The Jackson argus. (Jackson, Ga.) 189?-1915, May 30, 1913, Image 2

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Royal BAKING % POWDER A Pure, Grape Cream Tartar Baking Powder Royal Baking Powder Improves the flavor and adds to the health - fulness of the food. THE JACKSON ARGUS Telephone U 9. Published every Friday at 11.00 a year. Entered at Jackson Hoa to trice as second class mall matter. E. V. CARROLL, Editor and Publisher MRS. E. W. CARROLL, - Manager Official Organ of Bi tth County JACKSON, GA., MAY GO, 1913. NEWMAN GENTRY. Sunday afternoon, at the Metli odift parsonage, Miss Susie May Newman, daughter of Mr. and Mrf. W. F. Newman, was married to Mr. John W. Gentry. Rev. M. S. Williams, the pastor, performed the ceremony, and immediately the young people left for a trip to Ten nessee. Mr. and Mrs. Gentry have many friends here who are interested in their marriage and who wish for them much happiness. Upon their return they will be with Mrs. C. A. Itutner. • * * BIBS. GARNER BURIED HEBE MONDAY The body of Mrs. W. V. Garner, who died at her home in l’eppertou Sunday, was interred in the City cemetery Monday. The Rev. Mr. Reeves, of Locust Grove, conduct ed the funeral services. The de ceased was 7 2 years of age and is survived by her husband. LEGAL ADVERTISEMENTS. AN ORDER TO PERPETUATE TES- TIMONY. Okorgia, Butts County. h By virtue of an order passed by liis Honor, Judge Robert 'l'. Daniel, Judge of the Superior Court of said county, on May lb, 1913, in tlie case of R. C. DeSaussure vs. the Heirs of Sarah Ann Davis: Take notice that on Tuesday, June-M, 1913, at 10 o’clock a. m., in the court house in Butts county, Geor- j>ia, 1, J. Caleb Clarke, duly ap pointed Commissioner, will take the testimony of X. N. Maddox and his wife, Mis. \. N. Maddox, and Mrs. Stephenson, sister of Mrs. X. X. Maddox. The heirs at-law of Sarah Ann Davis and all other parties interested in said case are requested to be present on said date and take part in the examina tion of s iid witnesses, or file any cross interrogatories which they may desire to file in said cause. J. CALEB CLARKE, Commissioner. ADMINISTRATOR’S NOTICE TO DEBTORS AND CREDITORS. Georgia, Butts County. Notice is hereby Riven to all creditors of the estate of W. \\ . Weaver, late of said county, de ceased, to render iu an account of their demands to me within the time preserilied by law, properly made out: and all persons indebted to said deceased are hereby request ed to make immediate payments to the undersigned. Th s Mav 28, 1913. L. I’. WEAVER, A !m nisrator of W. W. Weaver. Wanted To rnt for several weeks a Lad) ’s Bicycle iu good condi tion* Apply at Argus Office. To Cure * ColJ in One Day T*k* LAX AT rVF. BROMO Quinine. It stops th Cough n.i liee iche and work* oil the Cold. Druggist* •'•fund money if it fii* to cure. £. 'ff. CLIOVfS *ignture on egek bo*. ®c. |ttcf;Aon J-tocwtij Miss Mattisu 11 am returned last week from Tifton. • • * Mr. and Mrs. L. R. Akin have returned to Macon • • • Miss Aimis Gilmore is at home from a lengthy stay in Florida. • • • • Mrs. R. W. Oxford and children are in Forsyth visiting relatives. • • • Miss Julia Thornton leaves to day for her heme in Tallapoosa. • • • Mrs. Janie McKibben has been visiting Mrs.A.W. Lane in Macon. • • • Miss Bessie Waldrop is at her home in Flovilla for several weeks. • • • Mrs. Dillard Sams, of Atlanta, spent Sunday with Mrs. T. S. Ed wards. Mrs. Ed Combs and children, of Locust Grove, visited in the city on Monday. • a a I)r. and Mrs. R. W. Mays went to Chattanooga Tuesday to attend the reunion. • • • Mr. and Mrs. W. IT. Hatcher, of Shellman, will be residents of Jack son after June Ist. * • * • D. M. Bethune, of Bethune, N. C., spent the week-end with Rev. and Mrs. James