Newspaper Page Text
If you have reason to believe, as
many have, that a change from
coffee or tea would be wise,try
Pqstum Cereal
You’ll find what thousands of
others have found*— complete sat
isfaction to taste, and freedom
from harm to nerves or digestion
When coffee or tea disturbs, its
easy to get up where you belons
with Postum
“There's a Reason"
Sold by grocers
everywhere
Made by
Postum Cereal Co., Inc
Battle Creek, Mich.
was presented Mrs. W. E.Mann.
After the interesting game, a de
licious salad course and iced tea was
served at the card tables.
The club will meet next with Miss
Julia McDaniel, at her home on. North
Thornton avenue.
sss
Mite Box Opening.
The Missionary Society- of the First
Methodist church will have a mite
box opening at 4:30 a o’clock Thursday
afternoon of this yreefi, and a large at
tendance is desired.
K Hi H?
Dance at Coun'ry Clnb.
The Fourth of July dance of Mon
day evening at the Dalton Country
club was a fitting ending of an inter
esting and enjoyable day.
A traveling colored orchestra was
secured and furnished the excellent
music for the occasion, which was en
joyed by a crowd of about fifty.
sss
Ice Cream Supper.
There will be an ice cream supper
Saturday night at Pleasant Grove for
for the benefit of missions. The pub
lic is cordially invited to attend.
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♦ PERSONAL MENTION ♦
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Society
Committees Revised.
hi conformity with the outline of
wrk. prepared originally by Mrs. Bur
dette for California, but now indorsed
tiv the General Federation and accept
ed by the State Federation of Women’s
Clubs, the Lesche Woman's club has
revised its committees.
This outline of study and work is
presented for: first, the practical side
through the development of applied
education: second, the perfection of
conditions through the department of
public welfare; third, the stimulation
to duty through the department of
American citizenship and legislation;
fourth, the cultural attainments and
adornments of life through the de
partment of line arts. Believing the
results will be worthy of record, a
department of press and publicity is
also a definite suggestion.
The president. Miss Carrie Green,
asks the chairmen of departments and
divisions to particularly remember
[heir committees and begin formulating
plans for the execution of the work.
Miss Green calls a meeting of the
Executive Board—officers and chair
men—at her home Friday, July S, at
4:30 o'clock.
The department of American citizen
ship embraces the division of citizen
ship training, which is, perhaps, what
this committee will particularly em
phasize.
Department of American Citizenship
-Mrs. Julian McCamy, chairman;
Miss Hose Huff, Miss Carrie Green.
l'nder this department is the di
vision of community service which
trorks for the getting together of the
community in song or play or for seri
ous discussion of community needs.
Division of 'Community - Service—
Miss Jennie Hamilton, chairman; Miss
tessie Hamilton; Miss Lois Edwards,
Miss Kate Harlan.
The department of applied educa
tion has. as its first division, that of
"location.
Division of Education—‘Mrs. W. C..
Martin. Miss Grace Flemister, joint
chairmen: Mrs. W. L. McWilliams,
Mtcs Maud Hamilton, Miss Mary
Moore. Miss Gertrude Manly, Miss
Marian McCamy.
Thrift Committed—Mrs. E. C. Coffey,
'•‘airman; Miss Sadie Sapp, Miss Daisy
Hamilton. Mrs. Howard Manly, Mrs.
"’right Mitchell.
(iiimy Co.-operative Committee—
Guilford Cannon, chairman; Mrs.
chan MH’atny, Mrs. Lamar Westcott.
'' ies Committee—Miss Willie S.
"Mr*. Jno, S. Thomas, joint
'■•ttitnieu; Mrs. M. E. Judd, Mrs. W.
•'Inure. Miss Elizabeth Denton,
' W. M. Denton.
•‘dev tiie department of fine arts
Coines; Division of Art—Miss Kate
Hamilton, chairman; Miss Lucy Kirby,
Miss Sarah Davis, Miss Marcia L.
Buchholz.
Division of Music—Mrs. W. C. Mc
Ghee* chairman; Mrs. W. M. Jones,
Mrs. C. L. Hamilton, Miss Laura Har
ris, Miss Mabel Lester.
