Newspaper Page Text
THURSDAY, MAY 25, 1939.
(Continued from opposite page)
and reconstructing, making addi
tions. extensions, alterations, or
improvements, in its Water Works
Syotem. end acquiring the neces
sary property therefor; and (b)
Improving, repairing, purchasing.
Installing anti constructing tncln
era.ora or crematories for the dis
posal o' garbage, refuse and waste
bv Its fiptary Department, and
acquiring the necessary property
therefor, either or both. may. from
time to time Issue Interest bear
ing revenue certificates to be paid
solely out of the revenues derived
from Water or Sanitary service
charges respectively, and to pro
vide for the payment of said rev
enue certificates by setting aside
In special funds to be known as
•Water* Works Department Reve
nue Fund' and 'Sanitary Depart
ment Revenue Fund,’ a sufficient
sum. not to exceed ten (10%) per
centum of the annual charges, fpes
and taxes received from the water
and sanitary service charges re
spectively. to retire the certifi
cates. Said percentages shall be
based upon the total annual re
ceipts from each of said services
for the year previous to the issue."
AN ACT—No. 366
To amend Article 7. Section 7,
Paragraph 1 of the Constitution by
adding the following;
And except that the Board of Ed
ucation of Fulton County, in this
State, shall, and is hereby re
quired to, assume and pay. with*
out any election, and without re
gard to any debt limitation, and
as its own obligation, the school
bonds of the City of East Point,
outstanding on the date this
amendment is ratified; and the
principal and interest, according
to the provisions of such bonds and
their interest coupons, of Mayor
and Council of the City of College
park, outstanding on the date this
amendment is ratified, said College
Park School Bonds being of date
March 1, 1926, aggregating Sixty
five Thousand Dollars principal,
and bearing interest from their
date at five per centum. The tax
levying authorities of Fulton Coun
ty shall levy upon the property sub
ject to taxation in the territory of
said county outside the corpor
ate limits of the City of Atlanta,
such tax as may be necessary to
provide a sinking fund for the re
tirement of said bonds and for pay
ing the principal thereof and the
interest thereon.”
AN ACT—No. 340
To amend Article 7, Section 7,
Paragraph 1 of the Constitution to
add the following:
“And except that the Town of
Bowdon in Carroll County, Geor
gia, for its present or future bond
ed indebtedness may issue serial
refunding bonds not in excess of
tlie legally authorized outstanding
unpaid bended indebtedness, which
includes principal and interest, for
the purpose of refunding and re
tiring any bonded indebtedness for
said Town of Bowdon municipal
ity and provide for the assessment
and collection of an annual tax
sufficient in amount to pay the
principal and interest of said re
funding bonds as they shall fall
due; the proceeds of such refund
ing bonds that may be issued as
herein provided to be used exclu
sively for the purpose of paying
and retiring said bonded indebted
ness that is due, or that may be
come due, and unpaid on any fu
ture bonded indebtedness and pro
vided further that said refunding
bonds shall he issued only when
authorized by a vote of the gov
erning body of the Town of Bow
don and then shall be validated as
Is provided by* law.”
NOW, THEREFORE. I, E. D.
Rivers. Governor of said State, do
issue this my proclamation hereby
declaring that the proposed fore
going Amendments to the Constitu
tion are submitted, for ratification
or rejection, to the voters of the
State qualified to vote for mem
bers of the General Assembly at
the General Election to be held on
Tuesday, June 6, 1939.
E. D. RIVERS,
Governor.
By the Governor:
JOHN B. WILSON,
Secretary of State.
LETTERS OF DISMISSION
Georgia, Jackson County. Where
as, R. L. Murphy, administrator of
Mrs. P. A. Murphy, deceased, repre
sents to the Court in his petition,
duly filed and entered on record,
that he has fully administered Mrs.
P. A. Murphy’s estate; this is, there
fore, to cite all persons concerned,
kindred and creditors, to show cause,
if any they can, why said adminis
trator should not be discharged from
his administration, and receive let
ters of dismission on the first Mon
day in June, 1939.
L. B. MOON, Ordinary.
letters of dismission
Georgia, Jackson County. Mrs.
