Newspaper Page Text
PAGE TWO
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RUBS TO AID VHERANS
Twenty Confederate Went To Go
To New Orleans April
10-12
Norina Talmadge and Buster Kea
ton will send about 20 Confederate
veterans in Sumter county to their
annual reunion at New Orleans, April
10-11-12.
These two headliners in t! movie
world, with the aid of the Ryiaum r
tbeat<M»y-W»» Woman’s club, the
Sops Confederate veterans, the
E:tsfeis_Bjar:and other organizations,
will rafePu-the money and no one is
asked to “GIVE” a cent.
All _o£.the profits derived Friday
and Saturday-will go to this purpose,
when a double bill composed of Nor
ma Talmadge and Eager- 1 O’Biien in
thj? “.Voice of the Minaret,” and
Barter’Keaton in “The B'acksmii'i,”
together with the Rv.'ande/ orches
tra and organ, is to be shown.
The’ cKiTdren of the schools will
be given a free ticket for every dol
lar's worth of tickets they sell, the
committee decided yeste’day. Cash
prizes h£ve also been offered the
■ ’m’.-tt —; ;
A dress of navy blue twill is made
with a tiered skirt and a very plain
biouse. 'Blfldln'gs of gray gros-grain ,
ribbon Jurjiish what little trimming
was deemed necessary.
*.
“ ~ ST 1
LOTS OF NEW
: iris • :
t . 1
• (
Spring
Dresses
i • Un. .
NFWSF NFW
11U 1V AND COLORS. 11D V I
3i , ■ i|
We have received lots and lets of
■ I Easter Dresses and more geming in
every day. Right off Fifth Avenue.
Wonderful styles in the* new Spo|L_? ,
Models. All sizes for MLses, JkiAfe M
and Adults. ]
’ i
You’ll Pay SIO.OO to
■ $20.00 More Anywhere
; else.
Prices Range From
<
$ 9.98 to $ 27. 50
*
♦
We want every lady in town to come
J . and look at our line of new Easter
F ® 1
«. _ ■■■- |
Easter Hose
Beautiful Chiffon, in all styles, colors
and shades. >
The Famous “Martha-4-Foot”
$1.25 to $1.98
*
t *
Beautiful Hose with Lace Clocks; all
; shades, colors and sizes
■ V $1.25 to $2.50
■’ ■ 1—
Nassar & Atty ah
agists*.'.’??”
Perry & Brown’s Old Stand Near Opera House
?!’- Forsyth St., Americus.
>| W |
•w W '
.v
THOMAS MEIGHAN .
starring in
PARAMOUNT pictures
At the Opera House tomorrow in
“Back Home and Broke.’’
old school hildren ?.! ■; Fred At- )
thur has charge >f the 'icket sale. .
A comimtrw handling the two
day program for the veteran ■ is |
'composed of rMs. S- H. McKee, chair- '
man; Mis. E. L. Car well, Mrs. W.
H. C. Dudley, Mrs. ]■’. B. Arthur, i ;
i Mrs. J. W. Karris, Jr., .Mrs. J. H. i'
Quarterman, Mrs. Frank Turpin, I'
John Shiver, Steve Pace, Emory Ry- I 1
TALKS TO MOTHERS OF FLAPPERS
By Congresswoman Huck
No 1 Don’t Let Your Daughter Alarm You <
BY MRS. WINNiFRED M. HUCK
Congre>3 womali-at Large From Illi
noil
Copyright, 1923.)
There’s nothing wrong with the
flapper. Don’t alarm you-self over *
her.
In spirit she’s as old as the hills.
In per unification she’s but the
twentieth century mode of expres
sion-—probably influenced a bit by
our present manner of living—on the
shortcut road to those c-.eted twin
posses-ions held dearest in the heart
of every woman.
These two jewels are, first the
longing for attraction and, second,
the ever-burning desire to be the
cente r of attraction.
