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ANN HILL DREWRY IS
5TESS AT BRIDGE TEA AT THE
WOMAN’S CLUB ON
<| , -
1 Miss Ann Hill Drewry was a
tag hostess at bridge Sat
afternoon at the Woman’s
s wide circle of
honoring a
■
, rnz.M The attractive club rooms were
iirown together and decorated
w 1th beautiful roses, istnnias, mari
dds. and other bright colored
; Miss Drewry was lovely in a blue
crepe sport dress, fashioned on
straight lines.
In the interesting bridge games
Mrs. Prank Lindsey hade high
score, winning a beautiful novelty
vase.
Mrs. Harry Johnson made low
score getting a silhouette.
Alter the games a delicious salad
course with an ice served the guests
guests at the small tables.
Those playing bridge were. Miss
Mary Virginia Wilson, Mrs. W. T.
Bennett, her guest, Miss Little,
Miss Jessie Pearl Rice, Mrs. D. T.
Sulllns, Mrs. Newton J. Baxter,
....... ......
I JUDGE
ft- W. A. Covington
Able and Eloquent Orator
: * Speaks At City Hall
Thursday NigKt, 8:00 P. M., Aug. 23
The Public, both Men and Women are
Cordially Invited
■ Under Auspices
Anti-Smith
Democratic Club
of Spalding County
Ten years ago you nobly resisted the advance of the Kaiser’s
You gave your means, you gave your sons, you gave your
lives If needbe. but right now a greater menace is at your door,
far more imminent, far more insidious. The forcignizlng and
Uquorhing Tammany Hall seeks to enslave not only your bodies
but your very souls.
Come out Thursday night and show the politicians that they
have made a fearful mistake in surrendering our GRAND OLD
DEMOCRATIC PARTY to the Tammany thieves.
In November ten years ago you annihiliated the German,
menace. What are yon going to do next November?
ADVISORY COMMITTEE
W. C. Jackson, chairman, Lewis W. Thomas George N. Mur
ray, Paul Flynt. C S Bryan. L W. Edwards, Geo T. Pursley, Rev.
von Bagen, J. W Hunt, Ernest Willis, Jno. II. Rogers, Hal Reviere,
B. J, Maddox, H. J. Copeland, (Mfgr.) J. D. Kilgore, J. T. Daniel,
W. A. Brooks. J. B. Potect, C. C. Smith. J. R. Jinks, M. W. Boggs,
Rev. J. Alton Davis, W. C. McBcc, Oils Snider, Eugene Bowles,
Vernon Greer, H. Cf Huckaby. Rev. Jno. Norton, John Bryant.
LADIES ADVISORY COMMITTEE
Mrs. Wilbur Brown, chairman, Mrs. J. H, Cheatham, Mrs. J.
P. Nichols, Sr., Mrs. J. M. Matthews, Mrs. E. P. Edwards, Mrs. J.
C Dozier, Miss Myrtice Bailey, Miss Rossie Belle Newton, Mrs J
■ *• Thaxton, Mrs. C. II. Westbrook, Mrs. Ernest Willis, Mrs. II. M.
GriIBn, Mrs. B. S. Murray. Mrs. W. R. Crowder. Mrs. Paul Flynt,
Mrs. A. C. Layne, Mrs. W. C. MrAbec, Mrs. Eugene Bowls, Mrs.
E. U, Snider, Sr., Mrs. J. S. Hollingsworth, Miss Madelyn Matthews,
Mrs. R. J. Deane, Mrs. B. B. Brown, Mrs. W. A. Brooks, Miss Ida
Buff.
/IkeRt’U. LUJ i)
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IDE \rcw PLENTY ME, s f > J OIN in this bathroom chorus of JOY and
I ever-ready hot water. RUUD users are bath
d7' room harmonizers, a joyful, care-free crowd
Cl that, learning their lesson of old-fashioned
methods, have bought RUUD ffjft
and Perfect Hot Water Serv- i
in ice. Sweet Adeline is never
A \ , so sweet as when the bath
room faucet sings a lusty if
v. baritone to your joyous tenor.
Look this fineRIJUD-AUTO
HOT over! At our show
room! Sold on monthly pay- lr i ■tin
ments! i ,
Only $5.00 "
cash down, 24 months to pay balance .. ■ ; ■
flO allowance for old water heater. . I
your
'
GRIFFIN GAS COMPANY : t
\ t (//is of f/or Hgrcr from Every' hauccr
Miss Mary Hammond, Mrs.
