PAGE TWO
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PRESBYTERIANS WILL
OBSERVE WEEK OF PRAYER
The ladies of the Presbyterian
Church will observe week of prayer
next Monday, Tuesday, and Wednes
day. when a special book “Out Os
The Wilderness” will be studied. The
meeting will be held with Mrs.
George Duncan on Monday after
noon, with MA. Albert Harris on
Tuesday afternoon and Mrs. Richard
Simpson on Wednesday.
•»
MISS LOUISE PURVIS
-THANKS FRIENDS
Miss Louise Purvis wishes to thank
her many friends who were so kind
in h< Iping her during the recent cam
paign conducted by The Times-Re
corder. Their support was deeply ap
predated.
HORTENSE TINSLEY SOCIETY
MEuTS MONDAY AFTERNOON
The Bible Class of the Hortense
Tin ley Missionary Society will meet
with Mrs. Barfield at her home on
Hancock Ave., Monday afternoon nt
three o’clock.
FIRST METHODIST MISSIONARY
SOCIETY MEETS MONDAY P. M.
The Woman’s Missionary Society
of the First Methodist Church will
meet Monday afternoon at three
o’clock at the Church.
• * *
JUNIOR MISSIONARY CIRCLE
MEETS MONNDAY P. M.
The Junior Missionary Society,
No. 2, of the Centra] Baptits church
will meet Monday afternoon at 3
o’clock at the hoftie of Mrs. Estelle
Garland on Elm Ave., Mrs. W. L.
Swain will be joint hostess with
Mrs. Garland and every member is
urged to be present.
Miss Mary Godwin will leav e to
day for Cuthbert, wherfi she will have
the ehair of English in the Cuthbert
High School.
Mr. and Mrs. E. E. Bland and two
daughters, Marjoire and Francis will
spend the week-end in Columbus
wit.i Mr. Bland’s mother.
Prof. Drohomer of Chicago, 111.,
who is on e of the i'rofessors in the
Americus High School is making his
home with Mrs. R. B. Godwin, on
Church street.
Bill Carswell who is a student at
Mercer University, Macon; returned
home with his mother and will be
their guests for the week-end at
their home on Lee strteet, returning
to Macon Monday afternoon.
Mrs. W. H. C. Dudley has return
ed to her home after a six weeks stay
in Miami, Fla.
Mrs. J. T. Jones and two children
left this morning for Knoxville, Tenn
for a visit of several weeks.
Miss Annie Ruth Ray will arrive
this afternoon from G. S. C. W. at
Milledgeville, to spend the week-end
with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. N. A.
Ray.
The many friends of Mrs. Della
Miller will be glad to know that she
is in the city, the guest of Mrs. T. A.
Jackson, on Taylor street.
DUDLEY’S ()PEKA pOUSE
MONDAY AND TUESDAY
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Forgotten/Jv
Men*
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HERBERT
PRODUCTION z -•'
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ADOLPH ZU KO a *'
JESSE I LASKY \
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‘ J BRIAN
Here’s one of the famous 40 Paramount*. The best picture in
town for Monday and Tuesday
MISS OLIVER
GIVES PARTY
Entertains Her Club and Other
Friends at Her Home-in
Plains
PLAINS, Nov. 14. —On Wednes
day afternoon Miss Francis Oliver en
tertained most delightfully her club
and other friends. The attractive
home was tastily decorated in the
national colors, suggesting the spirit
of the day, rich red Autumn leaves
adding to the beauty of the decora_
tions. The score cards further carried
j out the idea of Armistice Day. At
the conclusion of the game, delicious
( refreshments were served. Miss
I Oliver was assisted by Mrs. Ernest
I Spann. Those playing were Mrs.
. Rees Andrews, Mrs. Sam Burgin,
| Mrs. B. E. Thrasher, Mrs. J. H.
I Mont.-, Mrs. John Oliver, Mrs. S. H.
- Timmerman, Mrs. M. M. Jennings,
I Mrs. Alton Carter, Mrs. Frank Greer,
j Mrs. Edgar Timmerman, Mrs. J. C.
■ Logan, Miss Eleanor Chambliss, Miss
Margarite Hudson, Miss Ruth Short,.
Miss Julia Coleman and Miss Pearl I
Langford, Mrs. Mary Campbel] com i
ing in for refreshments.
The Parent-Teacher association is
perfecting plans made to serve a
Thanksgiving dinner in the large din
ing room at the school house on
Thanksgiving day. Committees have
been appointed and preparations are
being made to serve a large number.
Patrons and friends of the school are
urged to patronize the association on
this occasion, the proceeds to go to
wards furnishings for the stage.
Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Dodson, of
Atlanta, were guests of Mr. A. Dod
son for a short time Friday evening.
Mrs. Mark Chambliss and Mrs.
Cora Lunsford were shopping in Al
bany Monday.
