Newspaper Page Text
12A
Durham
DURHAM, Sept. 20. —Angiu Mc-
Donald. a druggist of this city,
and Miss Beatrice Wood were
quietly married Thursday afternoon
at the Trinity Methodist parsonage
by Rev. R r. Craven.
One of the prettiest church wed
dings of the season occurred here
Wednesday morning' at the First
Baptist Church, when Mi.*- Eunice
I>ee became the wife o f Claud Pick
ett. The ceremony was performed by
the Rev. J J. Hurt
The Friday Afternoon Bridge Club
met with Mrs G C. Jnnes
Steps are being taken by the civic
League to nave the electric wires of
the city put underground The ladb*
intend making a strenuous • ampaign
Students of Trinity College and
Trinity Park Schnn] were given a re
ception Friday evening by the Ep
worth League of the West Durham
Methodist Church.
Thursday evening a reception of
* welcome was given to the student
bodies of every school and college
« in the city at the Trinity Methodist
Church.
Senoia
SENOIA, Sept. 20.—N0 entertain
ment nf the season was enjoyed
more by the ladies of Senoia
than the one Friday afternoon, when
Mrs. B C» Childs entertained in
honor nf Misses Lee, Evelyn and
Elizabeth Ept 1 ng.
The Womans Missionary Society
of the Senoia Baptist Church cele
brated its twenty-fifth anniversary
Monday afternoon at the home of
Mrs. Casper A mail. The past year
has been a very successful one, and
Mrs M. H. Couch, the retiring presi
dent. turned the society over to Mrs
J T A mail In very fine shape.
Th* Mirlamlte Club was entertain
ed Thursday evening by Miss Charlie
Maude. Hamilton.
Mrs. W. }< Baggarly entertained a
large party of young people Saturday
evening In honor of Misses Epting,
who had been her guests for several
days.
Oxford ]
M
OXFQJUt. Sept. 20.—A marriage
of Unusual interest was that of
Miss Mary Ix>ehr f formerly of
Georgia, to Mr. Davis, of Fort Wayne,
Texas, which took place on August
19 In the West Indies. Miss Loehr
was returning to New York from
South America, and met Mr. Davis
on board ship, and In about two
weeks* »!me their romantic wedding
occurred. Miss Loehr met her brother,
Tleorgu Loehr, in New York on his
way to Emory College, and there In
formed him of her marriage.
L "Dublin |
DUBLIN. Sept, 20- Several affairs
have been given this week In
honor of xiiss Foxworth, th*
guest of Mlgs Maud Powell, among
them being a spend-the-day party
given by Miss Powell, attended by
Miss Leonora Starr. Mrs Marvin
Page, Miss Anna Car re re, Miss Wil
helmina B|< a< ksear, Miss Hallie Car
rero and others.
Mrs. D. D. Hankinson, of Savannah,
who U thi r-i-st <■!’ bar mother, Mrs.
E <’. Hightower, was the guest at a
bridge party given by Mrs James
Simons, at which the one table was
filled by Mrs Hankinson. Mrs. H. P.
Shew’make and Miss Frances Webb.
J T. Hadden, of this city, and Miss
Mollie Beasley, of Avera, were unit
ed in marriage at Avera several days
ago at the residence of the bride in
that il■
Mrs Thomas Simmons was hostess
in honor of Mrs. D. D. Hankinson nt
a little raid party a few days since,
Jacobs’ Liver Salt
On Arising
and You’ll
Vefl Enjoy
Vour
Breakfast
IK3 -
ip / the morning?
. TO* Bilious? Hea d -
ache? Resit thing
in the world for you
la Jacobs' IJver Salt.
Wl~_. Bad breath. bil-
iousness. const!-
patlon, flatulence, daytime drowsi
ness. wakefulness at night, means
FOOD-POISON! NG. Undigested food,
fermented, is doling out poison to
the system.
Jacobs’ Liver Salt instantly flushes
the alimentary tract with water,
sending a cleansing stream through
It from all pans of the system. Pack
ed. ciogging matter ts loosened and
with the fermentation washed away,
pressure is removed, liver and kld
oeys resume their natural cleansing
pr«• esses of elmination No forceJ
iction. as with calomel, and severe
purgatives; never a griping pain or
gausea.