Mattie H. Carrington, guardian of
W. J., Mary Frances and Morris
Edwards, has applied to me for a
discharge from her guardianship of
said minors. This is, therefore, to
notfy all persons concerned to file
their objections, if any they have,
on or before the first Monday in
June, next, else she will be discharg
ed from her guardianship as applied
for.
L. B. MOON, Ordinary.
If you render pleasant service, let
the public know about it—Advertise.
NOTICE OF SALE OF LAND
Georgia, Jackson County. Be
cause of default under the terms and
provisions of the deed to secure debt
executed by C. 0. Pittman, now de
ceased, to the Land Bank Commis
sioner, dated the 25th day of May,
1934, and recorded in the clerk’s of
fice of the Jackson County Superior
Court in Book 3-A, Page 181, which
deed, and the note and indebtedness
secured thereby, are owned and
held by Federal Farm Mortgage Cor
poration, the undersigned has de
clared the entire unpaid amount of
the indebtedness secured by said
deed due and payable, and, acting
under the power of sale contained
in said deed, for the purpose of pay
ing said indebtedness, will, on the
6th day of June, 1939, during the
legal hours of sale at the court
house in said county, sell at public
outcry to the highest bidder for cash,
the lands described in said deed,
to-wit:
Eighty-two and three-tenth acres
of land, more or less, in the 257th
G. M. District of Jackson County,
Georgia, said land being now or
formerly bounded on the north by
lands of C. M. Barnett, east by lands
of Lucius Mauldin, Mrs. T. A. Maul
din, and Mrs. Belle Hale, south by
lands of H. W. Davis, and west by
lands of Hubert Wilhite and S. J.
Suddeth, and being the same land
described in the security deed exe
cuted by C. 0. Pittman to the Land
Bank Commissioner, May 25, 1934,
and recorded in Book 3-A, Page 181,
in the office of the Clerk of the Su
perior Court of Jackson County,
Georgia, to the record of which deed
reference is hereby made for a more
particular description.
Subject to first security deed
dated May 25, 1934, executed by C.
O. Pittman to The Federal Land
Bank of Columbia, said security
deed being recorded among the re
cords for Jackson County, Georgia.
A deed will be executed to the
purchaser as authorized by the afore
mentioned loan deed. This Ist day
of May, 1939.
FEDERAL FARM MORTGAGE
CORPORATION
Davis & Stephens, Attorneys.
SHERIFF’S SALE
Georgia, Jackson County. There
will be sold on the first Tuesday in
June, 1939. before the court house
door of said count.y, within the leaal
hours of sale, to the highest and best
bidder for cash, the following de
scribed property:
All that tract or parcel of land,
lying and being in the 428 Dixt., G.
M., Jackson County, Georgia, de
scribed as follows: Beginning at an
iron stake in the State road leading
from Jefferson to Gainesville, Ga.,
at the S. E. corner of lands of J. C.
Turner, said corner being ?5 or 100
yards beyond the residence of U. G.
Gillespie, and going in the direction
of Gainesville, Ga., running thence
N 76t4 E 29.90 to rock corner,
thence S 15*E 5.88 to P. O. corner,
thence S 76 W 29.94 to hickory
corner, thence N W 5.88 to the
beginning corner, containing seven
teen and 6-10 acres, more or less,
joining lands of J. C. Turner on the
north, P. J. Roberts estate on the
east, Thornton on the south, and the
Harrison Estate on the west, known
as a part of the old Bob White home
place. , . .
Also, at the same time and place,
the following described property:
All that tract or parcel of larTd, ly
ing and being in the 455th Dist., G.
M., Jackson County, Georgia, ad
joining lands of Mrs. Sallie Lipscomb
on the north, Harville place on the
east, J. S. Brooks and R. E. Jackson
and C. F. Porter on the south, and
Mrs. Sallie Lipscomb on the west,
the place where T. N. Wright once
lived, and having the following
bounds, to-wit: Beginning at a rock,
running thence S 76 W 7.90 to
maple, thence S 69 W 16.11 to pine
knot, thence N 16% W 21 to a rock,
thence N 70 E 22.75 to a rock
(formerly Spanish oak), thence S
1914 E 21.43 to the beginning corn
er, containing forty-eight and one
half acres, more or less.
Said property levied upon as the
property of C. F. Porter, said levy
being made under and by virtxe of
two judgments in rem against the
property hereinabove described, is
sued from the City Court of Jeffer
son, in favor of C. W. Hood, Jr.,
and against the property herein de
scribed. This May 9th, 1939.
