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THE BEAUTIFUL GRAMMAR SCHOOL BUILDING
This building, containing 12 large class rooms, auditorium, and otherwise splendidly equipped for the
Grammar School work, was erected in 1907, and is still one of the best buildings of its kind in this sec
tion of the State.
Names of Pupils Who Studied in The
Hartwell Public Schools During ’23-24
Graduate* 1923-24
The graduates of Hartwell High
School from the 1923-24 term com
posed the largest class the school
has ever sent out. They were as
follows:
Sara Louise Alford, Claude
Cureton Allman, Drucilla Brown,
Pauline Brown, Roy Jones Brown,
Sara Katherine Brown, Ally Rubye
Buffington, Sydney James Burden,
Martha Christine Carter, Nell Eber
hardt Carter, Joel James Cordell,
Jack Gordon Craft, Jr., Joel Eugene
Dendy, Dollye Walters Estes, Jewel
Elee Estes, Berry Floyd, Anna Clara
Gaines, Eunice Julia Gray, Hoyt
Linton Gurley, James Columbus
Jenkins, Julius Thomas Johnson, An
nie Ruby Jones, Mary Louise Jones,
John Hoyt Jordan, Mack Leon Kay,
Bertha Mae Madden,Austell Kathryn
Mann, Alton Monroe Maret, Joe
Bernard Martin, Horace Earl Mas
sey, Annie Grace Moorhead, Edwin
Nelms Osborn, Carlise Ruth Powell,
John Clifton Reynolds, Lillian Irene
Eich’irdson, Melzie Mae Roe, Kermit
Sanders, Frank Henry Satterfield, J.
W. Scott, Jr., Lena Pearl Shirley,
Schafer Judson Skelton, Elizabeth
Benson Teasley, Joneil Teasley,
Angus Neal Thornton, Boyd Cofer
Turner, Carrie Lou Vickery, Mary
Sue Vickery, Frances Carolyn Yates.
Teacher Training
Those completing the course of ,
study in the Teacher Training de- |
partment were:
Pauline Brown, Katherine Brown,
Christine Carter, Joel Cordell, L>ollye
Estes, Jewel Estes, Berry Floyd,
Clara Gaines, Eunice Gray, Hoyt
Gurley, Mack Kay, Bertha Madden,
Austell Mann, Annie Grace Moor
head, Carlise Powell, Melzie Mae
Roe, Carrie Lou Vickery.
Students in all grades attending
the Hartwell schools during 1923-24
were as follows:
ELEVENTH GRADE—Louise Al
ford, Claude Allman, Jewel Ayers,
Drucilla Brown, Katherine Brown,
Maude Brown, Pauline Brown, Roy
Jones Brown, Ally Rubye Buffing
ton, Sydney Burden, Tom Burns,
Christine Carter, Nell Carter, Joel
Cordell, Jack Craft, Jr., Joel Dendy,
Dollye Estes, Jewel Estes, Berry
Floyd, Clara Gaines, Eunice Gray,
Hoyt Gurley, James Jenkins, Julius
Johnson, Louise Jones, Ruby Jones,
Hoyt Jordan, Mack Kay, Bertha
Madden, Austell Mann, Alton Maret,
Joe Martin, Horace Massey, Annie
Grace Moorhead, Edwin Osborn,
Carlise Powell, Clifton Reynolds,
Lillian Richardson, Gilbert Robert
son, Melzie Mae Roe, Kermit San
ders, Henry Satterfield, J. W. Scott,
Jr., Lena Pearl Shirley, Schafer Skel
ton, Elizabeth Teasley, Joneil Teas
ley, Neal Thornton, Cofer Turner,
Carrie Lou Vickery, Mary Vickery,
Frances Yates.
TENTH GRADE —Ethel Adams,
Robert Lee Ayers, Edwin Baskin, J.
C. Blackmon, James Bradley, Asa
Brown, Ernest Brown,Lucian Brown,
William Brown, Sara Buffington,
Julian Burns, Maude Cason, George
Clark, Pauline Cleland, Denver Cor
dell, Vera Cordell, Laura Crawford,
Louannah Gaines, R. L. Gaines, How
ard Gurley, Armond Hailey, Sallie
Hailey. Ruby Hall, Mary Harrison,
Charles Rufus Heaton, Parker Hea
ton, Maxine Herring, Evelyn John
son, Frances Linder, Chandler Mann,
Arnold Maret, Carter Martin, Drucie
Martin, Warren Martin. Kyle Mas
sey, John Mayes, Myra McCurry,
Alice McGukin, Ethel Meredith, An
na Milford, Frank Moorhead, Hugh
Moorhead, Lizzie Kate Morris. Wil
liam Morris, Jacob Mouchet, Billie
Neese, Hoke Nixon, Maude Powell,
Marie Pursley, Dennis Reynolds,
Rubye Mae Reynolds, Henry Rich
ardson, Houston Sanders. Nancy
Sanders, Will Annie Shiflet, Carey
Skelton, Alice Teasley, Roy Teasley.
