Newspaper Page Text
PAGE TWO
iScDcDieifcy
BRADY-MOORE MARRIAGE
OF INTEREST HERE
Cordial interest centers in the
marriage of Mirs Kathleen Brady,
of Sanford, Fla., and Mr. Arthur
Moore, which was solemnized a:
the home of the brides parents, Mr.
and Mrs. E. E. Brady. The bride
is a niece of Mrs. R. B. Godwin,
and is well known in Americus,
where she has frequently visited.
Rev. E. D. Brownlee, pastor of
the Presbyterian Church performed
the impressive ring ceremony and
Mrs. Munson played the wedding
chorus from Lohengirn.
The lovely bride descended the
stairs on the arm of her father and
was met by the groom. She was
gowned in white georgette crepe
trimmed with small velvet ribbon
ruffles alternating with white silk
lace worn in cap style was caught
with orange blossoms in her hair
She carried a handsome bouquet
6f Bride roses showered with val
ley lillies.
An informal reception followed
the ceremony.
Later in the evening Mr. and
Mrs. Moore left for a few days
motor i|i Florida.
Mrs. Moore’s traveling costume
was a grey dress of georgette crepe
with cream lace worn with a large
grey hat faced in blue, with cape
and other accessories to match.
The bride has always been pop
ular, winning friends by her sweet
and charming personality, and hun
dreds of friends in this state and
iFlorida are interested in her mar
riage.
GRAY-JOHNSON
Mr. and Mrs. John Arthur Gray,
of Jacksonville, Fla., announce the
marriage of their daughter, Alice
Evelyn to Mr. James Charles John
son, of Americus, Tuesday evening,
June 10 1924.
The above announcement will be
of sincerest interest here as Mr.
Johnson, is the son of Mr. and Mr,.
O. C. Johnson, and has always
made his home in Americus, be
fore. going to Jacksonville to re
side, where he is connected with a
large advertising concern.
. Mr. Johnson and his bride have
arrived in Americus, having been
called by the illness of his brother,
tf.A 1.,- iJ^
Lightin’ Brand
CALCIUM
ARSENATE
Manufactured by electricity in the Heart of the
Cotton Belt.
You Can Put It On
In The Daytime
—IT STICKS!
IT'S CHEAPER
EC* US E " Due to it* finely divided
particle* it ipread*—goe*
.further—lt Sticks.
Efe F AI|CX F_ _ D can be dusted on in the
DAYTIME—thus elimi
nating night work lt
Sticks.
Et F I iIS F It* inweased killing pow-
D V- er give , grealer resu | ti
and with certainty.
It Sticks!
Dust now and lave your crops—Order now and save
your money— ,
if YOUR merchant can’t supply you with “LIGHT
NIN’ BRAND”—write direct to
THE GULF STATES
CHEMICALS REFINING CO.
BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA
jgL,
/ 1
7 ’ 1
*'F,
Ottie Prather Johnson, at the
Americus and Sumter County hos
pital, and will be given a.cordml
welcome by his many friends here.
They are guests of Mr. and Mi--
O C. Johnson, on Jackson street.
MRS POOLE ENTERIAINS
WITH LOVELY PARTY
Mrs Clarke Poole was hostess at
a beautiful children’s party Thurs
day afternoon, at her home on Har
rold avenue, given in honor of her
two young sons, Reginald who is
four, and Clarke, Jr. seven years
pld.
Quantities of brightly colored
garden flowers filling baskets and
vases, formed an artistic decora
tion for the living room and front
porch where the guests were en
tertained, carrying out an attrac
tive yellow color scheme.
Many interesting games were
played during the afternoon on the
lawn, after which delicious ice
cream and cake were served. At
tractive favors were given) to the
guests, the little girls receiving
dainty decorated boxes of ■ candy,
Some Baby!
Oh yes, they raise something
!- besides cotton in the South!
Charles Bowen, Jr., for instance,
who is quite the fattest baby
south of the Mason-Dixon line.
