About Americus times-recorder. (Americus, Ga.) 1891-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 27, 1925)
PAGE EIGHT Society FORRESTER-LEE WEDDING OF CORDIAL INTEREST. The marriage of Miss Martha Elizabeth Forrester and Mr. Elijah Butts Lee, Jr., took place Friday evening at 7 o’clock at the home of the brides parents, Mr. ;qid Mrs.. W. H. Forrester, Leesburg. Rev E. M. Altman, Pastor of Bynes Memor ial Church of Albany performed the ceremony which was beautiful and impressive, in the presence of rel atives and intimate friends of the couple. Preceding the ceremony Mrs. Rob ert Lunsford Heath, presided at the piano. While Mrs. James Lott of Americus sang “With You.”. The bride was lovely wearing her travel ing costume, an ensemble of sedge brown flat crepe with coat and ac cessories to match. A dorsage of brides roses and lilies of the valley completed her costume. Immediately following the cere mony the young couple left for West Palm Beach, Fla., their future home. The bride is one of Leesburg’s fairest and favorite daughters and by her winsome ways and charming personality has endeared herself to scores of friends and admirers throughout this section. The groom is a young man of ster ling worth and business ability. He is now teller in the First American Bank and Trust Company of West Palm Beach, Fla. The outof town guests were Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Thomas, of Plains, Mr. and Mrs. James Lott of Amer icus, Mrs. Mabie King and daugh ters, Misses Marguriette Fort and Josephine Forrester, Messrs. T. M. Williams and I. C. Johnson of Moul trie, Miss Blanch Lee and Mr. Ma rion Lee of Albany; Miss Carrie Shropshire of Atlanta. * « « MRS. COBB MILNER AND MRS. EVERETT ENTERTAIN. Mrs. E. B. Everett and Mrs. Cobb Milner were joint hostesses this -morning at their home on Lee street entertaining at ten tables of bride and forty-two. Throughout the re- i ception hall and the living room where the ineresting games were play there was a profusion of roses and cosmos, in floor vases and bas kets. In the center of each table was a pumpkin and the place cards fur ther carried out the Hallowe’en motif At one o’clock a most delightful hot luncheon and an ice course was serv ed the guests. Mrs. George Walker won the high score prize, a beautiful vanity set. Mrs. Milner and Mrs, Everett were assisted in entertaining the guests by Mrs. Hamilton Yancey, Mrs. C. H. Burke and Mrs) Eugene Bailey. * * * PHILATHEA CLASS ENTERTAINS BARRACAS Group No. 3, Philathea Class of the Central Baptist Church will en tertain the Baraca Class Thurs day night at seven o’clock at the Fair Grounds. » » » MISS KATHERINE SMITH HONORED AT LUNCHEON Mrs. Sam Heys was a charming hostess this morning entertaining at four tables of bride, in honor of Miss I I Relieved of lame back overnight STIFFNESS AND ACHE GONE IHNE NIGHT Sportsman is “as good as new” after one treatment , Sportsmen have learned a simple way to take out pain and stiffness when they get lamed up from exposure or over-exertion. APhiladelphia sportsman writes that he caught cold in his back while out • gunning and the next day found himself so stiff and lame he could hardly bend. “I went to work, but had to come home,” he writes. “1 applied Sloan’s freely and went to bed. The next morning I was as good as new, thanks to the quick and sure action of Sloan’s Liniment.” (Name and address given on request.) It is amazing what Sloan’s does for any kind of muscular pain. Just pat it on lightly. No need to rub. Sloan’s alone does the work. Instantly it sends a healing tide of fresh, new blood right to the sore spots. Your muscles limber up, stop aching and get back their tone. So clean and pleasant to use, too. Get a bottle to day. All druggists—3s cents. A Royal Kiss $ « 1 Queen Victoria of Spain is shown greeting her royal spouse, King Al phonso, on his return to Madrid aft er his latest tour of Europe. Which merely goes to show that kings and queens are just like plain folks. They even kiss in public. 