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MDAV.
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RODGERS-MONSON MARRIAGE
OF INTEREST HERE
JL\ Cordial and sincere interest cen-
JLbrs in the announcement of the
iaVriage of Miss Madre Rodgers, tn
Zhrist r. James. Monson, which was I
rermi'lemnized Saturday cw citing in
kt Ct ken, S. C. where t <> motored
i »m Atlanta, with a small group ■
as a f’ int'mate friends.
Par] 'Ph(jS"bride is a daughter of Mr.
George M. Rodgers, who
Ila their home in Americus. for
be fT niy ’ years, before going to At
nj. j hl a to reside, and has a wide cir
, qi *e ! of friends and relatives here
|Ver A'hi will be greatly interested in her
;e marriage.
H Mr. Monson holds a responsible
position as credit manager for ti e
Diamond Rubber Company, of At
lanta, where he an dl'is bride will
make their home in the future.
# * «
KATHERINE SMITH GIVES
LOVELY BIRTHDAY PARTY.
Mrs. Fred Smith gaze a delight
ful little birthday party at her home
on Horne street, Monday afternoon
in honor of her daughter, little Miss
Katherine Smit’s seventh birthday
anniversary.
Throughout the reception rooms,
an artistic arrangement of Christ
mas berries, vari-colorcd chrysan
themums, and autumn leaves form
ed attractive decorations. The table
in the dining room bad for its cen
tral decoration a Christ
mas tree, holding many lighted
candles, and was encircled by bask
ets, with handles tied with fluffy
bows of tulle, holding bags of
candy, attractive favors for each
guest. One one of the table was
the beautifully embossed birthday
cake holding seven tiny pinic
candles.
Many interesting games and con
tests were enjoyed during the aft-
Used Kellogg’s Bran 2 months—
constipation gone after suffering 3 years
Three years of suffering with con- t
stipation. What happiness was his 1
when Kellogg’s Bran, cooked, and j
krumbled, his health. But
read his letter. j
“Dear Sirs: 1
. . . this is what I think of •
your krumbled bran. I would not be ,
without it for anything in the world.
. . . for three years I used all I
kinds of medicines for constipation, <
and only got temporary relief. I was
advised by a doctor to use Kellogg’s
Bran, and since I began using it I
don’t have to take pills or anything
else. I have used it two months, and
my constipation has left me. I feel 1
better now than I have for three
years.” (
(The original of this letter is on file
at the Kellogg Company, Battle
Creek, Mich.)
Kellogg’s Bran brings results be
cause it is ALL bran. You can’t
tight constipation with halfway mea-
Good to the Lust Drop
V W, ■
w
./l T. * :
• ■ -
■
iso
f
ROMANCE lies within the cir
cle of your cup of Maxwell
House. That fragrant aroma
breathes of Araby and distant sun
wrapped lands where the finest
z coffee is grown.
There are visions of the great ships
breaking foamy miles to bring the
treasure home.
There’s the long, long qucft for the
exadt blending of these fine coffees
to create the flavor that is “Good
to the Last Drop. ’ ’
M AXW ELL
HOUSE
Coffee
ernoon, Virginia Wootten and Jack
Holt winning the prizes, dainty bot
tles of perfume. Fred Turpin won
the booby prize, a paper cap. Late
in the afternoon delicious ice cream
and cake were served.
The guest list included B -mice
Beavers, Elizabeth Gardner, Henry
Black, Herschel Argo* Jane Luthey,
i Elizabeth Mathis, Virginia Morgan,
.Mary Rees, Martha Virg’nia Elldri
dge, Josephine East, vlin, Flora
Christian, Sara Bahnsen, Grey Till
man, Elizabeth Worthy Sara Bell
Barfield, Laura -Mae Hale, Jacl:
Holt, Fred Turpin, Margaret Moore,
Katherine Moore, Mat Wherler, |
Ruth Eldridge, Walter Rylandor.
Betty Joe Smith, Willard Smith,
Carolyn Smith and Wa-ne Smith.
** » '
HELPING HAND
CALLS FOR AID.
The Helping Hand Society asks
aid for two families that were burn
ed out recently, one at Shilob and
the other residing on Dr. Bagley’s
plantation, on the upper river road.
Anything will be appreciated,
i everything they had was destroyed
. in the fire. Notify Bob Anglin.
