Newspaper Page Text
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 1913
: SOCIETY news :
♦ ♦
Lift f 4 t
♦ JOY IN LIVING. ♦
♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦>
There is lots of joy in living if you
strike the proper gait;
If you always come up smiling in the
face of every fate.
If you’re keeping step and whistling
some lively little tuae
You’ll be living, gay and happy as a
Bummer day in June.
Keep a level head, don’t worry, help
your brothers on the way;
Let the sunshine of good humor shine
upon you ev’ry day;
Speak a cheerful word at all time,
never “knock” your fellow man,
And you’ll surely be rewarded—just
keep doing all you can.
There is lots of joy in living if you
live your life aright
Lots of sunshine and of roses, keep
your eyes turned to the light,
Ix>ok behind the clouds of trouble;
there’s a silver lining there,
And you 11 find it if you’re only living
life upon the square.
Scatter good cheer like the thistle
scatters seed before the wind,
And the petty woes and troubles soon
, will be left far behind,
Be a “booster” every minute, help
along your fellow man,
And you you’ll surely be rewarded, just
doing all you can.
—Exchange.
* * *
MRS. SAM HEYS HAS
FORTY-TWO PARTY.
Mrs. Sam Heys entertained Wednes
day morning with five tables of 42 at
her home on Taylor street.
The hostess had beautifully arrang
ed spring flowers, and it was, indeed, a
pretty sight.
After the enthusiastic gab<e a de
lightful luncheon course was served
as follows: Quail on toast, creamed
eggs, hot Sally Lund, pickles, crack-
Weber& Heilbroner
Spring Hats Enter
WEBER & HEIL-
KRONER’S
Spring hats—which are
the hats of the hour in
New York—are now
on display at this store. /P
oo k
There’s a lot of phil- fX .
osophy about these
hats. As styles, they
have not been created. f.s.&co.
They are the crux 7
from the crucible of x ,
styles which New York of metio
men have been making politan men, gathered
for themselves. at first hand in the
Weber and Heilbroner
0 0 stores.
A correct hat, recog- 0 0
nizable en sight as cor-
rect, bears an unmistak- The hats are pre
able relation to the sented simultaneously
clothes and haberdash- in those storcs and in
ery of the well dressed t
J our store. They are,at
man. , .
this present moment.
0 0 THE HATS OF THE
.HOUR in Newltork.
Weber and Heilbro-
ner hats are presented 0 0 J
eacn season in New
York, after a painstak- Either soft or stiff
ing study of the style bats, $3.00.
PINKSTON’S
MEMBER AMERICUS CHAMBER OF COMMERCE.
ers and coffee.
Those enjoying ths hospitality of
Mrs. Heys were Mrs. S. L. Sills, Mrs.
J. E. Hightower, Mrs. W. J. Josey, Mrs.
T. M. Griffith, Mrs. Sara Reid, Mrs. W.
A. Rembert, Mrs. G. C. Davis, Mrs. Er
nest Tullis, Mrs. John Council, Mrs.
George Ellis, Mrs. Will Riley, Mrs. S.
F .Howell, Mrs. Mary Kate Heys, Mrs.
C. A. Pope, Mrs. Walter Maynard, Mrs.
R L. McMath, Mrs. Lizzie Jacobs, Mrs.
K. E. Cato, Mrs. Gordon Heys, Mrs.
Maude Smith, Miss Callie Slappey and
Miss Belle Ansley.
Wednesday afternoon Mrs. Heys en
tertained the members of the Ma
trons’ 42.
At the conclusion of the game, a
most tempting luncheon course was
served.
Those present were Mrs. Charles L.
nsley, Mrs. Harvey Weaver, Mrs. Rol
and Broadhurst, Mrs. Zack Childers,
Mrs. A. C. Crockett, Mrs. Hollis Fort,
Mrs. Lee Hansford, Mrs. Fred Lambert,
Mrs. H. B. Mashburn, Mrs. John Shef
field, Mrs. Frank Sheffield, Mrs. S. A.
Daniel, Mrs. J. J. Holliday, Mrs. D. R.
Andrews, Mrs. E. C. Parker and Miss
Annie Foute.
* * *
MRS. DODSON HAS
THE BRIDGE CLUB.
Mrs. W. A. Dodson entertained the
Matron’s Bridge club at her home on
Lee street Wednesday morning.
♦ * *
I'. A. R. CONFERENCE TO BE
HELD IN COLUMBUS.