Eloise Temples, J. C. Temples, Fran
ces Thornton, L. C. Thornton, Mary
Thornton. Susan Thornton, Evelyn
Vassar, Margaret Vickery, Sara
Vickery, Lucile Warren, Elton Wil
liams, Frank Wilson, Louise Wright.
NINTH GRADE —Linder Alford.
Linda Avery, Arnold Bailey, Edgar
Bailey, Sara Bailey, Ruth Baker,
Ruby Banister, Louise Baskin, Grace
Blalock, Mac Brown, Jr.. Sara C.
Brown, Sara Nan Brown, Venie
Mat Campbell, Essie Sue Carlton,
Randolph Dendy, Martha Dodd, Joe!
Estes, Leland Hays, Paul Heaton,
Burchel Jordan, Mason Jordan, Julia
Kay, Horton Leard, Olin Leard, Wil
ford Leard, Mary Mayes, Malcolm
Meredith, Flora Mewborn, Dupree
Moorhead, Gladys Morris, William
Ray, Clifford Shiflet, Medora Skel
ton, Rudolph Turner, Grady Vick
ery, Lamar Wilcox.
EIGHTH GRADE—ArIie Adams.
Clara Avery, Harrell Ayers, Ernest
Baker, Katherine Barron, Copeland
Carter, Alberta Cash, Walter Cash,
Lillian Cash, Will Henry Chapman,
Cleo Cleveland, Condor Cleveland,
Myrtle Crawford, Ernest Edwards,
Amy Elrod, Newel Elrod, Thomas
Ethridge, Edwin Gaines, Mary Tom
Gaines, Elizabeth Green. Hoyt Grif
fin, Hugh Hailey, Lili Hailey, Betty
Hammond, Edith Herndon, Lois
Herndon, Albert Johnson, Ruth
Jones, George Leard, Jack Magill,
Flora Maret, Warnell McDuff, Helen
Meredith, Annice Mewborn, Mattie
Mouchet, Mary Elizabeth Norman,
Rachael Page, Leila Parham, Mil
dred Ray, Charles Rogers, Loyd
Rogers, Cleo Sanders, Dolly San
ders, Frank Skelton, James Skelton,
Beulah Stephens, Eula Stephens,
Grace Teasley, Fred Teat, Sara
Claire Thornton, Irona Vickery.
SEVENTH GRADE Hoke Adams,
Inman Adams, Benjamin Alford,
Frances Ayers. Hazel Barrow, Ruth
Blalock, Elizabeth Bradley, Eunice
Brown, Helen Brown, Leo Burden,
Annie Jim Carlton, Lee Elmer Car
ter, Walker Cason, Champ Dendy,
Taiford Dunn, Lillie Mae Eaves,
Calos Elrod, Carolyn Elrod, Brough
ton Hall, Joel Herring, Frances Hod
ges, Opal Howell, Leona Locke, Otto
Mason, James Orr McMullan, Gil
bert Meredith, Rachel Norris, J. D.
Parham, Elmer Reynolds, Herndon
Risner, Lowell Risner, Loyd Rogers,
Joe B. Satterfield, Cary Saylors,
Newell Saylors, Gray Skelton, Mary
Stephens, Jack Temples. Annie Ruth
Thornton, Cleo Vickery, Tom Vick
ery, Johnnie Walters, Charles Wil
cox, Charles Williams, Emmett Wil
son, Frederick Wilson, Jack Yates.
