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HAPPY BIRTHDAYS
The Progress-Argus wishes a very
HAPPY BIRTHDAY to the follow
ing:
Aug. 20—Mrs. T. A. Nutt, R. C.
Wilson, Edith Elizabeth Bond.
Aug. 21—Lecil Johnson, Mrs. J.
G. McDonald, Adelina Ridgeway,
Helen Craig, Mrs. Otho Morgan, Mrs.
L. G. McKibben, Paul James Jr., Lin
da Lou Reaves, Mrs. Henry Turner,
Helen Howell Moss, Clarice Annette
McClure, Gerald Wayne Grabey,
Nancy Lillian Brooks.
Aug. 22—Frances Williams, Billy
Benton, Mrs. R. L. Grant, Walter
Harris, Ruby Bennett, Jessie M.
Smith, Albert Ronald Johnson, Mary
Avanell Townsend, Mrs. R. W.
Mays, Ellen Phillips, Deidra Jinks,
Jennie Lou Singley.
Aug. 23 —Mrs. L. G. Daniel, Mrs.
Bryant Leverette, Mrs. W. A. Smith,
Van Fletcher, Leila Pelt, P. B. Byars,
Mrs. D. W. Cochran, Mary Lois Wise,
Margaret Shirley Kitchens, Jimmy
Lee Wise.
Aug. 24—Mrs. W. M. Meredith,
Don Koch, Albert Owen Thomas,
Mrs. W. A. Dodson, Chester Whidby,
Mary Frances Allen, Lawrence Mor
gan, Mary Allen, Uel Pulliam, Mrs.
J. L. Fletcher Jr.
Aug. 25 —W. J. Saunders, Jean
Hoard, Ray Lowery, Mack Fletcher,
Mrs. T. P. Thurston, Bob Kersey,
Rev. Ralph Goodwin.
Aug. 26 —Mrs. Herbert Hardy,
Jimmy Bedsole, Mrs. Alvin Maddox,
D. T. Long, Elizabeth Fincher, Mrs.
Louise Heath, Dennis Wise, Mrs.
Carlos Chafin, Otis Moss.
MRS. EDWARD CORNELL GIVES
LUNCHEON FOR GARDEN CLUB
Mrs. Edward Cornell entertained
members of the Jackson Garden Club
at a lovely luncheon Tuesday, August
10, at the Elder Hotel, Indian
Springs.
Following a short business agenda,
Mrs. Cornell, club president, presen
ted Miss Georgie Watkins who gave
the program on “Flower Arrange
ments.” To enhance her lecture Miss
Watkins used color slides to illustrate
the various arrangements.
Guests on this delightful occasion
were Mrs. S. L. Austin of Atlanta
and Miss Delia Watkins of New York
City.
LOCAL GIRL GROWS GARDEN
IN ATLANTA REVENUE OFFICE
Miss Anne Watkins, daughter of
Wade Watkins of Jackson and the
late Mrs. Watkins, is one career girl
who adds an extra touch to brighten
the working hours for those in her
office.
As secretary to William H. Loeb,
regional counsel of the Internal Rev
enue Service, Miss Watkins has lined
his long office window with 25 Afri
can violets, which help soften a stea
dy scene of law book decorations.
The Atlanta Journal in a recent
issue wrote of Miss Watkins’ novel
hobby which makes her report for
duty half an hour early to water her
pet plants.
The secretary, who practices plen
ty of tact and horticulture on her job,
has a list of after-office activities,
too. On Tuesday nights from 4:30
until 10 p. m. she is a Gray Lady at
Grady Hospital, visiting patients, do
ing errands for them and “keeping
up the morale.”
She has done other Red Cross
work, too, and was president for sev
eral years of the Cheer-Makers Club,
an organization of Internal Revenue
women workers, who do charitable
work.
PERSONAL
Mrs. Leon Wilson and baby son,
Henry Leon, Misses Sally and Danny
Wilson of Atlanta were guests Fri
day of Mrs. H. R. Slaton.
Friends of Mrs. C. H. Mitchell are
glad to know that she has sufficient
ly improved from a recent illness to
return home from the Griffin-Spald
ing Hospital, where she was a pa
tient for a week.
PERSONAL
Miss Elizabeth Carmichael is im
proving after an emergency opera
tion for appendicitis at Georgia Bap
tist Hospital Saturday night.
