Newspaper Page Text
THURSDAY, JANUARY 1, 1920. f
Marion >
the story of her life and
LOVE.
CHAPTER XXII.
A School i* Chosen for Yolsnie.
The very thought of a co-educa
tionat school made smiles play all
over my face.
“Os course, the boys must not take
up too much of your time. After
schoi begins, they can only call on
Saturdays or Sundays; and if some
thing special is going'on, maybe you
can have engagements on Friday eve
nings,” said Mamma. “But to my
way of thinking boys and girls should
be thrown together. It makes them
more natural when in each other’s
company. All this gives me concern,
Yolande. I’m very proud of you, and
I want you to be a splendid woman
one of these days, one with no ideals
Mattered, and one who has kept the
sweet, girlish, lovable heart you now
have. You understand, darling, don’t
you?"
When Mamma talks like that I
want to soar right up to the pearly
gates as pure as a dew-drop. There’s
something entirely too sordid in life
and its necessary contact with peo
ple such as old man Hildebrand or
BILIOUSNESS
Caused by
Acid-Stomach
II peoplt who are bilious are treated accord-
Bar to local symptom* they seldom get very
much better. Whatever relief ia obtained is
ususiiy temporary Trace biliouEaess to its
aotwco and remove the cease aod the chances
are that the patient will remain strong and
healthy.
Doctor* say that more than 70 non-organic
dfeeases can be traced to an Add-Stomach.
Billon. «s Is one of them. Indigestion, heart
burn. belching, sour stomdcb, bloat and gas
are other signs of acid-stomach. EATONIC,
the marvelous modern stomach remedy,
brings quick relief from these stomach mis
eries which lead to a long train of ailments
that make life miserable if not corrected.
EATONIC literally absorbs and carries
away the excess acid. Uakes the stomach
strong, cool atfll comfortable. Helps diges
tion; improves the appetite aDd you then get
lull strength from your food. Thousands say
that EATONIC is the most effective stomach
remedy in the world. It is the help YOU
need. Try it on our money-back-if-not-satlr
Bed guarantee. At all druggists. Only S 0«.
lor a big box
FATONIC
fcX fdW YOUR AOD-STOMACg)
ICADTED f S THE QUICKEST I
■ IMP# lia I.Wfa AND EASIEST!
■ LITTLE WAY TO PUT THE I
| mil c A LIVER, BOWELS |
1 r \ AND STOMACH IN I
LfittvOfO* GOOD CONDITION 1
“A GOOD DFfUG STORE”
Thanks You '
For the Bounteous Share of your trade which you so
generously have given us, and wish for you and yours
ALL OF THE PROSPERITY
AND HAPPINESS THAT
1920 affords. May each day bring you a full meas
ure of success and happiness and your nights needed
rest and peace.
Nathan Murray,
Druggist
PHONE 79. '
“A GOOD DRUG STORE”
If It’s a Piano or Player-Piano Yda Want
See •|j '
Edwards Music Company
The Music Store of Greater Service;"
Phone 123. N. H. EDWARDS, Manager 'i * Forsyth Street.
a girl like Bella McDonald. It’s an
gels land singing and Peter and Paul
for me every time. But I never
can answer her. There comes an im
passable lump into my throat.
“Dearest, I’ve settled for you upon
the Parmway Academy, and "
My tongue wis mine in a second
and I was on my feet jumping up
and down like a crazy person and say
ing:
“You’re grand, grand! I’d rather
I listened attentively, for I’ve read
that this is a sure path to a
man’s heart.
go to Parmway Academy with its
military training for the boys and
them floating around in their ador
able uniforms, than be President of
the United States. Roy goes there,
too. And Mary Bannon.” (Mary’s
a girl who lives near us, but whom
I don’t know very well. I admire
her immensely. She uses the most
wonderful perfume and has such
classical features.)
“I know all that you are saying,”
a whimsical smile illuminating her
words, and there she had been, read
ing my heart and only imparting to
me my very own wishes. Thus it was
with double happiness that I welcom
ed “Hard” Forsythe when he arriv
ed at exactly half-past eight. Mam
ma was on the porch for a few min
utes and met him and he never sat
the whole time and he also seated me
so gallantly that I felt like the daugh
ter of King George of England, only
more. so. There’s nothing wins a girl
so quickly as good manners. Some
say; “Diamonds in the rough, every
time.’’ But I prefer mine polished
before they leave Amsterdam.