Tane Jacoba* Liver Salt on arising,
it Is effervescent and stimulating. You
feel better at once, good appetite for
preakfaat and good digestion, that
lull heaviness vanishes and your
Praia is clear and quick. Keeps one
tp to the notch
Jacoba* Liver Ba*t is the business
Qian > '-st s’mulant 25c. delivered
v> here, postpajc.
J .cob’s Stores
saw /sfw»? swffi
Mrs. Wesleg Singletary cXIH
S. C., who before her rnarriaee was Miss Ethel Spivey, of Moul- !
j trie. Ga,
ihg.
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Bridge was played. Mrs. H. P. Shew
rnake winning the high score prize, a
crocheted work bug. while Mrs Han
klnson was presented with an em
broidered shirtwaist. The guests In
cluded Mrs. J S Simons, Mrs. E. H
Langston, Mrs. H. P. Shewmake and
Miss Frances Webb.
Miss Mattle Wall has returned to
her home here after a visit with rel
atives In Flovilla.
Mr. and Mrs. M. J. Guyton have re
turned from a visit to Milledgeville.
Huntsville
I|(JNTaVILLE. Sept. 20 -Mrs A
I Fl Echolg entertained Tuesday
morning for Mrs. Gustave Stall
ing. of Lynchburg, Va.. the guest of
Mrs Will Newman.
Mi«s Jane White entertained the
Columbus Schools
Will Have Record
Attendance, 3,000
i Fall Term Opens Monday With
Bright Prospects—Many Private
, Institutions Also Begin Session.
COLUMBUS, Sept. 20.—The city
schools will open Monday morning,
and according to the present out
look the enrollment for the first day
will run above the three thousand
mark in the white schools.
The Columbus Industrial High
School and the North Highlands In
dustrial Schools have already begun
their fall terms and on Monday the
Seventh Street, the Tenth Street, the
Sixteenth Street, the High School and
the East Highlands schools will be-
I gin their fall term.
In addition to the city schools, there
are several private schools and throe
select .schools for girls that have al
ready begun their fall sessions.
! Model Playgrounds
For Savannah Tots
' Plan of Mayor Davant Insures Imme
diate Popularity and Success
of Movement.
SAVANNAH. GA., Sept. 20—The
next step toward the realization of
he plan of Mayor Richard J Davant
| to give the children of Savannah a
• •mplete system of model play
■ athletic fields and out-of
loom recr< ition places, will proba-
I bly be the employment of a high
| class experienced man who can
launch the movement in such a man-
I ner as to Insure its immediate popu
larity and success.
The Mayor is now In communica
te «n with several men who have been
suivessf-il in handling playgrounds
and n c-r*.Hion movements Nothing
further ’<>ward putting into effect of
the scheme will be done until tlie
proper man has been found for thia
work.
Auction Club Monday morning at her
home on “The Hi 11.*’
Mrs. S. W. Judd was the hostess
Thursday afternoon at a meeting of
the Ladles’ Auction Club.
The young men of the city compli
mented Miss Margaret Sibley, of Bir
mingham, with a dancing party at the
McGhee Hotel on Tuesday evening
Miss Marian White, of Brooklyn,
N Y, ia the gueat nf Miss Bessie
Cruse.
Mrs. M W. Thornton, of Fayette
ville, was the guest this week of
Mrs. A. (’ Elder
Mrs. J W Black, of Fayetteville,
has returned home after u visit to
friends in this city.
Miss Susie Mai Lawler, of Browns
boro. is the guest of friends In this
city.
Mrs. Robert Leiper. of Tullahoma,
Tenn, is t‘iu guest <»f Mrs. A. M
Booth.
Mrs. Flmmett Russell and children
Pair of Scissors
Only Gift to Wife
Daughter of American Tobacco Com
pany Magnate Charges Neglect
In Suit for Divorce.
ST LOUIS. Sept. 20—Mrs Mar
garet V. Bucklew', daughter of R. D.
Lewis, American Tobacco Company I
magnate, to-day filed suit in the Cir
cuit Court to divorce Leslie L. Buck
lew, to whom she was married In St.
Louis November 14. 1906, alleging a
long list of cruelties and Indignities
nt the hands of her husband.
