Americus times-recorder. (Americus, Ga.) 1891-current, November 09, 1925, Page PAGE EIGHT, Image 8
PAGE EIGHT X-*: 3k f • . W>ociety SUSANA WESLEY S. S. CLASS WILL MEET TUESDAY P. M. The Susana Wesley unday school class of the First McthodL’t Church will meet Tuesday afternoon at 2 o'clock at the Community Club ®wase to bundle the magazines that have been gathered, Mis. Ella Cam enwn, Chairman. # # * FIRST METHODIST SEWING CIRCLE MEETS TUESDAY The Lee Street Sewing Circle of the First Methodist Church will meet Tuesday afternoon at 3 o’clock with Mrs, W. M. Riley on South LeLe street. All members are urged to come and bring scraps. D. A R. WILL MEET TUESDAY MORNING The D. A. R's will hold their regu lar monthly meeting on Tuesday, Nov. 10th at 10:30 at the home of Mrs. 11. C, White on Lee Street, wills Mrs. Stapleton. Mrs. Cliff Wil- Mttas. Mrs. White acting as hostesses. Ab interesting program has been ar ranged and it is urged that every member be present. * * * MRS. MARY B. CLAY ENTERTAIN SEWING CIRCLE. The Taylor, Brown, and Horn Street Sewing Circle will meet with Mrs, Mary B. Clay on Taylor street Tuesday afternoon at 3 o’clock. A full attendance is urged. * * • EASTERN STAR MEETING MONDAY NIGHT The local chapter of the Order of Eastern Star will meet tonight at T at the Masonic Hall. All mem bers are urged to be present. * * * D. A. R. COOKING SCHOOL AND FOOD SHOW, MONDAY NOV 15. Much interest is being manifested in the cooking school which will be tirdd in the building formerly oc cupied by the Harris Hardware Co, beginning Monday Nov. 15th. 'This school will be conducted by Mrs. Stanfield, of Atlanta, under the auspices of the Council of Safety- Chapter, D. A. R.. Mrs. Stanfield comes highly rec ommended, having conducted various .similar cooking schools in Atlanta, atntnsg these being one for Chamber lin-Johnson Dubose Co, covering a peritxl of four months. GAINED 17 NEEDED POUNDS Adding her voice to the thous ands who are praising Tanlac for the return of health and strength, Mrs. George Hernigle, relates her remarkable experience with the medicine. “To me Tanlac le the grandest medicine in the world. It has not only increased my weight 17 lbs., but it has also brought me the best of health. I had suffered from nervous indigestion for five or six years and had reached the point where it was either get relief or break completely down. “When I began taking Tanlac I only weighed 99 lbs., I couldn’t deep, felt tired all the time, and was often unable to do my house work. Since taking Tanlac I weigh Jl6 pounds and am a new person. Tanlac is also helping my little rigid year old girl. It makes her eat more and sleep better, and I consider it deserving of only the fc'ghest praise.” What Tanlac has done for otners k can also do for you. For sale all good druggists. Accept no smnstit-ite. Over 40 million bottles , sold. Tanlac Vegetable Pills for con stipation, made and recommended by the manfacturers of Tanlac. TANLAC fVR YOU II HEALTH Freshly Cleansed! There’ s no question about the fact that we do de pendably excellent work. Your clothes are safe with ua. No mixups or 'strays' in wash from Americus Steam Laundry. You get your garments back intact and cleaned in a wonderful way. Americus Steam Laundry Phone 18 We’ll Dye for You Honeymooners EC ajgj., Afei *.