After Mamma went into the house,
"Hard” praise my dancing, and add
ed how he detests girls who can’t
dance and expect a fellow to flop all
over the floor with them. “If they
could only see themselves, they’d un
derstand why they sit along the wall
like unplucked blossoms.” And he
gave an imitation of such girls danc
ing, lumbering back and forth on
the porch until I was afraid the
neighborhood would mob me, I laugh
ed So loud.
He rehearsed his football experi
ences so vividly I fairly could see
the games. He promised me one of
the very photographs reproduced in
that magazine, and says he wili auto
graph it for me with the sweetest
of sweet sentiments. If he should
forget to do this, my heart shall
break. He talked without ceasing for
a long while, although, last night, he
gave me the impression of being rath
er quiet. I listened attentively, for
I’ve read that this is a sure path to a
man’s heart. “Hard" never over
does the pronoun “I” when he tells
you something, but you know he’s
present, and always doing more than
his duty. That’s admirable, I say.
“But here I am, making a pig of
myself,” he finally said. “Tell me
something of yourself, Miss Blair—
or may I call you that beautiful name
I heard Mrs. Chamberlain use when
she addressed you—‘Yolande?’ Why,
you could weave that into poetry.”
This please me, and I granted his
request, and he then asked me if I
! wouldn’t call him “Hard,” and I said
I would try, just as if I hadn’t been
doing so ever since last night to my
self.
He again pleaded with me to speak
of myself and tell him what I did
all day.
“If you’d ask me for an account
of my evenings, that might Be more
interesting,”/ I parried, “But beside
what you’ve told me, even what I
do then would be insignificant."
This must have flattered him, for
he asked me right away if I liked
chicken and waffle.’, and when I sim
ply adored them, he invited lie in
his touring car (I didn’t know until
then he had one) out into the coun
try early next week for dinner.
(Tomorrow —The Hour Makes
Yolande Uneasy.)
#
New School Move At
Smithville Gaining
SMITHVILLE, Jan. I.—Smith
ville higjj school opens again “for
business” on Monday, Jan. 5, for the,
second term of the school year.
The recent move put on foot to
get a new school building here has
gained in support, and it is expected
it will be brought to a head in a few
days, and work actually started on
the building. In spite of the boll
weevil this year, most of this
section have had a good season, and
in consequence the leaders of the
“boom" expect no opposition. So far
none has developed, and if the pres
ent plans come to a head, and are
carried out, Smithville will have a
school second to none in the state.
They already have an able corps of
teachers, and with up-to-date, first
class equipment as will be installed
with a new “building, the school will
be one to be proud of. Prof. J. H.
Forbis, who has had much experi
ence in this line, is heading the move
ment.
Briton Eats Third Less
Meat Than Before War
LONDON, Jan. I. Englishmen
used to be considered the greatest
meat eaters in the world. Now, de
clares the Society of Meat Importers,
the average Englishman eats 33 per
cent less meat than he did before the
war. Unless he can be induced to
eat more of it, the country will be
faced with such a glut of meat as it
has never had before.
The annual consumption of meat
|in the United Kingdom before the
was was about 1.300,000 tons, rav
the importers. It is now only l r
200,000 toi?s. And this, they can
tend.us due entirely to the high cost
still maintained!. Englishmen and
Englishwomen, too, are just as fond
of meat as ever, but they cannot af
ford to eat as much of it as they
used to.
THE AMERICUS TIMES-RECORDER
MORE CENSUS
TAKERSNAMED
Crisp, Dooly, Macon and
Stewart Enumerators
Listed
Census enumerators, with their
territories, were announced today by
Supervisor T. M. Furlow for Crisp,
Dooly, Macon,< Stewart counties, of
the Third Congression Districts, as
follows:
CRISP COUNTY.
J. A. Champion, .^rabi —Militia
district 732 (aprt of), including
Arabi town (part of). All north,of
the Seville and Arabi public road.