Bradley. • • • Mr. and Mrs. 1,. L. O’Kelley, of Macon, wtre guests last week-end of Mrs. L. I). Watson. f% * • Chas. C. Land, of Atlanta, is the guest for two weeks of his par ents, Mr. and Mrs. J. 11. Land. • * • Mrs. 11. W. Nalley has returned to Forsyth after a several weeks’ visit with Mr. and Mrs.S. M. Pope. A. C. Wilson, of Atlanta, was the guest Sunday of Mrs, Wilson and little sons at the home of J. 11. Land. * * * Miss Maud Gowdey, of Living ston, Ala., arrived Tuesday for a visit with Mrs. Raymond Carmi chael. j A • • * Dr.O.G. MingledorfFaudClaude Miiigledorff, of Dublin, attended the Crum - Miiigledorff wedding Tuesday. nr. sea Misses Gail Hammond and Lucy Jim Webb arrived Wednesday from Meridian, Miss., where they have been attending school. * • • Col. and Mrs.J. B. Moore (Ethel Walthall), of Baxley, return today after a week’s visit with Captain and Mrs. Felix Walthall. • • • Miss Annie Lou McCord is in Meridian, Miss., where she went to attend commencement of the Meridian Female College. asm Mrs. Maurice Wright returned from New York Monday and had as her guest Monday night Miss Phena Meador, of Covington. • • • Mrs. John Moore, of Atlanta, is here for several days, her visit at this time oecasianed by the illnes of her sister, Mrs. V. A. Wright. • • a Miss Annie Arden, of Guyton, who has taught the past term in theCordele school, is spending this week with Mrs. R. N. Ktheiidge. • • • Mrs. Lloyd Marlin and children, of Salem, Mo., are visiting in Jackson for some time, and are guests of the family of J. B. Ed wards. • • • Mrs. Lottie Atkinson, Misses Annie and Florence Crawford leave tomorrow for Maxeys to speud several weeks with their sister, Mrs. J. R. Nicholson. • • • Mr. and Mrs. L. S. O’Neal, Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Harris, Mrs. L. I) Singley and H. R. Harris were called to Douglas Friday on ac count of the sickness and death of their son and brother, A. K. Har ris, which occurred at 10 o’clock Friday night at the Douglas Hos pital. TO PROF. MINGLEDORFF. Oh! Professor, Professor, thou art great.' You came to our town to educate, Hut like Lazarus of old You got too bold In begging the Crum within the rich man’s gate. • • • Mrs.J. H. Holifield,'Misses Alice Maddox, Mamie Ilainlm and Lee Ellis motored to Monticello Mon day and attended the commence ment exercises in the evening. * * * Mrs. W. M. Crawford, of Jack son, Ga , and Mrs. F. A. McCar roll, of Jacksonville, Fla., are, the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Norman Miller.—Hawkinsville Dispatch. • • • Her friends here atid at Flovilla will regret to learn that Miss Ethel Bonner will not return to Flovilla this fall as one of the teachers in the school. She will go to Jesup. • • • Misses Mary Lou and Lillian Britt, of Tifton, who are returning from Red Springs, N.C., where the latter graduated last week in music from the Southern Presbyterian College, are guests for a week of Dr. and Mrs. O. L. Chesnutt. * * * Mrs. F. S. Etheridge went up to Atlanta Monday and was accom panied home by Miss Ruth Lamar, of Americus, who was her guest until Wednesday. Miss Lamar and her mother, Mrs. Charles Winn Lamar, who have been in West Point all winter, will come to Jack son within a few weeks and be with Mrs. F. S. Etheridge until after Miss Lamar’s marriage to Dr. Quigg Fletcher, of Chattanooga, June the twenty-fifth. * * * AL FRESCO PARTY. A beautiful hospitality was the al fresco party arranged yesterday afternoon by Mrs. Park Newton to compliment Miss Minnie Hailey, a bride-elect, and her wedding party at her home on Third street. The details of the affair were arranged with every attention to artistic effect and to the enjoyment of Mrs. Newton’s guests. They were marked by elegance in every incident