Newspaper Page Text
PAGE TWO
RICHLAND.
RICHLAND, Feb. I. Messrs. S.
E. Cook and Edgar Tatum, of Wes
ton, were the guests of Miss Eleanor
Turner and Warrine Moore here
Sunday night.
J. W. Fillingim, Jr., of Dawson,
was in the city a short time Sunday.
Bascom Trotman, of Kimbrough,
was here Sunday afternoon.
Messrs. G. T. Bland, Jr., and
Jack Etheridge motored to Weston
Sunday afternoon.
John Henry Turner, of Columbus,
spent the week-end near here with
his parents.
Perkins Cleveland, of Columbus,
passed through Sunday en route to
Weston where he will visit his par
ents, Mr. and Mrs. Thad Cleveland.
Miss George M. Brightwell spent
the week-end at Kimbrough the guest
of Miss Gussie Jones.
Misses Ruth and Wildred Dannard
of Weston, entertained Saturday
night in honor of Miss Georgia M.
Brightwell. Among those present
were Misses W illie and Eldora Sims,
Lila Jones, Gussie Jones, Lois
Brightwell, Janett Sutherland, Wil
ma Joines, Georgia M. Brightwell,
Ruth and Mildred Dennard and
Messrs. Bascom Trotman, D. H. Ken
yon Drew. Ras Christian, Clyde Mer
ritt, Joe'Hill aßrge, Hiott Suther
land, Herbert Dickey, Owen Staple
lot, Edgar Tatum and S. E. Cook.
The affair was thoroughly enjoyed
by all.
Miss Lula Bell entertained the
Bunea Vista team High school set
Friday night after a game of basket
ball. Richland won twenty-six to
fifteen.
J. J. Askew, of Columbus, spent
the week-end here.
Mrs. Ben Phillips and little son
spent the week-end with Dr. and Mrs.
F H McCalla in Albany.
J. C. Layfield has returned from a
trip through South Georgia and
Northers Folriad.
Col. G. Y. Harrell, of Lumpkin,
was in the city recently.
J. W. Fillingim, Jr., and Joe Ted
der. of Dawson, were in the city
Friday night. *
Mrs. J. McLeroy and children, of
Eufaula, Ala., spent several days of I
last week with Mr. and Mrs. M. B. •
Brown and Mr. and Mrs. A. M.
Wright. They left Sunday after- !
noon for Arlington where they will
spend several days with the former’s
sister, Mrs. H. C. Jeter.
HUNTINGTON
HUNTINGTON, F*eb. I. The
following pupils are on the January
honor roll: First honors—Felder Eth
ridge, Donald Grattis, Ellis Grattis,
Lurline Grattis, C. C. Sheppard, An
nie ♦allent and Ruby Tallen. Sec
ond honors, Griff Ethridge, Virginia
SIOO.OO
CHINA
DINNER
SET
100 Pieces
Fcr
$75.00
THOS. L. BELL,
Jeweler and Optician
RAILROAD SCHEDULES
(Centra) Time.)
Arrival and Departure of Passenger
Trains, Americus. Ga.
The following schedule figures
published as information and not
guaranteed:
CENTRAL OF GEORGIA RY.
Arrive Leaves
11:59 am Columbus-Chgo 8:40 am
10:28 um Albany-Montgy 5:14 am
7:85 pm Macon-Atlanta 6:37 am
*7:15 pm Columbus *7:10 am
2:01 pm Albany-Montgy 2:20 pm
2:20 pm Macon-Atlanta 2:olpm
*11:45 am Columbus *2:30 pm
110:00 am Columbus 13.00 pm
6:37 am Albany 7:35 pm
5:14 am Macon-Atlanta 10:38 pm
3:40 am Albany-Jaxville 11:59 pm
2:58 am Albany-Jaxville 12:36 am
2:13 am Albany-Jaxville 4-21 am
12:36 am Chgo, St L. Atla 2:58 am
4:21 am Cinti. Atl-Macon 2:13 air
(•) Daily; (!) Sunday,
SEABOARD AIK LINE,
arrives Leave*
5:15 pm Riehland 10-tioan
3:10 p. rn. Cordele-5av’h....12:31 pm
12:31 pm Richlar.d-Montgy 3:10 pm
Turner Electric Co.
Reduced Prices on House
Wiring and Fixtures
We are ready. Are you? Call
us for an estimate-
Phone 124.
BETTY AND HER BEAU.
/ JUST WAIT'LL A
I HE COMES J
°° T ~
tup;- i , -
/ WHAT ARE tOlj) ?
