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PAGE EIGHT • SOCIETY The Coming Week’s Program at The Temple Theater Today—Buck Jones in “Straight from the Shoulder.” Tomorrow—A William de Mille classic, “Miss Lula Bett.” Monday—Eugene O’Brien in “A Prophet’s Paradise.” Tuesday—A Goldwyn feature, “Pov erty and Riches.” Wednesday—Bert Lytell in “The Face Between.” Thursday—Mia May in “The Mis tress of the World.” Friday—Edna Murphy and Johnnie Walker in “Live Wire.” Saturday—All star cast in "After the Show.” • • Miss Lula Bett at the Temple To morrow a Reel Classic v “Miss Lula Bett” will be shown at the Temple tomorrow afternoon and night. Distinctive in many details and characterized by features that make them decidedly different from the works of other directors, are the pro ductions of William de Mille for Para mount. Mr. de Mille chose for one of his latest productions, "Miss Lula Bett,” a novel by Zona Gale, which proved one of the most popular books of the past few seasons and was lauded gen erally by critics for its wholesomeness and rich human appeal. It was sub sequently dramatized by the author and was produced on Broadway in 1920 with big success. The play was awarded the Pultizer prize for being the best American play produced last season. It is a highly captivating story and cannot fail to please the most fas tidious. Clara Beranger, who has written the scenarios for many successful Paramount pictures, and several ori ginals, penned the screen version of “Miss Lula Bett.” Miss Beranger is one of the most talented scenario writers in the country and made the adaptations of many famous photo plays. Lois Wilson, the outstanding figure in “What Every Woman Knows,” “Mid-summer Madness,” and “Lost Ro mance,” three William de Mille pro ductions, has the title role of “Miss Lula Bett.” Milton Sills, who scored in “The Great Moment, ” plays opposite her. Theodore Roberts and Helen Fergu son are also among the featured play ers taking the parts of Dwight Deacon and his wife, Diana Deacon. • * * Mrs. Carl Ayer and her three in teresting children, of Mclntosh spent a few days during the week in Ocala, the guests of Gen. and Mrs. Alfred Ayer. • • • Dr. and Mrs. James Bodifurd of Gainesville, motored down to Ocala Sunday for a visit with their daughter, Mrs. W. D. Sheppard. m + m Mrs. Rue Garnett, of Inverness is spending this week in Ocala with her sister, Miss Rena Smith. ■ • • Mrs. James Nichols and her small son are spending a short while at White Springs, the guests of rela tives. • • • Mrs. U. A. Carmichael has returned to her home from iHion City, Ala., where she went in to a tel egram announcing the illness of a sis ter, who was doing nicely when Mrs. Canutchael left her. • • • Mrs. Mary Williams came down from Jacksonville the first of the week for a short visit with her son and daughter-inlaw, Mr. and Mrs. George Williams She expects prob ably to visit her sister and other rela tives in Tampa before returning to Jacksonville. • s • Mr. and Mrs. Paul D. Camp, of Franklin. Virginia, expect to spend the next few days with their Ocala rtiativea. going from here to Jackson vklle to attend the Southern Baptist convention to be held in that city ■ext week. • • * The handsome and elegant home of Mr. and Mrs. K. T. Helveaston on Fort King avenue is now rapidly near tag completion and they expect to be able to move into their new home some time during th* present month ' • • • Mrs George W Martin, has gone to Otdsmar where she will spend some time with her daughter, Mrs. Harrison Black and her little grand daughter, Amelia Lae Black Mrs j Martin sent at this time to especially be with her daughter on “Mother s Iby which Is Sunday the 14th. • • • Ur H C. Hosier left yesterday for Philadelphta. a hers he accompanied a patient. Dr Duster will remain there for a few days and from there be goes be St Louis to attend the National Omveatioa of Hallway Surgeons He Virginia, who is unable to attend this ■meting Ur Denier Is expecting to be away for about ten days and is ex pecting to have a very pleasant and profitable visit. • • • Mr and Mrs. Bailey Celebrate Fifty-ninth Wedding Anniversary .. May fourth is a very important date of the calendar in the lives of Mr. j and Mrs. John E. Bailey, well known and among the oldest if not the old-1 est residents of Ocala, for that date marks their marriage day. -This year Mr. and Mrs. Bailey have been married fifty-nine years and while no formal celebration marked this event quite a number of their