Mrs. Edgar Timmerman left Fri
day for Forsyth to spend two days
with her daughter, Miss Hazel Tim
merman, who is attending Bessie Tift
• College.
ISOUTH LEADS
IN BUILDING
FOR YEAR 1925
(Continued From Page One.)
buildings, including hotels and apart
ments in Miami, neared the million
mark.
Other notable individual buildings
included for the month were the
plant extensions of the Gulf State
(Steel company, of Gadsden, Ala.,
($500,000; an addition to the Buena
I Vista Hotel, of Biloxi, Miss., (in-
■ | eluded in the September permits.),
,$500,000; the George W. Harvey
i building, $750,000, and the Alliance
| Realty company hotel, $350,000, at
(West Palm Beach; the American Na
tional bank building, Sarasota, $450,-
000; an addition to the 0. Henry ho
tel, Greensboro, N. C., a
junior high school, Petersburg, Va.,
$175,000; an Episcopal church at
Alexandria, La., $125,000; a build-
ling for the International Harvester
(company, Amarillo, Tex., $160,000;
! ja nurses home. $127,000, and a hos-
■ pital at Memphis, $110,000; a Sun-
Iday school building, SIBO,OOO, Bir
mingham.
PAGEANT FOR
FIRST BAPTIST
SUNDAY NIGHT
“Send The Light” Will Be Given
By Ten Members of the
Senior B. Y. P. U.
“Send The Light” a pageant with
ten characters will be given at the
First Baptist Church Sunday night
at 7 o’clock. In addition to the pa
geant a special musical program has
been planned and Pastor Branch ex
tends to all a cordial invitation to all
co attend the services at that timei
Judson Rushin plays the pgrt as a
young man of Americus, Janie Mur
ray as Miss America; Minnie Beat
1 Reese as a Spanish girl; Nellie Horne
as a Japanese girl; Jeffrey Kersey
las a American school girl; Raymond
I Parsons as- a Christian teacher; Car
i rol Purvis as a ministerial student;
Edwin Kimball as a young business
man and Misses Sarah Hamrick and
Edith Jennings as candle bearers.
The pageant is staged by the sen
ior B. Y. P. U., and is one of the
few such organizations in this sec
tion that is rated A-l, a very high
standard in efficiency being neces
sary to acquire that rating.
it . _/
‘ GREAT PICTRE
AT RYLANDER
Following directlty upon its sensa
tional New York showing. Univers
al’s spectacular mystery-romance,
“The Phantom of the Opera,” will be
seen here at the Rylander theater
Monday and Tuesday.
This adaptation of the famous
novel by Gaston Leroux, the noted
French exponent of the weird and
sensational, directed by Rupert Jul
ian, includes spectacular scenes and
settings which are the result of six
months preparation and the work of
hundreds of experts in photograph
lighting, mining engineering and con
struction.
Lon Chaney as the star of “The
j Phantom of the Opera” will startle
I the audience with a make-up that
I took him three months to devise for
(the part of Erik, the Phantom. Mary
j Philbin as Christine Daae, plays the
i leading feminine lole, and Norman
Kerry appears as Raoul de Chagny,
I her lover.
j Five thousand playeres were used i
in the picture. I
“The Phaontom of the Opera”
i lends itself to an elaborate musical
program having been conceived and
written around this famous opera
house which was planned by Napol
eon HI and completed by the Re
public after his downfall. Much.of
I the dramatic action occurs during the
production of “Faust” upon the stage
of the opera house. Music from this
opera predominates the score ar
ranged by the noted musical director
Gustav Hinrichs. The score is sup
plemented by French compositions,
many of which have seldom if ever
; been played in this country, as the,
opennig of this picture commemor
ates the semi-centennial of the his
toric Paris Opera House.
As an added feature, R ,P. Stack
house tenor, Miss Lucy Lane and
Miss Louise Thayer, sopranors will
be heard in special vocal numbers at
4:30 and 8:45 p. m. each day.
Common sense is the oniy thing
that can make experience useful.
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LECTURE SERIES
HERE NEXT WEEK
Number of Prominent Speakers
Will Be Here Next Thursday
and Friday
Col. Alfred L. Moudy, prominent
educator in the Indiana schools will
be in Americus Thursday, Nov. 19th
to deliver a lecture in the First Bap
tist church, at 7:30 p. m. His sub
ject, “The Rock of Liberty” which is
drawing large crowds throughout the
country, will be the first of a series
of three lectures to be given in the
First Baptist church by members of
the Flying Squadron Foundation, of
;Indianapolis, Indiana. Col. Moudy i
(comes highly recommended as de- j
livering his subject in a masterly
manner. He has an enviable war >
record for military service on the '
Mexican Border and in the World >
War and holds the distinction of I
Lieutenant Colonel in the 150th
Artillery, U. S. Army. A well
1 nown local resident, Mr. T. F. Gate
wood will be chairman of the even
ing, Rev. W. M. Haywood, pastor
of the Lee Street Methodist Church
will offer the invocation.