* Jhl j ■' J |F / W. / vs. i Mr i Hl 1 ’ -JIB ; ■M Constance Bennett, movie actress and daughter of Richard Bennett the actor, leaves for her honeymoon with her new husband, Philip Plant, youthful New York millionaire. This photo was taken when the couple returned to New York after their sud den elopement. Americus housekeepers, and oth ers, will gladly avail themselves of the opportunity to secure this five days course in cooking for the sum of one dollar. Tickets will be placed on sale, be ginning today, Nov. 9th. Special attention is called to the fact that the sum paid for a ticket covers ev ery expense connected with the cook ing school . including cook books. Mrs. G. C. Webb is chairman of the committee in charge of ticket New Shipment of Fall and Winter COATS I Just Received! / F ur trimmed, while K \/| others are plain 'A tailored. All the leading shades to w choose from. Regular $25.00 to wKS $30.00 values for, ■A 5 18.95 ■ and ‘22.50 ' PEARLMAN’S Lamar Street Americus, Ga. i «.vs amt loose desiring tickets will please notify her promptly. ! U. D. C.’S WILL MEET TUESDAY WITH MRS. CHARLES HALE ; 'lhe U. D. C. Chapter will be en tertained Tuesday afternoon at 3:30 j o’clock, by Mrs. Charles Ansley and i Mrs. Charles Hale, at the residence iof Mrs. Hale, on Church street. i The Americus Chapter will study Confederate Shrines for this year’s ! program. The following program : will be rendered on Tuesday after ' noon, “Beauvoir,” the home of Jef ' lerson Davis, Mrs. Charles Ansley, j poem, Mrs. Cleve Davis, music, Miss I Smith. Mr. Ralph Lane of Jacksonville, Fla., spent the week-end with his parents, Col. and Mrs. W. T. Lane, at their home on Lee Street. £ | Miss Marie Bell will leave the lat- I ter part of the week for Atlanta to j attend the Georgia-Tech game. Miss Lucy Lane has returned home after a deightful visit to her friends. Mrs. Wendall Oliver, in Statesboro, Ga. Mr. and Mrs. Lilys Holt, and Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Mills, of Tampa, Fla., were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Hamilton Holt Sunday, en route ; home from Columbus where they at | tended the Georgia-Auburn Game on | Saturday. The many friends of Mr. R. L. I Little, manager of Kress Store will ■ be glad to learn that he is improv- I mg after undergoing a major oper ation at the Wise Sanitorium Fri | day morning. I A. S. Hughes of Fitzgerald was the week-end guest of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Hughes, en route to Alabama, to join his wife, Mrs. A. S'. Hughes and baby daugh- I ter, Mary Louise who. are visiting ! her parents, Mr. and Mrs. E. D. | Davis. I Mrs. R. L. Little is at the bedside I of her husband who Underwent an operation at Plains Friday. Mrs. Marie Louise Myrick return ed to her home in Savannah today after a pleasant visit to Mrs. Lee G. Council at her home on Church ; -treet. Mrs. Fletcher Griffin and little daughter, Dorothy Ann have return ed to their home in Atlanta after a visit to her mother, Mrs. Capien. A large number of Ameri; >s i < - pie attended the Georgia-Auburn Game in Columbus Saturday after noon. Among them were Miss Marie Bell, Bill Marshall, Ralph Lane Bill Dodson, Sam Hooks, Wyble Marshall, Mr. and Mrs. Charles La nier, Thaddeus Bell, Ray Ansley and ■Joe Burgin. Tipping the scales at 100 pounds Meredith S. Taylor, three-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Taylor, is believed to be the largest child for his age in the state of Kentucky. Mr. Ponce Perkins of Atlanta was a guest in the City Sunday. THE AMERICUS TIMES-REGORdER FOOTBALL CURES A BROKEN NECK Ivan Williams of Georgia Tech Played With Neck Broken A I LAN IA, Ga., Nov. 9.—Foot ball -a cure for a broken neck! It seems strenuous treatment, but it worked in the case of Ivan Wil liams, crack halfback al Georgia School of Technology. ivan Williams’ neck was fractur ed in a prep school game, but did it stop his football playing? Not a bit. He had a harness made that wouiu keep the fractured bones in place, even in the heart of scrimmage, and the next year he entered Georgia Tech. After starring on the freshman team, he made the v arsity; and lost year, wearing his leather and steel brace, he proved one of the hardest running backs on the Tech team. There wasn’t a man on the Yellow jacket squad that took more chances or played more fiercely. What was the result? That the bones of his neck have knit so com pletely the brace is no longer neces sary. Football, the roughest game ever invented, cured Ivan Williams of a broken neck. It seems a crazy thing to say, but it’s true. WOULD DEVELOP POWER PROJECT Plant Planned to Utilize Water of Okefenokee Swamp, St. Marys and Suwanee River WAYCROSS, Ga., Nov. 7.