As a mother myself, I cannot
share with alafniists their views on
the passing throngs of young girls
poqqoq jiaq; tunny A[t»:p ouzz
heads and jangle their amusingly
long ear-pendants in parade on our
“Main Streets.”
Moralists may sigh and heave
heavy conjectures as to where the
marching throng is going. They may
regard with grave apprehension the I
possible aftermath of a “neurotic
age.” But to me, the flapper sym
bolises nothing if it is not sheer
honesty, frankness, and a glorifying
eamancipation front Victorian fet
ters, which made for feminine petti
ness and narrowness of vision.
1 love the.flapper. She heralds the
dawn of a womanhood which will
accept equal responsibilities.
The flapper and her purposes are
good. She will grow up and enter
into motherhood the better for her
experience.
What if her skirts are a trifle
short, her manner innocently flip
lander, Lovelace Eve, Captain Watts,
H. E. Allen and others.
. ‘‘The two pictures selected by the
committee,” Manager Rylander said,
“are possibly the two best features
to’be had at this, time —as well as
being the two most expensive. No
movie stars are more popular in
Americus than Keaton and Norma
Talmadge. A great drama and a
great comedy.”
|
I Today
I Hr ■ at;■ La?
Lt
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Don’t Miss the
Greatest Picture
of the Year!
Like a panther at bay . . .
Cigarette stood guard over
her fallen lover . • . as the
swarm of swirling demons
closed about her . . .
nearer . . .ever nearer . . .
Priscilla
DEAN
in '
! “UNDER TWO FLAGS”
RYLANDERI9
MONDAY, March. j
Matinee and Night
Bl
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mßnKwntD gap
IOOOaLGRCID Quite
'■ ■ : ■' '/ A X
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jonf>
MEgMSEgF
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! Prices: Night, sl-$1.50-$2.00
Prices: Matinee, 50c-75c-$l .00
All Seats Reserved
fHE TIMES-RECORD Ek.
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'■ Y 1
/ f y-
' ' #OaI £4 •
F -fR 'i
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x ■> f ;
y
vl AT ’$ * f
■■■ a
—-i*' x
MRS. HUC KAND TWO OF KER CHILDREN r
pant? • it 1 are charging. E
Such exteriors label the flapper
not as a new creature by any meaihs
but rather as a self-perfected model
of something we have had in our
midst for a long time.
The flapper includes too many of
us to be had. : ,
And whateve r her aim, her pur
pose, her desire ,1 konw
on goodness, can Tor and truth.
No structure built on -such fotp»-
dations can topple. Nor can it be'so
corrupt as a good many moralists
*
nUOIEH QPERA HOUSE
Elf Fix'.' "T. I
TODAY * 1 17 " b TOMORROW
Last chance to see that magr “Back Home
nificent picture— ’ : And Broke”
“To Have By George Ade.
And To Hold” Written for Thos. Meighan- |h
r, , ii i jjj A mint of laughs. The
Romance and red bloodqd . IsJ . . • r
, r world s greatest tonic tor tne
thnl^r^ k eynote_°f Hem sjfctege . WRoUorfe
) (llm'* < » ' f JdL I’ can fuA • 'Mothers.' Fathers, !i } ‘
' ’ ”It sa raVarnounr Picturq , n , j, . ,
z = r I a t r fl' 11 n • I i Girls and- ws should seel ’
pILI fetorJL ■
you cancel your card game Paramount Picture
engagements. At Popular Prices
? ' ■ ' ■'» 7, i
GET THE MOVING PICTURE HABIT; IT’S NOT j
EXPENSIVE WHEN YOU GO TO THE OPERA HOUSE j
~i
I“STI IT E IBLE” I
I That 9 s what Billy Sunday says, and he’s right
The Wonder of the Ages-r-the Beloved Volume —the Great
Book. of Books— the Bible. It brings a sense of peace i
to all ~ the bld, the young, the rich, the poor.