R. M. Culberson, Sheriff.
SALESMEN WANTED
Rawleigh Route now open in
Banks County, Jefferson, Commerce.
Real opportunity for man who wants
permanent, profitable work. Sales
way up this year. Start promptly.
Write Rawleigh’s, Dept. GAK-163-
KA, Memphis, Tenn., or see M. W.
Alford, Jefferson, Ga.
To keep aluminum bright, rub it
with any of the acid fruit juices
such as lemon or rhubarb, or let it
stand in a rather strong solution for
one-half hour.
tt t t
Store honey in a warm, dry place.
It should not be kept in the cellar or
in a damp place as it will absorb the
moisture and ferment.
THE JACKSON HERALD, JEFFERSON, GEORGIA
Middle-Class America
(From Grit)
Eighty-eight per cent of the peo
ple in the United States consider
they belong to the great middle
class, according to a recent nation
wide survey. Of the remaining 12
per cent, one half consider them
selves members of the upper class,
while the remaining six per cent be
lieve themselves part of the so-called
“submerged tenth.”
These figures are interesting, and
they are also significant. For they
reveal that much of our public con
cern has had to do with a minor
part of our population.
For the last six or eight years
government and the press have been
telling us about the “sixty leading
families of the economic royalists,”
or trying to fill our hearts with pity
for the “ill-fed, ill-housed, and ill
clothed third of our population.”
Now it is evident that both classes
have been over emphasized.
About the great middle class, com
prising 88 out of every 100 of our
population, we have been hearing
too little. Neither government nor
press has been giving them proper
attention. Yet they comprise the
backbone of this country, economic
ally, and spiritually. They are the
great producing class, the great con
suming class, the great taxpaying
class. Their condition governs the
weal or woe of the nation.
Isn’t it time, therefore, that more
attention was paid this great middle
class of Americans, especially by
government. Isn’t it time that we
quit fussing about the top six per
cent or worrying about the bottom
six per cent, and give heed to the
in-between 88 per cent? We have
been neglecting the man in the
middle, and yet it is this great ma
jority that provides the foundation
upon which we must build the Amer
ica of tomorrow.
BELIEVE IT OR NOT
Benton City, Wash.—The Benton
Rural Electrification Association re
cently eliminated meter readers and
asked all customers to read their
own meters, report by postcard and
make payments by money order.
Manager J. B. Whitehead says col
lections improved 50 per cent under
the honor system.
MARSHALL’S SALE
Georgia, Jackson County. There
will be sold on the first Tuesday in
June, 1939, before the City Hall of
the City of Commerce, Ga., within
the legal hours of sale to the highest
and best bidder for cash the follow
ing property to-wit:
That tract or parcel of land, ly
ing and being in the City of Com
merce, Jackson County, Georgia, be
ginning at a stake on Bowden Street
at the corner of a lot owned by Mrs.
W. E. Bailey, and running thence
along said street S 84 1.2 W 60 feet
to a stake on Bowden Street, thence
N 15*4 W 150 feet to a stake, thence
N 84 Ms E 60 feet to a corner on the
line of Mrs. W. E. Bailey, thence
along the line of Mrs. W. E. Bailey
150 feet to the beginning corner.
Same being a portion of the lot
owned by W. E. Bailey fronting on
Bowden Street, as shown by a plat
made by Grover Prickett. surveyor,
and levied upon under and by virtue
of a paving assessment fi fa issued
by the City of Commerce, Ga.,
against said property, and proceed
ing in the name of Northeastern
Banking Company, as transferee,
said fi fa having been transferred by
the City of Commerce, Ga., by and
through its Chief of Police, to
Northeastern Banking Company.
This May 9th, 1939.
J. R. HIX,
Chief of Police City of Commerce,
Ga.
MARSHALL’S SALE
Georgia, Jackson County. There
will be sold on the first Tuesday in
June, 1939, before the City Hall of
the City of Commerce, Jackson
County, Georgia, within the legal
hours of sale, to the highest and best
bidder for cash, the following de
scribed property, to-wit:
All that tract or parcel of land
lying and being in the City of Com
merce, Jackson County, Georgia, ly
ing along North Bowden Street, and
being described as follows: Begin
ning at the, corner of Bowden and
North Bowden Streets, and running
thence N 4% W 147 feet to a stake,
thence S 8414 west 75 feet to a
stake, thence S. E. 150 feet to a
stake on Bowden Street, thence
along Bowden Street 50 feet to the
beginning stake corner, same being
a portion of the lot owned by W. E.