He lives in Lowndesville, S. C.,
and has won any number of
“healthy baby” prizes.
and the little boys whistles and
t come back balls. ,
Mrs. Poole was assisted in en
tertaining by Elizabeth Poole and
3 Juanita Hill, of Pineview.
3 The guest list included Martha
Marshall, Clarabel Hooks, Billy
J Boyd, T. O. Marshal.l Jr., Heys
d McMath Jr., Alvin Hall, Pearla
i- Poole Elizabeth Worthy, Meri
t- wether Jones, Maxine Lyon, Mary
i- McCleskey, Carolyn Crocqett, Rar.-
dolph Stackhousee Helen Poole,
Grey Tillman, Jr., Ruth Eldridge,
e Evelyn Horton, Lucas Thiers James
e Poole Foy Brown, of Great Falls,
e S. C.; Reese Horton, Jr. Stewart
t- Crockett Riley McMath, Charles
ie Schneider, Annie Ruth Stackhouse,
g Cleve Tillman, Jr. Jane Shipp
y, Gene Hill Clarke Poole and Reg
inad Pooe.
if * * *
I BENEFIT CONCERT TONIGHT
I FIRST METHODIST CHUURCH
I | Cordial interest has been mani-
I fested this week in the program
I j to be presented in First Methodist
I < church this evening at 8 o’clock.
I when Mrs. R. P. Sweat and Miss
I Hazel Sweat, musicians, of Tusca-
I loosa, Ala., charming guests of
■ Mrs. Shelton Howell wilj give a
I group of pleasing numbers on the
I piano and violin. Assisting them
I will be Mrs. Melva Holt, in vocal
I selections.
I Mrs. Sweat and Miss Sweat visit
I Amercus each summer, and have
I hundreds of friends here who ap
| preciate their spendid musicianship
I and it is expected that a large au-
I dience will be present this evening
Everybody is cordially invited to
.1 attend, the program being unusual
ly excellent and varied to suit ev-
I ery musical mind.
• • •
Mr. and Mrs. S. D. Hambrick
I announce the birth of a daughter,
Joly 24, at the home of her par-
I ents, Mr and Mrs. W. F. Philips,
I near Buena Vista, who has been
given the name of Dorothy Eliza
beth Hambrick. Mr. Hambrick is
connected with the Americus Times
I Recorder.
Kres* Store Sells Wildroot
I The Kress 5 and 10 Store has just
I I received new stock of Wildroot Hair
I Tonic and Wildroot liquid sham
; poos as advertised in national maga-
I zines.— (adv.)
USE SULPHUR TO*
I HEAL YOUR SKIN
Broken Out Skin and Itching
Eczema Helped Over Night
For unsightly skin eruptions, rash or
blotches on face, neck, arms or body,
| you do not have to wait for relief from
torture or embarrassment, declares a
noted skin specialist. Apply a little
, Mentho-Sulphur and improvement
, shows next day.
■ Because of its germ destroying prop
erties, nothing has ever been found to
take the place of this sulphur prepara
tion. The moment you apply it heal
, ing begins. Only those who have had
unsightly skin troubles can know the
delight this Mentho-Sulphur brings.
Even fiery, itching eczema is dried right
«P-
Get a small jar of Rowles Mentho-
Sulphur from any good druggist and
use it like cold cream.
THE AMERICUS TIMES-RECORDER x
F
si J hgure. that thou heie seest put,
< It was for gentle Shakespeare cut;
'JTz J Wherein the Graver had a strife
Hl Nature to outdo the life:
Oh, could he but have drawn his wit
jC 'V /"'Atwell in brass, as he hath hit
His z face; the Print would then surpass
y was ever writ in brass.
~ ut since cannol, R ea^er ’
at his picture, but his book.
Jonson.
Mr. and Mrs. Robin Scarborough
and children of Hawkinsville, are
guests of his mother, Mrs. J. N.