A pretty and intimate custom ex
ists among the Daughters of the
American Revolution, especially in
the Southern states, in that the dele
gates are entertained in the homes of
th members and their friends, and in
this way ar not regarded as strang
ers, but distinguished guests. This
courtesy suggests the old days of the
South, and the men unite with the
ladies in extending most cordial hos
pitality to the visitors, notes the Col-
▼a W* WKwe
- " ill w Wft
-JH w>■
'WMF™
Mi>> Mary Pickford, Famous Players-Paramount Star.
umbus Ledger.
The state conference meets in Col
umbus this year, February 22-25 be
ing the date set aside.
Each of the visiting delegates are
requested to wear a blue ribbon, so
when they alight from the trains they
may be readily recognized by the wel
come committee.
Official invitations have been issued
by the local chapters, D. A. R., and
all hostesses are requested to write a
personal invitation to their respective
guests.
The program is not as yet com
plete and is subject to change.
The meetings will be held at St.
Luke church, and the program as par
tially outlined is as follows:
The delegates arrive Tuesday and
the addresses of welcome will be given
Tuesday evening, this being the first
session.
Another business session will be
held Wednesday morning. At one
o’clock the Orpheus club, '.he Wom
an’s Reading club, and the Students’
ciub will be joint hostesses at a de
lightful lunch.
Another business session will be
held Wednesday afternoon.
On Wednesday evening the three
local chapters of the D. A. R. will be
hostesses at a brilliant reception to
be given at the home of Mrs. John
Blackmar, regent of the Oglethorpe
chapter.
After the morning business session
on Thursday, the United Daughters
of the Confederacy will be hostesses
a; a luncheon, which will be followed
by an automobile ride over the city.
A business session will probably be
held on Friday morning.
• * ♦
MRS. THOMAS ENTERTAINS
SUNDAY SCHOOL CLASS
Mrs. J. A. Thomas entertained her
Sunday school class very delightfully
Wednesday afternoon. The class is
Composed of fifty-two young ladies of
the city.
The decorations were hyacinths,
narcissi, ferns and red hearts daintily
/tied on ribbons. A game of hearts
v as .enjoyed, after which a delightful
salad course was served.
* * *
I Misses Mattie Lewis and Georgia
Bena Dodson, Mary Ella Davenport,
Messrs. C. H. Burke, L. A. Adams and
John Mathis formed an automobile
party who visited Albany Tuesday ev
ening to see “The Birth of a Nation.’’
* * *
Mr. and Mrs. Dudley Gatewood, Mr.
and Mrs. J. D. Hooks and Mrs. Ira
Lowe visited Albany where they say
“The Birth of a Nation” Tuesday.
* * •
Mrs. J. M. Summerford and daugh
ter ,Miss Sara Summerford, were in
Americus shopping Tuesday.
THE AMERICUS DAILY TIMES-RECORDER
BALKAN CAPITALS
AHL BEAUTY SIEHTS
WASHINGTON ,D. C., Feb. 9.
“Tinova ,the ancient capital of Bulgar
ia is the national pride of the Central
Balkan Kingdom, where it epitomized
all the history of the nation’s former
greatness, the glories of its pries per
iod of Balkan empire,” begins a primer
on war geography just given out by
the National Geographic Society at
Washington. “Sofia ,the modern cap
ital, and all of the more important
Bulgarian cities, are brand new. They
are promises of the future, while Tir
nova, perched on a mountain side, is
an inspiration from the past.
“There are countless attractions in
this remote little city for the archieol
ogist and the student of history, and
the beauty of its construction, a series
of terraces climbing a long hillside, is
worth going far to see. It is laid out
upon a cliff 500 feet high, and each
house overlooks the roofs of the neigh
bor’s down the street. The appearance
of everything about the town is media
eval Oriental, which Bulgaria possess
ed before ist acquisition of equally
worn Macedonian cities as fruits of the
war with Turkey in 1912. Elsewhere
in the kingdom, th.e peasant folk have
not teen able to go ahead fast enough
tj suit them, to pull down the old and
rebuild according to the standard,
utilitarian, monotone tastes of the
twentieth century West.
“The one modern thing about the city
is the railroad; for the town is situated
on the Yantra and Sofia-Varna line. It
lies 124 miles northeast of Sofia, on the
northern outskirts of the Balkan Moun
tidns. There are a number of ancient
churches in the city, and one that has
been a church, a mosque, a stable ,a
jail, and a fortress, as varying fortunes
wept over the mountainside. The nar
row streets run up and down, and a
promenade in the place affords lessons
in mountain-climbing. Turkish arcades
and eastern malconies line many of
the streets. Most of the buildings are
gabled, one-storied buildings of great
iige, and these mark off aimless alleys
that pursue resultory wanderings all
over the hillside.
