Newspaper Page Text
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY S, 1920.
AMERICUS TIMES-RECORDER.
PAGE StVEN.
bBORT COURSE AT intimacies of teachers revealed
& M. PLANNED AT BIG FROLIC AT ROTARY CLUB DINNER
nd bull'
|1 will I'
ere
Othi
o Last From 1 To 6 Club Elects Handsomest, Grouchiest and Noisiest
Weeks According To I Members and Distributes Other
Demand ! Honors
. an* already being made for. Intimate glir.
ll( t course which will be held acteristics of tlu
& M. school this summer m of Americas
benefit of club girls and wo-1 monthly ladies’
the public at large.
pses into the eh
public school teach-
werc atTorded at the
night dinner of the
j Rotary Club, *Whieh took place at the
o’clock Thursday eve
hich the teachers were
iber of special guests
The references to the
acteristic, came in an
teachers’ primer in
by Mrs. J. E. High-
robabie
esent f
Regula
nd this
emand
M. Trance, head of the A. & 1 Tea Room at
ms offered for this course ning, and at
es of the entire grounds j among a m
gs, together with the set- ,,f the elulj.
nself and other members 1 teachers’ chi
iltv who will be present. | anonymous
, dairy nnu poultry yards,) rhyme, read
urned over to these sum-'tower,
s. N | It was an uproarous occasion—up-
Mr. Still, farm manager,• roarous with fun and merriment from
; now with Mrs. Olin Wil-|ihe opening song of America until
>M. tration agent, a six-|**Auld I.ang Syne” at shortly after
i which will furnish the y o’clock—and even later when J. E.
ised in the canning work., Hightower, after calling for help
rill be fitted up as a can-. w ht*n his auto wouldn’t start to carry
steam pressure canner in-i home a number of the lady teacher
j guests, had it discovered for him that
cuts will join Mrs. Wil- |lhe lank Wtts (lry of gasoline,
ing this course, and it is j The dinner was attended by near
ly 70 persons, seated at tables in the
rvod by the
ihurch. W.
the club,
one end of
Hightower,
vice-president, assisted with the pro
gram from the other end. The prin
cipal talk of the evening was by Love
lace Eve, who spoke on the prin
ciples of Rotary, “going the second
mile,’’ developing the Scriptural text,
“If any man ask you to go a mile
with him, go twuin.” Miss Bess John
son, one of the teachers, gave a pleas
ing impromptu toast to the hosts
hat club members will be
"in several counties. , mam dining-room and :
ar courses in cookery, sew- j l a( li<. s of the Episcopal
nu.g. dairy work and poultry Ky. Dykes, president o
1! |„. given, these courses to w j e lded the gavel fron
both lectures and laboratory | the main tab | t . whik . M
Programs will be compiled
nd printed later.
nee states that board and
ill be either free, or at the
initial cost of $3 a week,
nrt course will continue for
to six weeks, according to
CONCORD
Mr. and Mrs. Homer Dupree, of
ndrew chapel, are visiting the for-
icr’s pai '-ts Mr. and Mrs. Ben Dtl-
ree.
i rod Mary Morrell and
lamaris Holly spent the week-end | nm | w hat k
Amcricus, the guests of Miss Mary t qu i m j to .
Vynn. I term.
Mrs. Mattie Womack spent last
horsday with Mrs. W. F. Darden.
Uriah Morrell was a business visi-
>r in Amcricus last Saturday.
Mrs. William Dupree and Mts.
lomcr Dupree visited Mrs. A. J. Lo
tt Wffiro v if ernooii
Mrs. J TiL’h«r was tiic visitor
f Mrs. A. W. Buchanan Friday af-
ernooi:.
Mr. and Mrs. B. H. Dupree telurn-
il from I.-lie Monday after spend-
ig a fi-w days with the former’s
rotlu r. A. .1. Dupree.
"Just for Fun” is the ti»l« of a
ay that will be presented at the
•hool audi'orium Friday evening,
id). 6. Tin* proceeds will be Used
>r sanitary •:ipro' , ement;§, and a
'tttributioii from patrons and
riends who are unable to attend the
will be appreciated.
iooI enrollment for January is
for tin- year 177.
| Best Singer—Frank Lanier,
i Thinks He Is—Frank Harrold.