Crowder.
Mrs. George Murray, Mrs.
Bailey, Mrs. Albert Gossett.
Harry Johnson, Mrs. Robin
on, Mrs. Robert Walker, Mrs.
B. Sawtell, Mrs. Render
Miss Douglass Montgomery,
Charles Randall, Mrs. Prank
sey.
Mrs. Clayton Brown, Mrs. J. J
Flynt, Mrs. George Niles,
Philip Cleveland, Mrs. L. C.
lee, Mrs. N. Westbrook, Mrs. E.
Hallyburton, Miss Emily
ton, Mrs. Ernest Carlisle, Mrs. H.
E. Williams, Mrs. Bob
Mrs. O. Sibley, Mrs. Joseph Persons,
Jr., Mrs. Thco Nipper.
Mrs. Evander Shapard, Mrs. L D
Gray, Mrs Robert Shapard, Miss
Lucile Flcmlster, Mrs. L. M. Lester,
Mrs. Clarence Shaeffer, Mrs. Ben
McKnight, Mrs. A. P. Pattersn,
Mrs. W. W. Norrman, Mrs. Jim
Powell, Miss Margaret Ogletree,
and Mrs. Carey Westbrook.
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Social Calendar
-
MONDAY, AUGUST 20
The Missionary Society of
Methodist church will meet at
church at 4 o’clock.
THURSDAY, AUGUST 23
Mrs. George Murray and Mrs. W.
H. Crowder will entertain with a
tea at the home of Mrs. Crowder
in honor of Mrs. Miles Crowder this
afternoon from 4 to 6.
Shlvcrs-Goet* Marriage
Quiet Event of Saturday
Evening, Home Rev. Drewry
Miss Florence Shivers and John
T. Goetz were quietly married
Saturday evening at the home of
Rev. J. A. Drewry in the presence
of a few close friends and relatives,
with Rev. Drewry officiating.
The bride is the uharming daugh
ter of Mr. and Mrs. B. J. Shivers
and lives near Griffin. She is a
young girl of unusual charm and
beauty and numbers her large
group of friends by ail wlfb knew
her.
Mr. Goetz is a graduate of Grif
fin high school where lie made
many friends during his school
days here. He Is now affiliated
wit hhls father in fanning, near
Griffin.
Both the friends of Mr. and Mrs.
Goetz are wishink them all happi
ness in their future together.
C’apt. Charles Stratford To
Wed Lt. Ruth Smith in Late
Fall, the Date not yet Named
An engagement of interest to his
many friends here is that of Cap
tain Charles Stratford head of the
local Salvation Army post, to Lt.
Ruth Smith, of Richmond, Virginia,
Captain Stratford is originally
from England, where he was born
and lived until he came to Am
erica some time ago. He completed
his Salvation Army training in At
lanta, where he met Lt. Smith. He
then came to Griffin, where he serv
ed under Captain Charles John
son, and just recently was given
his captaincy here. He is a young
man of sterling characteristics and
is well liked by all who know him.
Lt Smith was born and reared in
Greenville. S. C., and attended the
Salvation Army Training school in
Atlanta before going to Virginia.
She is a young woman of the high
est ideals and charm and their many
friends here hope that they will
make their future home in Griffin.
C ROUP VICKS relieved Spasmodic by one Croup application la frequently of—
LEGAL 1091
NOTICE TO DEBTORS AND
CREDITORS
Georgia, Spalding County.
Ail creditors of the estate of Wil
; iiam M. Evans, late of Spalding
j | county, deceased, are hereby no
tiffed to render in their demands to
j the undersigned according to law
! and all persons indebted to said
j jdlate estate payment are required to make imaie
to me.
J. O. Futral, Admr. William M.
I Evans estate.
July 19, 1928.
LEGAL 1098
CITATION
Spalding Court of Ordinary,
August Term. 1928.
P. E. Arnall, administrator of the
estate of Mrs. Nettie G. Barfield,
late of Spalding county, deceased,
having duly applied by petition for
leave to sell the lands belonging to
said estate;
Said application will be heard at
the regular term of the Court of
Ordinary lor said County, to be held
the first Monday in September,
1928,
This 11th day of August, 1928.