of service, decoration and reception. As the guests arrived they were | met by Mesdames Emma Mallet. B. P. Bailey and W. A. Newton, who directed them to the receiving party, who stood nearer the house, [this party including Misses Minnie and Eva Key Hailey, Mary New ton, Nina Harris and Pauline Mallet. Punch was served on the porch from a table decorated in magnolia blossoms. Miss Exie Ham and Mrs. J. 1). Jones presided here, and under the pagola outside, the tea table was in charge of Mrs. W. E. Watkins and Miss Hattie Buttrill. Assisting the hostess in enter taining and serving sandwiches to the guests on the lawn were Mrs. R. T. Carmichael, Misses Nettie Rae Pittman, Rosa Newton and Julia Thornton. The frocks worn at this lovely garden party by the hostess, the honor guests and those assisting were of dainty lingerie material, lace-trimmed. The color scheme effected in the decoration of the porch and of the tables which stood on the lawn and held the punch and other dainties were the delicate sweetpea colors which were employed in profusion with gardenias and magnolias, great clusters in golden baskets making lovely centers for the tables. The affair was the loveliest of the season and altogether perfect in every detail. TAX RECEIVER’S NOTICE. This is to notify the tax payers that they are requested to ninke their tar returns for State and County Taxes al once, so that I may havt ample time to make up my book. The time to close will be the 20th dav of June. F.’M. Hodges, Tax Receiver. Warning. All parties are warned not to employ Marcu? McFaul, as he is under con tract with me for 12 months. J. T. WILSON. BLOUNT brevities; The grain around here is about ready to cut. Mr. and Mrs. Troy Willis are smiling over anew girl baby. Several from this place vis ited Indian Spring Sunday afternoon. . ’ TV Miss Martha Lee Sutton spent Saturday afternoon with Mrs. Troy Willi3. Mr. and Mrs, B. T. Stand ard spent Sunday afternoon with Mr. and Mrs. A. Free man. Misses Ellen Brownlee and Florence Etheridge spent Thursday afternoon with Mrs. A. Freeman. Mrs, W. J. Sutton had as her guest last Tuesday after noon Mrs. A‘. Freeman, Misses Annie Craig and Martha Lee Sutton. All the farmers around here have a smile on their faces this week. They have got a rain, and their cotton has got up at last. Mrs. C. B. Standard and Mrs. A. Freeman spent Sat urday afternoon with Mrs. Jack Reeves, Mrs. Ollie Tin gle. Mrs. Annie Ogletree, of Atlanta, is the guest of Mrs W. J. Sutton this week. Be fore her return home she will spend awhile at Indian Spring. Remarkable Catarrh Cure Xlels Right into the Affected Parts and Stops Gather ing in Eyes, Nose, Throat and Lungs. Dy a lonpr series of elaborate experi ments at the Swift Laboratory it is definitely known that catarrh can be cured by the simple process of inocu lating the blood with antidotal reme dies that stop inflammatory conditions throughout the mucous liftings of all the organs of the body. This is don§ with the famous Swift's Sure Specific, or, as it is widely known, S. S. S. It is taken into the blood just as natur ally as the most nourishing food. It spreads its Influence over every organ in the body, comes through all the veins and arteries, enables all mucous surfaces to exchange inflammatory acids and other irritating substances for arterial elements that effectually cleanse the system and thus put an end to all catarrhal pollution. S. S. S. cleans out the stomach of mucous accumula tions, enables only pure, blood-making materials to enter the intestines, com bines with these food elements to enter the circulation, and in less than, an hour is at work throughout the body in the process of purification. The medicinal components of S. S. S. are relatively just as essential