! Greatest Enthusiast—Dave An
drews.
The Teacher*’ Primer.
The teachers’ primer, as read by
Mrs. Hightower, follows:
A B C’S
Andrews, David R. is signified by A.
He's a member of the Board and
serves without pay.
An upright business man, he plays
a fair game,
And he thinks that pedagogues
ought to do the same.
Miss Annie Ansley is A number two,
A teacher that teaches the whole
day through.
Now B is for Bond, Ximenia’s her
Tho* she never get married, she’ll
be “Bond" just the same.
The next B is for Brooks, Winifred
by the way,
Who expects to teach so long, and
not another day.
C is for Cannon, Mary the young,
W r ho talks more with her eyes than
she does with her tongue.
C two is for Cobb, Martha by rights,
Who is an excellent cook of tooth-
somest bites.
Third C is for Cobb, Miss Sarah, I’ll j
say: |
When she once sets her head, bet- j
ter give her her way.
C four is for Creighton, Edith, I’m
sure,
Who’s teaching and waiting for
some one to woo her.
Ella Folk sang several solos! D is for Dempsey, E. M.—not the
pleasingly, accompanied by Mrs. Joe I fighter.
Johnson, and Lieut. John Butts, a re- But no pugilist ever held the rein
turned sailor and again a high school tighter. •
student, delivered an eloquent ad- j D, did I say? Yes, this is the letter,
dress on what the returned soldier j And we'vi
ould expect f uni the government
CASHIER BACK !
MINUS WOMAN
An experienced teacher, the dread
of shirkers.
Mathis, J. E., the school system’s
head,
W’ho works teachers so hard they
wish they w f erc dead.
Mathis, Linda, Belinda or MalindaJj. H. Pennington reached Vienna Fri-
ButH^ #t u n pte.chin K . S h u ’.l l ^:: t !;_ Rob " t . A - «“"•!? cartod y-i
lose all the money she’s got.
ment having agreed to exchange new 11898 type considerably out
rifles and accoutrements for the old | in actuality, but very similar in d«-
woanons. The new equipment, for | sign to the modem type of army.*•
which negotiation- have been under! fle. The school will have 100 at Om
way for four months. now en route | new , weapons.
No Word -of Wherea- The school i, : .s been using KU ns or 1 —— ; —=-■= =—
boutsof Dooly Man 1 ,
Companion h " W , The pus which are being sup-| Lo.. of appetite and HeadscS-Z—J
| plied are Krag-Jorgensen rifles of the («dv.)—(S>
VIENNA, Jan. 31.—Deputy Sheriff | ——
having brought him from Kemmerer,
Miner, H. I)., came down from the
cold.
He teaches for pleasure and not
for gold.
Morgan, Genevieve, the last M, but
one,
Insists that teaching should he
mighty well done.
But Mott, Foy, observes that this is
very rare;
For there are so many pedagogues
that really do not care.
In this alphabet of Board Members
ami teachers,
The little letter “N” is not one
the creatures.
O stand for Owen who talks like
saint,
But ftiictly confidential,
what he ain’t.
Phillips, Miss Irma.
Wyoming, where he was held after
his arrest at Opal, on a charge of em
bezzling $17,000 from the Commer
cial Bank at Unadilla.
It has been stated that an attempt
will be made by Unadilla relatives
and friends of Collins to affect his
release from jail on bond. The Feb
ruary term of Dooly Superior court
convenes next week, however, and no
move may be made before that time.
Collins has refused to discuss the
case. His wife went to Wyoming,
arriving a day or two before the offi
cers and returned to Vienna with
j the party. The officers state that they
saw nothing of the other woman
i from Byromville who is said to have
sn ***bcen with Collins when he went to
Opal. Silence is maintained as
teaching and I th6 wh «“bouts »f the young wo-
1 man who disappeared at the
You Take No Chances
A Positive Guarantee With Every Job. Any Work That FaSb
Will Cheerfully Be Made Right Free of Charge, or Your Money
Refunded.