SIXTH GRADE—HeIen Ayers,
Sara Bagwell, Z. P. Barron, Leila
Bates, St. Clair Bradley, Charlie
Brown, Joe Brown, Floyd Bowen,
James Bowers, Joe Buffington, Son
Campbell, John Carlton, Edna Car
ter, Sam Cash, Ralph Cordell, Ira
Mae Crawford. James Crawford,
Charlie Mac Dickerson, James David
Dickerson, Mary Etta Elrod, Doro
thy Estes, Edgar Evans, Lucile Ger
rard, Clarence Gray, Raymond Grif
fin, Paul Harrison, Jewel Heaton,
Claud Herndon, Lorene Herring,
Ruth Herring, W. C. Herring, Lam
bert Jones, Rufus Jones, Howard
Kay, James Kay, Joel Leard, Cleo
Lovern, Lois McGukin, Frank Mou
. chet, Evelyn Oglesby, John O’Neal,
i Wilson Page, Willie Pruitte, Arthur
I Reynolds, Joe Skelton. Billy Teasley,
1 Marion Teat, George Vickery, Grace
Vickery, James Vickery, Naomi
Vickery, Louise Wilcox, Henry Wil
liams.
FIFTH GRADE—RaIph Banister,
Virginia Bagwell, Henry’ Blalock,
Mary Brewer, Ralph Bowers, Lila
Casey. Vera Nell Cash. Eunice Chas
tain, Carl Cleveland, Clara Cleve
land, Shirley Craft, Lucian Crump,
Jack Davis, Manelie Dooley, Julia
Margaret Dove, James Dunn. Annie
L. Eaves. Sallie R. Eaves, Vera Lou
I Elrod, Tom Gaines. Hubert Gerard,
I Lucile Guest, Sara Hall, Sidney Har
! ris, Melba Hayes, Dacus Hiott, Nel
; lie Jones, Taylor Jones, Mary Eula
I Kay, Myra Kay, Dan Lewis, Walter
Maret, Daisy McCurry, Jane Mc-
I Ewen, Julian Moorhead, Erskin Mor
ris, Louise Mouchet, Kathrine Nelms.
Arnold Nixon. Avis O’Barr, Hubert
i Parham, Edith Putnam, Luther
i Rhodes. Jack Rice, Paul Sanders,
I Barton Scott, Oscar Skelton, Myr
tice Skelton, Maggie Smith, Addie
Stephens, Columbus Teasley, Will
Temples, Callie Vickery, Frank
Vickery, Nettie Vickery, Cleve Wil
son.
FOURTH GRADE Monford
Adams, Hoke Baker. Queenie Baker,
Eugene Buffington. Louise Campbell,
Ruth Cash. Lattie Chastain. A. Ruth
Cleveland, Ruby Cordell. Lucy Craw
ford, Frank Crump, W. Claire Da
vidson, Sara Emma Dendy, Charles
Dickerson, Emma Lee Dickerson,
W. Mary Dickerson. James Dunn.
Mary White Putters, T. R. Espy, Jr..
THE HARTWELL SUN, HARTWELL, GA., AUGUST IS, 1924
Willie Ethridge, Alice Griffin, Burch
Griffin, Willie Heaton, Leatho Jim
Herndon, Robert Howell, Joseph
Jenkins, Jessie Leard, Van Locke,
Hazel Martin, Marvin .Mason, Ben
son Matheson, Carolyn Moorhead,
Hugh Morris, Sylvanus Morris, Frank
Morris, Howard O’Barr, Dan Ogles
by, Calloway Page, James Reynolds,
Jessie Bell Reynolds, Dorris Rich
ardson, Ruth Scott, Stafford Scott,
Hoyt Stephens, Amos Teasley, John
Temples, Franklin Thornton, Jose
phine Vickery, Roscoe Walters.
THIRD GRADE —Cecil Adams,
Frank Adams, James Adams, Melba
Adams, Nardin Adams, Cornelia
Bagwell, Joe Bailey, Lucile Banis
ter, Haskel Bates, Clyde Brown, La
vinia Burns, Sara Carlton, Alice
Carter, Jack Cash, Jenny Wren
Cash, Oscar Chastain, Leonard Clark,
Dorothy Cleveland,. Fannie Sue Cor
dell, Margaret Cordell, Fay Dicker
son, Julius Dickerson, Myra Dicker
son, Joe Dooley, Joe Dunn, W. C.
Dunn, William Eaves, Calhoun El
rod, Bennie Evans, Jessie Bell Gray,
Clem Hailey, Loyd Harris, Thomas
Heaton, Carolyn Herring, James
Herring, Grace Hill, Paul Jones, Cleo
Locke, Billy Maret, Clyde Mason,
Mary Lee Mathis, Lawrence McDuff,
Lindsey Mouchet, Elizabeth O’Barr,
Harold Reynolds, Louise Reynolds,
Robert Reynolds, Ada Rhodes, Dor
ris Rice, Macie Ricks, Leon Risner,
Blanche Skelton, Mary Skelton, Roy'
Teat, Charles Thornton, Talmadge
Veal, Woodrow’ Vickery, James Wil
son.
