Newspaper Page Text
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1937
locals
Eugenia Boone and Ethel
Moor were visitors in Maysville last
* eek - t t t t
Mr Morris Bryan is spending
hi *„ wee k with Mrs. W. T. Bryan at
Rabl! " G,p ' t t t t.
I ittle Hattie Reed Maddox is
j.jtinjf her grandmother, Mrs. A. S.
Moseley, in Greensboro.
Mi-- Charlotte McCants of Win
, was in the city Monday after
noon, visiting her sister, Mrs. H. R.
H° Wel1 ’ t f t t
Miss Esther Kinney, first grade
u icher in Martin Institute, spent
t hc past week-end at her home in
BogaO- f t t f
Miss Frances Hawkes of the Home
Economic* department, Martin In
stitute, spent Saturday and Sunday
with her parents in Athens.
t t- t t
Mrs. Kirk of Jefferson is a guest
of her daughter, Miss Corene Kirk,
at the NichMson House this week.—
Clayton Tribune.
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The Mulberry Baptist Association
will meet with White Plains church,
six miles west of Jefferson, October
13 and 14.
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Mesdames J. C. Turner, H. I.
Mobley, R. S. Johnson and Ethel
Hancock were visitors in Atlanta
Thursday.
X X t
Morris Bryan has sufficiently re
covered from his recent appendix
operation to enter Georgia Tech.
He left on the 24th.
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Friends of J. S. Robinson will
learn with regret that he has been
quite ill for several days, suffering
from an attack of flu.
t+ T t
Misses Jean Hicks, Margaret Kel
ly, Florence Lassiter and Professor
I. N. Hayes, of Martin Institute
faculty, spent the past week-end in
Atlanta.
Mrs. J. C. Smith, Misses Gene and
Mary Smith spent Saturday in At
lanta and were occompanied home
by Miss Mary Neal Shannon, who
was their guest over the week-end.
+t t t
Mrs. B. G. Smith of Ovida, Fla.,
and Mrs. Ernest Carlisle of Griffin,
who have been guests of Miss Annie
Hawkins "at her home in Apple Val
ley, have returned to their homes.
tt t t
Miss Sally Bryan left on Sunday
for Bryn Mawr, Penn., where she
will attend the Shipley School.
She was accompanied by her father,
who is on a business trip in New
York.
+t t t
Stanley Kesler of Georgia Tech
was at home for a week-end visit.
He was accompanied back to At
lanta by Mrs. Virginia Legg Carter,
who had been spending the week in
Jefferson.
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Attend the “Amateur Hour” show
at the Institute Friday evening, and
vote for the most popular entertain
er on the program. A complete
change of program will be present
ed.
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Friends in Jefferson of Mr. and
Mr3. J. T. McKay will regret to
know that in a recent football prac
tice in the Lavonia High School,
where he is athletic coach, he suffer
ed an injury to his shoulder, follow
ed by an attack of tonsilitis, which
kept him from the school room for
several days.
t X X
Herbert Brown Braselton has en
tered Oglethorpe University, and
Royce Braselton, Jr., has matricu
lated at North Georgia College.
Both young men are residents of
Braselton. John Stone, Jr., of
Hoschton has entered Oglethorpe
University.
tt t t
Misses Emilyn Rigdon, Mary Car
ter, Virginia Wills, Virginia Sim
mons, Betty Dozier and Julia Rob
erts spent the past week-end at the
beautiful country home of Misses
Ruth and Martha Evans. A delight
ful evening was enjoyed by the
young people at the weiner roast of
Miss Betty Dozier on Friday night.
tt t t
Addison Ayers left last week for
Cambridge, Mass., to enroll at Har
vard for post graduate work in Busi
ness Administration. He received
his- degree from this department
from the University of Georgia in
June. He made the trip to Cam
bridge by motor, and en route,
stopped for a few days visit with
Mr. and Mrs. Nathan Ayers in High
Point, N. C.-
locals
Mims Caroline Radford of Martin
Institute faculty spent the past
week-end at her home in Monroe.
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Mr. and Mrs. Y. D. Maddox and
ittle . D. spent Tuesday in Atlan
ta.
_ . t t t t
1 1 lends of P, C. Gurley regret to
know that he is confined to his home
with flu.
♦t t t
Miss Martha Watson of States
boro visited Mrs. S. Kinningham
r rulay night and Saturday.
♦t t t
Mrs. J. A. Wills and Miss Sarah
Wills were guests Saturday and Sun
day of Rev. and Mrs. Nat G. Long
in Atlanta.
+t t t
Mrs. Y. D. Maddox and children
spent thc week-end in Greensboro
with the former’s mother, Mrs. A. S.
Moseley.
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Mrs. Cause, mother of D. A.