Mrs. Bucklew alleges among other
things:
That she was forced to pay bills
while on her honeymoon, and that
he has failed to provide her with
servants, forcing her to do her own
work, and the only present he has
ever given her was a pair of scissors.
Sleeps for 33 Days;
Can't Be Awakened
Doctor Unable to End ‘Nap’ of Man :
From Tennessee Who Slum
bers In California.
SAN JOSE. CAL. Sept. 20—Wright
Keeble, a visitor here from Tennessee,
has been asleep for 33 days at the
home of his uncle, R. P. Keeble, and
nearly every doctor In Santa Clara
County has tried without success to i
awaken him
Keeble was found sleeping with i
boards for covers between bales ot ;
hay on hts uncle's ranch. After es- ■
forts to awaken him had failed, med- j
i< a! assistance aas summoned. His >
parents are on their way here from
Tennessee.
MOTHER OF AUTO VICTIM
SUES OWNER OF CAR
SAVANNAH, Sept. 30.—Mrs Ellen
Moore, of Iz'eds, Ala . mother of Miss
Mary Moore, who was Killed by an
automobile at Drayton and York
streets June 19, has filed suit in the
City Court against C. C. Ely. owner I
of the car, for $20,000 damages.
HEARST’S SUNDAY AMERICAN, ATLANTA, GA., SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1913
[I have returned to their home in War
) trace, Tenn, after a visit to Mrs A.
’ W. McAllister.
Mr. and Mrs. A. Jackson and
daughter, Hortense, have removed to
> I this city from Savannah, Ga., to make
; their home.
Mrs James Stevens has returned
from a visit to New York.
Mrs. O. B. Laxon is visiting Mrs.
W K» Jackson in Chattanooga. Tenn, j
Mrs. Annie Robertson is visiting
relatives in Chattanooga.
Mirs Eos Petty has gone to Abing
don, Va., where she wdli enter Ran- '
dolph-Macon College
Mrs. Susie White, of Decatur, is
visiting Mrs Mastin Strong
Miss Pat tie Westmoreland has re
turned to her home in Athens after a
visit to Dr. and Mrs H. D. Westmore
land,
Miss Dnt Yarbrough haji returned
from a visit to Montgomery.
Mesdames Milton Humes and Al
i berta VanDusen are visiting in Nash
| ville.
Misses Annie Ralston and
Brown, of Decatur, are visiting in the
city.
Mrs. Ben Matthews and eon. Oliver,
have returned from an extended East
ern trip with friends.
Misses Marie Holmes and Elizabeth
Frost have gone to Athens to entef
the Athens College
Miss Retta Schiffman has returned
from a visit to Decatur.
Mrs. Charles Dllllard has returned
from a visit to her son, James Dll
llard. qt the Patton Hotel in Chat
tanooga
Mrs. J F. Sturdivant, of Birming
ham. la the guest of relatives here
Eastman ■ |
Cl A STM AN. Sept. 20.—Miss Bessie
I Mae Daniels attended the open-
Ing of Cox College in College
Park last w r eek. From Cox College
she will go to Chattanooga, T<*nn., io
visit friends, and from there she will
go to Randolph -Macon College, wh*»re
she will be a pupil during the ensuing
scholastic year.
Mrs. H. H. O’Callaghan entertained
the “42” Club and the "Noisy Nine”
one day during the past week. Tasiy
refreshments were served.
The Colonel William Few Chapter,
Daughters of the American Revolu
tion, met at the home of Mrs. H. W.
Hurst Thursday afternoon. After an
Interesting business meeting, over
which the regent, Mrs. A. L. Wilkins,
presided, a literary and musical pro
gram was enjoyed. Mrs. S. C. Smiley
giving a vocal number and Miss Re
gina Rambo a reading. The hostess
was assisted by her little daughters,
Misses Wilhelmina, Bernice and Car
olyn The invited guests were Mrs.
Singer, of Atlanta; Mrs. App Herr
mnn. Mrs George Mcßae and Miss
Regina Rambo.
The Once-a-Week Club met with
Mrs. James Bishop, Jr.. Saturday
1 morning from 10 to 12 o’clock. Miss
I Madlyn Rawlins and Miss Mary Ar
nold served an ice course at the end
of the game This club Is composed
of twelve of Eastman’s young married
women. They are Nfal Herrm-m
Milner, Mrs. James Bishop, Jr., Mrs.