Scarborougn, at her home on
Church street. ,
Mrs. James E. Hickey, Jr., who
was the guest of her parents, Mr.
and Mrs. E. C. Parker for several
days at their home on Taylor
street, has returned to Atlanta.
Mr. and Mrs. R. A Dean and in
fant son, have returned from a
motor trip to Tifton, where they
were guests of relatives for sever
al days ,
Miss Martha Duncan and Miss
Florence Fort left Thursday for
Moultrie, where they will be the at
tractive guests of Miss Rossie Ve
reen for several days, going from
there to Doerun where they will
be guests of Mrs. Lawrence Mc-
Phaul.
Mr. and Mrs. O. C. Johnson have
returned from a motor trip to
Pittsburg, Penn. West Virginia and
Washington, D. C., where they
were guests of their daughter, Mrs
Robert F. De Morest. having been
called by the illness of their son.
Ottie Prather, who was painfully
injured in a motor cycle accident.
Mr. and Mrs. Johnson made the
trip by automobile, and were ac
companied by Mrs. H. E. Mott, of
Jacksonville who remained for sev
eral weeks longer with Mrs. De-
Morest.
Dr. and Mrs. Lanier of Miami,
Fla., who have been guests for sev
eral days of Mr. and Mrs. John
Monahan, left Thursday for Cobb
to spend a short while with Mrs.
Ida Statham, going from there to
Cordele to visit relatives, before re
turning to their home in Florida.
Miss Elizabeth Council has re
turned from Atlanta, where she
was delightfully entertained as the
guest of Miss Martha Lewis, at her
home on Springdale Road.
Mrs. Tom Smith has returned
from Atlanta, where she has been
visiting her daughter, Mrs. E. S. Al
bright for some time
Miss Ada Walker has returned
from Atlanta where she was the
guest of friends for several days.
Miss Annie Mae Head, of Tus
caloosa, Ala., is the guest of Mrs.
Eugene Rushin, at her home on
Jackson avenue.
E W. Devours, who has been
very ill at the city hospital for the
past several days, is reported somo
what improved today.
Friends of Mrs. E. H Lipford
will learn with pleasure that her
condition has so greatly improved
that she may be enabled to return
to her home on Barlow street with
in the next few days
Miss Elizabeth Slade and Miss
Lydia Coney, of Cordele are the
guests of Miss Frances Shiver at
her home on Lee street for the
week-end next week they wil be
guests of Miss Martha Johnson, at
her home on College street. A
number of lovely social affairs
have been planned for these lovely
visitors. f
Miss Rosella Westbrook. of
Doerun, is the guest of Miss Emma
Westbrook, at her home on South
Lee street.
Jesse Westbrook, formerly of
Americus, but who now resides in
Jonesboro. Arkansas, where ho
holds a responsible position as
manager of large shoe store, has re
turned to Jonesboro after a visit
of several days to his parents, Mr.
and Mrs. C. B. Westbrook, at their
home on Lee street This was Mr.
Westbrook’s first visit home in
four years, and he was given a
cordial welcome by his many
friends here.
Elizabeth Poole has returned
from Pineview where she was the
guest of Jaunita Hill and Jean ,
HiH. She was accompanied home ■
if HUNTS GUARANTEED
SKIN DISEASE REMEDIES M
(Hunt's Salve and Soap),tail in f ’I
the treatment ofltch.Kceema.'Sawy/ J I
RinKWOrm.Tetterorotheritch- f if / /]
In* skin diseases. Try thio • z xs / |
treatment at our risk.
Planter’s Seed & Drug Company
Howell’s Pharmacy
V *■ • • ~ ■ «•* . a
Cal Listens and
Thinks, Says
HislClerkl
(Continued From Page One) |
listening. In other words unless a '
thingis worth listening to he doesn’ ,
listen to it.
He may appear to be listening,
but the sound waves vibrating j
against his ear drums will not be
registering on his consciousness.
On these occasions, though he
may look like he’s listening, he’s
really thinking Welliver holds.