Everybody netds the Bible, and leading news- s
papers are offering this opportunity of getting
times-recorder
» conducting this wonderful distribution Greatly reduced
and every reader should take advar.- fps illustration of the
tage of it. fl lir 8 e Red Letter vol-
Clip the Bible Coupon . c ! ,r:sl ’ s trfntJ’£
. J®9. h rcd for i,lstant identification.
printed elsewhere in this
paper and get your Bible STYLE A
NOW Z’ff' Now Presented to every
rcader for three (fl r.Z I
’' ’ '' coupons and onl y sl.9B I
STYLE B—Three coumn< = j I
only d 9Br
IVIAIL ORDERS fllledasexplainedir > printed
j 1 ============-.
! j Every Home Needs This New 3ible i
MKO ■ ' - ii
Flapperism in its essence means 1
freedom. Freedom as opposed to li- 1
cense can be sustained only when ' :
guided by education, intelligence and i
confidence. Therein lies the parents
obligation.
Tomorrow: Are petting parties j
facts or fancier 1
• —■■■ . ■ 1 ■ -
You can remove rust from needles *
if you will stick them into a piece 1
of flannel which you have saturated
in machine oil.
—_ ————————• i
Georgia Lead In
Fertilizer Plants
Continued from Page One.)
states reported 2.5, 1.5 and 1.0 per
cent of the total in the three years.
In March, the month of maximum
employment, 26,745 wage earners
were reported and in July, the month
of minimum employment, 12,346 —-
the minimum representing 46 per
cent of the maximum. The average
number employed during the year
was 16,898, as compared with 26,-
296 in 1919 and 22,815 in 1914.
The number of establishments in
creased four in the period between
1919 and 1921, there being 588 re
ported by the bureau of census for
1921. There was a decided decrease
in the number of persons employed,
however, even though only 584 es
tablishments were reported for 1919.
In 1919, 32,522 were reported to be
employed, against 21,538 in the 1921
season. Os those employed in the
1921 season, 163 were proprietors
and firm members; 4,376 were sal
aried employees, and 16,898 were
wage earners. To the salaried em
ployees and wage earners, a total of
$25,845,500 was paid, acocrding tc
the report.
The various plants paid $59,30f
for contract work in 1921, according
to the report, less than the amount
paid in 1919 when a total of $171,-
300 is reported.
The 1921 materials cost the manu
facturer $144,978,300 and thodr
products were valued at $180,374,*
800, $35,396,500 being added to their
value by manufacture.
Statistics for establishment with
products valued at less than $5,000
are not included in the figures for
There were 18 such establish
ments, reporting 20 wage earners
and products valued at $54,000.
LUMPKIN HI WINNER
FIRST BASEBALL GAME
LUMPKIN, March 6.—The first
baseball game of the season in this
section of the state wa’s played at
( uthbert Friday afternoon, between
Lumpkin High and Cuthbert High,
the final score being 5 to 3 in favor
of Lumpkin. The game was very
RYLANDER - WED. - SEATS NOW
L AMatioxs Dsught
I \ MAY VALENTI Nt’Ofr&S
’juuStfßr.
Ml / /najkuhcent Stn6tnd Ensemble,
W Ope.mtic Orchestra
I I
. * IS GOOD
B uszr-uw »m i mi j
TUESDAY, MARCH 6, 1925
r
I
7 feu
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BI.UE TAFFETA
To prove that youth and crispy
taffeta are ideal companions, conies
this frock of navy blue with its
rows of cording and petal-liko
trimming of self material. Close
fitting bodice, square neck and full
overskirt, are attractive features.
The 'corsage bouquet of cherry
color and yellow velvet is a dainty
touch.
interesting from the start to finish.
The star for Lumpkin Hi was ‘Plunk’
Swan, who pitched an excellent game,
allowing only five hits, and also col
lected a double and single out. of
four times to the bat. The star for
Cuthbert was Moye.
Batteries: Lumpkin, Swann and
James; Cuthbert, Hatcher, Moye,
Moye, and Stanford.
Remember you don’t need to use •
so much suf ar if you add a pinch
of carbonate of sade when stewing
fruit.