“Timova counts a population of tbout
14,000. Its golden age was lived dur
ing the twelfth century. For some two
enturies, it was the capital of Bulgaria
falling to the Turks in 1393. It has lit
tle importance today, save '.n the affec
tions of the Bulgarian patriot. Its chief
industries are dying and the manufac
tore of copper ware, but they have
never developed to such an extent as
to bring anything o' the modern air or
bustle to the town.”
THOSE WHO COME
AND GO Americus The Mecca For—
~ Those Peeking Pleasure,
Health and Business.
I have a few umbrellas left over;
will sell at a sacrifice. Thos. L. Bell
Miss Teance Espy, who was a popu
lar visitor at the home of Mrs. J. W. L.
Daniel, has left for Cordele on a visit.
Special Matinee Monday afternoon
ht 3 p. m., the big musical comedy,
Henpecked Henry.” Matinee prices,
25c and 50c. S-6t
Armstead Dodson, of Plains, was a
prominent business visitor in Ameri
cus today.
Our Special Clearance Sale continues
right along this week. Don’t put off
your purchasining. it means dollars
saved to you. ANSLEY’S. 8-lt
Frank Gooding was in the city Tues
day, shaking hands with his friends,
and whwile here he transacted some
important business.
Miss Mary Pickford will be the guest
of the Alcazar tomorrow in “Esmer
alda.” See it by all means. 9-lt
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Harrold are in
Cartersville this week, the guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Hampton Fields.
Boyden’s $6.50 Shoes for $3.50; Re
gal $4.50 Men’s Shoes for $2.50, to
close out. ANSLEY’S. 8-lt 1
I
W. E. Laney, of the Laney Produce
Co., left Wednesday for a business trip
to Columbus.
The many friends of Miss Mary Pick
ford will be charmed to hear of her
arrival tomorrow at the Alcazar in
‘ Esmeralda.” Don’t fail to see her.
hit
Clarence Hale, of Smithville, came
up Tuesday f a business visit in the
metropolis of south Georgia.
See that Gold Rooster feature at the
Opera House tonight. A magnificent
picture. 9-lt
Capt. John A. Cobb left Wednesday
for a business trip to Macon.
Every Man’s Suit, every Boy’s Suit,
Overcoat and Odd Pants, One-Third off.
8-lt ANSLEY’S.
“The Regeneration” is a Fox pic
ture at the Opera House tomorrow.
It’s thrilling and elaborate. 9-lt
ol
WPi ’W \
Hi \ \
Hyp \ \
Your
Photograph
The one inexpensive I
gift with that personal I
touch.
Pleased to see you at
M KINSTRY’S STUDIO I
"The Photographer in I
Our Town”
Safety First—Start that lazy liver work'
ing with San Tox Saline Liver Sait—as
/f Peasant to the taste as a lime sour. Most
.! positive in its effect.
l y/T Windsor Pharmacy
Telephone 161
HERBERT HAWKINS
tnsuranceyand Surety Bonds
Special y—Autos at 2 per ct.
Planters Bank Building : ’Phone No. 186
New line Dorines and Vanities. 8
A. Daniels, the Jeweler.
A. Allen, one of Ellaville’s promin
ent citizens, was in the city Wednes-
I day on business.
i
1 Our Special Clearance Sale continues
right along this week. Don’t put off
your purchasing. It means dollars
( saved to you. ANSLEY’S. 8-lt
The many friends of Paul Easterlin.l
. of Andersonville, will learn with pleas-
I ure that he is very much improved and
has s o far recovered from his recent
spell of pneumonia as to be able to be
up again.
| Matinee Monday, Feb. 4th, at 3p. m.
at the- Opera House. Prices: Adults,
50 cents; children 25c; the big musi
cal lay “Henpecked Henry.” 8-6 t
A party romposed of Mr. and Mrs.
Will Humber, Miss Emma Mae Borum,
Miss Marjorie Kalmon and I. J. Kal
mon will go to Albany tonight to see
“The Birth of a Nation.”
Some extra good Suits for Men in
the odds and ends for $5.00, $6.50, $7.59
and $10.00; worth double and more.
ANSLEY’S. 8-lt
I J. C. Dixon has just completed and
is ready to turn over to the city an
other handsome wagon, which is one
of the four that was contracted for.
Miss Mary Pickford will be the guest
of the Alcazar tomorrow in “Esmer
alda.” See it by all means. 9-lt
Miss Nannie Lou Speer, who has
been in Macon for some time, returned
home Tuesday afternoon.