Just what he thinks at such times,
Welliver doesn’t say—Maybe it
wouldn’t look well in print —but
from the way the condition is de
scribed it seems that the president
just twists his mental dial and
tunes out the speaker on such oc
casions.
The conversation continues, but
it doesn’t register. And meantime
the presidential mind is busy with
something of real importance.
Running close in importance to
his listening and thinking ability, is
the president’s un-hurried, metho
dical rather plodding approach to
the vast mass of routine labor his
office entails.
He wastes neither energy nor
time in flourishes or furbelows.
What he needs to know about a
matter he finds out by direct, inci
sive methods that neither invite nor
admit the intrusion of irrelevant
matter.
With these facts in the mental
hopper, the answer comes out with
mathematical precision and exact
ness. Welliver finds. It is like
pulling the lever for a total on an
adding machine.
If all the factors have been cor
rectly entered, there can be no more
mistake in the Coolidge answer he
holds than in the mathematically
exact, mechanical total of your cash
register. For both are the result of
simple exact principles undeviating
ly applied.
In his decisions as in his thinking
and his speech Welliver finds, there
is no lost motion, no superfluous
maneuvering. The result is a de
finiteness and clarity as to the
executive attitude On public matters
that has not been equalled—well at
least not since Welliver began analy
izing presidents.
That recently popular slang
phase, “the cat’s meow’’ has taken
on new significance in Washington
circles since members of the Wash
ington vice squad by imitating the
softly-purred call of a lonely feline
obtained access the other night to
the apartment of a lady formerly
of the ‘officia” set where a riotous
liquor party was in progress.
Now whereever Sergeant Mc-
Quade, who “pulled” the house goes
a medley of caterwauls follows in
his wake.
by Juanita and Jean who will ije
I her guests for the remainder of the
i summer.
>
Sometimes it looks as if talk is
the best policy and honesty is
> cheap
SME II LIST
FINOS ME mi
TB BUILD WEIGHT
New Treatment Containing Sev
enteen Ingredients Renews
Every Part of Body.
This complete treatment is
found only in a prescription known
Ss Re-Cu-Ma, which contains sev
enteen well known and thoroughly
tested medicines, so skillfully com
pounded that each one performs
its functions on the various parts
of the body perfectly and harmo
niously
This remarkable prescription
thoroughly cleanses the colon of
its accumulation of poisonous re
fuse instead of allowing it to
course through the veins and emp
ty into the body. In addition, Re-
Cu-Ma starts the liver to work
pleasantly and naturally, purifies
and strengthens the blood, thus
building firm, healthy, rosy flesh
that is free from pimples and o'Jtr
er skin blemishes. Re-Cu-Ma will
also relieve rheumatic an.d back
pains, give you a gocwt digestion
and enable you to Afecp like a. log.
It is a scientific prescription that
revives, rehew and regoptrates the
entire system and j s sold and rec .
oWH.ended by all good drug stores.
1 -.-***;.* (adv.)
Jiggly wiggly
In order to help boost Sumter County Prod
ucts, we are going to sell Sumter County
Creamery Butter, made in Americus, for
40c per pound Saturday. We will also give
one pound of this butter FREE to each cus
tomer purchasing $5.00 worth or more of
other groceries. i
VINEGAR 36
Bring your jug, per gallon
Grits
5 Pound Bag :
I
LEMONS ?7
Per Dozen ----- fed (
Armour’s Toilet Soap, \ 7p
8 - oz. Cake ‘ ’**
t
». •■ . frtj fir.-cX
CERTO 29
Per Bottle fed <Z
Wesson Oil, pint 26c * | /IQp
Quart
COFFEE 44
Maxwell House, Per Pound I *
Kaffee Hag Coffee 1 U 1 t X \
Per Pound T . VJI
LARD “KINGANS 1 44
8 Pound Bucket > •
Hines Honey and Almond T QQp
Cream ’ j| vvl
CHEESE 97
Per Pound ■■rs 9
PIGg(.Y z
FRIDAY AFTERNOON, JU| Y 25, 1924