to well balanced health as the nutritive prop erties of the grains, meats, sugars and fats of foods. Any local Irritating Influence In the blood is rejected by the tissue cells and eliminated by reason of the stimulating influence of g g g You will soon realize Its wonderful influence by the absence of headache, a decided clearing of the air passages, a steadily Improved nasal condition, and a sense of bodily relief that proves how completely catarrh often Infests the entire svstem. You will find S S. S. on sale at all drug stores at SI.OO per bottle. It is a remarkable remedy for any and all blood affec tions, such as eczema, rash, lupus, tetter, psoriasis, boils, and all other diseased conditions of the blood. For special advice on any blood disease write in confidence to The Swift Spe cific Cos., 127 Swift Bldg., Atlanta, Ga. Po not delay to get a bottle of S. £5. S. of your druggist INDIGESTION FIVE YEARS Relieved by Vinol. Strength and even' life itself de pends upon the nourishment and proper assimilation of food, and unless digestion is good, the whole, body suf fers. Mrs. L. D. Cook, Vineland, N. J., aays: “I was sick five years with in digestion. My stomach seemed to have a heavy load In It, and at other times it seemed to be tied in knots. Nobody knows how I suffered. “I tried a great many doctors and a great many kinds of medicine, but nothing did any good until 1 took Vinol. It has helped me wonderfully. I am Improving fast, feel better and am getting my flesh back again. \ inoi baa done me a world of good.” We know the great power of Vinol, our delicious cod liver and iron tonic without oil, In curing chronic stomach trouble and building up all weakened, run-down persons, and that is why we guarantee to return your money If it does not help you. Jackson Drug Cos., Jackson, Ga. The Foy Hotel, Indian Spring, Ga, ■ "—■ ■■■?," 1 n ,> f.t> v t - • - *%?: . • . ' Offers Very Best Accommodations - To Pleasure and Health Seekers. Clear spring water piped to stationary lavatories in each room. Acetyline gas lights. Electric call bells. Electric fansin the dining room. GARAGE. FREE BATHS. Every attention given to guests. R. V. SMITH, Lessee. R. T. SMITH, Manager: To tie Picnickers ol the Whole Country.. \Ve take this method of informing you that we are now open at INDIAN SPRING and can accommodate you in every way to further your pleasure while in our midst. y Bowling, Swimming, Shooting and various other amusements* can be found on our grounds. Special attention will be given to arranging a'suitable place for lunch. Do not fail to see the wonderful exhibit of Indian relics owned by Chief Eagle Eye and Princess Neola, on exhibition at the bowling alley. Sincerely yours, Dolvin & Brownlee. CONNER & CRAWFORD, Exclusive Agents In Jackson for Atlantic Ice & Coal Corpora tion, manufacturers of the PUREST PLATE ICE, Give them a trial and be convinced. Ice delivered in any part of the city. Phones 135 and 136. BE SURE and k s^ nd i me y° ur Kodak Work finished within 24 hours. Films developed, 10 cents per roll. Prints made for 3 cents and up. Bronjide enlargements 25c. up. JOSEPH E. EDWARDS, JACKSON. QEORUIA. ‘ Phone 150 What Shall I Have For Dinner? This is a question which perplexes many housekeepers every day It is no longer a problem to those who haue formed the habit of colling on us for assistance. Just telephone to us and we will make suggestions which will be just the things you wanted, but could not think of. Our meats are always fresh and fine. ' McIUCHAEL & DODSON, . Jackson Qa Miss Helen Smith came down from Atlanta Monday and was a guest at the Crum-Mingledorff wed ding Tuesday. Mr and Mrs. Fred Ball moved Monday mto the cottage recently vacated by Mrs. Carroll on North •Mulberry street.