The second lecture of this series
, will be given by Miss Norma C.
: Brown, on Constitutional Govern
ment, Friday afternoon at 3 p. m.
in the First Baptist Church. Miss
Brown is a young speaker of excep
tional ability which she readily dem
(onstrates to her audience, by hand
ling a subject, usually conceded to
be within the realm of the masculine
; mind, only. She has spoken in ev
ery Capitol city in the United
States, is a brilliant writer and as
sistant Editor of the National En-
Old? That’s no handicap to Peter
Skiff, of Meriden, Conn, On his
hundredth birthday Pop Peter step
ped out and danced the Charleston
with one of the fair flappers in his
home town. And he sure s'4hk.s a
wjeked hoof
quirer.
Rev. John M. Outler, pastor the
First Methodist Church will be on
the program for a short talk, and on
“The Place of the Church in the
Battle” for law enforcement. Rev.
H. H. Shirley, pastor of the Central
Baptist, will be chairman of the aft
ernoon.
An added feature of the after
noon’s program will be the Open
Forum, held at the close of the lec
ture.
Hon. Oliver W. Stewart, of Chica
' go. 111., Editor of the National En
quirer will give the principal address
lin the evening, Friday Nov, 20 at
,7:30 at the First Baptist Church. Mr.
Stewart is known throughout the
| Nation for his intrepid spirit in the
fight for the 18th Amendment, and
j has been continuously in the field
for Law Enforcement, so that his
appearance here, will put the num
ber of lectures this veteran in the
cause of Civil Righteousness has de-
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(definition of value—
The New Chevrolet
Marshall Auto Sales Co.
327 W. Lamar St. Americus, Ga.
SATURDAY AFTERNOON, NOVLMDER 14, 1925
BEAUTY PARLOR
OPENS MONDAY
' The Marinello Will Open in
Rooms Over Thos. L. Bell’s
Jewelry Stere
A new beauty parlor will open its
doors to wcn.en of Americus
Moday, the Marinello, it is called,
Mrs. R. L. Crawford, proprietress
It is located in newly outfitted
rooms over Bell’s Jewelry store, on
Lamar street.
Mrs. Crawford has only recently
returned from Chicago, where she
completed a six months course and
secured her diploma as a cometician.
While . she purchased all of her
equipment which includes all of those
things necessary for the practice of
her profession.
The parlors are composed of sev
eral rooms, one a living room outfit
ted in reed furniture; another room
is fully equipped for giving perman-
i
livered, well past the 1300 mark.
He is a veritable encyclopedia on
I the subject, and the audience is
| promised a most interesting course
|of lectures from this group. The
| public is cordially invited. Rev,
i Richard F. Simpson, pasjor of the
i Presbyterian Church will preside and
(the well known,local merchant, Rev.
jW. A. Joyner, of the Christian
I Church will deliver the invocation.
1
ANNOUNCING
The Opening On
, Monday, Nov. I 6 of the
Marinello Beauty Shop
Mrs. R. L, Crawford,
Graduate, National School of Cosmetics, in Charge
Located at
208 Lamar Street
(Over Bell’s Jewelry Store)
Permanent Waving Electrolytic
Finger Waving Facials
Water Waving Coarse Pore Astringent
Marcelling Dry Skin Astringent
Round Curling Bleaching Treatments
Shampooing Wrinkle Treatments
Electric Scalp Treatments Muscle Strapping
Hair Tinting] Special Acne Treatments
Nailglossing Electrolysis
Your Patronage
PHONE 101 FOR APPOINTMENT
ent waves; another massaging etc.
I Mrs. Crawford announces that she
will open her parlors Monday morn
ing at 9 o’clock and will be glad to
' welcome all her friends or acquain
-1 tances then.
GEORGIA UNIVERSITY
EXPANSION URGED
ATLANTA,, Ga., Nov. 14.—Devel
opment of a great state university
through the expansion state u
through the expansion of all its d.
partments is one o fthe pressing
needs of the state, it was declared
here by Willis A. Sutton, superin
tendent of the Atlanta public
Mr. Sutton expressed the hop®
that if the extra sessio nis called by ’
Governor Walker, the matter of giv
ing increased aid to the University
of Georgia wil Ibe considered.
TURKEY SUPPER
Saturday Night
60 Cents a Plate.
; Make reservations early to insure
good service.
SIGN OF THE PINE TEA ROOM
—l3-2t
SIGNS YOU CAN BELIEVE IN
! If your breath is bad and you have
j spells of swimming in the head, poo:
i appetite, constipation and a general no
; account feeling, it is a sign your liver is
torpid. The one really dependable rem
' edy for nil disorders in the liver, stomach
! and bowels is Herbine. It acts powerfully
1 | on flic liver, strengthens digestion, puri
i sics the bowels and restores a tine feeling
I of energy, vim and cheerfulness Price
60c. Sold by
NATHAN MURRAY, Druggist