This is backed up by an established business of I 7 years stan<2~
ing (with a record of over 50,000 jobs of dental work wcD
done and over 4,000 satisfied patrons) which make it possible
to give a liberal guarantee with no uncertainty about it.
CAN SAVE YOU MONEY
Note Prices
Plates
Crowns
Bridges
Fillings
Extraction ..
.$10.00
$ 5.00
.$ 5.00
.$ 1.50
.$ 1.00
Your For Sendee That I®
Definite. Sure and Certain
Jackson St. Near Kress*
N. S. Evans Dental Offices
Americas, Gs.
No Better Equipped Offices
In the Soath
Safe, Modern, Painless Methods Used
HuTwhat''she's waiting (or, I dare 1 * ime < ' 0,, ‘ ns left - th °“* h , thc . rc P° rt
' has gained currency that she is again
at her home.
The arrest of Collins was effected
through a letter he wrote to Captain
Baker, a well known conductor on the j
Georgia Southern and Florida rail-!
road, in which he made promises to j
remit for a car he bought and in j
which he left Georgia. He was ar-
| rested at Opal, a small place near
Kemmerer, where he had gone to
work in a commissary. He made no
effort to conceal or deny his identity,
and did not fight extradition. W. C.
Griggs, vice president of the Com-
not be stating,
Polk, Ella K., is the singing super
visor.
Who admits without question that
there's nobody wiser.
Q’s a good letter, but there’s no use
for IT;
For there’s nobody’s name that
the Q will fit.
R is for Rushin, Miss Myrtle
mean,
Why she’s teaching school is yet to
be seen.
Here comes another M. O. B.
Member of the Board, don't you Bank ofTnadilla! aeeompan-
S i, for Sheffield, John by the way. ^ DCP “ ty Sheriff Penni "«‘®" »“
He serves on the Board but gets j
no pay.
trip.
of P
vould be re-
ent next
'Jewnan Cotton Mills
Pay 50 Per Cent Profit
N'KWN'.w, Jan. 29.—The Newnan
"ttmi Mills have just declared a
•mi-annual dividend of 25 per cent,
hi.- is th«* second dividend of this
non.it. declared within tw.dve
tli'. by this corpomtion.
An amusing feature of the en
tertainment was a Rotary election,
in which members were nominated
and voted upon for the followin;
honors, and with the noted results:
WHO IS THE—
Handsomest—“Turk” Harris.
Thinks He Is—Dave Andrews.
Tardiest—Dick Taylor.
Busiest—‘‘Tim” Furlow.
Thinks He Is—Joe Perkins
Wittiest—J. T. Warren.*
Grouchiest—“Fess” Mathis.
Best Natured—“Rev.” English.
Afbst Popular- -Frank Harrold.
Fo
The defalcation and disappearance
hyme up and do , r . rn „ ~ „ . . ' ... I of Collins created a sensation in Doo-I
. ... I stands for Tea Room and for Miss ; i_ , .
bit better; | Susie Tavlor ) ly county last October. He was cash- j
D stands for Dykes, Rotary’s , * er ^e Commercial bank and one;
hoad, _ A k nowu to f ai l h , r l of the most p0 P ular and Prominent |
id the man that signs checks with | *t. . ki • . * fi . , i young men of the Unadilla section. I
with which teachers buy bread, i , •. , 4V .. . rea er ’ He left his wife and their one little!
And ,f .there, a V, we ve never It is stated that he still has'
-*Doc”
Most Bashful-”Doc’
Mot Typical Rota
Howell
' Wheeler,
rian — Car
Glove
Done Mo.-
Burke.
Most Che
for the Club -“Dusty’’
rful Liar—“Turk” Har-
Most Beautiful Figure—“Tim”
Furlow.
Best Orator—“Lovie” Eve.
Best Poet—“Lovie” Eve.
Best Dresser—Frank Lanier.
Biggest Bluffer—John Sheffieffild.
Worst Knocker—J. V E. Mathis.
Homeliest—Dick Taylor.
Biggest Tightwad—Dick Taylor.