D. R. CUMMING, Ordinary. •
might as well have been hamburger
steak for all Crystal knew or cared
at the moment, the story of Crys
tals humiliation was told—almost
frankly. No girl could have con
fessed the very last detail of that
agonizing experience.
“That awful old secretary, Miss
Manley, pretended that—that Mr
Harvey had looked me over and
sized me up,” Crystal told Tony,
whose blue diamond eyes were sat
isfyingly indignant. “It 1 —it seems
that Mr. Harvey didn’t think my—
my clothes were suitable for office
work. He ought to have had sense
enough to know that I wouldn’t
come to work in a dress like this.”
she added, her voice quivering on
a sob.
“The old beast!" Tony cried, with
such genuine scorn that Crystal's
heart was half healed of its hurt.
“I’m going to take you right home
with me and dress you up to look
like a picture ol ’what the well
dressed secretary will wear.’ And
then I’ll call up two or three busi
ness men I know and tell them to (
give you u ojb or I won’t love them i
anymore. Pat’s company might
have something for you. but it’s an
awful dump—they manufacture
Pat’s invention you know—”
“No, Tony,” Crystal rejected the
suggestion with the bit of self-re
spect which her encounter with Miss
GRIFFIN DAILY NEWS ^
MR - AND MRS. BUTLER WALKER
ENTERTAIN IMMEDIATE FAMILY
WITH BARBECUE SUNDAY NOON
Mr. and Mrs. Butler Walker en
tertained with a family barbecue
Sunday at their home near Grif
fin, as a special compliment to Mr.
Walker who was celebrating his
birthday anniversary.
The tables for the barbecue were
spread under the trees of the large
grove at the side of the house and
rustic benches were placed for the
guests.
The long rustic table had as its
central decoration low wicker bas
kets filled with peaches and grapes
set at Intervals along the table.
Mrs. Walker received her guests
wearing an attractive black and
white sport suit.
Mrs. Walker was assisted in en
tertaining bjf her daughter Miss
Henrietta Brewer, who was wearing
'
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ByjJmveJIustin ;
For two hours after her humi
liating experience in the “spy room”
of the Interstate Finance Com
pany Crystal Hathaway walked the
streets of Stanton's business district.
She was so ill, with anger and shame
that she could not think coherently,
was entirely incapable of making
any new plans for the finding of
work. And yet she had to work, or
starve, or—what was wores—be de
pendent upon her cousin Bob’s
bounty. And she had alienated
both Bob and Faith by insisting
upon wearing the horrid yellow silk
dress. . .
Self-hatred flooded poor Crystal
in sickening waves. In all her life
she had never felt so like a crea
fure at bay. Every person against
whom she bumped in her blind
flight up one street and down an
other seemed like a human wolf
snapping at her heels. Wild plans
for self destruction seethed through
her tortured mind. She was a fail
ure at everything she attempted;
no one loved her; no one even liked
her, and all that she asked in life
was to be loved. . . That terrible
unseen man spying on her, grin
ning maliciously as he watched her
make up her face, arrange her skirt
enticingly to show her knees—Oh,
she would rather die than look for
another job—
“Yoo-hoo, Crystal!” A gay, thrill
ing voice, emphasized by the honk
|
of a motor horri, cut across Crys
tal’s agony! i
Somehow she reached Tony’s car,
got into the seat beside her chum,
even greeted her, before the storm
broke.
“Why, Crystal, darling, what in
the world is the matter?” Tony
marveled, as she shot her car thru,
an opening in the traffic, Here,
darhng, take my hanky. Cry lots
if you want to, then tea Tony, Had
lunch yet? I thought not! You
look haggard with hunger. I’m sup
posed to be breaking bread with
Dick Talbot at the Randolph, but
I'd just as soon stand him up. He’s
becoming a problem, you know
thinks he’s engaged to me, and in
sists on broacasting the news—
Feeling better honey? I know a
little tea room—”
Over sweetbread pattie^ jwhich
a sport model
trimmed with large red buttons.
A delicious barbecue with all its
accompaniments was served the
guests at noon.
Only the immediate family of Mr.
and Mrs. Walker were Invited,
among whom were Mr. and Mrs.
Andrew Walker of McDonough, Mr.
and Mrs. Andrew Walker, Jr., and
their children, Mr. and Mrs. Tal
madge Carmichael, and their family
of McDonough, Mr. and Mrs. Asia
Lemon and Miss Olive and Dorothy
Lemon of Atlanta, Mr. and Mrs.