W R. Hail, Mrs. 8. C. Smiley, Mrs.
J. C. Wall, Mrs. L. M Peacock. Jr..
Mrs. W. Mcßae, Mrs. A L. Wilkins,
Mrs. T. H. Prince, Mrs. Homer
• O'C’allaghan, Mrs. L. E. McVey and
Mrs Nell Smith.
i Mrs. W. J, Dcfflnel has returned
’ home from Atlanta, where she has
been visiting her daughter for the
past two weeks
j
I Brenau j
AINESVILLE, Sept. 20.—Brenau
J College has opened with a full
attendance. The recital recent
, ly given by Otto Pfefferkorn was a
i brilliant musical success and well at
tended. Mr Pfefferkorn’s program
included his "Little Cradle Song” und
i compositions by the old masters.
Monday Dr. Henry G. Ranchett
gave a musical evening with a beau
. tifu! program.
I George O. Bowen, supervisor of ma.
i sic in the public schools of New York,
Plans to Save All
Would-Be Suicides
Presbyterian Minister of Philadel
phia Successfully Conducts a
'Mental Clinic/
PHILADELPHIA, Sept. 20.—The
Rev. Zed Hetzel Copp, paster of the
> Cohocksink Presbyterian Church, at
Franklin street and Columbia ave
nue, has a plan tu save the lives of
would-be suicides by methods of
mental suggestion. It is his proud
boast that never has he “lost” a “pa
tient."
“Treatment is based upon individ
ual needs. I always insist upon a
complete, voluntary history of the
life of the •patient.’ I persuade them
to tell me everything
“Then I sum up the cause, point
out the place in the road where the
trouble began, impress upon them
the utter impossibility of relieving a
fault or a misfortune, ask them about
happy periods of their career, bring
their minds to dwell upon these per
iods. show them how there is a won
derful amount of happiness in store
for them if they will but stretch
out their hands to seize it. explain
how important it is that they must
not cease speaking their lines nor
leave the stage of life until the great
Stage Manager calls.”
District Red Men
To Meet at Girard
There Will Be One Hundred Dele
gates and Prominent Officials
of Order Present.
COLUMBUS. Sept. 20. —Prepara-
tions for entertaining t|ie Eleventh
District Improved Order of Red Men
in their annual convention, which
meets Saturday with Uchee Tribe, in
Girard, Ala., are complete.
The convcentlon win embrace tribes
in Lee. Russell. Chambers and Ma - I
con Counties. There will be at least I
100 delegats in attendance, in addi- >
Ilion to some of the most prominent I
Red Men officials in the State.
head of music of pedagogy’ in North
-1 ampton. Mass., and lecturer in the
i ory in both the University of New
i York and Columbia University, has
i matriculated to the Brenau Conser
. vatory of Music for his ward. Miss
I Irene McCarthy, of Yonkers. N. Y.
Miss McCarthy, after a brief visit
to her brother. Professor E. T. Mc
i Carthy, of the Technological School
i in Atlanta, has begun her work .it
Brenau.
Mrs. R. L. Colson, of Swainsboro,
I G<v accompanied her sister, Mist
| Bessie Moore, to Brenau to attend
I th»- opening exercises.
Mrs. H. J. Brown, of Gulfport, Miss ,
| has returned to her home after a vMit
ito h r daughter, Miss Isaura Brown
Miss Ruth Stone, of Linton; Miss
• Grace Ragan, of Hawkinsville, and
I Miss Erin Holder, of Jefferson, are
i guests at the Alpha Delta Ph! House.
Mrs. George Pollock, of Atlanta, is
’ the- guest of her daughter, Miss Madge
Pollock.
Mrs. E D. Phillips, a former gradu
ate of Brenau, has returned to her
home in Ferdinand, Fla., after a visit
with her sister. Miss Marion Phillips.
On Friday evening at 8:30 o’clock
at the auditorium Miss Helen Howe,
soprano, gave a recital, which occa
sioned much interest. Professor El
mer Zoller accompanied Miss Howe.
\Vest Point ~
' _ --LT-U-L -
WEST POINT, Sept. 20.—Miss
Iralee Whitaker entertained
at 6 o’clock dinner Friday
evening. Her guests were Misses
Nunnally, Carmichael, Bryans and
Professor W. P. Thomas, of West
Point; Mr. Tom Hanserd, of Bir
mingham, and Mr. P. A. Acree, of
Albany.