Boyden’s $6.50 Shoes for $3.50; Re
gal $4.50 Men’s Shoes for $2.50, to
close out. ANSLTY’S. 8-lt
Master Carroll Purvis, aged seven
■ years, who has been in Macon at the
hospital there for treatment for a ner
vous trouble unde- Dr. A. B. Jamison,
returned home Tuesday after a stay of
several weeks. His condition is very
much improved, much to the gratifica
tion of his parents and friends.
Some extra good Suits for men in
the odds and ends for $5.00, $6.50, $7.50
and $10.00; worth double and more
; ANSLEY’S. 8-lt
Dr. W. D. Sears, of Ellaville, stopped
over with Mr. and Mrs. L. D. Lockhart
Wednesday, en route to Atlanta.
The many friends of Miss Mary Pick
ford will be charmed to hear of her
arrival tomorrow at the Alcazar in
“Esmeralda.” Don’t fail to see her.
91t
Our tomorrow’s special, with every
pound of Seeman Coffee at 25c per
pound you can get beef roast at 12 l-2c
pound. The Ayashery, Phones 89 and
14. 9-lt
Boyce Miller, of Macon, is in the
city today on business.
FANCY Tangerines, Florida Naval
Granges, Buchanan Grocery Co. It
Prof. W. J. Noyes arrived Wednes
day afternoon tosucceed Prof. J. F.
Lambert at the Americus High school.
Prof. Noyes formerly lived in Ameri
cus and has many friends who wel
come his return.
Judge Ware G. Martin was in Amer
icus for a short while Wednesday.
Mr. Edgar Weeks, of Savannah, was
a visitor in Americus today, at the
home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. M.
Weeks.
WYANDOTTEB
BROWN'S Crystal White Wyandottes
Fishel strain; eggs $1.50, $3.00 and
$5.00 per 15. Chicks 15c. 25c and 50c
each. L. M. Brown, Marietta, Ga.
PAGE FIVE
ALC AZAp|
THEATREIX |
Today
Broadway feature K
The greai character,
Joe Knowles, in
‘THE NATURE MAN”
5 superb acts
Don’t miss it ||
Thursday . i
The darling of them ■
all,
MARY PICKFORD
in ■
"Esmeralda”
5 reel Paramount
picture
Friday
Mary Fuller,in
“THE HEART OF A MERMAID” B
3 part drama
“THE RED CIRCLE”
Chapter No. 3
You may have good safe
insurance but until you
get a
Union Central
Policy
you haven’t the best It is
best because it gives you all
that is good in 1 ife Insur
ance protection, and gives
it to you for less
UNION CENTRAL LIFE INSURANCE CO.
LEE M. HANSFORD, General Agent,
Room 13, Planters Bank Bldg.
' The Great Annual Dividend Payer.”
MISS LILLIAN LHANDLLR
URE AND LIFE INSURANCE
HEALTH AND ACCIDENT.
Office: Allison Building, Phone 45.
Americus, Ga.
MISS BESSIE WINDSOR
. . Insurance , .
Fire, Accident and Bonds. Of*
flee Forsyth St. ’Phone 313
c. P. DAVIS,
Dental Surgeon.
Orthodontia, Pyorrhea.
Resident Phone 218. Office Phone 81 >
Allison Bldg. ’,j.
DR. M. H. WHEELER, u
i
Dentist.
Office In Bell Bldg., Lamar St. Just
ipposite Postoffice.
Iffice Phone 785. Residence Phone 28C
F. and A. M.
* AMERICUS LODGE
F. and A. M. m
atl d A ’ M ’ mee^B ev *
NfttXßjLnr er y se c°nd and fourth
\ Friday night at 7
..o’clock.
S. A. HAMMOND, W. M.
CLOYD BUCHANAN, Sec’y.
®. M. B. COUNCIL
. .LODGE, F, and A. M.,
jQi meets every First and
’•Th ir d Friday nights.
t \ Visiting brothers are
invited to attend.
H. B. MASHBURN, W. M.
NAT LeMASTEK, Secretary.
IMiiRICUS CAMP, 202,
OF THE WORLB.
Meets every Wednesday aigut in th*
Aheatley Bldg., Windsor Ave. £ll via-
Wing Sovereigns invited to meet wltli
is. J. M. TOBIN. C. C.
NAT LeMASTEK, Clerk.
DASHLWJ.ON CAMP, SO. U,
P. 0. S. OF A.
Meets on Thursday nights, Wheat
ley Building, at 7:30 o'clock. All mem
bers are urged to attend Visitors
welcomed. E. F. WILDER, Pres’t.
O. D. REESE, Recording Sec’y.
NAT Ln MASTER, Financial Sec’y.
F. G. OLVER
Sewing Machines and Supplies; Key
vnd Lock Fitting; Umbrellas Repaired
and Covered.
IiAMAR STREET NEAR WELL.