W. L. aPtterson, Arabi—Militia
district 732 (part of), including
Arabi town (part of). All south of
the Seville and Arabi public road.
O. A. Stratton, Cordele—Militia
district (part of). All north of the
Patesville public road.
L. S. Odom, Arabi—Militia dis
trict 945 (part of). All south of the
Patesville public road.
J. B. Adkins, Vienna—Militia dis
trict 1004.
T. H. Horton, Cordele—Militia
district 1040.
F. A. Colquit, Cordele—Militia
district eo;;; nto-p uC. ,t„ 1234 12
district 1451 (part of)* excluding
Cordelg city. All east of jG. S. &F.
Railway.
H. K. Ertzberger, Cordele—Militia
district 1451 (part of),, excluding
Cordele city. All west bf G. S. A
F. Railway.
Chas. P. McGougan, Cordele—
Ward’l, Cordele city.
George Hart\ Cordele-—Ward 2,
Cordele city.
H. G. Morris, Cordele—Ward 3,
WHAT dpl|
AILS Jf 1
THE j®
CHID
Chances are it's WORMS—If
the child is languid, irritable 3fl
and restless in sleep. Sou can
find out with
Dr. Thacher’i
Worm Syrupi S
, Perfectly harmless. (Ad doc- 3H
tor's prescription In tise for *m
150 years. At your drufg store. dH
THACHER MEDICINE CO 9
Chattanooga,
»■««»■»«■»«■»«»»>»■ ■■ihmininii |9N
For sale Dy Howell’s Pharmacy.
PUT CREAM IN NOSE
AND STOP CATARRH
Tells How To Open Clogged Nos
trils and End Head-Colds.
■ mmmmmmmmmmmmm .1. .mm—
You feel fine in a few moments. Your
cold in head or catarrh will be gone.
Your clogged nostrils will open. The air
passages of your head will clear and
you can breathe freely. No more dull
ness, headache; no hawking, snuffling,
mucous discharges or dryness; no strug
gling for breath at night.
Tell your druggist you want a small
bottle of Ely’s Cream Balm. Apply a
little of this fragrant, antiseptic cream
in your nostrils, let it penetrate through
every air passage of the head; soothe
and heal the swollen, inflamed mucous
membrane, and relief comes instantly.
It is just what every cold and catarrh
sufferer needs. Don’t stay stuffed-up
and miserable. *
if
An Inside Bath
Makes You Look
and Feel Fresh
Says a glass es hot water with
phosphate before breakfast
keeps Illness sway.
This excellent, common-sene*
health measure being
adopted by millions.
Physicians the world over recoin
mend the inside bath, claiming this Is
of vastly more importance than out
side cleanliness, because the skin
pores do not absorb Impurities intc
the blood, causing 111 health, while tli
pores in the ten yards of bowels dr
Men and women are urged to dnn:
each morhing, before breakfast ;
glass of hot water with a teaspoonfu
of limestone phosphate in it, as i
harmless means of helping to was!
from the stomach, liver, kidneys auf
bowels the previous day’s indigestibl
material, poisons, sour bile and toxins
thus cleansing, sweetening and pud
Tying the entire alimentary canal b
fore putting more food into the stoir
ich. *
jurt as soap and hot water cleam
and freshen the skin, so hot water an
limestone phosphate act on the elii'
Inativo organs.
Those who wake up with bad breatl
boated tongue, nasty taste or have f
■till, aching head, sallow ccmplexioi
■Ld stomach; others who are subjer
V bilious attacks or constipatior
'Sbuld obtain a quarter pound of lim<
Bane phosphate at the drug Btor
fhis will cost very little but is sul!
cient to demonstrate the value of ii
rider bathing. Those who continue -
each morning are assured of pr
aounced results, both in regard s
health and appearance.
Cordele city.
Mrs. Cordelia Moore, Cordele—
Ward 4, Cordele city.
W. A. N. Jones, Hatley—Militia
district 1697, Hatley.
DOOLY COUNTY.
J. F. King, Vienna—Militia district
516.
J. F. Everett, Vienna—Militia dis
trict 535, excluding Vienna city,
E. G. Greene, Vienna, —Vienna
city.