'The first meeting of the fall season
of the Fort Tyler Chapter of the
Daughters of the Confederacy will
be held next Tuesday evening at the
home of Mrs. G. F. Ervin. Mrs. Mat
tie Bass will have charge of the lit
erary program, assisted by Mrs. Bes
sie Calloway, Miss Mary Booker and
Mrs N L. B-irker
Mrs. Grady Webb entertained sev
eral friends at her home Thursday
evening in honor of Misses Nelle Wil
liams, Alice Zachry and Mary Scott,
who left the past week for college.
Sunday evening after services at
the Methodist Church Dr. C. C. Pat
tillo joined in honly bonds of wed
lock Miss Prince and Mr. Henderson,
of Blanton.
The first meeting of the season of
the West Point Women’s Club was
held Friday evening at the home of
Mrs. W. Trox Bankston.
1 Miss Daisy Zachry entertained at
a spend-the-day party Wednesday.
Her guests were Miss Hattie Mae
Frederick, of Lafayette, Ala.: Miss
Mattie Lou Scott, Misses Erin and
1 Susie Hayes, Mrs J. H. Henning and
Mrs. Paul Potts.
iss Sarah I'ranvis Jenkins and Mr.
Clinton (’ox were married at the home
of Mrs. O. B. Johnson last Wednesday
by Rev. Graham Forrester, pastor of
the Baptist Church.
Miss ijattie Lou Scott entertained
at a spend-the-day party Tuesday
Mrs. J. H. Henning. Mrs. William
Huff and Miss Marion Woodyard.
• • •
i! Tifton
I s
‘ nr TFTON, Sept. 20.—One of the
| most noteworthy weddings of
the year at Tifton was that of
| Miss Wynona Ford and Marzette
Hardie Bell, of Montgomery. Ala., at
j the home of the bride’s parents, Mr.
? and Mrs. I. L. Ford, on Central ave
nue, Tifton, Wednesday morning at 11
1 o’clock The Rev. Charles A. Stack
-1 ley, of Montgomery, perfomed the cer
emony in the living room of the
l home. The bridesmaids were Misses
Haze! and Pearl Ford, sisters of the
s bride. Mrs. W. H Hendricks and Mrs.
11 N. Peterson received the guests at the
door. Miss Nelta Murray presiding
t over the bride’s book. Misses Made
• line Hollingsworth, of Chula, and
Ruby Wood, of Valdosta, served
. punch. z\fter the ceremony a salad
, | course was served by Mrs. W. H.
Fire Prevention
Society to Inspect
Columbus Houses
City Has Had Heavy Losses During
Past Year—Rate To Be
Lowered.
COLUMBUS, Sept. 20.—Fire in
surance agents in Columbus are urg
ing the people of the city to get busy
with their preparations for the com
ing of the members of the Georgia
Fire Prevention Society, who will
hold thlr monthly inspection In this
city next Thursday and Friday.
The people of Columbus, however,
are showing a perfect willingness to
co-operate with the Insurance men of
the city in helping to make as good
showing as possible, as this city has
had very heavy fire losses for the past
year and a half.
Pupils Get Credit
For Aiding Families
Minding the Baby and Milking the
Cow Count in California
School System.
SACRAMENTO, Sept. 20.—Caring
for baby, milking the cow and help
ing mother and father at home may
be worth credits in all California
schools if State Superintendent Hyatt
can get counties of the State to adopt
the policy which was recently inau
gurated in San Diego schools.
"The giving of credits in the ele
mentary schools for 'outside activi
ties' takes away the bookishness of
schoolwork and promotes opportunity
for children who do not learn readily
from books.” says Hyatt. “Besides ft
encourages work at home, where the
aid of children quite frequently' is
needed."
Under the system which San Diego
has adopted and which Superintend
i ent Hyatt particularly Indorses, "out-
I side activities" are given 160 credits
annually, just as ntueh as geography.
| arithmetic, grammar, history and
spelling.
Hendricks. Mrs. L. A. Davis, Mrs. E.