Bailey fronting on North Bowden
Street as shown by a plat made by
Grover Prickett, surveyor, and levied
upon as the property of W. E. Bail
ey, under and by virtue of an assess
ment fi fa for paving issued by the
City of Commerce, Ga., against the
property of W. E. Bailey, and trans
ferred and assigned to Northeastern
Banking Company, by the Chief of
Police of the City of Commerce, Ga.
This May 9th, 1939.
J. R. HIX,
Chief of Police City of Commerce,
Ga.
Mr*. J. C. Alexander Write*
About Dahlias
The growing of dahlias is a sub
ject in which all gardeners and lov
ers of beautiful flowers are inter
ested. At a recent meeting of the
Jefferson Woman’s Club, Mrs. J. C.
Alexander read a paper on the cul
tivation of flowers, with especial
reference to dahlias, which was
heard with great interest, as Mrs.
Alexander is noted for her beautiful
garden and a grower of fine dahlias.
The paper follows:
Now, we come to the one visitor
from Mexico, not only the Queen of
Autumn flowers, but Empress by di
vine right of the entire flower king
dom.
This is a man’s flower, by nature.
Man loves competition, and the big
dahlia is the world’s ideal competa
tive flower. Men took nearly every
prize at the dahlia show in Atlanta
last fall. A flower does not have
to be large to be lovely. Of late
years many new dahlias, Miniature,
Orchid and Ball, have been added to
the already popular formal and in
formal decorative and cactus varie
ties.
When you choose your dahlia
stock, decide first, what you wish to
grow the plant for. Never put a
penny into a tuber if you are not
willing to give this plant some of
your time. There are varieties used
only for show f *atures, table ar
rangement, for interior, or just col
or, and charm for fall cutting. Se
lect the variety suited to your need.
Any good garden soil is suitable
for dahlias. Beds or rows must be
dug 18 to 24 inches deep, turning
under all the coal ashes and clink
ers the neighborhood has afforded
through winter. This helps with the
drainage, also supplies a certain
amount of potash, which any tuber
needs. Place your tubers 3 feet
apart, in a hole 6 inches deep, under
2 inches of top soil. Always place
any bulb or tuber on sand. Turn
ing the earth to such a depth may
seem useless to you, but this insures
both good drainage, plenty of root
glowing area, with food and mois
ture storage.
I use the same ground from year
to year. The tops of dahlia are
chopped into the dahlia hole when
tubers are lifted in fall to furnish
humas for next year’s planting.
Place your stake by the tuber eye
as you plant, use a tea cup of bone
meal for each plant. Bone meal is
a slow acting fertilizer, but there is
always enough plant food in ground
to carry the plant several inches.
As the plant comes into the 4th leaf
stage, pinch out the bud, throwing
the growth into the laterals, upon
which the flowers will form.
Always leave the center flower
bud on lateral and prune as you did
the first time when you cut a flow
er. When a plant is high enough, tie
firmly, though loosely, to stake with
a rag string.
You will have 3 or 4 good canes
from the main plant, which will
come into bloom some 6 weeks later.
It takes 3 weeks to take a bud into
perfect flower.
I feed my plants twice, once when
I top them, again when buds form,
with a cup of good commercial fer
tilizer. Stir the ground often, but
not deeper than 2 in., after the buds
come, as you might injure a tuber.
Dahlias are not only always hun
gry, they are thirsty, too. It takes
22 lbs. of water to get one bud to
form. Never let your dahlia get
dry; keep them growing; never
sprinkle, but soak the ground, filling
the indenture around the plant as
often as the dirt dries to extent it
will not hold shape when pressed in
your hand. You may use liquid
fertilizer once a week after the
nights are cool in fall. Spray plants
with sulphur for mildew, which is
caused from moisture on foliage;
use rotanane or boardows for flees,
spiders and other insects.
