Newspaper Page Text
pclcMn Sociftij
Mrs. J. E. McMichael, of Stark,
spent Tuesday here
• * *
Miss Hattie Buttrill is visiting
Mrs. Andrew Lane in Macon.
* * *
Miss Minnie Bailey was in At
lanta Wednesday and Thursday.
• • •
Mrs. R. H. Henderson, of Flo
villa, spent Wednesday in Jackson.
• • *
Miss Emma Lu Nolen, of Bessie
Tift, spent the week-end at home.
• • ft
Mrs. C. L. Redman and Miss
Lillian Redman spent Saturday in
Atlanta.
* * *
Mrs. R. L. Allen, of Flovilla,
was the guest Saturday of Mrs. C.
A. Butner.
• * •
Mrs. C. L. Carter was another
•visitor in the city from Jeukiusburg
Wednesday.
Miss Trudie Maddox is with the
Ham & Carter Company for the
spring season. # # #
Mrs. Ida Hendrick visited her
sister, Mrs. J. G. Tolleson, in Mou
ticello last week.
• • •
Miss Margaret Kinard spent the
week-end in Atlanta with Miss
Ruth Stallsworth.
• * *
Mrs. Richard Cutnming, of Flo
villa, was the guest on Tuesday of
Mrs. C. A. Butner.
• • •
Mrs. Jack Dempsey and children
have returned from several mouths
stay in Orlando, Fla.
• • •
Mesdames J. W. Terrell and W.
J. Partridge, of Flovilla, spent
Tuesday here shopping.
• • •
Misses Lillian Cornell and Dovie
Bryan were visitors in the city from
Indian Spring Thursday.
* • •
Misses Myra Miller and Lucile
Elder, of Flovilla, spent Tuesday
with Miss Pauline Mallet.
* * *
Mr. and Mrs. J W. White have
.an apartment on Third street with
Mr. and Mrs. John W. Jones
* * •
Miss Ethel Bonner, of Flovilla,
was the week-end guest of Miss
Louise Harris on Third street.
A • •
Mrs. A. A. Conner and children
are spending the week-end m Cov
ington with Mrs. Harry Death.
Miss Grace Ham returned Tues
day night from Atlanta, where she
has been visiting for some time.
• • •
Mbs*s Florence and Felicia Mor
rison, of Jenkinsburg, spent the
-week-end with Mrs. C.R-Gresham.
• • •
Miss Chlora Smith has returned
to her home in Cairo lton after a
-visit with Miss Estelle Thornton.
• * •
Miss Eloise Slaton arrives to
night from Washington to be the
guest of Dr. and Mrs. Henry Slaton
• • •
Mesdames Belle Weaver and Fe
licia Wise, of Elgin, were among
the visitors in the city on \\ ednes
day.
* * *
Mrs. Paul Baker and Miss Wi’lis
Smith, of Atlauta, will spend the
week-end with the family of b. U.
Ham.
Mrs. W. A. Harris and Miss
Nina Harris were called to McDon
ough Tuesday by the death of Hon.
H. M. Tollesou.
Mrs. E- W. Carroll and children
spent the week-end n Athens with
Mr. Carroll and were guests of Mrs.
R. H. Bickerstaff.
• * •
Miss Esta Garr returned Wednes
day from a visit to friends at Bessie
Tift and the family of I)r. i. *-•
Gibson in Forsyth.
• • •
Mrs A. 13. Harp returned from
Atlanta last week, and ber friends
will regre* to learn that -hew still j
confined to her room.
harry butner weds mss Frances
ROBERTS TWO MONTHS ADO.
riarriage Announced Last Week
Announcement has just beeu re
ceived in Jackson of the marriage
of Mr. Harry Butner, formerly of
thiscity, and Miss Frances Roberts,
of Atlanta, who has often visited
here as the guest of her friend, Mrs.
Lillian Newman Bussey, who was
milliner at the StarStorelast winter.
Mr. and Mrs. Butner were mar
ried in Atlanta on January 23d,
and their reasons for keeping their
marriage a secret for so long a time
is not known.
Mr. Butner is an auditor on the
Southern road in South Carolina,
from Columbia to Charleston, and
has hosts of friends in this, his
hometown, who will be interested
in his marriage to Miss Roberts,
who, too, has many admirers in
Jackson.
AFTERNOON PARTY FOR VISITOR.
A popular pastime of spring in
Jackson just now is the afternoon
party at which “500” is played.
Saturday at 3 o’clock Miss Lou
ise Harris invited a dozen of her
friends to her home on Third street
to meet her relative, Miss Ethel
Bonner, of Shady Dale, a popular
teacher in the Flovilla High School,
and had arranged her plans for
“500” as the motive for the after
noon’s entertainment. There were
three tables of players, and Miss
Pauline Mallet made highest score,
receiving as a trophy a bottle of
toilet water. The prize presented
to the guest of honor was a pair of
dainty hose-supporters.