Eats tlu* Most—“Dusty” Burke.
Most Typical Ladies Man—“Doc”
.well, J.' T. Warren.
1 s t* Want Ads For Results.
No
Dav
And
for Ellis, Money’s master,
George R.
A member of the Board and a
member of the bar.
G means Garrett, not an attic, but
La Verne:
As for knowledge of Math., she’s
got it to burn.
II stands for horse and for halter and
Hale,
Who has kept school so long that
his hair has turned pale.
Another H is for Harris f Turk,
Board member, well-krtown.
You pay him for a fish, ami he
sells you a stone. .
Third H is for Holst. Till two, he’s
a teacher,
, But the rest of the day he’s an
insurance preacher.
I’s—not an I am I able to find.
many friends who are willing to stand j
by him in an effort to clear himself,
of the tangle.
seed” her.
j W stand for Mrs. Annie Walker,
Who must be a thinker; for she
isn’t a talker.
W number two is for Miss Martha
Wheatley,
And when it comes to art, she
does it up neatly.
X stand for cross, which describes! The ca(Ms „ t t(lp Third District
all teachers, * • . , . ,
v . Aggie school are to have new guns
r," 8 . that tlu ' y work, !nnd Kun equipment, according to Wm
Aggie Cadets To Swap
Old Rifles For New
Guaranteed Analysis:
Protein 10#
Fat 2
Crude Fibre 5#
Carbohydrates ..60^
Made From:
Wheat Oats
Cracked Corn Sunflower
Kaffir Corn Seed
Barley Buckwheat
Make Poultry Pay
It isn’t the cost of the feed
much as what you get from
what you feed.
It isn’t a question of merely
keeping your fowls alive; it's making
them produce eggs that counts. Tbs
difference between a maintenance ra
tion at a certain cost and what tbep~
produce means your profit.
More vigor means more eggs; amd
you can not get more vigor with in
ferior feeds. Quality in stock, raft'
and eggs requires vigor. If you waft
quality—you must feed quality fewefa.
Red Comb Scratch Feed
is the Highest Quality Poultry Feed tm
the market Every handful is unifonq,
free from dust, always fresh, dbsoliitctp
clean and perfectly mixed.
An ounce of Rad Comb Scrattdk,
twice a day. fed in litter, plus Rad Comb
Feed with Dried Buttermilk, fed from a fc*v
per, furnishes the necessary nutrients to I'jsa
results. The two ounces per day of Red Confe
Scratch is equal to three ounces of the avcnyje
^ee/plenty of Math Feed at all times tm
big egg production. m
poor creatures
Z stands for Zero, the total of all
wages
-That all teachers have been paid
for ages and ages.
Wilson Case Evidence
Attacked At Hearing
, _ , The motion of J. E. Sheppard, at-
S -n°t an 1 am able to find. - to for a ncw tria , fo /^ s c ient
I wonder if they ere all really Walter W. Wilson, sentenced to life
j imprisonment for the murder of Joel
; Edge, was completed before Judge
. . . . . ! Littlejohn of the Superior court in
°* earnm *” °* ar ’ chambers Saturday, it not having been
finished when taken up a couple of
weeks ago. Solicitor Jule Felton was
present to represent the state at tho
hearing.
Mr. Sheppard made a stirring plea
for his client vigorously attacking tho
s a sphinx, j
sits and
Love
Splendid Settlement By
Union Central Life
Insurance Co.
Lei
i> >hown settlement of a death claim paid Friday by
NI Hansford, Agent of The Union Central Life Ins. Co. The name
tin insured and beneficiary is withheld by request.
IV.licy 235081 $1000.00
Additions bought with dividends 201.25
Interest paid from death to payment
"f claim at 4 3-4 ft 4.75
Tui, post-morten dividends 14.78
r<dicy 4:502 1 3 3 0 00.00
^ Additions bought with dividends 285.00
lut'iist paid from death to payment
"f elaim at 4 3-4% 12.38
l’° v t mortem dividend 2a.65
Cheek for full amount paid $4003.81
l'olicy 2:55681 was a ten-pay life policy issued
in Dec.. 1901, at a premium of $44.22.