M. Dell and Misses Wood and Hoop- I
er The groomsmen were Harry and :
Ivy Ford, brothers of the bride. The
wedding march was played by Mrs-
W. A. Puckett.
Among the out-of-tow n guests were
N. J. Bell, of Montgomery. Ala; Har
ry Ford, of Toledo, Ohio; Mrs. E. M.
Dell, of Pinehurst; Miss Ruby Wood, ;
of Valdosta; C. G. Dell and Mr. and I
Mrs W. C. Thompson, of Ty Ty.
Miss Kate Fleming Wilson, of Tif
ton, and John Finley Gillispie, of ■
Pine Bluff, Ark , were united in mar
riage at the home of the bride’s par- |
ents, Mr. and Mrs. B H. Wilson, on i
Central avenue Thursday’ evening at I
9 o’clock, the Rev C. W. Durden, of |
the First Baptist Church, Tifton, per
forming the ceremony.
Miss Edith Hoffman, of Fremont.
Ohio, and Captajy W. F. Newton, of
Tifton, were united in marriage at the I
home of the bride’s father, in Fre- I
mont, Monday, September 15.
Milledgeville ];
Milledgeville, sept. 20.—Miss
Rebecca Hall entertained at a
conversation party Thursday
evening.
The young men of the city gave a
dance to the visiting girls on Thurs
day evening at the Elks’ Hall.
Mrs. R. L. Swint gave a party on
the lawn of her home Monday even
ing In honor of her sister, Miss Ruth
Stone, of Linton, Ga., who is her !
guest.
Miss Annie Harper left this week
for Atlanta-
Leesburg
, -.-u-u-u-Ll-u-u-Lr
IEESBURG, Sept. 20.—1 n honor of
Dr. and Mrs. T. H. Clark, Mr.
" and Mrs. S. J. Teoman enter
tained at a 6 o'clock dinner Wednes
day evening In addition to ths guests
of honor and the host and hostess, I
there were present Miss Barbara i
Thomas, of Valdosta; Miss Annie
Laurie Bunkley, Robert Heath and
Charles Cannon
Mrs. Blanche Burke, of Atlanta, Is
the guest of her sister, Mrs. W. T.
Jackson.
Gainesville
Gainesville, fla., Sept 20.
Miss Ethel Butler has returned
from a several weeks’ visit to
Atlanta.
Miss Isabella Patton has returned
from a delightful visit to friends In
Atlanta.
At Hawthorn, tn this county, last
Wednesday Miss WllUmao Mclntosh I
and !•'. E. Henderson were married. |
I
\/|IAMI, Sept. 20.—Mrs. John At
I I Burdine. Miss Bettie Quarter
man and Miss Alice Sanders
have returned from a three months’
trip abroad.
Mrs. T. S. Howel! was one of the
hostesses of the week who entertained
a group of friends on a boating party j
to Cape Florida.
Mrs. Carl G Fisher, of Indianapolis,,
has been the guest of Mrs. Gaston
Drake for a week. She will return
later to open her winter Lome here.
The Misses Mamie and Lillian Ml
zelle have returned from Woodbine,
Ga., where they have spent the sum
mer and where they were hostesses at
a house party.
Mrs. Orin E. Smith gave a farewell
reception for Mrs. Charles DeGarmo
before the departure of the latter 'or
Ithaca, N. Y., where she will go with
her husband, who is a member of the
faculty of Cornell University.
Mrs Thomas McGahey entertained
the Needle and Thread Club Wednes
day afternoon.
Jacksonville
JACKSONVILLE, Sept. 20.—Ray
mond Demere Knight, of Jack
sonville, and Miss Madeline
Downing, of Brunswick, were married
in New York Wednesday. The bride
has just returned from Europe, where
she spent the entire summer.
Immediately after the ceremony,
which was witnessed by only the
members of the immediate families cf
the contracting parties and a few in
timate friends, the young couple left
for Maine, where they will spend their
honeymoon, after which they will
make their home In Jacksonville.
Thia season’s list of debutantes In
cludes at present only four, who are ;
Miss Meta Bryan, daugh er of Mr
and Mrs. Joseph E. Bryan; Miss
Catherine Trenholm- Miss Ella Kin?,
The “Pennant”
is won
The “banner of i
health” is always won £
by the person who iy
possesses a keen appe
tite, enjoys perfect di
gestion. and whose liv
; er and bowels are reg
ular. Get into this
“winner" class at once
by the aid of
HOSTETTER'S
STOMACH BITTERS
It is for Poor Appetite.