Gause, returned Monday to her home
in South Carolina, after spending
the summer here.
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Mr. and Mrs. S. E. Smith and two
sons, Sam and James Bailey, of East
Point, spent the week-end here with
Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Bailey.
Friends of A. M. Hardy are glad
to see him back at the Ford Place,
after being confined to his home
with sickness for several days,
tT t t
Miss Sarah Frances Archer,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. L. H.
Archer and a 1937 graduate of Mar
tin Institute, has matriculated at
West Georgia College, Carrollton.
She was given a scholarship to this
institution.
♦t t t
Mrs. George Edmondson and Miss
Frances Edmondson of Milwaukee,
who were guests of Mrs. F. P. Hol
der, have been spending the past
week in LaGrange, guests of Mrs. J.
S. Holder and Mrs. H. B. McDonald.
Miss Edith Harwell, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Harwell of Win
der, is studying at Abraham-Baldwin
College, Tifton. Miss Harwell is a
former resident of Jefferson, and a
graduate of Martin Institute.
tt t t
Three prominent business men in
Jefferson will stage a unique per
formance at the “Amateur Hour”
entertainment in the Institute Audi
torium Friday evening. It is new
and laughable. Don’t miss it.
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Rev. and Mrs. R. M. Ridgon, Col.
H. W. Davis, Mesdames E. E. Mar
tin, H. E. Aderhold, Y. D. Maddox,
L. J. Lyle and C. D. Cox are the
delegates chosen by the Jefferson
Baptist congregation to represent
the church at the Sarepta Associ
ation in Winterville this week.
tt t t
Mrs. C. G. Williams and little
daughter, Sallie, of Shelbyville, Ky.,
have joined Mr. Williams in Jeffer
son, and at present they are with
Mrs. J. B. Pendergrass on Sycamore
street. Mr. Williams is superintend
ent for the Mills Construction Cos.,
who is paving the Jefferson-Athens
highway.
+t + +
Mr. and Mrs. A. Hoyt Archer of
Atlanta were visitors in the city
last Wednesday. Mr. Archer
was reared here, and Mrs. Archer,
the formef Miss Jimmie Johnson,
lived here during her girlhood.
Since going to Atlanta Mr. Archer
has been in the drug business, in
which he has been very successful.
The winter weather that came so
unexpectedly Monday, 'when the
mercury hovered around 50 and a
cold east wind blew, caught almost
everybody unprepared. Heaters
were not in place, coats, sweaters
and blankets were stored in moth
balls, and all were complaining that
winter had arrived on a faster sche
dule than usual.
tt t t
The friends of Miss Mary Pen
dergrass will be interested to know
that she has become connected with
the John Robert Powers Commercial
Advertising Studio at 247 Park Ave
nue, New York City, as a model.
Miss Pendergrass, with her unusual
type of beauty, will make a most
striking model, and her friends will
delight to see her face adorn many
magazines and advertising projects.
tt t t
Messrs. C. Y. Daniel, Harold
Chatham, Gordon Harrison and Miss
Jewel Alexander, local force of
Georgia Power Company, attended a
banquet on Friday night at Georgian
Hotel, Athens, in honor of Messrs.
T. A. Gibson and L. M. Shadgett.
Mr. Gibson is being transferred to
Augusta as division manager, and is
being succeeded by Mr. Shadgett of
Atlanta.
THE JACKSON HERALD, JEFFERSON, GEORGIA
LOCALS
John Hood of Commerce was a
visitor in Jefferson Monday.
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Billy Dye spent the past week-end
in Athens with his father, Ellis Dye.
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S. C. Moon of Gainesville was in
the city Monday.
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Miss Thelma Langford of Athens
spent the week-end with her par
ents, Mr. and Mrs. L. A. Langford.
♦t t t
Mr. and Mrs. D. A. Gause and
children were visitors in Atlanta for
the week-end.
Mesdames Fred Truluck and E. T.
Wright were visitors in Atlanta for
the week-end.
XXX
Mrs. Sam Wilson and Miss Ella
Dickson of Atlanta were nyith rela
tives in Jefferson the past week-end.
„tt t t
Miss Lucy Whitehead of Atlanta
was with her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
L. P. Whitehead, the past week-end.
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Miss Callie W’atson spent Satur
day and Sunday in Commerce, the
guest of Mrs. R. L. J. Smith.
XXX
Mrs. J. W\ Shields and Miss Utha
Shields of Winder were guests Sun
day of Mr. and Mrs. D. T. Wilhite.
XXX
Col. S. J. Smith and Mrs. R. L. J.
Smith were visitors in the city Mon
day.
tt ff
Mr. and Mrs. H. L. Singer and
Mr. and Mrs. Dan H. Cannon of At
lanta were visitors Sunday at the
home of W. H. Smith.