Total cost $ 442.20
Policy 430213 was a 20-pay life policy issued
in Jan. 1912, at a premium of $114.00
Total cost 912 00
* "tal amount paid out on both policies 1354.20
Original amount of both policies $4000.00
Interest and divider^ additions 603.81
riilv ' hiim was paid just eiuht days after claim was placed in Mr.
fen-ford’s hands.
I f you want the lowest net cost and best Life
Insurance service call on me.
Lee M. Hansford, Agt.
Planters Bank Bldg. Americus, Ga
blind.
One J in the list, Johnson, named
Bess,
Who’!
and of Kress.
K—Clebe Kemph, silent .
She never tnlks—just
thinks.
in this alphabet is for Labo
and Laughter.
The Labor comes here; Laughter i "Lioncc in the Ca se en which Wilson
and Love hereafter was oonvictedi especially that of the
M m our primer is the biggest letter, the tw0 nfRro wompn , ,i ocl a ri ng that
01 a ' the law does not recognize as legal
a conviction based on evidence
which a witness admits changing his j
or her story given each time under
, . , oath,
day
Steed, commandant, the war depart-
Manufactured Exclusively by
HALES & EDWARDS CO.,
For Satm by
AMERICUS
SEED & SUPPLY CO.
Phone 150. Forsyth St.
vhile, and nine of ’em
Be patient
we'll call.
McArthur, Ruth, the first of the
bunch,
Says the best part of tl.
time for lunch. Red Cedar Shingle* are the best
McLaughlins, two, named Annie and jret. Wo carry at all times a largi
Claude, , stock and can fill your orders
Not working for pay, merely scrv- promptly. Come to see us when you
ing the Lord. j are in the market for shingles. Jno.
McLendon, Lizzie, worker of workers, W| Shiver. Phone 117.
' !
Did you shave
with a dull razor this morning?
The AutoStrop
Razor makes good
because the patented
sflf-stropping feature
insures a perfectly
cool and comfortable
sl.ave every time.
It is the only Safety
Razor that sharpens
itself, shaves and is
cleaned without re
moving the blade.
From every dozen
AutoSt- op b'ades
300degn, comfortable
shavesare guaranteed.
Our riiilcry department would be glad to demonstrate to you.
nathan Murray
ELECTRIC LIGHT AND POWER
Here’s Proof
That There Is
No Vibration
. in the
Silent Alamo
This remarkable plant operates
under full load mounted on
three ordinary drinking glasses
Experts and laymen alike
are amazed at the quietness
and -lack of vibration in the
Silent A lama.
There are a score or mores
of electric light and powen
, plants that will generate
electricity. But how long
will they last? How often
will they require attention?
Service is what you want
And to guarantee it you
must get a plant that does
not vibrate—that runs
smoothly and quietly—that
won't shake nuts and bolts
ond bearings loose—and
be out of commission in a
few months. Select the
Silent A LAMP
—the plant endorsed by prominent engineers every
where. The only plant in the world with the noiseless,
rotating, aleeve-valve motor. Theacientificallybalanced
plant that does not vibrate and that will not shake the
house or shake itaelf to pieces. The plant that need*
no special anchoring or concrete foundation, because
It is buiU right.
Remember This. No electric light plant ie more de
pendable than its motor. And no motor, however
good, can operate efficiently for more than a very
abort period when subject tb severe vibration. It
atanda lo reason.
Electric Light and Power Plant
Come in and See the Silent Alamo
All parts, except the batteries, are easemhled in
metal hose. It Ml
ta, except
compact, durable unit, on a solid i
mechanically perfect. All moving parte are i
Automatic governors end shut-offs safeguard tha
motor at every point It is practically impossible fox
even the least experienced operator to do it dsmago.
Come in yourself and see the plant. See how noise
lessly it runs—how free from the ruinous effects of
vibration. Enjoy electric light and power to the fullest
extent bv installing theSilent Alamo—the most highly
perfected and longest-lasting plant. Come in today
and see for youraelL
F. G. BEAVERS
PHONE 259
AMERICUS, GA.