friends called to offer their felicitations and to wish them more happy wedding anniversa ries. Both Mr. and Mrs. Bailey are still very active and in posession of every faculty. Mrs. Bailey is out daily at tending to the marketing and other errands neccessary in the family life and Mr. Bailey is daily at his office. This paper joins their other friends in extending its best good wishes to this worthy couple. • • a Fay—Williams Marriage in New York * The Ocala friends of the groom will | read with interest the following an | nouncement: Mrs. Harriet J. Risbey announces the marriage of her daughter Mrs. Florence Risbey Williams to Mr. Timothy Frances Fay on Saturday the twenty-ninth of April one thousand nine hundred and twenty-two Church of the Holy Name New York City Mr. Fay is the President of the Lon cola Phosphate mines with headquar ters in this city. He spent a portion of the winter in Ocala the guest of his nephew and niece, Mr. and Mrs. Wade Lumus. He is a delightful gen tleman and the friends he made will be pleased tolearn of his recent mar riage and are hoping for a visA from Mr. Fay and his bride some time in the near future. • m Mrs. E. J. Redding expects to go up to Jacksonville in a few days to be present at the marriage of her grand daughter, Miss Genevieve Redding and Mr. A. A. Cook next Tuesday night. * • * Mr. Kyle Wartmann, of Citra was taken to the Marion County hospital Monday and had to undergo a very serious operation. Mr. Wartmann's friends throughout the county will re joice to learn that he is getting along nicely following his operation. * Mr. Robert Hall has sufficiently re ! covered from his recent operation to be able to be moved home and he is j now almost recovered. , , , Mrs. L. T. Izlar continues quite ill j at the Marion County hospital al- I though her condition is steadily show ' ing improvement.' • * • Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Raysor (Caro Liddom and young son, now of Lough- j man. are visiting Mr. Raysor's father j and family at Lowell. They spent several days during the week with Ocala friends. • • • Miss Elizabeth Davis entertained the “A” club most enjoyably Monday night and Tuesday afternoon the I members of the “Round Dozen” Auc-1 , th>n club had a very pleasant after noon as the guests of Miss Stella! Camp. • • • Mrs. James Kershaw. (Ethel Cros by of Cocoa, has arrived in Ocala to ‘ spend several weeks with her parents. I Mr and .Mrs. J. W. Crosby. This is ' Mrs. Kershaw's first visit home for. a year and her friends are welcoming j her most cordially. • • • Mrs. Sarah Weaver, who is the ! state poet of the United Daughters of the Confederacy, spent a few days the past week in Orlando at the con vention. She accompanied her sister, Mrs. A. A. Winer home and is her guest for a while before returning to her home in Miami. ' • + * Miss Victoria Raysor. of Lowell, spent Monday in Ocala the guest of friends. Mr. Kelley, the state representative , t the K t\ Williams, t Royal Scarlet) vanned goods. spent Monday in our ,city on business. t • • Mr L. P. Wilson, the new vice pres ident of the Munroe and Chambliss National Rank, will be Joined on the 23rd by his wife and son. Walker, and for a few days they will be the quests ,®f Mr and Mrs. A. E. Gerig. They have leased the home of Miss Meta Jew*- ett on Fort King avenue, and they will make their home there for the present. • s s II rm. Howard Munroe and her daughter. Miss Frances Bangs, who have spent the winter in Ocala with Mrs Mumrue's Mother.’ Mrs. John M. Martin, left Sunday for their home •t Bi ft more. where they will spend] TUB OCALA BANNHB the summer months. They were ac companied by Mrs. Martin, who will be their guest for some time. While in Ocala Miss Bangs was the honor guest at quite a number of social af fairs, and renewed many of her for mer acquaintances and friends. • • • Junior-Senior Banquet One of the most important social events of the week will be the Junior- Senior banquet to be given by the ju niors in honor of the “Class of ’22.” :It will take place tonight at “David ! son’s,” and will in every way be a de | lightful affair. The juniors are to : leave no stone unturned to make this affair surpass all others. They will i have the table beautiful in its appoint ments, using the class colors. There will be some classy toasts, speeches and music, and altogether it gives promise of being one of the most pleasant of the parties given in honor of the graduates. • • • Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hager, who ! have spent their third winter in our city, expect to leave the first of June The friends that they have made in Ocala are hoping that they will re turn again in the fall. • • • The Woman’s Club art class, under the able instructions of Mrs. Beau man, a very splendid artist, started its lessons Tuesday at the c lub house. The class has to be a very small one, so only members of the c lub can take the lessons. They go early in the morning and spend the entire day with brush and paint. All take lunch, which is served at nocn. The day is filled with great pleasure, and it is re gretted that the class must necessar ily be so small. Mrs. Beauman and her daughter. Miss Dorothy, while in Ocala this week, were the guests of Mrs. W. T. Gary. • * • Mrs. W. K. Haile and her daughter, Mrs. Gladys Martin, and her daughter of Gainesville, with a party of friends spent Wednesday very pleasantly at Silver Springs. • * * Mrs. H. M. Hampton, after a very pleasant visit to Atlanta, where she w r ent to attend Grand Opera, and who has since been visiting with friends in Jacksonville, has returned home. • • • Mr. Cranford Standley, who is now making his home in Gainesville, where he is connected with one of the banks, spent Sunday at home with his mother. • * • Mrs. Thomas Sexton spent a few days this week near Cotton Plant with her sister, Mrs. Henry Clark. • * m Mrs. Charles Lloyd will return to her home in Jacksonville Monday aft ernoon. after a ten-day visit at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Harris. m m m Mr. and Mrs. Bickley of Fruitland Park, formerly of Weirsdale, spent the day in Ocala Wednesday. u m m Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Bryant, (Lois Livingston) are expected in Ocala next week for a short visit at the home of Mrs. Bryant's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Livingston. They will motor down from their home in South Carolina, bringing with them Mrs. Bryant’s aunt, Mrs. Kitchin, who will spend next week in Jacksonville, attending the Southern Baptist Con vention. Before returning home they expect to enjoy a motor trip down the east coast. • • Mrs. E. J. Crook, who has been in Jacksonville for the past six weeks, jis expected home in a few days. ! While in Jacksonville Mrs. Crook had ito undergo a very painful operation on one of her arms, and her friends will be delighted to know that she is now almost entirely recovered. • * • Mrs. Virgil Lanier of Jacksonville was mentioned among the well known visitors in the city during the week, j • • • Mr. J. H. Therrell has returned home from Hot Springs, Ark., where he spent a week in attendance at the General Methodist Conference, in ses sion in that city. • • Rev. W. P. Buhrman left the first of the week for Hot Springs. Ark., to attend the remaining sessions of the General Methodist Conference. • • • Mr. Ben Rheinauer spent Sunday j and Monday in Tampa, the guest of 1 his friend, Mr. Abe Maas, going down to attend the funeral of Mr. Maas’ nephew, whose death occurred last i Friday. * * * Turner-Brown Engagement announce the engagement of their Mr. and Mrs. George H. Turner daughter, Crarice to Mr. George Albert Brown, of Anthony, the wed ding to take place in May. m m m Miss Kate Gamsby spent last Sat urday in Jacksonville going that far with her sister-in-law, Mrs. C. L. Gamsby. m m m Mr. and Mrs. B. J. Potter after a visit of several weeks in Ocala, guests at the home of their daughter, Mrs. H. A. Waterman, expect to return to their home in Jacksonville the first of next week. * * * Miss Wenona Wetherbee to Graduate Miss Wenona Wehterbee, who has been attending the Posee School of Physical Education in Boston, Mass., will graduate with high honors from this college on the twenty-second of this month. Miss Wehtrbee is one of the most popular girls who attends this school. She is a member of the i Delta Phi Kappa fraternity, being one of its most liked members. During the winter Wetherbee has at tended many of the college danees ! given at the Boston School of Tech nology, where her father attended ! college. She has also been the guest |on a number of occasions of her un : cle and aunt, who reside in Boston, ■ and altogether she has spent a very j delightful as well as profitable time | in Boston. After her graduation Miss Wether j bee will go to Washington. D. C., where she will join the Red Path j Chautauqua, with which organization ! she will be connected during the sum mer as child director. She will