I uOAFIN HERE J I NOTHING; \ EVERVftODV STOOi-*
lZ>S'-.FQR SON \ IN ONE PLACE HQ vv
WOULD THE
Z-mlz REST GET r I
# \ past q / - z
Ethridge, A. L. Gleaton, Eva Gleaton,
Claude Edwin Johnson, James Frank
lin Johnson, Gleaton Johnson, W. T.
Johnson, Hoyt Murphy!, William
Murphy and Nunn Reeves.
Miss Geraldine Ryals entertained
her friends with a singing Saturday
evening.
Miss Lilia Echols spent the week
end with Miss Mollie Forrest at
Plains.
Mrs. H. P. Murphy, Hoyt and Wil
liam Murphy were guests at the home
of Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Bridges in
Leslie Sunday.
Charlie Perry is able to be up aft
er having been confined to his bed
with pneumonia for several weeks.
Among those from here attending
the funeral of Miss Cora Cocke at;
Leslie recently were Mr. and Mrs. |
T. M. Etheridge, Mrs. J. J. Kinard. :
Misses Bartha Kinard, Adele, Clara J
and Virginia Etheridge.
Jim O’Neal, of Rome, was the
guest of Miss Annie Florrie Williams
Monday evening.
Harvey Perry spent a delightful i
afternoon Sunday with C. C. Shep
pard at the latter’s
Woodrow Etheridge is in school
again after several weeks illness .
The Senior and Junior B. Y. P.
U. of Pleasant Grove Baptist church
gave excellent programs Sunday eve
ning. They planned a contest in!
which they propose to take a trip.!
The side winning the most points will'
FARM LOANS I
Lowest Interest. Quick Results.
DAN CHAPPELL '
Attorney-at-Law
PLANTERS BANK BUILDING.
lufsERVICE CS
T ° ANP Q ■ N /
ST OFFICE DOXBI AMERICU
OUR LINE OF
AMMUNITION
IS COMPLETE.
WINCHESTER
THE BEST MADE
WE ALSO CARRY WINCHESTER
SKATES. GUARANTEED TO BE
THE BEST
GATEWOOD-COGDELL HDW. CO.
Home of Winchester Guns and Ammunition-
Phone 64 Cor Lee and Forsyth Sts.
Leave*
return first and will be entertained
by the losers.
FRIENDSHIP.
Mr. and Mr§. Sam McGarrah, Myr
tice and Mary McGarrah, who are
spending a part of the winter in
Jacksonville, are expected to ar
rive home early in February.
Mrs. Leroy Hamilton and children,
who have been recent guests of Mr.
and Mrs. John Carter, have gone to
join Mr. Hamilton in Birmingham,
Ala
Mr. and Mrs. A. C. Dodson were
spend-the-day guests of Mr. and Mrs.
T. C. Wells, recently.
Mrs. Rosa McGarrah and Russell
McGarrah were guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Otis Wellons at their home in
Plains Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Harris, Misses
Kate and Dorothy Murphy, of near
Ellaville, were spenJ-th-day guests of
Mrs. Blake Harris Sunday.
Mrs. John Mashburn and Len
Mashburn visited Mr and Mrs.
Ernest Foster in Plains Sunday.
Miss Mary Harris attended the
community singing at Mrs. Charlie
Dupree’s in Concord Sunday even
ing.
Mrs. Mae Smith is visiting friends
AMERICUS
UNDERTAKING CO.
Funeral Directors and Embalmers-
NAT LEMASTER, Manager
Day Phenes 88 and 231
NIGHT 661 and 161
THE AMERICUS TIMES-RECORDER.
and relatives in Americus. She will
go from there to Leesburg, where
she will be the guest of Dr. and Mrs.
Otis Statham.
John Carter made a business trip
to Columbus last week.
Mrs. Lula Smith, Mr. and Mrs.
Brown Smith, of Buena Vista, were
afternoon guests of Mrs. Blake Har
ris Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Dave Owens visited
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Murphy at their
home near Ellaville Sunday.
Misses Elizabeth Wooten and
Christine Harris, of Buena Vista,
were guests of Miss Mary Harris
Sunday afternoon.
Mr and Mrs. T. C. Wells, Misses
Josephine and Dorris Wells, were vis
itors •in Americus Monday.
Mrs. Bailey has returned to Mrs.
Mashburn’s here, after several days’
visit with her niece, Mrs. Ernest Fos
ter, at Plains.
Dr. and Mrs. Carl Minor, of, Amer
icus, were dinner guests of Mrs.'Har
ry Priddy
Miss Mildred Deriso spent the
week-end with friends at New
Point.
In 1642 the English Parliament
made it a crime t > attend a theater,
the first of which had just been
opened.
LEGAL AD NO????
CITY MARSHAL’S SALES.