XXX
The friends of Stiles Dadisman re
gret to know that he is confined to
his home with sickness the past few
days.
Mr. and Mrs. Dan Jackson and
Miss Lorene Brown of Newnan were
guests for the week-end of Mr. and
Mrs. Grantland Hyde.
X t X
Mrs. Percy Alexander and Miss
Earl Alexander of Commerce were
guests Sunday of Mrs. J. F. Shan
non.
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Lanis Ethridge and Misses Nancy
Daniel and Frances Staton were
visitors in the North Georgia moun
tains Sunday.
ft t t
Mr. and Mrs. W. Harold Smith
and son, Jimmie, of New Holland,
were guests Sunday of Mi - , and Mrs.
W. H. Smith. Billy, the older son
in the family, is a student at Clem
son College.
Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Alexander of
Pendergrass, Mrs. Mollie Espy and
Mrs. Lester of Atlanta, Mr. and Mrs.
J. W. Alexander, were recent guests
at the home of J. V. Alexander.
tit
Mrs. Mollie Espy, Misses Kate and
Gladys Espy, Mrs. H. F. Lester and
son, John, of Atlanta, were guests
Sunday of Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Alex
ander and family.
tt t t
Miss Mary Connally is spending
the next ten days in Gainesville in
the Gallant-Belk department store.
Miss Connally will be delighted to
have her friends who are shopping
in Gainesville call to see her.
+t t t
Rev. Gower Latimer, a former
pastor of the Maysville Baptist
church, but now serving the congre
gation at Vidalia, has been offered
the pastorate of the church at
Thomaston. He has not yet accept
ed nor declined the call.
Jefferson extends cordial greetings
to H. L. Bentley, who succeeds R.
B. Maxwell at the Gainesville Mid
land depot, and Mrs. Bentley, who
arrive today, Wednesday. They will
have an apartment in the home of
J. N. Holder.
tft t
A Womanless Bridge Club and a
Womanless Sewing Club will be
featured at “Amateur Hour,” Mar
tin Institute, Friday evening. See
how well these act the parts of
their wives. See yourselves as your
husbands picture you.
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Mr. and Mrs. Harry Gross of New
York and Dallas, Tex., were recent
guests of Mrs. J. B. Pendergrass.
Mrs. Gross is the former Miss Geor
gia Lyle, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Luther Lyle, and is a niece of Mrs.
Pendergrass.
Services will be held next Sabbath
at 11:30 o’clock at Dry Pond, with
Prof. H. J. W. Kizer as the speak
er. At the same hour Colonel W.
P. Frost will conduct services at
Holly Springs, both churches belong
ing to the Maysville Circuit. These
services are held in these churches in
compliance with the suggestion from
President Roosevelt that next Sun
day shall be ‘Go To Church Sun
day” for everybody. The pastor of
Maysville Circuit, Rev. J. L. Hall,
will preach at the other churches of
his charge that day, Maysville and
Gillsville.
Someone borrowed my Wrecker
Bar. Would appreciate its return.
—John H. Lord.
Flour on Sale Friday and
Saturday. Bird & Owen’s.
ANNOUNCEMENT
WATCH FOR THE
H. T. MOBLEY CO.’S
/
BIG CIRCULAR
The ENTIRE $20,000 STOCK of H. T.
MOBLEY CO., Jefferson, Ga., will
be Closed Out to the bat e walls.
A sale you will never forget
BE HERE WHEN THE DOORS OPEN
FRIDAY, OCTOBER Ist, 9 A. M.
“AMATEUR HOUR” AT
INSTITUTE FRI. EVENING
An entirely new “Amateur Hour”
will be presented at Martin Institute
Auditorium Friday evening, begin
ning at 8:00 o’clock. The entertain
ment is sponsored by the Methodist
Missionary Society. A similar en
tertairtment was staged several
months ago, and so pleased was the
audience that the ladies have had
numerbus requests to repeat the
same. However, an entirely new
program will be presented, and
every indication is that it will be
even better than the former one.
There will be readings, singing,
tap dancing, various laughable skits
and contests. The committee as
sures us that those who attend will
enjoy the show, and the price is only
20 and 10 cents.
The missionary society members
will appreciate the co-operation of
their friends.
MRS. COX HOSTESS TO BRIDGE
CLUB
Members of the Ladies Thursday
Bridge Club were guests Thursday
afternoon at a beautiful bridge par
ty given 'by Mrs. C. D. Cox at her
home on Hill street. Those enjoy
ing the game were Mesdames H. E.
Aderhold, T. T. Benton, M. M. Bry
an, W. T. Bryan, H. J. W. Kizer, C.
H. Legg, H. I. Mobley, Dudley
Moore. High score was made by
Mrs. Mobley.