11 Katherine Smith, whose wedding will i[be an Interesting event of Wednes ■ 1 day afternoon. The home was beautifully decorat ed with yellow cosmos and marigolds, i carrying out the color scheme of yel low and green. Marking the place of each guest were dainty Hallowe’en favors, filled with salted nuts. After an interesting game of bride, a delightful hot luncheon was serv ed the guests by Mrs. Heys, assisted by Mrs. James Ferguson, and Mrs. Henry Everett.. Miss Smith was presented with two beautiful hand made linen tow els. Besides the honor guest the guest list included, Mrs. Carl Holmer, of Miami, Fla., Miss Christine Evans, of Fort Valley; Mrs. Arthur Rylander, Jr., Mrs. Charles Lanier, Mrs. Stuart Mrs. Shirley Hudson, Mrs. Charles Hale Mrs. Katherine Heys Prather, Mrs. Eshton Buchanan, Jr., Miss Orlean Ansley, Miss Alice Mc- Neill, Miss Martha Ivey, Miss Mary Littlejohn, Miss Christine Brown and Miss Janie Murray, Miss Smith was lovely wearing beautiful gold sports suit and gold hat. ♦ ♦ * HALLOWE’EN PARTY POSTPONED INDEFINITELY The Hallowe’en Party which was to have been given by the First Methodist Church on Thursday night October, 29th has been postponed indefinitely. Mrs. I. Odum of Macon, Mrs. Joe Brown, Joe Brown, Jr., and Clare and Margaret Brown, of Columbus, cßegain Your ‘Radiant Complexion NADINOLA CREAM America’s Greatest Bleach Supreme for Thirty Years STOP EXPERIMENTING! Thousands of satisfied customers have done this for you. These beautiful women are our strongest endorsement. We guarantee Nadinola Cream • to bleach the deepest tan, clear the sallowest complexion, remove roughness, freckles, pimples, blackheads and other blemishes. Nadinola never fails. It leaves the skin in a perfect state of health —clear, fresh, radiant. Just a few minutes of your time each night. Nadinola does the test while you sleep. Full direc tions and money-back guarantee in each package, 50a Extra large size, SI.OO. of tk your dealer for Cream To Sore Your Complexion- were the week-end guests of Mr. and Mrs. Rees Horton, at their home on Harrold Avenue. Miss Christine Evans of Fort Vai-1 is the attractive guest of her aunt, Mrs. bam Heys.. Miss Evans is among the out of town guests here for the Smith-Stewart wedding. Miss Elizabeth Simpson of Macon spent the week-end with her brother and sister, Rev. and Mrs. Richard Simpson, at their home on Hampton Street. Mr. Theo Erwin of Tampa, Fla., is spending several days in the city with friends. Mrs. Robert Heath of Leesburg, Ga., arrives today to be hte guest of Miss Katherine Smith at her home on Reese Park, until after the Smith- Stewart wedding. Mr. Lorin Smith of St. Petersburg, Fla., is the guest of Mr. and Mrs. G. E. Buchanan. Mrs. A. J. Evans and Miss Ruth Evans of Fort Valley will arrive Wednesday to be the guest of Mrs. Sam Heys. Mrs. W. G. Raines of Lakeland, Fla., arrives Wednesday to be the] guest of Mrs. E. B. Everett, at’ her j home on Lee street. Mr. George' R. Walton of Pom-, pano, Fla., has returned to his home ' after spending some time with his daughter, Mrs. E. J. Fulbright. Miss Celeste Howard, Miss Ruth Parker, Mrs. Nathan Murray and Mrs. Beal, went to Plains today at tend the W. M. U. Association of the Central Baptist church. Hospital Notes ■ L. E. Kent, of Memphis, Tenn., is a patient at the City hospital where he underwent a major opera tion some time ago. Mr. Kent, a traveling salesman, was taken ill while here on visit, and immediately placed in the local hospital. Friends of Daniel Edge will be pleased to learn that he is fast re covering from an operation for ap pendicitis. He expects to be able to return to his home soon. Mrs. Fannie Barnes, of Monticello Fla., and a visitor here with her sis ter, Mrs. L. F. Comer is resting nice ly after an operation for appendi citis. Little Mias Bertha Johnson, age 11 of Thalean district is getting along PINKSTON Americus’ Dependable Store i for I BOYS School Shoes that Wear * And wear —and keep his B °ys‘ School feet dry and warm. A Stocking, sturdy shoe that he will be proud to wear and to show to “Skinny” and the rest of the gang. Light tan calfskin, with almost indestructible soles and rubber heels. Buy this shoe for your boy. Sizes I to 5 1-2. Educator ’ _ i o e\m Shoes for Only 3.95 Little Boys AMERICUS HMES-RECORDER School Supt. Memorizes Paem Before Breakfast ATLANTA, Ga., Oct. 24.—N0 i Poem no breakfast. Such is the stern rule by which i professor Willis A. Sutton, superin-1 tendent of schools here, keeps his ' memory at work. And he never misses his breakfast. “If you memorize some great poem the first thing every morning, it will be a source of inspiration throughout the day,” he says in ex-, plaining his practice. “We are controlled by our sub conscious minds. No matter how mony troubles assail you before night, if you start out with the high and couraegous thought of some poet imprinted on your mind it will hold you like aj judder on a straight course.” x Professor Sutton begins memoriz ing a poem as he steps into his bath. By the time he is dried and ready to drop his towel, he usually has a firm grip on poem. If not he keeps up the effort while shaving and dressing. But not a bite of food will he allow himself until his memory has performed its task. He has memorized “Macbeth” in its entirety, and also “In Memoriam.’; One of his favorites is “The House by the side of the Road,” by Sam Walter Foss. But just about his first