SECOND GRADE —Lee Adams,
Bill Baker, Harry Barron, Haskel
Bates. Sara Lee Bond, Jones Bow
ers, Clyde Brown, Carl Chastain,
Dorsey Cleveland, Vincent Cornell,
Eleanor Craft, Mack Crawford,
James Henry Dickerson, James Dick
erson, Althea Eastman, Avenell
Griffin, Hugh Heaton, Evelyn Jones,
Charles Kidd,- Bessie Mae Locke, Joel
Massey, Hewin Morris, Parks Nixon,
Rufus Norris, James Page, Harold
Partain, John Ricks, Fred Scott,
Clyde Seawright, Bessie Shiflet,
James Slater, Emmett Teat, Frank
Temples, Eleanor Thornton, Mary
Carter Thornton, Lillian Vickery,
Nezzie Vickery.
FIRST GRADE —-Clinton Adams,
Margaret Bingham. Williams Bowers,
Merle Buffington, Dan William Bur
ton, Tom Chapman, Beth Clinkscales,
Ruth Cobb, Tommie Cordell, Guy
Crump, Milo Davidson. Ralph Dick
erson, Justus Dunn, Mary Elrod,
Samuel Gaines, Owen Harris, Edwin
Harrison, Thomas Herndon, Howard
Herring. Parker Herring, Harold
Hicks, Frances Jenkins, Elaine Ma
ret, Grady Mason, Frank Morris,
Fred Mouchet, Dorsey McCurry,
Paul McDuff, Charles McEwen,
Clyde Norman, Kendall O’Barr, Roy
Patton, Clyde Patterson. Lillian
Reynolds, Hugh Reynolds, Rosa
Ricks, Marine Risner, Julian Scott,
Marion Skelton, Edward Skelton,
Cleo Thornton, Albert Veal, Frances
Vickery, Kenneth Vickery, Helen
Wallace, George Walters, August
Williams, Evelyn Wilson.
Enrollment Mill School.
FIRST GRADE—Fred Banister,
James Casey, Hall Crawford, Otis
Crawford, Clarence Crowder, Bert
Elrod. Annie R. Guest, L. B. Guest,
Joe N. Reynolds, Eva Rhodes, Lorene
Shaw, Georgia Thomas, Nesbit
Thomas, Guynell White. Elsie
Thrasher. Dolly Morrison, Eddie Mae
Bagwell, Ben Thrasher, Lonnie Bag
well, Myrl Moncrief, Deul Moncrief.
SECOND GRADE—OIIie B. Addi
son, Ida M. Addison, Selvra Addison,
B. C. Banister, Furman Banister, Leo
Bobo. Lucile Chastain. Inez Fitzpat
rick, Robbie L. Fitzpatrick. Essie
Guest, Garnett Hill, A. C. King. W.
C. King, Ralph Sanders, Mary
Thrasher. Annie M. Whitfield, Har
old Williams, Pledger Thomas.
THIRD GRADE—Charles Bobo,.
Annie L. Bowen. Edna Lovern. Kath
leen. Reynolds, Payton Smith.
FOURTH GRADE—Ida M. Baker,
W. C. Banister, R. M. Bobo, Joe
Bowen, Annie G. Elrod, le.ie Bag
well, Robert Kinley.
Some Figures On Luxury And Education
Luxuries Vs. Education.
In 1920 the United States blew
away in smoke of cigars and cigar
ettes $300,000,000, more than the
total cost of education in 1918, ac
cording to P. P. Claxton, U. S. com
missioner of education. The to*al
cost for tobacco in all its forms, in
1920, was five times the total of
teachers’ salaries in 1918 and al
most exactly the same as the total
cost for elementary and secondary
education for the three years 1916,
1917 and 1918. If the people who
use tobacco had smoked two cigar
ettes instead of three, two cigars in
stead of three, taken two “chaws”
instead of three, and two dips in
stead of three, and had paid to the
support of the schools the money
thus saved for the year, the salaries
of teachers in schools of all grades,
public and private, could have been
increased more than 120 per cent.
