm.
Miss Carolyn Williams will teach
this year at Pavo.
Miss Wava Dame spent the past
week-end in Bradley with relatives.
Mr. J. C. Holder, of Fitzgerald,
was here yesterday on business.
~ Mrs. Neva Dukes is visiting friends
in Moultrie this week. i
Mrs. Maddox has returned to b e
home at Glenwood Springs after
spending several weeks here with
her daughter, Mrs. J. A. Lasseter.
We Carry A
New Line
of Wedding Gifts;
Birthday tokens, and
Jewelry with an
Expression
in it.
Our goods are dependable de
signs in the very Latest Crea
tions, We will appreciate a
call to look them over,
S. M. Dekle
Miss Adel Dill is visiting friends
in Atlanta.
Miss Katie Goodman spent Suaasy
with friends in Albany .
Mrs, J. 8. Tyler and little som.
John, are spending the week with
relatives at Jonesville, 8. C,
Miss Rosalie Fenn has returned
from a several days visit to her sis
ter, Mrs. Ed Merritt in Macon.
Mr. Fred Cutts, of Philadelp:ia.
will arrive this week for a visit
to his mother Mrs. Lena Cutts.
Miss Annie Mae Brower spent the
rast week-end in Moultrie the _».';'.w:.1.l
of friends,
Misses Lily and Mae Dunlap m«"(
guests for a few days of friends in
Jacksonville,
~ Mrs. Gene Neal and infant daugkh
ter are visiting Mrs. Neal’s mother.
Mrs. J. J. Dennard at Pineview.
Misses Emily Woodward and Grace
Woodward of Vienna were visitor:
here today. "
Mrs. R. E. Hamilton has returned
from a visit to relatives in Forsyth
and Macon.
Miss Birdie Bulloch, of Miami,
arrived Saturday for a visit to her
mother, Mrs. G. M. Bulloch.
Miss Crystelle Fenn and her guest
Miss Matt Tomlinson, of Albany,
were visitors to Macon yesterday.
Miss Bonnie Graham is spending
several days with friends at Penia
this weei.
Miss Mary Blackmon will leave
next week for Valdosta, to resume
her studies at G S. W. C. ;
Miss Inez Rumble has returncd
to her home in Barnesville after a
visit to Miss Sara Mae Slade.
Mrs. Joe Garret, of Macon, has
been the guest of her parents, Mr.
and Mrs. C. L. Lifsey.
Mrs. R. Huckabee, and daughter,
i Mary, of Ashburn, were among Lhe
i visitors in town yesterday.
do M 0 Ao A & ,
“ yofl‘he \‘\um- o ”, 275 f-:\,
: \u\o"q the tol- W _ /(Y 0
Sl ve O, el N W (BT PO SRR
epho"?! 7 ¢ O“RERE o e o
\ eratol "o d. WS = % e,
B °P° oof P RPN RF 4
name naet (ke
Q) are®® (¢ VR W R
whic? - VW, St
\\;i’d' /\..\ o )Sy :
\ & A —
) ‘ ¥ Ly
‘Zet‘fg;
on Long Distance /
WHEN you wish to make a long distance call and do not know
exactly how to go about it, why not let the long distance
operator help you?
To make a station-to_station call, place your call by number.
If you do not know the number, place the call in the usual way,
and the operator will give you the number,
If you do not happen to remember the term, “station-toe
station,” tell the operator you wish to make your call at the
fowest rate.
The reduced rate, both day and night, applies only te
station-to-station calls,
If necessary to talk to some particular person, and no one
else will do, tell the operator the name of the person. There
I 8 no reduction In the rate for calls of this kind, day or night.
You can make quite a saving on your toll calls If you will
let the operator help you.
i C. G. BECK, Georgia Manager ' .
“BeELL SysTEM" ,/.49_
SOUTHERN BELL TELEPHONE [/ A
AND TELEGRAPH COMPANY '\
One Policy, One System, Universol Service
"THE CORDELE DISPATCH
POLICE TELEPHONE USED BY
FLAPPERS ON MASHER CALLS |
BOSTON, September T—(/P)-=
Disereet telephone inquiries for
l “Helen,” “Margaret” or “Teresa’ a%
the Dorchester police station have re
vealed the flapper's latest mode of
digcovering persistent mashers,
For a long time Officer William
son was nonplussed by the queries
fliuulin;.'. the station switehboard un
til a telehone operator explained
that the {lapper is meeting the de
mand for her telephone number wath
the station’s call,
Mrs. Theodore MceArthur and
children have returned from a visit
to points in North Georgia,
’ Mrs. M. C. Conner, of Wilcex
county who is a patient at the 10-1('al
1('al hospital, is reported recoverin:
nicely alter an operation. ;
Miss Bobbbie Mae Booth, who
graduated the past® spring from <.