Lovely hyacinths and ferns were
used for decorating the pretty
rooms, and at the conclusion of
the games salad and coffee were
served from the small tables.
• • •
Mrs. Paul Nolen and Mrs. W.
P. Nutt, of Jackson, were among
the visitors in Griffin Wednesday,
—Griffin Daily News.
• * •
Mrs. R. E. Carmichael returned
Wednesday from Macon, where
she has been the guest of Mrs. L.
P. Lester for two weeks.
• At:
Mrs. B. J. Anderson and children
have reiurned to their home in
Starrsville after an extended visit
with Mrs. T. S. Edwards.
Mesdames Maurice Wright, Fred
Ball, W. L. Nutt and Paul Nolen
enjoyed a trip to Griffin Wednes
day in Mrs. Wright’s car.
♦ * *
Misses Alice Maddox, Tenella
and Mollie Catherine Tingle will
spend Sunday with Mrs. J. D.
Brownlee in the country.
t • •
Mrs. Walter Meade Crawford re
turned Tuesday from a fortnight’s
visit in Hawkinsville with her
mother, Mrs. N. P. Miller.
* * *
Mrs. J. A. Middlebrooks and
Miss Ruth Middlebrooks, of Jen
kinsburg, were guests of Mrs. Bry
ant Thompson last Saturday.
• • •
0
Mr. and Mrs. H. I). Moore and
Mrs. M. T. Hodges, who have been
in Jacksonville, Fla., since last
fall, are now living in Leesburg,
Fla.
The friends of Mr. and Mrs. Joe
Kiuard will be pleased to know
that their daughter, Mary, is im
proving from a very critical illness
of pneumonia.
* * *
Miss Eloise Meredith has return
ed from a three months’ visit to
friends and relatives in Pinehurst,
Port Va'ley and Griffin, where she
was delightfully entertained.
• • •
Mrs. Taylor liuttrill went up to
Atlanta Tuesday for treatment in
a sanitarium, and while she is not
considered seriously ill, her friends
are anxiously awaiting news of her
condition.
• • •
Mesdames T. S. Murph and B. B.
Murph, of Marshallville, are ex
pected in the city as guests of Mrs.
W. E. Watkins during Grand Op
era in Atlanta. They will go up
from here.
Found a Cure for Rheu
matism.
“I suffered with rheumatism for
two vears and could not get my right
hand to my mouth for that length of
time,” writes Lee L. f'hapman, Ma
pleton, Ijwa. - I suffered terrible
pain so I could not sleep or lie still
at night. Five years ago I began
using Chamboriain’s Liniment and
in two months I was well and have
not suffered with rheumatism since."
For sale by all dealers.—Adv.
GRADUATING RECITAL
BRILLIANT SUCCESS
0
Miss Eileen Lanier’s Recital at
Auditorium Greatly Enjoyed by
Large Audience—Three Young
Ladies Receive Diplomas.
Jackson was treated Monday
evening to another one of Miss
Eileen Lanier’s recitals, and music
lovers, not having forgotten the
pleasure of having attended the
several others, were out in unusual
numbers on this occasion, and the
affair has received the most sincere
praise and was perhaps the most
thoroughly enjoyed of any previ
ous entertainment of its kind ever
held under the Public School sys
tem of Jackson.
Maybe it was the growing ac
quaintance with the musicians that
the selections they rendered so
faultlessly were so well received
and that the audience realized that
the graduating of these young girls,
Misses Margaret Sams, Helen Car
michael and Mary Helen Crum,
meant the bringing about of all
that is best in music in Jackson,
bringing our town into prominence
as a music center.
Miss Lanier and the three young
ladies to whom she gave certificates
were assisted in this delightful and
thoroughly appreciated recital by
Miss Frances Fulghum (Voice)
and Miss Ruth Willis (Expres
sion), who are acknowledged fa
vorites in the highest musical cir
cles. Their voice and reading se
lections made an uuusual combina
tion of music and art of excep
tional merit.
One cannot escape the feeling
that the work Miss Lanier is doing
is a great work and unusual, and
her pupils proved themselves of
equal greatness in the rendition of
their selections and interpretations.
The following program was ren
dered :
Caclioucha Raff
Margaret Sams
(a) Waltz. Op. 42, No. 5 Chopin
(b) To A Wild Rose McDowell
Mary Helen Crum
I Both Near and Far Vision
V lln One Lens with No'Line of Demarkation
'I If you need different lenses for
\ near and far vision you will be
/ _T f v greatly benefitted by the use of
tMmW KRYPTOK
\J Av LENSES
U One of (he moit wonderful Invention! optlcl
S’ .-M v science has produced in many yeari. Two
pieces of glass are to skillfully fused that no
i line or seam exists. Kryptoks look exactly -
(Sljgggjfg k hke regulars single-vision lenses. \
Joseph E. Edwards,
Jeweler and
Ut IjfvSx/ Optometrist.