GEORGIA, Sumter County.
Will be sold before the courthouse
door in the City of Americus, Geor
gia, on the first Tuesday in March,
1921, between the legal hours of sale,
to the highest bidder for cash the
following, described property, to-wit:
One house and lot situated on the
west side of East Forsyth street, and
known as No 627 of said street,
and bounded on east by Forsyth
street, south by property of C. B.
Partin, north by (life-time estate of)
Mandy Wilson, west by (life-time es
tate of) Mandy Wilson.
Size of the above described prop
erty being 70 feet front and 150 feet
deep, beginning at Forsyth street, and
running west from said street. The
above described property levied on
as the life-time estate of Mandy Wil
son, to satisfy a certain fi fa issued
by E. J. Eldridge, clerk and treas
urer of the City of Americus, Geor
gia, in favor of the Mayor and City
Council of Americus, for the cost of
installing plumbing on the above de
scribed property. Tenant in posses
sion notified in terms of law. This
the 20th day of January, 1921.
C. B. POUNCEYY,Y City Marshal.
Nothing to Wear
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She is just as femininely fond of
looking pretty, and ‘‘dolling up” as any
other little girl. Eut she was unlucky
enough to be born in Eastern Europe,
where the possession of one warm
whole garment is looked upon as
luxury, so in all her short life she has
never been decently clothed. But even
clothes are not the most vital thing in
her life. Food comes first. And with
3,500,000 other little ones just like her
self, in Eastern and Central Europe,
she has found that even a very little
girl really MUST have one meal of
nourishing food a day if she is going
to keep on living.
She can not keep on living unless
America sends that one nourishing
meal a day. To feed them all will take
$33,000,000. It must be contributed at
o:;ce by the American people or it will
be too late.
The European Relief Council,
through which America’s eight leading
welfare organizations is functioning, is
speeding every effort to raise thus
amount for food and medical service,.j
Benjamin Franklin is said to have
introduced the game of poker in
Paris.
They All Believe In
Advertising
• A
The Wise Manufacturer Does, He
has seen advertising make his fac
tory grow from rear attic to city
block dimensions.
The Wise Jobber Does. Try to
stock him on an unknown article
and hear him say: "HoW about
your advertising?”
The Wise Merchant does. He has
seen the goods that moved slowly
begin to move quickly when ad
vertising brought the customers in
legion.
The Wise Customer Does. He has
compared the safety, service and
satisfaction found in advertised
goods with the disappointments of
unbranded, unknown articles.
You cannot help believing in advertising. You have had
the same opportunity to compare and prove. Are you
watching the columns of the Times-Recorder for the help
ful suggestions the advertisements offer?
Homing pigeons, which were used
as messengers during the war, came
first from Belgium.
i ,
ALLISON
UNDERTAKING CO.
(Established 1908.)
Funeral Directors and Embalmers.
OLEN BUCHANAN, Director
Day Phone 253
Night Phones 381 or 106.
5P The
Jr Unlaid
.KrJ
S The grain-fed hen usually carries a number of
unfair/eggs—yolks which she cannot complete into
eggs and lay, because her feed lacks the necessary
HT~T*/ white-forming nutrients. (That‘s why egg-yolks are
1 jßHsgl : \ \ found in a hen, when it is dressed). Many of these
\ \ yolks of unfinished eggs are finally absorbed back into
1 \ \ the hen’s system.
Missouri Experiment Station tests showed that 100 lbs.
of wheat, corn, oats, barley and kaffir com make (above
bodily maintenance) an average of 224 yolks and only 154 white*.
Li ; Based on data from tne same experiments, Purina formulas ->roduce,
(above bodily maintenance) as follows:
Yolk. WWtes
Purina Scratch Feed 247.49 142.11
Purina Chicken Chowder 182.05 282.55
Combined Ration 429.54 424.66
These feeds, used in combination, form the most perfectly balanced
and economical egg producer you can buy. Purina Chicken Chowder is
■ That’s why we can MIIIbP f EHMTLH
positively guarantee IU nUB Mt
More eggs cz | WTCHBRICKEN3
HST money, bar.. pggp QCCHOWDERS
fegjgl SdiSh &!'“ ««•«>«»> ra
>®™L—Purina Scratch Feed jfisL BAC *
Mize Grocery Company
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 1921.
About 95 per cent of all messages
entrusted to British pigeons during
the war were safely delivered.
FOR SALE
At a Bargain
Slightly Used One Ton
Ford Truck
N. S. EVANS.
DR. E. E. PARSONS
Dentiat.
Office in Commercial City Ban*
Building.
Office Hours: 8 to 12 m. 1 to 6 p. m.
Work Solicited.