Friends of Mrs. Wallis Mott will
be glad to learn that she is doing
nicely, following an operation at
the City Hospital Monday fc? ap
' pendicitis.
Mrs. Otis Reese has gone to Al
\ bany to visit her daughter, Mrs.
1 Hudson Malone for several days.
1 _____
Mr. and Mrs. George Adams and
young son, of Atlanta, are guests
v of her sister, Mrs. Olin Dixon. Mrs.
Dixon recently underwent a serious
operation at the City Hospital and
surcs—with brans which are only part
bran. It takes ALL bran to be 100
per cent effective.
Because Kellogg’a Bran is ALL
bran it sweeps, cleans and purifies
the intestine. It acts naturally—just
as nature acts. It stimulates the in
testine and makys it function regu
larly. It is guaranteed to bring re
sults, or your grocer will refund your
money.
Kellogg’s Bran has a delicious nut
like flavor. Quite different from ordi
nary, unpalatable brans. You will like
it as a cereal, sprinkled on other
cereals, cooked with hot cereals, or
in the recipes given on every package.
Eat two tablespoonfuls of Kellogg’s
Bran every day—in chronic cases, with
every meal. Made in Battle Creek.
Sold by all grocers.
her many fiWC.ils will be interested
in learning tW v has sufficiently
recovered to so her home
n t.
Miss Martha English and guests.
Miss Teleta Wood and Miss Mildred
Willis, have returned to Columbus
to resume their studies at Lorena
Hall after being delightfully enter
tained during the holidays' as the
guests of Miss English’s par nts,
Mr. and Mrs. W. L. English at their
home on Taylor street.
Mr. and Mrs. T. M Furlow and
family are spending several days on
a fishing trip at Panama City, Fla ,
and will return to Americus this
evening or in the morning.
Miss Isabel Wheatley Las return
ed from Atlanta, where she spent
the Thanksgiving holidays delight
fully as the guest of Mrs. Albert
Beall.
Miss Sara Oliver has returned tn
Wesleyan after spending the week'
end with her mother, Mrs. George
Oliver at her home cn C urcit
street.
Mr. Ainsworth Gatewood has re
turned home after, spending a few
days in Athens as the guest of Mr.
and Mrs. Ad Poole.
Mr. Irvin Bishop spent the Thanks
giving holidays with relatives in
Athens.
Mr. Kirkland Sutlive has return
ed from Savannah where he spent
(the Thanksgiving holidays with his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. G. Suc
live.
Outlook Bright
Says Bank Chief
BY GEORGE E. ROBERTS
Vice President of the National City
Bank of New I ork
The business outlook is very
promising.
The attitude of the business com
munity is shown by the action of
the stock market, increased com
modity-buying and the generaj ex
pression of confidence since the
election. The prevalent feeling
therefore, the world over is that
better times are coming everywhere,
and nothing will do more than this
to bring them.
The disorganized state of indus
try in Europe since the wa» has af
fected trade between that continent
and the rest of the world, with the
result that the price of farm pro
ducts and raw materials have been
depressed and the purchasing pow
er of great numbers of people re
duced. This has been the sore spot
in the United States, but the rise of
farm products since last June has
gone a long way toward relieving it.
Ten years ago people were asking
it it would take ten years for agri
culture to get back into norma' re
lations with the other industries,
and then within ten weeks the thing
was done, and by a s : mpje natural
readjustment of the relations be
tween supply and demand. It is evi
dent now that the troublesome sur
plus was relatively small.
When industry in its various
branches is in balance, nothing but
confidence is needed to make good
times and these conditions are now
present.
HEAD-ON TRAIN SMASH
IS TATAL TO TWO MEN
RICHMOND, Dec. 2.--Joe Laird,
engineer, and his fireman, Hardin,
were killed and at lea<rt one other
man was seriously injured late last
night in a head-on wreck of two
freight trains at Wetham about siv
miles from Richmond,.
The wreck occurred when a west
bound train jumped the track just
in time for a passing east bound
train to crash into it. The erf
gineer and fireman of the east
bound freight were instantly killed.
When located their bodies were un
der a mass of wreckage.
More
A happy little girl whose
happy mother keeps the
hens happy by feeding
Happy Hen Buttermilk
Mash —the greatest egg
making eed in the world.