Miss Emma Griffeth, Mrs. Worth
Brown, Mrs. Cecil B. Porterfield and
Mrs. L. M. Leathers, all of Athens,
en route to visit the Ida Cason Calla
way Gardens and Warm Springs Sun
day were guests Saturday night of
Mr. and Mrs. Doyle Jones Jr.
Whose Community
Are Your Dollars
HELPING?
The dollars you spend don’t stop working after
they leave your hands. They go on building the pros
perity of the community in which you spend them, to
the advantage of the people who live in that commu
nity.
Whose community and what people are your
*
dollars helping?
Buy and bank in Jackson so that you and your
neighbors can profit by the community building abil
ity of your dollars.
JACKSON NATIONAL BANK
JACKSON, GEORGIA
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
Deposits Insured Up To $10,000.00
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The hit thats changing the sales standings puts you
Mrs. Edwards gave an inspiring
review of “Magic Fire” by Bertita
Harding. This books deals with the
! scenes around the ,ite of Richard
'Wagner. Recorded selections from his
| operas, Rienze, Tanhauser, Lohen
igrin and Parsifal, were played at in
tervals during the review.
At the close of the program the
guests enjoyed punch and cookies
served by the hostesses.
About twenty-five guests were
present.
Way ahead 3 ways
This year Buick has done what no other car
has done in more than a generation.
This year Buick has moved into the lofty circle
of America’s three top sales leaders -a circle
once dominated only by the so-called low-price
three.” For today, Buick is outselling all other
cars in the nation except two of these “low-price
three ” And each new month’s sales figures
strengthen Buick s new sales leadership.
You can’t do better - if you w ant the best buy
for your new-car money than to look into the
soaring success that is Buick today. Y)u 11 find
this glamorous new-day beauty puts you way
ahead in three important ways—that s for sure.
So drop in on us— tomorrow at the latest—and
see for yourself that Buick is the buy of the } ear,
hands down.
Moore’s Auto Parts & Service
5 Third St. Jackson, Ga.
THE JACKSON PROGRESS-ARGUS, JACKSON, GEORGIA
MRS. RAVEN, MRS. EDWARDS
HOSTESSES TO BOOK CLUB
Mrs. Mildred Raven and Mrs. Rob
ert Edwards entertained the mem
bers of the Jackson Book Club and a
few friends at the home of Mrs. Ed
wards on Friday afternoon.
PERSONAL
Mrs. W. G. Cook of Hollywood,
Fla., is visiting her sister, Mrs. R. L.
Hammond, and Dr. Hammond.
Col. and Mrs. Howell Thompson
and children, Jean and Barry, visited
Mr. and Mrs. Vincent Jones and fam
ily briefly Sunday afternoon. Col.
Thompson, a cousin of Mrs. Jones,
was en route to an Army assignment
in Kansas, following a tour of duty
at Miami, Fla.
Mr. and Mrs. Sams Harrison of
Montgomery, Ala., Mrs. Miriam S.
Butler of Columbus and Miss Leila
Sams of Atlanta were weekend
guests of Mrs. T. B. Miller and Mrs.
J. B. Harrison.
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Buick price* start close to the lowest—just
a few dollars above those of the traditional
"low-price three." But those few more
dollars for a Buick get you a lot more auto
Whh our great and growing sale* volume,
we can offer you a bigger trade-in allow
ance on your present car when you buy a
new Buick. After all, the more new cars we
Because Buick's broad panoramic wind
shield has started a whole new styling
trend, you can be sure that today's Buick
Vffiiek Sfltes Staiiffigl
RBsj? '-t
1. More new car for your money
2. More money for your present car
3. More dollars when you trade
WHEN BETTER AUTOMOBILES ARE BUILT BUICK WILL BUILD THEM
THURSDAY, AUGUST 19, i 954
TROTTEIt
FOR 1
CONGRESS
mobile more room, more comfort, more
V 8 power, more ride steadiness, more solid
durability—plus the advanced "tomorrow"
styling that has taken the country by storm.
sell, the better deal we can make with you.
So you get the benefit of our great success
in the form of a higher trade-in allowance.
will keep its modern look for years to come.
So you are assured of a higher resale figure
when you trade it in later on.