Show flowers should be cover
ed 2 hours in middle of day. Grow
ing anything perfectly takes time
and work, and it is also a game of
chance. I remember a nice butter
fly left her family of catapillars in
center of my Americas Sweetheart,
and how terrible I felt.
After frost, cut tops from tubers
and lift in a few days, turn upside
down and let rain; place on sand
out of chill and frost in some not
too dry cellar and let stand until
January, when the sand is given a
good soaking. The tubers plum up,
show the eye. Divide them, leaving
each tuber one eye. Plant in May,
then the story can be told all over
again.
Try out new dahlias if you like,
but I place my faith in those of
proven worth, planting some of same
varieties year after year.
AMERICANS WILL VACATION
THIS SUMMER
More miles will be traveled this
summer on vacation journeys
throughout North America and near
by lands than in any previous sum
mer season.
Travel authorities are united on
that. Nothing short of a widespread
war will reverse this tide. Two great
fairs in San Francisco and New
York, the stimulating work of the
new U. S. Travel Bureau, and a
general feeling that it is time we
get acquainted with ourselves, are
all combining to set the stage.
New Yorkers who have known
Paris better than Chicago or San
Francisco will introduce themselves
to the west. Golden Gaters who
think nothing of a trip to Hawaii or
Shanghai may get acquainted with
New York. Sixteen slops ure sche
duled, for instance, for the Virgin
Islands within the next six months,
more than in the whole preceding
year.
Mexico and Canada are going to
get a big play. The national parks
all over the country were never so
attractive nor so well equipped to
receive their thousands.
THE ONLY KIND OF WAR WE
NEED
The only kind of war we need in
our beloved America is the war
against extravagance in defense of
economy—a war against wrong in
defense of righteousness. We have
too long had a tolerance for idle
ness, laziness and certain element of
folk who, like the 190-pounder who,
strong as a bull and well as could
be, walked into a grocery store, and
being refused credit, remarked: “I
am hungry and unless you allow me
credit, I’ll takee what I need. The
government is feeding other people
and why shouldn’t I have my part?”
Americans, particularly Georgians,
need to war against “handouts” —so
much of the needless spending on
people who, regardless of what they
claim, can find some sort of labor
that will at least give them necessi
ties, if not luxuries. Have you ever
been to the government commissary
—the place where they issue out
provisions? If so, you have, we are
sure, seen some people who without
what they get there, would be suf
ferers. They should have this relief
and, on the other hand, you have
seen lots of them, ablebodied and
sound as a dollar, and could plow,
hoe, drop corn, strew cotton seed,
guano, clean out ditches and fence
rows, and according to the Scripture,
“eat bread by the sweat of their
brow.”
EXPERT CLAIMS 1939 SHOE
STYLES HARD ON WOMEN
Little Rock, Ark.—America’s feet
ara taking their worst beating in
years, thanks to 1939 styles in fe
minine footgear, Dr. Clyde W. W.
Dalrymple, Little Rock, told the Ar
kansas Osteopathic Association here
Saturday.
“Women with foot trouble out
number men ten to one,” he said,
blaming two new types of shoes—
those without hacks and those with
out either backs or toes.
“Both types allow the foot to get
completely out of shape. To make it
a thing of beauty today and a knot
ty, bump thing in years to come—
what price vanity,” he added.
“Stockings must be tight across the
toes so they will look well kept in
the modern shoe. But again vani
ty interferes with common sense, for
short stockings (lo much more harm
than ill-fitting shoes, deforming the
toes, cramping of the calf of the leg,
forming bunions and creating a ter
rible disposition.
“Shoe styles must change, but one
must get along with their feet. Wise
women and men will buy shoes—
and stockings—to take caro of their
feet and not make their feet con
conform to shoes one would like to
wear.”
Proper footwear, Dr. Dalrymple
said, would be stockings "plenty
long” and shoes with “a heel, a
shank and some support to the arch
on the inside of the foot.”
DIOGENES FOUND! MAN
FINDS $163; RETURNS IT
Carrollton. —Diogenes, put out
your lantern. We have your man.
He is Douglas Merrell, who on Sun
day morning found $l6B in crisp
bills lying behind a bench in the
square. Unlike us of weaker flesh,
Mr. Merrell promptly notified the
rightful owner, as identified by
cards in the wallet enclosing the
money. The loser, Ben Chambers,
had not yet missed his bank roll.
