Americus times-recorder. (Americus, Ga.) 1891-current, November 09, 1925, Page PAGE FOUR, Image 4
PAGE FOUR Constance Bids Forewell to Her Career, Wants Home FILM STAR SAYS NO MORE CAREER, PHIL GETS ALL Dainty Motion Picture Star Marries Phillip Plant. Wants 100 Per Cent Home NFW YORK, Nov. 9. —Constance Bennett, dainty film star, from now on is Mrs. riant, with the accent on the Mi.-. Her important business is being Philip Plant's wife. Although but 22, she has had enouugh of spinster hood to last her a lifetime, and is jubilant at having exchanged her career for a home. These decisions are handed down with all the solemnity that lies in two deep blue eyes and a nodding golden head. And they are affirm ed earnestly by a smiling young bride-groom, the wealthy Broadway playboy who turned his back on a handful of wrecked love affairs to swear devotions to Constance. “There is not going to be any compromise,” says Constance, “Phil gets ail; the career gets nothing. Some girls combine the two phases of life after a fashion and seem hap py over it. And some hold out for a long time in faithfulness to career alone. 1 think they are "ill missing the greatest happiness life can give them. When one shuts love out or tiles to make ’ust a half-way e sponse to it there isn’t much left.” When Constance and Phil arous ed a sleepy Greenwich, Conn., justice of the peace at 2 o’clock the other morning, and insisted upon being married, the demand was not so sud den as it appeared. It had been smouldering along for five years, and at a dinner party that night it all at < nee blazed up into a de cision. There was a hasty loading into an automobile and speeding to have the knot tied. Since th..,, distant day when they met, each has looked around the world and had opportunity to make sure of the present intention. The daughter of Richard Bennett and Adrienne Morrison-—two gifted ColdS Grippe Be Quick-Be Sure/ Get the right remedy—the best men know. So quick, so sure that milhons now employ it. The utmost in a laxative. Bromide'Quinine in ideal form. Colds stop in 24 hours, La Grippe in 3 days. The system is cleaned and toned. Nothing compares with Hill’s. All druggists Price 30c CASCARA Get Iked Bex with portnut Gojsfc yours a if w® fll RuX ! IWF ( lift \ll be shapely/ •*T DO NOT want to be thin! I just , I want to be my right weight! I want these hollows filled out. I just want enough firm, plump flesh on my bones to till out my figure.” Os course you do. You want a figure that you can drape your clothes on —not just hang them on! What’s the use of having pretty clothes, if they just hang on you? And what would you say if you were told you could have the figure you want? A graceful, well rounded body—firm, solid flesh —just enough —just your right weight? You’d be mighty happy, wouldn’t you? Well, then, be happy because you can have it! Put plenty of red cells in your blood and watch your weight go up to where you want it! That’s what’s the matter with you! Your blood is impoverished. You need more rich, red blood. S. S. S. is the thing to put red blood in your system. S. S. S. helps Nature build red-blood-cells by the millions. You just try S. S. S. and watch how quickly you begin to fill out your clothes. Notice your skin clear it unsightly blemishes your ap<r X petite increase —f f f C ] strength come 1 flabby muscles and ▼lm and vigor fill X. your whole system. It’s red blood that does it. And 8. S. S. surely helps Nature build that red blood. 8. S. 9. is sold by all drug stores. The larger bottle la more economical. / wk ' & i / > Ik- J||| I I. .i' t f ■ WAll \ I \ W Tilt jk,. ■-> • ' * ■ Constance Bennett and her husband, Philip Plant actor folk incidentally, who didn't succeed in combing professional success with domestic bliss—had a tiapper’s fling at marirage. It «vas aoout four years ago that Constance “on a dare” eloped to the same Greenwich marrying justice and was wed to young Chester H. Moorehead of Chicago, a student at the Univers ity of Virginia. She was just 17 then, and Moorehead was 18. The families had the marriage annulled, and Constance danced out to Holly wood and Ynade a name for herself in the pictures. Meantime Plant was having hi: own fling. He received a clear $2. 000,000 b\ bequest from his foster father, the late Henry B. Plant, fi nancier <>f Cuban and Florida rail road and hotel properties. And he is heir to an estimated $.’