Telephones
on F&rnis
ffe' , 50c per Month and Up
If there is no telephone on your
farm write for our free booklet
telling how you may get service at
small cost.
Addre*#
FARMERS’ LINE DEPARTMENT
SOUTHERN BELL TELEPHONE
AND TELEGRAPH COMPANY |A|
8. PRYOR STREET ATLANTA, GA.
Grand Polka de Concert Bartlett
Helen Cannichaal
Reading Jetty's Wedding Trip
Ruth Willis
La Raladine Lysberg
Piano I. Margaret Sains
Piano 11. Miss Lanier
Staccato Caprice Vogricli
Helen Camnichael
Waltz. (Faust) Jaell
Mary Helen Crum
(a) May Morning Denza
(b) Japanese Maidsn..., Gaynsr
Miss Fulglium
(a) Black Key Chopin
(b) Tranmerel Schumann
Margaret Sams
Polka de la Reine Raff
Piano I. Helen Carmichael
Piano 11. Miss Lanier
Maiden’s Wish Chopin—Liszt
Mary Helen Crum
Reading Re-christening Cornell
Ruth Willis
Arabesque C. Chaminade
Margaret Sams
Invitation ala Valse Weber
Piano I. Mary Helen Crum
Piano 11. Miss Lanier
To Spring Grieg
Helen Carmichael
(a) Open Secret Woodman
(b) Quite True Woodman
Miss Fulglium
Grande Valse de Concert Mattel
Piano I. Margaret Sams
Helen Carmiehael
Piano 11, Miss Lanier
Mary Helen Crum
Look to Your Plumbing
You know what happens in a house
in which the plumbing is in poor con
dition— everybody in the bouse is lia
ble to contract typhoid or some other
fever. Tlie digestive organs perform
tlie same functions in tiie human
body as the plumbing does for the
house, and they should be kept in
first-class condition all tlie time, if
you have any trouble with your di
gestion take Cliamberlain’s Tablets
and you are certain to get quick re
lief. For sale by all dealers.—Adv.
What the Painters Say.
“White Lead and Oil makes good
paint. But add Zinc, and it’s better.”
That’s L. & M. Seinl-Mixed Real
Paint. It hides even a black sur
face. It wears fot years. Tlie cost
of painting is reduced, because the
user adds three quarts of Linseed
Oil, costing only 45 cents, to every
gallon of the L. & M. Bemi-Mixed
Real Paint, to make \\ gallons of
the best pure paint ready for use.
You iret, three quarts more paint for
the 46 cents. Sold by Newton-Car
micliael Hardware Company, Jack
son. Ga.—Adv.
TO THE FACULTY GF THE JACKSON PUBLIC
SCHOOL, MARCH 20.1913.
Prof. Martin,he’s tiie Superintendent,
His rules you nnust obey
From tlie very first morning
To tlie close*v>f the Anal day.
His punishments are not awful,
But are for correction, gentle, mild ;
Tlie rod lie does not choose to spare
When lie knows it spoils the child.
The Principal, Prof. Mingledorff,
He’s some disciplinarian, too,
But lie loves to do unto others
As they unto him should do.
He comes to us from "Asbury"—
The school for Christian education
stands;
This alone would inspire our confi
dence,
But he himself respect demands.
Miss Goodman, she’s an expert,
And never to the class-room is late;
A good lesson she demands of each.
Or she’ll get you sure as fate.
Miss Keith, she’s a hustler;
Her duties are not a few;
She not only keeps up the FlrstGrade
But in art she teaches, too.
Miss Rogers, she’s from “Wesleyan,”
Tiie first school of its kind,
And the girls who there graduate
Are developed in body, soul and
mind.
Miss Nichols, she comes from Caro
lina,
The great “Palmetto State;”
She, too, is ail expert teacher,
And her service we appreciate.
Miss Lanier, she teaches music,
And music, too, site likes to hear;
She likes to play tennis, also,
When only one is near.
She comes to us from “Bessie Tift,”
Tlie school of character, merit and
fame,
Where the faculty seeks to emulate
The Spirit-filled giver of its name.
Miss McCord, she’s a home girl—
In Jackson she made tier start,
And her true character inspires us
To a “life in Christ set apart.”
Miss McMichael, she teaches elocu
tion,
The Rcieuce of expression and
grace;
She’s thoroughly proficient in the
work,
And her service uplifts tlie race.