•; Sick Headache, Heart
burn. Indigestion. Con-
$ stipation and Malaria.
60 years the leader
daughter of Mr. and Mrs Augustus
IH. King, and Miss Ellen Bours.
: daughter of Mr. and Mrs James E
Bours.
Mrs. E. A. Staub’ entertained Tues
day evening at the Cosmopolitan Ho
tel at six tables of auction bridge,
(complimenting three visitors. Mr. and
Mrs. J. C. Hancock and son. Mr.
Frederick Hancock, of Stuart, Fla.
Members of Mayport’s society set
' held a charity bazaar in Daniel’s H ill,
Mayport, Wednesday evening. The
affair was for the purpose of raising
funds to send an aged couple back to
Virginia. Mrs. Harrison Clarke Steele
was chairman and a number of Jack
' sonville people attended.
Members of the Ladies’ Aid Socletv
of the Riverside Baptist Church, of
which Mrs. A. M. Dixon is the presi
dent, held a social at the home of
! Mrs Frederick Durant, No. 1837 Park
street, Tuesday afternoon and even-
SICK HEADACHE, Klffi, BILIOUS,
IL LIVER IS TWIMIME A BOX ■
You men and women who can’t get
feeling right—who 'have headache,
coated tongue, foul taste and foul
breath, dizziness, can’t sleep, are
! nervous and upset, bothered with a
sick, gassy stomach.
Are you keeping your bowels clean
with Cascarets—or merely dosing
yourself every few days with salts,
pills, castor oil and other harsh Irri
tants? Cascarets immediately cleanse
CANDY
10 CENT BOXES-ANY DRUG STORE
» ALSO 25 8c 50 CENT BOXES’
SOUTHERN COLLEGE OF MEDICINE AND SURGERY
SESSION 1913-14.
The Southern Collage es Msdlctne and Surgery will b*gln Rs 1913-14 ses
sion Monday, September 8, 1913 with a full staff of paid Professors We have
added a Pharmacy, Post-graduate and Literary School to the Medical Depart- ,
ment thus making the college dftmplete in every sense for the matriculate
in Medinina Vast improvements have been made in the college building.
Including the enlargement of the amphitheater. Chemical. Anatomical. Path- i
©logical. Bacteriological and Histological laboratories; with the addition of I
our new Hospital, the student will receive bedside training and have an op
portunity of studying different cases in their several phases.
POST-GRADUATE SCHOOL COURSE
Our Post-Graduate School Course (six weeks) Is for the busy practi
tioner, who wishes to perfect himself in certain lines of work.
PHARMACY SCHOOL.
The Pharmacy School consists of two sessions, of six months each, and
will continue throughout the year the sama as the Post-Graduate School.
For catalogue and Information apply to WM. BERNARD LINGO, M D.,
Dean 52-54 McDaniel street, Atlanta. Ga
- -
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ing. Amons those who assisted wer a
Mrs. C. L Collins, Mrs. Albert Davis,
Mrs. E. v. Milton. Mrs. Braxeale and
Mrs. W. C. Vaughn.
A pretty wedding was solemnized
Monday evening at 8:30 o’clock at
the Presbyterian parsonage, when
Miss Kate Carmichael and Charles E
Meyers were united in marriage by
the Rev. Junius B. French.
Mrs. E. B. Patton of Church street,
entertained at a birthday party Wed
nesday afternoon, celebrating the
tenth birthday of her niece. Miss Co
rinne Chaney. 'The guests Included
Misses Clara Butler. Laura Stead
man. Ixtla Gannan, Sarah Gannan,
Anna Norton. Antes Norton, Emma
Coglan, Sallie Connor. Estelle In
gram, Marguerite Chaney, May
Blanche Chaney. M. E. Powell. C. R.
' Chaney. C. H. Gannon, George Con
nor. Buster Chaney, Jay Steadman
and David Norton.
and sweeten the stomach, remove the
sour undigested and fermenting food
and foul gases; take the excess bile ,
from the liver and carry oft the con- (
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from tile bowels.
A Cascaret to-night straightens you
out by morning—a 10-cent box keeps
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for months. Don’t forget the chil
dren.