>0,000,000 from his mother, now the wife of Col William Hayward, well-known attor ney. Plant first attracted public notice as a Yale student in 1920 when the beautiful Helene Jesmer, a chorus girl, was injured and disfigured in an automobile accident while riding with plant. She brought suit for $500,000 damages, and the case was settled out of court for a reported s7s,ooo. Then the gilded youth was atten tive to Marion Stokes, a chum of Constance Bennett’s, and to the wealthy Anne Whelan. Finally he became engaged to Judith Smith, of exclusive social connections. That engagement was broken last summer however, and now he and Con stance are married. Plant is 24 and goes to his office every day as a developer of Florida leal estate. He is settling down as a business man, and his career is just seriously opining up. It is that ca- KPOHMIIcSS <■ j increase interior space. They have made the Come in and try the seat- Better Buick more roomy ing space in the Better than other cars of even Buick. There is more of longer wheel base. head room— a full-sized, man sited added lee room—added , . width in seats for both Pf°P le driver and passengers. to nde *“♦ without being „ l , . . squeezed in. Buick engineers have dts» covered new ways to Come in and try it! BUICK MOTOR COMPANY, FLINT, MICHIGAN Divirion of Qtneral Motors Corporation W.G. Turpin & Co. jSrtsw MskMM*b®M m* Buick wfll btsßdl Ami reer which the piquant little actress wilf be concerned with exclusively, henceforth. His career is hers—she says. POLAND SHUTS OFF UNITED STATES FLOUR WARSAW, Nov. 9.—Poland also has had an unusually good harvest this year, and there is no longer any necessity to import foreign flour, of which last year America sent over $20,000,000 worth. To make further importation impossible the government has placed an import tax of $1.50 per hundred kilos on flour. ONE THIN WOMAN GAINED 10 FOUNDS IN 20 DAYS Skinny Men Can Do The Same That’s going some —but skinny men, women and children just can’t help putting on good, healthy flesh when they take McCoy’s Cod Liver Oil Compound Tablets. As chock full of vitamines as the nasty, fishy tasting cod liver oil it self, but these sugar-coated, taste less tablets are as easy to take as candy and won’t upset the stomach. One woman gained ten pounds in twenty-two days. Sixty tablets, sixty cents. Ask Nathan Murray, Druggist, Howell’s Pharmacy or any druggist for McCoy’s Cod Liver Oil Compound Tablets. Directions and formula on each box. “Get McCoy’s, the original and genuine Cod Liver O’’ Tablet.” AMERICI S lIME3-REC ORDER MYSTERY IN THE DEATH OF FIVE Bodies Are Found in a Cottage of Minnesota Resort. May Have i Been Poisoned HIBBING, Minn., Nov. 9.—Five Women, hotel employees here, were found dead today, either from pois oning or asphyxiation. A gas jet open in the kichen of the home in which they were discov ered, may have caused the deaths, al though a coroner’s inquest has been called to determine if wine, in small glasses before each, contained pois on. The dead: Mrs. Ellis Kuustio, 35, owner of the cottage. Mrs. Ida Hardy, 35, her tenant. Mrs. Henzzing( 25. Mrs. Mary Ernatinger, 35. Katherine Green, 25. The bodies were discovered by Mrs. Kussito’s 9-year-old daughter who summoned neighbors when she was unable to enter. The door was broken down. The inquest will be held tomorrow Mrs. Ermatinger’s body was lying in the bathroom doorway with . her head in a basin. Resting upon her body was that of Mrs. Hardy. Near the gas stove was the body of Miss Herzinjf, while Miss Greene war near the center of the kitchen floor. They had evidently been preparing a meal with food material and crockery, lying ,on the table, w’hen death came suddenly. Mrs. Kuus isto’s body was near the living room davenport, which she evidenly had tried to reach. ARMISTICE DAY PLANS COMPLETE ticipated in the recent pecan festi-1 val in Albany. The float will be dec orated with chrysanthemums; in the large bowl of flowers carried on the float will be seated three of the most beautiful young ladies of Americus, Misses Martha Ivey, Georgia Lump- Watson Allen, Anderson, S. C.; Rem kin and Ruth Everett. Following this float will come the members of the American Legion, Confederate veterans, veterans of the Spanish- American war, Rotary Club, Pallad ium Club, Kiwanis Club, and stu dents of the Third District Agricul tural College and the Americus High ulMe/t regular meal times f | 128 I I ' ' /fl iSh/ ■ I I I p Mfc 1 i • I Don't spoil your I l Y appetite by humoring a false hunger between | ' meals. Let WRIGLEY’S supply the “taste” you need the craving for “just a snack.” Then .you’ll be set for a good, full meal your stomach refreshed and ready—your appetite pleasantly stim ulated so you feel a healthy hunger. WRIGLEY’S cleanses the teeth, acts as a mild antiseptic to mouth and throat, gives a lasting good taste. And “AFTER EVERY MEAL” it greatly aids digestion. ... ss /SEALED -VI I If TIGHT 4 i KEPT $ I \R I GUTA\\ Is Flavor Lasts' g WRIGLEYS I “After Every Meal” u , | HOTEL GORDON ALBANY, GA. 4 /Fire Proof 115 Roohu, 115 Backs J 8 ll® U 22* Europe** kEKSwH BIB® II gag Boot Co/o M Albany *’h«o yoo School, The rew white way " ill be flashed ’ on promptly at seven tiiirty 'i-edne- ( day might. The current will be 1 turned on by Mr. W. L. Walker, City Engineer, whose untiring efforts materially contributed to the comple tion of the installation of the sys tem within the time desired by the committee. As a signal for the turning on of the lights the Kiwanis Club float, which will be covered witl? electric lights, will be lighted up at point