Made by Edgar-Morgan Co.,
Memphis. Sold by us. Call g
or ’phone for price:.
AMERICUS HATCHERY
AND SUPPLY CO.
Americus, Ga.
THE AmMBHBBcORDER
_ Wot See
': /MR $ ;
<'2-. ;
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a iBIL
'MMk w7
T e 'tßp >■ ><
XT?'! Z '’”l,
—WraFPK'TsgKa?"*?- i«
Dora Duoy, “pet of Deauville”
and "darling of Montmartre,” re
fuses to leave her France. Ameri
GEORGE E. ROBERTS
UNITED STATES TIKES AKE GOOD
W
Trade ll IM I
fr>l
| us co
G°°d Low-Priced
are hundreds of thousands of call
owners in th * s country who want a good low«S
priced cord tire.
Their re( s uirernents do not call for the extra mildß
Bage that is built into U. S. Royal Cords.
While they do not expect to get a tire as
- th o Royal Cord without paying the Royal
price, they do want a full money's worth of
able service and dollar value.'
it to meet tiiese requirements that the
LJ- S. Royal Cords have produced the USCCMMWHBWMMMmMI
e USCO Cord is an all-black tire. Its
' broad and iiat with good high
'■ splendid road contact and non-skid prolectiaMHMmHHH|
T lie USCO Cord is fully warranted and
the'name and the trade mark of its makers. ■
I* comes in 39 x 3 inch and 30 x 3’A inch
and 3(>x3*/2. 32x3^,31x4,32x4, 33x4. and 34x4
straight side —all the sizes for light sixes and
United States Rubber Companw ; >
Z 7 -zAf
can theatrical have beset
her with enticing offer , but she
shake-'- her head and continues danc
| ing at her Parisian night case
I BABY’S CRY RESOUNDS ' i
THROUGHOUT LONDON
(By NEA Service, Inc.)
I LONDON, Dec. 1. —For several
minutes the other day the loudest
sound in all down-town London was
the fretful wniline of a baby which
was probably teething and which
; refused to comforted.
, It became n;.iceable in this way.
lAt 11 o’clock on Armistice Day
I the biggest city in the world sud
| denly seemi d as if stricken with
: a sudden death that paralyzed all
I humans and all human endeavors.
As the guns boomed out, an-
I'ouneing the -e- , -d hour men stood
at attention with bared heads, the
|' 666
j i» a prescription for Colds, Grippe,
i Biliousness. It is the most speedy
| Dengue, Headaches, Constipation*
remedy we know. adv
SI SiSi' E ' "
HF
i f
distant—ill som.e little
Hat There was this little baby to
whom Armistice Day meant noth-
m n Reduces Waist and Hips
Three t() T en l nc h es /
I - This triumph of scientific corseting makes you look
/I' ’j j I\ \ thinner the moment you put it on—and actually
' , \ ' takes off flesh as you wear it —often two to three
/ \ \ hwhesthc lirstweek. Madeofpure,specially resili-
/ I ent rubber, is worn over the undergarment and it
i . ! ... I so constructed that it touches and gently matsagM
I f ; .. every portion of the surface continually. Entirely
■ J ncw ' Gome in and try it on 1
2 i / QlladameYßeducingGirdle
Makes You Look Thin While Getting Thin
PAGE’S
BETTER VALUES
PERHAPS |
—you fill your own batteryl I
Taking out floor-boards to get at the bat- i
tery is a mussy job at best. i I
Why not let us do it for you ?We test the I
bat >f l ti‘- CnS ' I OfclßlMMkerminals at
-ie time.
Corroded terminals mean less starting |?
power. |
. • I
~ “I once knew a man who let ■
L zM the hydrometer slip surd he had f
to buy a new pair of pants. Let
us *t and save your clothes,” 9
1 say® Little Ampere. 9
■■■■inwMiwnw i, I
QUICK SERVICE TIRE CO. I
Batteries Tires—Vulcanizing
Phone 142 _. _
PAGE THREE
| ihg nt ala a\/resent pain a gre at
deal. I \J
At aiiy rate,
doners heard the little mite’s pro
test against a world of pain. Then
the guns thundered once more, life
was taken up anew and.,, nobody
could hear the baby save its mother.
h _____ .■.■ a—