tour with them in the northern states. Miss Wetherbees’ Ocala friends will be very sorry to learn that she will not come to Ocala for some time yet, as her work will start shortly aft er her graduations, and in the fall she will accept a position either in : Liberty, X. Y., or Caldwell, N. J., as | physical instructor in one of those ; cities. * * * > Of Interest to the Future Bride At her marriage ceremony in In dia a bride stands on a large plate filled with milk and rose-colored sweets. In one of the little frequented parts of Tibet the women propose to men and have as many as 10 husbands by marrying a whole family of brothers at the same time. On her wedding day the Chinese bride is clad in ted and carried in a sedan chair covered with red. Any person who wishes may turn back the chair curtains and have a look at the bride. Hayseed takes the place of rice and confetti. In the Island of Rhodes honey is still a factor in the marriage rites. After the wedding the husband dips his fingers in honey and traces a cross over the door *way of his home before the bride enters, meanwhile the spec tators cry out to the bride, “Be al ways good and sweet as is this honey.” On the island of Jersey there is a curious but pretty marriage custom. As soon as the ceremony is over, and when the happy couple are entering into occupation of their house, the large granite slab over the porch is inscribed with the initials of the bride The Hen Knows She Has a Good Product—So She Advertises it. I . ,' • Kut-kut-kut-ka-dawrkit —kut-kut-kut-ka-dawrkit??? See the little brown hen strut ting about, advertising the fact that she has just laid a warm, white egg, guaranteed strictly fresh, .Sir. You patronize the hen that ad vertises. Accord the same fair ness to the merchant that ad vertises. Read the advertise ment—for pleasure and profit. Advertising is for you as much as the advertiser. So — READ THE ADVERTISEMENTS The Ocala Banner t The Oldest Paper in Florida OCALA , FLORIDA Summer Clothes Light and Medium Weights in Famous Hart Schaffner and Marx Brand We have all pattern# and a size to fit you. Then our line of Hats in Straws, Pana mas, Balliluks and Felts is complete. When an outfit for the man or boy is wanted we can supply you. H. A. WATERMAN The Haberdasher Ocala, - - - Florida and bridegroom, and between the two a rough representation of two hearts is entwined, the whole thus forming a unique marriage certificate for all the world to see. Courtship in Burma is a more open land natural flirtation than it is in almost any other part of the East. The young man usually manifests his interest at one of the pagoda feasts by shy attention; he then calls in company with his boy friends to find that the young lady with a bevy of her friends is awaiting him. He means business, however, and if the fami lies consent, he persuades her to eat a meal with him in public, and by virtue of this procedure his bachelor hood is brought to an abrupt end. • • • Mrs. Maude Horne and daughter, Miss Ethel Horne, will leave this aft ernoon for New York City, where they will enjoy a stay of ten days or a fortnight. mm* Mrs. John Preer and little son re turned home Sunday from Gaines- where they spent a few days very pleasantly with Mr. and Mrs. Spaulding Smith, formerly of this FRIDAY, MAY 12. 1922 city. Mr. and Mrs. Smith brought Mrs. Preer and son home in their ear, returning to Gainesville Monday morning. m m 9 Mrs. Edward Tucker and little daughter. Sara Louise, returned home recently from an enjoyable fortnight’s visit with Mrs. Tucker’s sister in Madison. • • • • Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Harriss. son and daughter-in-law, from Ocala, drove over from that city this week to Lem on Bay, where Mr. Harriss has a fine grove property. They made a short stop in Sarasota to visit Mr. and Mrs. R. I. Kennedy. Mrs. Kennedy’s young er days having been spent near the home of Mr. and Mrs. Harriss—Sara sota Times. • • Miss Katherine Livingston, th* j teacher of the fourth grade in Sara sota school, took the train Saturday night for her home in Ocala.—Sara sota Times. A small son of Mr. and Mrs. Jeffer* son Parrish of Palatka was srtuck and killed by a Coast Line train Saturday afternoon. Every advertisement small or large, points the way to a sav ing of money or time, an in crease of your daily comfort. You can’t afford to miss a single ad. Read them all. Read them every week. Advertising is the lighthouse that keeps the family budget off the rocks of commerce