—A hearing which is attracting consider erable attention in Waycross will be held before the federal power com mission in Jacksonville, Tuesday, November 24. An appication is being made by Ernest L. Hill and C. Layman Spen cer, of Jacksonville, for permission to undertake a comprehensive devel opment of the water power re sources of the St. Marys river, ,the Okefenokee swamp and the Suwanee river in north Florida. There are fiv e developments in the proposal cf the two Jacksonville men; namely the Okefenokee storage pond project, to create a storage pond with an area of about 245,000 acres with water level at 120 feet elevation; the Trail Ridge project to create a reservoir in the St. Marys I river, with water surface at eleva tion of 101 feet; by the construc tion of a dam at Trail Ridge the Traders Hill project to create a res ervoir in the St. Marys river with Watch for our advertisement of the NEW OLDS AUTOMOBILE SIX Demonstrating Chasses Frank Easterlin Company TODAY TUESDAY RY LANDER Added Attraction, Including FIDDLING JOHN CARSON J —MMlZltxdt Motional JHcturelßtSZ This is the funniest of funny ones—all the pep is here with Cupid leading the laughs. Won seven successive fiddling championship; the famous Okeh record and popular WSB radio entertainer. Known throughout Dixie as champion fiddler. May not reach here in time for matinee, but at night about 7:30 and 9:00. Z" •• X . '-A, . • 4 * r' r Jl | Ip? .x i K * i I I fe ’ jH! w ■ |||| @ ) Ivan Williams, top, sparing a brace to protect his fractured neck, and lower, after the broken neck had healed. water surface at an elevation of 40 feet by the construction of a dam at Traders’ Hill; the Suwanhachee project, to create a reservoir in the Suwanee river with water surface at an elevation of 101 feet by the construction of a dam about four miles east of White Springs, Fla. The tropica Iplant research foun dation of Washington was undertak en an investigation of forestry prob lems in Cuba. The infant death rate in the Unit ed States is higher than in England, Wales, Denmark, Norway, Sweden, or the Irish Free State. The smallest incandescent electric light yet made, only a quarter of an inch in length, came into practical use when it was used to light up a baby’s lung while a surgeon removed a tack that the child had inhaled. REGISTRATION NOTICE Books are now open for regis tration for primary to be held Nov 17th, 1925. Books close Nov. 11th, 1925. A. D. GATEWOOD. JR., Clerk and Treat- MONDAY AFTERNOON. NOVEMBER 9 1925 MARRY YOUNG IN ENGLAND LONDON, Nev. 9. — There are many 15-year-old EngL ghls- mar ried widowers wfto have children of their own who sometimes are no : oqngi-r than their little step-mother. There aii boy. ci 17 wedded to wid . i.ws with children scarcely less juve.i , .Lan t :elr step-father. ( This was brought out in a survey ' made in connection with putting in to effect a new act requiring the ' consent of parents to the marriage >of minors. It also wa> shown there are more than 95,000 husbands and wives in England and Wales under . 21. Os these 38,000 were boys and I girls in their ’teens. , These minors, it was stated, marry BAYER ASPIRIN PROVED SAFE Take without Fear as Told in "Bayer" Package fsAYERH 'ooi pub n ([as os[B sisrSfhuq -stuao Maj jsoa sja[qßj 3A[a.u.) jo saxoq Apusjj ■suotjaaiip ua.vo.id suisjuoa aSßrjaed uibj ‘ujßji -BtSfßjnayi tnstißumoqy aqjsqjooj, oftßqmnq aqaspsaH S PI°D joj sjeaX aag •XjuaMj la.vo sußiats.fqd Aq paquos -aid pus suoiptm .