Miss Smith, site comes from Athens;
The “State Normal" is her Alma
Mater;
Stie sways her scepter over the Sev
enth Grade,
And we’re mighty glad we’ve got
her.
Miss Thornton, she’s a Jackson girl,
In Milledgeville she received iier
“dip.”
She teaches the Third Grade with
discretion.
And she does it without the whip.
Miss Harden, she hails from Conyers,
And with her we refuse to part;
To the boys ail over the country
We say, “Harden not your heart.”
Miss Waldrop, she's a Butts county
girl.
And in point of time tiie best,
For other teachers come and go,
But site remains and meets tiie test.
“C. 8.” stands tor County School—
Maddox is tiie Commissioner’s
name,
“Good teaching” is his watchword
And “prompt payment of salary”
his aim.
FINALLY.
In giving this pen-sketch for publi
cation,
I make no claim to the honor of
poet,
But we’ve got tiie best school in tiie
State,
And we want the world to know it.
O. Lee Cjikhnutt,
Drive Sick Headaches
Away.
Hick headaches, sour, gassy stom
ach, indigestion, biliousness disap
pear quickly after you take Dr.
King’s New Life Pills. They purify
tne blood and put new life and vigor
In the system. Try them and you
will be well satisfied. Every pill
helps; every box guaranteed. Price
20c. Recommended by Hlaton Drug
Company.—Adv.
|3 n Cl inn and send me your Kodak
MJKC worktodo.
Work finished within 24 hours.
Films developed, 10 cents per roll.
Prints made for 3 cents and up.
Bromide enlargements 25c. up.
JOSEPH E. EDWARDS,
JACKSON, OEORUIA.
Phone 150
INDIAN SPRING SOCIAL NEWS
Miss Thelma Gregory has return
ed from a visit to friends in Atlanta—
Miss Louise .Smith and Mr. Betc
Cleveland visited J ackson Saturday—
Mr. Edward Cornell made ac
business trip to Jackson Monday—
Mr. and Mrs. Ben Polk, of Mir-
Vernon, are visiting Mrs. Tone
Burke.
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Hoard are £
Macon; made the trip in their topp
ing car.
Dr. James Bradley, of Jacksoa*;.
will preach here the third Sunday*
in April.
■ i
Miss Lucile Elder, of FlovillaJA
was the guest of Miss Lillian Gbr4
nell this week.
Mrs. W. 11. Arnold and Ming
Myrtice Arnold will visit relativcss,
in Atlanta soon.
Dr. and Mrs. Powell, of Sylua?-n
nia, are at “Rock Castle” far acs
couple of weeks.
The next meeting of the Warn-*
an’s Missionary Society will meed
with Mrs. Eliza Fears.
\
Misses Florence and Susie Ether-*
idge, of Mt. Vernon, were gueatas
of Miss Dovie Bryan Monday.
_
Messrs. Sherwood Thaxton gnf*
Bert Carmichael, of Jackson, wercQj
visitors here Sunday afternoon.
Master John Joseph McMenaatmJ
Jr., of Macon, is visiting his greatC
grandmother, Mrs. Emily Bryan.
Miss Dovie Bryan has returned!
from Macon, where she has been,
visiting her sister, Mrs. J. J. Mc~
Meuamin.
Mrs. Bessie Bryan returned hanue
Tuesday from a trip through Flor
ida. She will spend the summer
here at “idlewild.”
Mr. Ardell Edwards, of thet
Georgia-Alabama Business Colleges
in Macon, spent his Easter holi
days with his parents.
The many friends here of Dr.
Robert VanDeventer, of Jackson,
are glad to hear he is improving?
from his recent illness.
Mrs. Margaret Allen is visitinjp
her son, Mr. K. L. Allen, in Flo
villa. Mrs. Allen spent the wintoff
in Atlanta with relatives.
Mrs. Edith Keaton is in Bruns
wick en route home. Mrs. Keaton
spent the winter in Florida for her
health. She is greatly benefited.
Mrs. W. G. Riley returned front
Macon Tuesday accompanied by
her sister, Miss Cody. She aril!
spend the summer with Mrs. Riley.
Dr. W. L. Richards, pastor of &
Baptist church in Union Spring*,,
Ala., is expected here this week.
He will be the guest of Mrs. SalHce
Smith.
\ The pupils of the Flovilla school
played an April fool joke on their
teachers Tuesday and enjoyed at
picnic here. They were chaperoned!
by Miss I.ula Dozier.
Those registered at the Hotel El
der this week are: Mr. and Mrs.,
H. A. Kenuington and child, of
Macon; Mr. M. Corbett, of Val
dosta; Mr. K. T. Beaty, of Val
dosta; Mr. C. W. Hubbard, oF
Macon; Mr. D. E. Wilson, of
Blackshear; Mr. J. J. Weatheras
an 1 son, of Adel.