choice of all is the stanza of Browning’s “Rabbi Ben Ezra” be ginning: “Then welcome each rebuff “That turns earth’s smoothness rough, , “Each sting that bids not sit nor stand but go.” If he finds his memory growing slack, he goes back over poems he already has committed and brushes up on them. “We all live one day at a time, and we can’t take our spiritual and men tal food once a week and still thrive,’ says Professor* Sutton. “We should feed the mind daily. I believe every adult and every child should learn a poem and listen to music every day, Unless we keep up our love for sucli things, the sorbid and material will dominate us.” nicely. Mrs. George Marshal, of Ameri cus is also patient. NEW SEABOARD BRANCH SOON BE READY AVON PARK, Fla., Oct. 26. —S. Davis Warfield, president of the Seaboard Air Line, announced here "x ill ■F *5 JI 1 r ” 18111 fol ML 4 PROF. WILLIS A. SUTTON today that the new Florida West coast branch o fthe Seaboard be tween Tampa and Waldo, via Brooks ville and Inverness would be in op eration by December Ist. HARRIS AND CARRAWAY ATTACK GOVERNMENT COTTON REPORTS figure for the season would exceed 14,000,000. Time To Abolish or Reform Charging that the government seemed to lend Itself to every move ment “to depress the price of cot ton,” Senator Caraway declared “it is time to reform or abolish the de partment of agriculture which has lent itself consciously or unconsci ously, to every gambling raid on the farms of the south end west.” “I shall myself introduce a bill to meet this situation when congress meets a month hence,” he added, and I shall demand immediate consider ation of it. The bill I will urge will make gambling in all farm products a crime with penalties to serve that none will have the temerity to vio late it.” Senator Caraway charged that ‘to everyone it must be apparent that intentionally or othewise, these cot top reports this year and the cotton growers of America not less than a quarter of a billion dollars. Rear Reports Knock Price “Whenever there is an apparent recovery of the cotton market, the bureau of crop statistics of the de- ■ ItASIFIEDADVEmENK MISCELLANEOUS NOTICE TO THE PUBLIC—Dr. F. L. Cato wishes to announce the reopening of his office for the prac tice of medicine and surgery..—l9-7t MONEY! 6 Pc. lO Years 6 Pc. On desirable Sumter County Farm Lands. R. L. MAYNARD P. B. WILLIFORD ■ —l9-tf THE AMERICUS Business College is issuing Trading Checks —slo for complete comercial course, and $5 for partial course, effective Oct. 24.—24-6 t WANTED WANTED—To buy old rage for used in wiping machinery must me of good size, and prefer those free from starch. Clean rags of all descriptions will be bought and paid for cash. The Times-Recorder. Try Our OYSTER SUPPER With HOT ROLLS Tuesday Night. Sign of the Pine Tea Room 26-2 t I WANT to do your fine Watch Re pairing. I want to set your dia monds for you. I will exchange new mountings for old ones. I will pay cash for old geld and platinum I want to sell you diamonds for cash or credit. R, S. Broadhurst, 110 Lamar St.—B-(s) iW VfiHTTWiit TUESDAY AFTERNOON, OCTOBER 27. 1925 partment of agriculture gives out an , estimate manp thousands of bales in | excess of the wildest hopes of the bear element of the cotton gambling fraternity. It is not worth while to look to the department of agriculture and the cotton exchange of New York and New Orleans for relief from these raids of the speculators on the ; cotton growers. If the government j and the bear interests were in ac— j tual alliance they could not co-oper ate more effectively to destroy the values of the cotton-growing indus try. ARMY AND NAVY LOSE 39 FLIERS IN MANY ACCIDENTS < Continued Hom Fnge One. i recently when an obsolete “honey moon express” plane came down in flames near New Salem, Pa. Two deaths in Hawaii were caus ed by* a collision of planes in mid air. It might be noted that prompt use of parachutes saved the lives of two army fliers in a similar crash in Texas last spring. An airplane in Alaska went astray in a snow storm and came down with its three occupants, all of whom were killed. A navy plane fell into the Potomac River and killed its pilot— a tragedy’ apparenty due to unfav orable weather conditions rather than to any defect in the machine. An airplane hit a truck in landing at an Ohio flying field and two men i were killed. Probably the best te.-tk 'ony to the | Friend’s Advice Proved Helpful J® Il JF 11 * xT MRS. MARTHA REYNOLDS I was in a nervous and weakened state of' health and suffered with sev ere headaches, when a friend advised me to take Dr. Pierce's Favorite Pre scription. I never knew that a medi cine could give the relief that two bottles of Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Pre scription gave me. My nerves are better and I am not troubled with the headaches that had bothered me for so long. In fact, my health of today is unusually good and I am thanking Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Pre scription for the relief it has given to me.’’