DR. CAMPBELL CONNECTED
WITH HOSPITAL IN COMMERCE
Dr. J. H. Campbell, eye, ear, nose
and throat specialist, left Monday
for Commerce, where he will be con
nected with the Commerce Hospital
in the practice of his profession.
Dr. Campbell has been in Jefferson
for the past two years, and leaves
here only because he will have a
broader field in his new location,
and will have the advantage of hos
pital service. Dr. Campbell has had
excellent advantages, and there is no
reason why he should not meet with
fine success in Commerce. Until he
secures living quarters in Commerce,
Mrs. Campbell and Miss Eleanor wlil
remain in Jefferson, and he will be
here at night.
LANGFORD—HARRIS
DeLAY—LANGFORD
On Sunday afternoon, September
26, at the home of Judge W. W.
Dickson, Miss Doris Langford and
Mr. Claborn Harris, and Miss Rose
DeLay and Mr. Bruce Langford,
were united in marriage, the double
ceremony being performed by Judge
Dickson.
Mrs. Harris and Bruce Langfoid
are daughter and son of Mr. and
Mrs. W. T. Langford of Jefferson.
Mr. Harris is the son of Mr. and
Mrs. J. L. Harris of Jefferson, and
Miss Langford is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. C. F. DeLay of Gills
ville. These popular young people
have the sincere good wishes of a
wide circle of friends.
SHORT—KNIGHT
A beautiful wedding occurring
September 19 in Commerce united
Miss Mildred Short of that city, and
LaVerne Knight of Cornelia. The
ceremony was performed at 5 p. m.
at the residence of Mr. and Mrs. C.
H. Short, parents of the groom.
The home was beautiful in its
decorations, and the bride was
charmingly arrayed in a wedding
gown of white chiffon. Her veil was
of Brussells lace. The ceremony
was performed by Rev. C. C. Tooke
in the presence of the members of
the two families and a few close
friends.
An informal reception followed the
ceremony, and Mr. and Mrs. Knight
left for a bridal trip, after which
they will occupy their home already
furnished and awaiting their return'
in Cornelia.
MRS. CARITHERS ADDRESSES
YOUNG WOMEN
The Young Woman’s Circle of the
Methodist Church held a most en
thusiastic meeting at the home of
Mrs. H. R. Howell, with twenty in
attendance. This was the first meet
ing of the fall. The large number
present and the interest exhibited
indicated that the members are in
terested in the work of the church.
Mrs. H. A. Carithers of Winder, con
ference chairman of Young Wo
men’s Circles, was present, and SDoke
on the recent council proceedings.
She brought a very interesting mes
sage.
We pay 30c doz. for Eggs.
| Bird & Owen’s, 300 Lee St.
i Phone 210.
PAGE FIVE.
ERROL FLYNN IN “GREEN
LIGHT” AT ROOSEVELT
“Green Light,” best-selling novel
for two years, has been booked by
the Roosevelt Theatre, for Monday.
Errol Flynn, the young Irish star,
has the role of Dr. Newell Paige, a
young surgeon who sacrifices his
career to save that of an older doc
tor.
Co-starred with him is the lovely
Anita Louise as Phyllis Dexter, for
whose mother’s death Paige has as
sumed the blame.
Dean Harcourt (played by Sir
Cedric Hardwicke) is a cleric with a
broad and beautiful philosophy of
life, and the confidante of these
three young people.
Lavishly produced, “Green Light”
bids fair to be one of the leading
screen contributions of 1937.
MAYSVILLE WOMAN’S CLUB
HOLDS MEETING
Maysville.—The regular monthly
meeting of the Maysville Woman’s
Club was held recently at the at
tractive home of Mrs. M. P. Dead
wyler.
The home was very beautifully
decorated with dahlias.
In addition to members of the
class, several visitors attended the
meeting, which was presided over by
Mrs. John Miller, club president.
Reports were given from the vari
ous committee and a most interest
ing talk was made by Superintend
ent Osborne as to the needs of the
school.
Mrs. Avery Arnold was in charge
of the program, after which an en
joyable social hour was held.
EPISODE S—VOLLEY OF DEATH
Clinging to the horses reins, Clark
manages to regain his footing. He
and Bowie and Carson go off in
search of the villians. He is attack
ed in the woods, and although he
escapes with his life, his credentials
are stolen. Arriving in Santa Fee
he steals into Escobedo’s headquart
ers and hides in a closet. However
he is detected by one of the villians
and locked in. Then Escobedo has
his guard pepper the closet with
bullets. Clark, powerless to defend
himself, watches the bullets clip
into the soft wood with merciless
precision, knowing that at any mo
ment one of them may destroy him.
His mental torture is aggravated by
the thought that the missing creden
tials may brand him as a spy.