<q ajns pa.ioid utitdsy la.fßg auinuaS aqj SuijjaS jou ai-B „ssoi3 jaABQ,, aqt aas noA ssajurj NOTICE I 1 have returned from Florida, where 1 have been connected with the largest Bicycle Shop in the South, and have learned a lot about the business. I have new stock of Bicycles and Parts arriv ing daily, and have taken over new Bicycle agencies and will carry a complete stock at all times. It pays to buy the best. See me before buying. DOUGLAS FREEMAN At Freeman’s Bicycle Shop 206 North Jackson St. Americus, Ga. CL a Ss/fIEZ>A d S FOR RENT FOR RENT—A desirable five-room house, near school, or. Jackson avenue. Apply “Home," care Tin.es- Recorder. —26-ts. HIGHEST Cash price paid for any size, variety or quantity of Pecans Neon Buchanan.—26-ts FOR RENT Two unfurnished rooms to couple. One furnished room; hot water. 303 E. Church St., phone 810.—2-ts. FOR RENT—Desirable apartment with all conveniences and garage. Phone 800. W. H. Cobb.—3-ts. WANTED—SOOO bushels Sweet Po tatoes. See me at Carter’s Curing Plant. W. E. Brown, Agt.—2o-30t WOOD FOR SALE—S3.OO per truck load, delivered. W. W McNeill. —6-3 t WANTED—Young man in Pres? room. Times-Recorder. GET PAY EVERY DAY: Distribute! 150 necessary products to estab-' lished users. Extracts, Soaps, Food Products, etc. World’s largest coir.-j pany will back you with surprising plan. Write the J. R. Watkins com-i pany. Dept. J-7, 62-70 W. lowa St.,! Memphis, Tenn.—l1-2t NEW TWO TON truck you to Florida. Phone 16. 9-3 t FOR SALE—Fire Brick, Fire Clay and Flue Linings. Jno. W. Shiver Phone 117.—9-ts. FIGURE with us on your Paint, Var nish, Flat Wall Coatings, Roof and Barn Paint. Jno. W. ’ Shiver i Phone 117.—9tf. Last year forest fires swept ewer 29,000,000 acres of public and orivate lands in this country. at tne ratio of one out o; every 3i girls between the ages of 15 and 20 and one out of every 40 boys ot same a; - group. The average life of a fr eg . ..... 20 years. } j J BEAUTIFY IT WITH "DIAMOND DYES" ! < Just Dip to or Boil > to Dye ( Each 15-cent package contains directions so simple any woman can tint soft, delicate shades or dye rich, permanent colors in lingerie, silks, ribbons, skirts, waists, dresses, coats, stockings, sweaters, draperies, ’■J'lirl roverings, hangings —everything' Buy Diamond Dyes—no other kind —and tell your druggist whether the material you wish to color is wool or silk, or w'liether it is linen, cotton or mixed goods. Straighten Up! Nicest Laxative J ; “Cascarets” 10c Don’t stay head achy, dizzy, sick. Nothing else relieves that bilious, consti pated feeling so nicely as candy-like “Cases rets.” Take one or two of these pleasant laxative tablets any time, to gently stimu late your liver and ft' start your bowels. Then you will feel fine, your head becomes clear, stomach sweet, tongue pink, skin rosy. “Cascarets” gently cleanse, sweeten and refresh the entire system. They never gripe, overact or sicken. Direc tions for men, women and children on each box, any drugstore. FOR SALE i FOR SALE—Basting’s Prolific and Fulghum Seed Oats, SI.OO per bushel; Abruzzi Seed Rye, $2.50 per bushel. Urgen Bowen, Americus, Ga., Route 8.—3-7 t CUT RC Q ES FOR SALE Mrs. R. C Moran * 411 West Chinch St. 8-**-dh. BAT PERIES 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 cty Property, payable one to twenty years. . Stephen Pace. 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. WANTED— 200 bushels ear corn. M H. rletcher. Phone 663—6-ts UP—One black horse mule, wner can get same by paying tor damage and ad. Lawson Staple ton— 6-3 t SALESMEN AND SALESLADIES Wanted to sell lots in Florida's fastest selling sub-division, Laßelle, n^ J F° r d 8 choice, and where some Lnited States’ greatest financial iz.ir s are building a city. If you ' w< acquainted in and around Americus and want to make good iiiom-j,, District Manager will call u,' • g * Ve yuo co-operation. Wnte J. h. Place, 201 Krause Bldg., lampa, H a .— lOR RENT— Apartment; all con veniences. 320 South Lee street. Phone 765—9-6 t