about where the American Doughboy stands, ond on which wil be seated the three ladies above mentioned, and as thus lighted will proceed to a point in front of the Windsor hotel j where the float will be hated and a ' call sounded, at the last note of the I bugle call the lights will be flashed ; on. Immediatley following the turning i on of the lights every one is expect- 1 ed to go window shopping to see the ■ window displays by the up to date contest. A handsome prize is be ing offered to the merchant having the best window display, and it is re ported that all the merchants in the . White Way area will participate in ' this contest. Other entertainments and attrac tions are being arranged to follow the turning on of the lights. Amer icus should look its best Wednesday : night,*in addition to the white way. i all the merchants are freshing up their places of business, the streets are being cleaned, and all the curb ing along the white way area will be painted white. Special concerts will be gjven b\ the bands at two and four-thirty in the afternoon and at seven-thirty in the evening. DR. H. B. ALLEN DIES SUDDENLY bert Allen, a brother, of Florida; j one sister, JHss Ida Allen, of Ander ! son, S'. C. I The pallbea’ ers were C. O. Niles, Thos. L. Bell, Charles H. Burke. Hollis Fort, Dr. W S. Prather, Dr. J. W. Chambliss, Dr. J. T. Stukes, Dr. Taylor Lewis, Dr. L. F. Grubbs and Dr. M H. Wheeler. Dr. Allen had been confnied at his home with a case of influenza for only a few days. Sunday morn ing he was permitted to sit by his bed for a few minutes, seemingly yery much improved. Soon after noon the condition of the patient became rapidly worse. Most of the physi- MONDAY AFTERNOON. NOVEMBER 9. 1925 cians of the city and county were summoned to his bedside, where they ‘ remained his death, shortly after 7 o’clock. Dr. Allen had been prominent in the fraternal order of the Woodn.en of the World for several years. He was elected state manager of the. Woodmen at Thomasville in 1911,1 which position he occupied until 1917.: In that year, at the state conven tiion held in Americus, Dr. Allen was chosen head advisor. At Rome, Ga., in 1919, he was aga ; n elevated, being named head counsel of Georga. where he served until 1921. For two years he was past counsel of the state lodge of Woodmen. He . represented the order at its national , convention three times, at Chicago, | San Antonio and this year at De- J troit, Mich. At the time of his | death he was camp physician of the ; Americus W. O. W. Camp, No. 202. i During the World War Dr. Allen | served in the camps in this country, with the rank of major. Dr. Allen had given generously of his time and talent for years in the DUDLEY’S QPERA ROUSE Today and Tuesday “THE OLD FOOL” A drama of sunshine and startling action that hits home i Aesop's Fables—“ The Jungle Bike Riders For Wednesday and Thursday "The Golden Bed" Cecil DeMille, the master directors, has set a pace in this production that startles with lav ishness and gesping gorgeousness. If you fail to see the pictures at Dudley’s this week, you ’ are simply not living, that’s all! ALLEN The exquisite quality and freedom from im perfections of Allen A Silk Hose is a real de light to women of good taste. They possess an unexcelled durability, too; giving the utmost satisfactory sendee where many other makes fail to do so. The usual guarantee, of course, applies to Allen A Silk Hose except Chiffons which may lose their usefulness through accident or im proper handling more easily than through actual wear. THE TEST See our large window display in our main East Front Window. You will see the sin gle Allan A Chiffon Hose suspending a 100- pound anvil. This display truly shows the strength of the pure silk strands that enter in the manufacture of this nation-wide known hosiery. COLORS WE ARE WW - SHOWING Cut Steel Tea Rose 1 Beige Champagne r Piping Rock Shell V Gun Metal Orchid Mauve Pine Cannon Biscuit Maple Cream Black Blush White 10-Strand, full sash, heavy $1.35 1 2-Strand, full sash. ex. heavy SL7S Lisle Top, full sash. Chiffon $1.50 Very Sherrfi all Silk Chiffon. SL9S Allen A Fancy Socks, 50c to SI.OO W. A. JOYNER DEFT. STORE PAY CASH-PAY LESS interest of the local hospital, usual ly presiding at dinners and other functions given by the hospital from ■ time to time. Dr Alien, as an eye, ear and ' n o.-e specialist, had practiced his j profession in Americus for years. : 4 f t >w mnoths ago he and Dr. L. F. Grubbs formed a partnership and I had pracitced together, with offices 'in the Doctors’ building, uncd Dr. I Alien’s death. . ' Dr. Allen numbered his friends ’ by the hundreds in the city and county and his activities in fra- . ternal circles had widened his circle of friends until they were practically nation-wide. His death was a II to lb- vast number of admirers, par* ’.ticularly in this section. ” -1 ■■■■- COLDS of head or chest are more casi.y treated externally with — ■I VICKS* f ▼ Varoßub 0 Over 17 tyillion Jar* Uted Yearly