H. 8., will enter G. S. W. C,, at Val
dosta, this fall
Cordele friends of Miss Sega:s
who taught here the past year, wiil
he interested to know that she will
teach this winter in Clearwater, lia.
~ Mr. and Mrs. Carzie Herringion
of Lakeland, Fla., announce the birth
of a daughter September third, wao
has been named Sibyl Ruth,
Mr. John Hawkins and family of
Haticy are moving to Cordele and
will occupy the residence on Six
teenth avenue East, formerly occu
pied by Rev. Blackmon and family.
Mr. and Mrs., Dan Walters ar?
now occupying their residence at
Bland Villa recently purchased {rom
“Mr. W. B. Smith, this being the
’ former Fleming home
1 i
Miss Annie Ree MecGougan '2%
yesterday for Raleigh, N. C., to re
sume her studies at Meridith Coi
} leeg after spending the summer vi
cation at home.
Among the out-of-town shopoer:
here today were: Dr. and Mrs. Gam
mage, of Pineview; Mrs. J. E. Heit,
of Pineview; Dr. Flournoy, of Wer
wick; Mrs. V. O. Harvard, of Ara
bi: and Miss Lydia Clements, of Ara
bi.
Mrs. Minnie Lee Jordan and
daughter, Gertrude, who have spent
the past several months here with
Mrs. Jordan’s mother, Mrs. G. M.
Bulloch, returned yesterday to
their home in Jacksonville. !
FARNESE PALACE STRUCK ‘
BY BOLT IN FIERCE STORM!
ROME, September T7--(P)--T2>»
Farnese palace, most magnificeny of
all the Roman edifices built in e
cirly sixteenth century, and now oe
cupied by the French ambassado,
was struck by lightning duving =«
violent storm today, The bolt caused
a fire which, however, was checked
with incongequential damage to th
structure.
The torrential rainfall flooded a
dzen low lying houses and several
streets, while the lightning cauvsed
a number of slight {ires.
The Farnese palace was begun h‘.'!
Cardinal Alexander Farnese (aiter)
ward Pope Paui 1II) from (|(':‘ll.’.l|~{
by Antonio Da Sangallo, the yoa py‘
er and was continued after his deaih
in 1549 under the direction ..r1
Michael Angelo, It was completed ‘n
1580. The materials were taken par'- ‘
ly from the coliseum and pa ',l:.'!
from the Theuire of Marcellus. 'l‘ln‘;
palace was inherited by the king: nl'%
Naples and was leased in 1874 to ih(-i
I'rench government,
Reli
% elieves
KPP Pai
R-1" redieves paio within o few
minutes after uppiication, M
does not blister, hoe socthios a 0
Is vecommended for (dendache
Toothanche, Faysehe, Nencald o
heuvmatasn, Sore "Whoont
aand othier puin,
Per 25¢C Bettle
Will Not Blistey - It Scoties
ASK YOUR DRUCGILT
Trout
Mango
Snappers
Croakers
Mullet
Shrimp
CORDELE FISH AND
OYSTER COMPANY
B ¥
IRCLE THEATRE
CHILLED BY GULF 2 COOLEST SPOT
BREEZES IN TOWN
"OPEN DAILY AT 3:00 P. M. | Vl\ d : L ADRRION -
Shows start at 2-56-7 and ¢ Children 15¢
‘ p.' m, - ;’l () a)7 ' ~\tlu‘.lxzl a3he
The fashion show that will make women gasp and men look twice
. “MONTE CARILO”
Played by a great assemblage of players headed hy LEW CODY
and GERTRUDE OLMSTEAD.
Cordele’s own comedian 3 : &2
Played again today by request €
WEDNESDAY
Adolphe Menjou and Clorence Vidor in )
“TiHE GRAND DUCHIESS
AND THE WAITER”
E THE CIRCLE THEATRE OPERATED UP TO A g
= STANDARD, NOT DOWN TO A PRICE E
Consolation
DID YOU
FIND IT?
ALWAYS
TRY
AT
Blackmon Hdw. Co.
We are ready to serve you night and day at all
hours for Auto Repairs and Service. Woco Pep
Cas—Tiolene Oil.
MOORE’S GARAGE
R
AND SERVICE STATION
PHONE 144 SEVENTH STREET NORTH
A COMPLETE GAS WELDING PLANT
We have the most complete gas welding plant in this
goction just installed, Save the breaks with a complete
weld in our plant, We do all kinds of Machinery and
Aato repairing.
A. J. HOEHN MACHINE AND AUTO CO
PAGE FIVE