Lamar Walker, Mr. and Mrs. Hugh
Carmichael, Mr. and Mrs. prank
Tucker, of Atlanta, Mrs. Joseph D.
Boyd, Mrs. Walter Beeks, Miss Mary
Hammond. Mr. and Mrs. Tom
Thorpe of Dry Branch, Ga., and
Mrs. John Brewer. j
Manley had left her. “I’ll try the
agencies. I’ll have to get a job le
gitimately or not at all. But if you
have got a dress I could borrow— • 1
and she shuddered as she glanced
down at the yellow silk she had
thought so enhancing.
NEXT—The transformation.
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.
«
£
J; w, isjfggi
«
*3
;
o \
1 front
adjustable closed models seats
in all Buick
p ro vi d i n g u n r iva I l ed co info if and
driving easef or and women like
simply turn the seat-regulator
as you would a car window, and
the entire seat moves forward
orbaqh^us driving assuring position a made-to
measure ...
No more awkward driving positions! No more straining
for pedals! No more need of cushions for feminine
drivers! Buick has ended all that—ended it with a new
comfort feature as unique and individual as the dash
ing beauty of Buick’s new Masterpiece Bodies by
Fisher—a comfort feature obtainable only in the
Silver Anniversary Buick!
The front seats of all Buick closed models are
adjustable! A turn of the seat-regulator causes
the entire seat to move forward or back at the will
of the driver, thus assuring a natural, comforta
ble position for any man or woman who takes the
wheel!
#
GRIFFIN, GA. I
< A U T O M O B I L E S
WHEN BETTER AUTOMOBILES wARE BUILT»,^.OBUlCK WILL^BITrLD^Tllfey
! ,<i.
ONE MINUTE INTERVIEW
Finds Women
Workers Prone
To Be Happy
In Mediocrity
By NEA Service
“Hard work, determination, and
faith in your own product,, whether
it is yourself or your career, are
the three keys to success,” said
Marjorie Dork, New York beauty
and” slenderising expert.
“It is the hard work clause that
stops so many women today. Too
many are content with a job that
pays enough to get along on. They
do not appreciate what it means to
have to hustle, and win by compe
tition.
“Then, too, If a girl is smart
looking, and clever, she can have all
sorts of invitations out to dine and
dance, so she is perfectly satisfied
with a mediocre job, because she
has such a good time in her leisure
hours.
“And no girl can be out dancing
playing every night, and work
hard the next day. It can’t be
done. So unless a girl has a driving
ambition, she becomes one of the
army of employes wiio work from
nine to five.”
Miss Dork herself has been most
ambitious, and successful. In 18
years she has built up a business
now so solidly established that it
would tempt many a woman to re
tire life of ”
to a ease.
“But I still have to keep my hand
on the throttle.” she says, “because
competent women are hard to find.
THEJILV ERXARY
B % CK
V-1TU MiSTBKMSCK UWKb!XX,ZHAU
And there la no business that will
run Itself.
I And besides, having formed the
habit of hard work, I find it neces
sary to my happiness, comfort and
peace of mind.”
Illustrated posters showing pe
destrains where they may cross the
streets are ifsed in Paris to reduce
the number of accidents.
The act or speaking calls into
operation 44 different muscles.
K
CCMING .
AUG. 23
An announcement by the Frlgidaire
Corporation . . . the world’s largest
makers of electric refrigerators. An
announcement of new developments
• • • new refinements .. . new values.
An announcement which points the
way to econoinical ownership of
a modem necessity in every
home in America.
tWATCU f€K IT|
I
use*
The new seat Is easily adjustable even when fully
occupied! A child can operate it! It is simple— posi
tive inaction—and together with Buick’s adjustable
steering wheel provides, for the first time in motor
car history, • made-to-measure driving positionl
This same fine convenience—this same matchless
comfort and luxury—are apparent in every feature
and appointment of the Silver Anniversary Buick.
See this epic car! Drive it! Test the new and ex
elusive adjustable seat! Prove to yourself that
here, indeed, is the finest motor car and the
greatest value America has ever produced!
t
MONDA Y. AUGUS_T 20 .
Airplane oil Is now belng
from locusts and It Is said that
oil will remain liquid at a
temperature than any other.
Pure Milk and
Two Deliveries a Day
Sweet Milk 12c perquort
Over two quarts per - day
Phone 370
TRY A NEWS WANT AD