S. L. Webb, Byromville—Militia
district 585, including Byromville,
J. O. McGough, Lilly—Militia dis
trict 633.
W. H. Martin, Dooling—Militia
district 640, including Dooling town.
A. D. Henley, Vienna—Militia dis
trict 1012.
H. D. Royal, Lilly—Militia district
1466, excluding Unadill« ‘own.
G. W. Sanders, Unadilla—Unadil
la town.
J. L. Roberts, Pinehurst—Militia
district, including Pinehurst town.
C. B. Wood, Vienna—Militia dis
trict 1552.
C. O. Nelson, Lilly—-Militia district
1671, including Lilly town.
MACON COUNTY.
Geo. H. Slappey, Marshallville—
Militia district 543, Marshallville, ex
cluding Marshallville town.
G. C. Walker, Marshallville—Mar
shallville town.
T. L. Robinson, Montezuma—-Mili
tia district 740.
J. E. Lightner, Ideal —Militia dis
trict 757, including Ideal town.
L. W. Gardner, Montezuma—Mili
tia district 770, Montezuma (part of)
excluding Montezuma town and Haw
kinsville road.
W. R. Hicks, Montezuma—Militia
district 770, Montezuma (part of),
excluding Montezuma town. All
south of Montezuma and Hawkins
ville road.
J. H. Robinson, Sr., Montezuma—•
Montezuma town.
Zach H. Jones, Sr., Reynolds—
Moved to J. D. Holman’s stable.
Telephone No. 35. Dr; Percy W.
Hudson.—l9-30t
How Many
people can you think of
right now who would
like to have your photo
graph, and how long
since that last one was
made?
Make The Appointment Now
It’s Noao Too Early.
TL
lhe *
McKinstry Studio
Phone 621.
—CO-ED—
SPRING MODELS
Os “CO-EDS” one of America’s most fam
ous makes of dresses for women are now
arriving and you are invited to call and
see them.
%
The line will consist of Tricolets, Tricotines,
Wool Jerseys, Serges, Taffetas, etc. We
have CO-ED Evening Dresses too.
And this house will be the exclusive home
'■s 0
of these exclusive dresses.
Get yours early and lead.
! ansley’s W
CO-EDS. SELLS THE BEST. fc - / CO-EDS.
Militia district 814.
G. W. N. Watkins, Reynolds—Mili
tia district 1002.
B. A. Lee, Andersonville—Militia
! district 1070, Oglethorpe-, excluding
1 Oglethorpe city.
J. P. Nelson, Oglethorpe—Ogle
thorpe city.
STEWART COUNTY.
< M. L. Gillis, Julia—Militia district
725, Mineral Springs, including Oma
ha town.
W. W. Mabry, Richland—Militia
district 727, Richland, excluding
Richland town.
Harry L. Richardson, Richland—
Richland town.
M. G. Hester, Richland—Militia
district 747, Pataula.
J. M. Deason, Lfimpkin—Militia
district 78C, Antioch, including Lou
vale town.
J. H. Miller, Lumpkin, Militia dis
trict 796, Lumpkin, excluding Lump
kin town.
H. C. Weathersby, Lumpkin, Lump
kin town, including county jail.
W. L. Maddoz, Florence—Militia
1
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mi\ ****** fw
pi&A* m
rTi c
a Mn v
Ik /htz\ pstf?* e9 l t,a " \
fliiitrirt rli PlrrJ ~~~~
f A •
tia distinct 965, Green Hill. Militia
district '966, Brooklyn.
G. E. Nueman, Lumpkin— Militia
district 988, Midway.
——— li _ mm
INFLUENZA “X 'ffb
starts with a CoH^|SP
Kill the Cold. At the firsts
enetze take YBL
HUL’S
CA&ARA^QUINJNE
k AftOftOfe
cold remedy for 20 years
—ia tablet form—:afe, sure, no
opiates—breaks up a cpld in 24
hourt—-relieve.* g; / i i 3 days.
Money bade if it fails. The
genuine b-'X has a FHI
ton vit li Mr. Kiir*a
tHL. At A.12 Dm** Starmrn