—Mrs. Martha Reynolds, 529 N. Garland St., Orlando. Fla. You should procure this Prescrip tion of Dr. Pierce’s from your drug gist, in tablets or liquid, or write Dr. Pierce, President Invalids’ Hotel in Buffalo, N. Y., for free medical advice. FOR RENT FOR RENT—A desirable five-room house, near school, or. Jackson avenue. Apply “Home,” care Times- Recorder.—26-ts. APARTMENT FOR RENT —Two large rooms, kitchei.ette and pri vate bath. 405 S. Jackson St. H, C. Davis.—ls-ts. FOR RENT—Five room apartment house. College street. Phone 333.—26-ts. HIGHEST Cash price paid for any size, variety or quantity of Pecans. —26-ts FOR RENT—Nine room house, 8 acres land. Will rent with or without land.—27-ts . LOST AND FOUND STOLEN—One dark bay horse; blind in right eye. $20.00 reward if re turned to Alfred Jones, Roney place, on Ellaville road, Americus., Rt. A., Box 1.—26-6 t Lost —1 dark blue mare mule, weight about 1000 pounds, chunky built; one light blue horse mule, weight about 900 pounds. Reward for re turn or information in regard to same. J. E. Harper, Plains, Ga. —24-3 t THE RADIO you have been waiting for. Everything necessary for the reception of Radio Programs from East to West, North to South. See the Stewart-Warner sets now on dis play in windows of their agents here. Howell’s Pharmacy.—27-lt WANTED—SOOO bushels Sweet Po tatoes. See me at Carter’s Curing Plant. W. E. Brown, Agt.—2o-30t I safety which attends aviat’or, when I the equipment is up-to-date and the pilots are properly trained is to be found in the record of the airmail service, with only one death and a few minor accidents despite its con tinuous day and night service under al sorts of weather conditions. Air ! mail pilots average a total of 7500 ! miles per day. Commercial aviation concerns of I standing, such as the Glenn L. Mar tin Co., the Curtis Co., and the Ford freight lines, also have made their flights with a remarkable absence of mishaps. To lessen the number of tragedies in civilian flying, rigid govern supervision of this branch of ir :a tion has been sought. Commercial air men want an aviaton bureau es tablished in the Department of Com merce, with careful inspection ser vice, enforcement of safety rules, and various other functions to be performed. The question of whether too high a price is being paid in human lives by the military branches for such progress as they are making, and if so, how the evil should be remedied, are outstanding issues n the series of flurries raised by the Mitchell case. ; Jlair (How to Keep it Thick,) The constant curling and waving de manded by modern style in hair dress, slowly burns the color, lustre and very life from the hair, leaving it dry, faded, brittle, streaked with gray; then the hair roots shiink and the hair falls out fast. A 35-cent bottle of refreshing, fragrant “Danderine” will do wonders for any girl’s hair. This vitalizing beauty-tonic acts on the hair like fresh showers of rain and sunshine act on vegetation. It goes right to the roots, invigorates, nourishes and strengthens them, helping the hair to grow thick, healthy and luxuriant. Try this for one week! While comb ing and dressing your hair, moisten your hair brush with a little “Danderine” and brush it through your hair —the effect is startling! Your hair immediately takes on new life and that healthy, youthful lustre, becomes incomparably soft, wavy and appears twice as thick and abundant. FOR SALE FOR SALE—Bargain. One all steel Case sweep power self feeding hay press; one home light plant; Dela valve cream separator; one feed mill; one hay rake; v u . Singer sewing machine; one 1-2 and one 1-3 h.p. electric motors; several gasoline engines, various sizes; one Ford truck and one Ford Touring car. F. G. Beavers. —3O-tf COAL At the same old stand at your service High est Grade Kentucky Coal. Telephone 303 CLARK COAL CO 2-tt • CUT ROSES FOR SALE Mrs. R. C. Moran 411 West Church St. 8-tf-dh. ■ .. ... BATTERIES recharged and repair ed. Sales and Service Station. Wallis Electric Co., 113 South Lee St. Phone 556.—17-ts. MONEY TO LOAN on Farms and City Property, payable one to twenty years. Stephen Pace. RADIO, Fixtures and Repair Work. Wallis Electric Co.—l7tf. SEVERAL PERSONS inquired at the Times-Recorder office for places to secure room and board. And advertisement in this column would have been seen by them. A word to the wise should be enough. Phone 99 for rates.—24-ts. —24-3 t