He figures that he dropped the wal
let from his pocket the night before,
while in conversation on the square.
PAGE SEVEN
WATKINS CHOSEN
GEORGIA BISHOP
Bishop W. T. Watkins, who (mm
been serving the conferences mtt
Missouri, Southwest Missouri, St.
Louis, and Mexico since last General
Conference when he was elected to
the episcopacy at Birmingham, turn
been assigned to preside over tbe
Georgia conferences.
Bishop Watkin’s assignment will
mark the return of a native Geor
gian to the scene of his labors wHeia
brought him, at 43, his rank as it*
youngest bishop in the Methodist
Episcopal Church, South.
His career has embraced
branches of theological endearvar,
ranging from special study of chunrfei
history to the preparation of the af
final mission study book for tle*
church.
Born in Maysville, Ga., May *6,
1895, the son of Mr. and Mrs. H IX.
Watkins, the future bishop
took interest in religious affairs.
In early youth he was a student. i
Martin Institute, Jefferson, Ga.
He attended old Emory College- at
Oxford, in 1911 and 1914, but Hd
not at that time complete the w nrk.
necessary for a degree of B Ph. In
1914 he joined the North Geo •xim
conference, and in succeeding yt tr*
served pastorates at Middleton, T:***?„
and Capitol View, Atlanta,
While here in 1926 he entaradl
Emory University, which mean*<wir
had been established, and attained
the bachelor’s degree. This was fal
lowed by a year at Edinburgh Uni
versity, where he specialized in
church history, and a summer couaewß
at the United Free Church G.
at Glasgow.
Returning to the United Statiea,
he spent a year as a graduate tu~
dent at the Yale Divinity soft?**!.
Having completed his residence re
quirement, he received the Ph B.
degree.
From 1928 to 1930 Dr. Wat* ins
served as pastor of Emory Univer
sity church. In 1930 he aecet',<ad
the chair of church history at
Candler School of Theology. Ir ad
dition, for the period 1932-3(T, he*
was editor of the Wesleyan Cin-in
tian Advocate. His university on
nection continued until his advarrcß
ment, to the bishopric.
The title of the official mis *m
study, which he completed Jung:
this period, was “Out of Aid ne
gate.”
Bishop Watkins married Ifur
Edith Hancock, also of Mr,
in 1914. They have five sons, l nv
ell, Lamar, William, Tate and Si
While since his elevation i:< dttn
bishopric his official headquai :et
have been in St. Louis, he had Re
tained residence in Atlanta.
FIGHT INSECTS NOW
The season is here to fight insaafc
that are a nuisance and that, carry
disease. This is especially tru ®f
mosquitoes and house flies. Sc re* sw
ing is valuable, but with our i-ast.
screened houses insects do gain Ad
mission. The spray comes in wall if.'
the room can be closed fairly wsIL.
A cheap and effective spray anr
be made at home, A good recipe* is
fresh powdered pyrethrum, t hr**
ounces. Place this in a jug t.n&'
pour over it half gallon of ken-v.we*
oil. Let it stand four day:,. Cjmp~
jng the four days shake the jug at
frequent intervals, mixing the
powder with the oil.
At the end of the four days [j*r
off the clear liquid and add to Sms*
powder another half gallon of 1 mp
oil, agitate it several times a day r
so, and strain through a cloth,
mix the two batches of oil. Etc am
through a fine cloth to remove all
sediment's. If desired you can
coloring and perfume. Use ia
spray gun.—Georgia’s Health.
• 000000009 O •
o ATTICA •
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Last Week’s Locals.
Funeral services were held at the
Methodist church Sunday aftcrnjrat
for Mrs. J. Frank Payne. The be
reaved family have the devra*.
sympathy of all.
Quarterly meeting was held at the
Methodist church Sunday.
Mrs. J. F. Hale and Mrs. F. BL
Spencer spent Thursday with airs*
G. 0. Shackelford.
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Hale wwm
guests of Mr. and Mrs. J. F, Raafcy
Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Wood viV 'ted'
Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Roquertcxriv-
Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Corbitt Trillin **•*
were Sunday guests of Mr. and !#*_
G. 0. Shackelford.
Washington Smith of
was a recent visitor here.
Mrs. F. B. Spencer visited in Jef
ferson, Wednesday.