Newspaper Page Text
IRfcOPhB YOU
fKMOW M
ABOUT n
Miss Thelma Woodruff is visiting
friends in Athens this week,
and Mrs. Garrett Smith an
nounce the birth of a little girl.
Col. S. G. Brown and Commission
er John Britt, of Lawrenceville, were
visitors to the city this week.
Miss Robbie Blasingame is spend
ing a few days with friends in Atlan
ta.
Mrs. Otis Jackson returned to her
home in Loganville after a few days’
visit to relatives here.
Miss Esther Stein of West Point
is the guest of her sister, Mrs. J. L.
Saul.
Mr. and Mrs. Charlie J*ckson, of
Atlanta, are the guests of relatives
■and friends here.
C. D. Burnett, who has been
Ante ill at her home onAthensSt ,
is reported some better this morning.
>
#rs. T. J. Nichols, of Atlanta, is
the guest this week of Mrs. W. H.
.Sheats.
Mr. J. M. Williams, cotton factor
and president of the Barrow Coun
ty Cotton Mills, is reported to be ill
at his home on Athens street.
Prof. Gaines, dean of Shorter Col
lege,- spent several days this w r eek in
Winder as the guest of Mr. and Mrs.
W. H. Sheats.
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Kilpatrick, of
Atlanta spent the past week end here
with Mr. R. L. Carithers and Miss
Ruby Carithers.
Prof, and Mrs. Huffaker and Miss
Ethel ..Weatherly will leave this week
for Cohutta Springs, where they will
spend the summer.
Ethel Jackson and Mary
Dunn left today for Loganville to
spend a few days as the guests of
Mrs. Otis Jackson.
Miss Edieth Grace Hill, the little
daughter of Dr. and Mrs. T. E. Hill,
has returned home after a visit to
her aunt, Mrs. B. A. Nash, of Snell
ville, Ga.
Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Taylor of
Benevolence, Ga., spent a few days
here the first of the week. They
-■went to Social Circle to attend the
Stanton-de la Perriere nuptials.
Col. Jas. A. Perry, of Lawrence
ville, spent Sunday here with his
hildren, who are spending the sum
mer with their grandmother, Mrs. M.
J. Perry.
Th.ySunday School classes of Mr.
I. E. 'Jackson and Miss Icie Smith en
joyed a picnic at Parks Mill Tuesday
afternoon. They made the trip in au
tomobiles. They report a pleasant
afternoon.
Five of Mrs. Mattie Brown’s chil
dren of near County Line, are des
perately ill, there being very ilttle
hofe for the recovery of either of
them. The neighbors will meet Sat
urday afternoon to hoe out her cot-
Will need about twenty hands.
0
Jno. A. Thompson, president of
the Winder Oil Mills, spent several
days last week at Savannah where
the Association of Oil Mill men
and Seed Crushers met. A trip to
Tyl>ee, other points of interest
werV.. deluded in the trip and Mr.
Thompson says “it was a most suc
cessful meeting and a great trip.”
Mr. Sidney F. Maughon, one of the
bright young members of the gradu
ating class of Mercer University, has
reached home and is spending the va
cation season with his parents, in
this City. He has already had fla#
tering positions in the schools of
South Georgia and Virginia offered
him for the fall terms, but he has
not accepted a place on the faculty
ofi any of these schools yet. His
Mr. S. T. Maughon spent sev
days in Macon last week at the
m^er commencement, being present
at the graduating exercises.
Mr. J. S. House, of Bagalusa, La.,
is visiting his parents here.
Mr. G. W. Woodruff, manager of
the Woodruff North Georgia Fair as
sociation and president of the
Woodruff Machinery Manufacturing
Cos., has just returned from a week’s
business trip to South Georgia and
Florida. Mr. Woodruff reports crops
good in the counties visited and bus
iness better than he had anticipated.
He sold two car loads of his Bull
Tractors in South Georgia.
The News is in receipt of an invi
tation to join the Lawrenceville
Booster Club in their Round-Gwinnett
County auto tour June 24. The cit
izens of Lawrenceville and Gwinnett
are wide-awake, progressive men and
have a hospitality that never allows
them to forget the newspaper man
A good dinner is on the program and
it will be hard to resist this temp
tation to join our neighbors in a trip
around old Gwinnett.
Mrs. J. J. Wilson was hostess to
the Young Matrons club last Thurs
day afternoon.
The reception hall and living room
were thrown together and artistical
ly decorated with bowls of nastur
tiums, placed on the mantels and ta
bles.
The punch bowl was placed in the
reception hall, embedded with nas
turtiums, and was presided over by
Misses Kathleen Wilson and Lurine
Hood of Athens.
After a series of games a delightful
sandwich course with ices was serv
ed.
Mrs. Charlie Jackson was the out
of-town guest.
Not only do we make the PRICES, but
1 WE’VE GOT THE GOODS. Modern mer-
1 chandising, where styles change every sea-
HSsp son, demands that each season’s goods be
SOLD that very season. Months of Summer
are yet to come and you yet have a long
me ei D°y beautiful summer clothes.
| Our PRICES are CUT so low, that you can
with other things, we are going to make a Special run o n
PARASOLS and FANS. We have about two dozen ladies’ colored Parasols,
ranging in price from SI.OO to $1.50 that we are going to turn loose at
59c Each= =lB Children’s Parasols to go at— 15c Each
A few better ones in Ladies’ worth $2.50 to ss,to go at what they will bring
A lot of pretty Celluloid Fans, the 25c and 35c kind to go at 15c.
Then there are thousands of other good things all over the store at just such prices. We still
have some mighty good things in Slippers at prices that will astonish you. Come and let’s show you.
See these Oliver Twist Suits for little boys, they are new, colors guaranteed and the price is only 50c
Watch SHOW WINDOW for bargains and come in and let us wait on you
Yours To Serve Always,
THE
Winder Dry Goods Cos.
STORE
The Winder News, Thursday Afternoon, June 17th, 1915.
Real EstatK
|HBI
CITY PROPERTY
and
FARM LANDS
Winder, Georgia.