According to government returns
for 1920, the people spent tw-enty
two times as much for luxuries that
year as they spent for education in
1918, and six billions, or 30 per cent,
more than we have spent for public
education in all our history. The
amount paid for face powder, cos
metics and perfumes is only $12,-
000,000 less than the total amount
expended for public., elementary and
secondary education in 1918, and
within $50,000,000 of twice the to
tal amount paid teachers in public,
elementary and secondary schools.
In food luxuries, we ate up in a sin
gle year more than the salaries of
all school teachers for the first eigh
teen years of this century.
The number of the people of the
state of Georgia is 2 3-4 per cent of
the total population of the country.
If the people of Georgia expended
their proportionate part of luxuries
their total luxury bill for that year
was $64,500,000.
The chewing gum bill for Georgia
was $445,000 more than the total
appropriations made by tha state to
all of its state institutions of high
er education, and nearly six times
as much as the state’s appropriations
to the three normal schools for cur
rent expenses and for new build
ings. In the smoke of cigars and
cigarettes they blew away in one
year nearly three times the total
of all public schools and of all high
er education, and for tobacco in al!
its forms they paid in the same year
more than half as much os they paid
for public schools in Georgia in 50
years.
o
Ford No. 10,000,000 Ended
Journey Across Continent
Ford car No. 10,000,000 complet
ed its trans-continental journey July
29th at one o’clock when it arrived
at the Western terminal of the Lin
coln Highway, according to a tele
gram just »eceived by the Ford Mo
tor Company from Frank Kulick,
former racing driver, who piloted
the car across the continent.
The arrival in San Francisco w’as
auspicious. The car accompanied by
a large number of motor cars, be
decked with California’s choicest
flowers was driven to the City Hall
where Mayor James Rolph received
a letter from Mayor John Hylan, of
New York, in the presence of an
enthusiastic crowd. It was then
O If
V THE OPENING DAY K
Os school tells the story. That’s when teach-
ers inform their charges as to what they will
need in the way of School Supplies. And 1
> / 'J x
v then, home come the youngsters with their list. /L 7 ;
» V- ( "'J /
Thrifty parents, in buying, will do well to 1
I . choose this place. 1
k * SCHOOL BOOK HEADQUARTERS \
TABLETS PENCILS WRITING PAPER 1
PENS INK ERASERS LUNCH BOXES
W W. D. & R. B. TEASLEY W
Complete Line of Groceries
hartwell ’ ga ‘
driven to the end of the Lincoln
Highway where a final greeting was
extended by James H. Houlihan, of
ficial representative of the Lincoln
Highway Association -on the West
Coast.
This marked the completion of one
of the most memorable demonstra
tions in automotive history.
The ten-millionth Ford was start
ed westward ocross the nation’s
greatest highway on Jure 16th, not
to prove performance but to com
memorate an achievement, and
throughout the journey demonstra
tions, bands and parades marked the
progress of nearly every mile of the
entire distance. Greetings were ex
tended by officials of every state
through which the car passed and all
along the route sentiment was free
ly expressed that to Henry Ford be
longs the greatest of credit for hav
ing brought the benefits of the auto
mobile within the reach of the larg
est number of people in all walks
of life.
Burdened with the responsibility of
upholding Ford tradition which has
come to mean reliable transportation
at the lowest possible cost, Ford car
J ill I
7/ I
Positive
lubrication of the
Buick valve in head
enginefaatransmissioii
and universal joint,
keeps a Buick owners
mind free from worry
HARTWELL BUICK COMPANY
A. C. SKELTON, Proprietor
When' better automobiles are bur.lt, Buick will build them
No. 10,000,000, one of approximate
ly 7200 standard cars produced in a
single day, performed in character
istic Ford fashion. The entire dis
tance of a little less than 4,000 miles
was covered with but one minor ad
justment and with absolutely no
mechanical difficulty of any nature.
Although many hundreds of miles
of road particularly through the
western states and across the Rocky
Mountains are of dirt and gravel
formation it is noteworthy that this,
the lowest priced car built averaged
approximately 110 miles a day for
the entire six weeks and was on
schedule to the minute in every town
visited.
The trans-continental trip of the
ten-millionth car has formally ended
but interest remains so keen that
the car is now being routed up the
Pacific Coast to Portland and Seattle
from which point it will be shipped
by boat back to San Francisco and
then driven over-land to Los An
geles and probably back across the
country to Detroit over a Southern
route.
■ ■
A woman will jump at a conclusion
almost as quick as she will a mouse.
o -
Leading a woman to the altar is
often a man’s last act of leadership.