The department of legislation will
keep the club informed concerning
those legislative measures endorsed by
the Federation, in state convention and
district convention.
Department of Legislation —'Miss
Willie S. White, chairman; Miss Rose
Huff. Miss Katherine Buchholz.
Department of Press and Publicity—
Miss Marcia Buchholz, chairman; Miss
Kate Hamilton, Mrs. W. L. McWil
liams, Miss Lois Morse'. ’
Department of public welfare em
braces: Division of Child Welfare—
Mrs. Margie Hill, chairman; Mrs. C. (
L. Hamilton.
Division of Health—Miss Mattie Lee
Huff, Mrs7 R. M. Herron, .joint chair
men; Mrs. T. C. McBryde, Mrs. Nita
M. Fraker.
Library and Scrapbook—Miss Kath
erine Buchholz, chairman ; Miss Mary
Louise Horan.
Program Committee—Miss Marcia
Buchholz, Miss Julia McDaniel, Mrs.
E. C. Coffey, Mrs. W. C. McGhee,'Miss
Sarah Davis.
Nominating Committee—Miss Mar
cia Buchholz, chairman; Miss Jennie
Hamilton, Miss Rose Huff.
With high idealism and a determina
tion for serious endeavor, the Lesche
Woman’s club is anticipating a year
of great service and great happiness.
Hi Hi Hi .
Woman’s Auxiliary.
The Woman’s Auxiliary of the First
Presbyterian church will meet at 4:30
o'clock next Tuesday afternoon. A
large attendance is desired.
Hi Hi *
Ice Cream Festival.
Circle B of the Presbyterian church
will have-an ice cream festival Fri
day evening, beginning at seven o’clock
on the Horans’ lawn on-. King street.
Cream and home-made cake will he
served, and delicious candy will he on
sale. A musical program has been
arranged, and every one is cordially
invited.
Hi Hi Hi
The Bridge Club-
Mrs. Julian McCamy entertained
the members of her card club at four
tables of bridge Thursday afternoon,
the meeting being one of the most en
joyable held by the club since its re
organization.
The game afforded decided interest,
Mrs. John Steed winning the honor
of Dtp score and being awarded the
prize, -a bud vase. The consolation.
nn owl with the Inscription. “Be Wise.”
m
WATCH And WAIT
ROUTH’S
big JULY CLEARANCE SALE
Will begin next week. It has always been
twice a year to hold these clearance sa es. 1
we believe we will be able to make this one the m
appreciated, and most profitable to our cub o ’
than any we have ever held, because -o
tmmatchable values we have been a e ° .stork
tendy. These bargains with all ou f re ^ u , ’
greatly reduced for a clean sweep, wi ma
tale you will greatly appreciate.
ROUTH
Nice assortment bathing caps.
City Drug Store.
Hi Hi Hi
Mrs. G. W. Howell, of Atlanta, is
visiting her sister, Mrs. Thomas Reid.
' Hi Hi Hi
Mrs. Sherry Hamilton and Mrs. Joe
Wrench spent Tuesday in Chattanooga.
Hi Hi Hi
Mr. W. M. Sapp made a business trip
to Rome Tuesday.
Hi Hi Hi
Mr. W. K. Moore returned Thursday
from a business trip to New York City.
Hi Hi Hi
Mr. Wyly King, of Rome, was with
his Dalton' friends Monday.
Hi Hi Hi
Mrs. B. L. Heartsill was home from
Atlanta for the week-end.
Hi Hi Hi
Pee-Gee Floor Paint is the best
City Drug Store.
Hi Hi Hi
Mrs. J. M. Parrott, of Atlanta, is
visiting relatives here.
Hi Hi Hi
Mrs. Rockwell Johnson, of Atlanta,
is visiting Mr. A. Berry and family.
Hi Hi Hi
Mr. W. S. McCarty has returned
from a business trip to Los Angeles.
Hi Hi Hi
Miss Judith McDaniel, of Calhoun,
is the guest this week of Miss Char
lotte Hudson, on Thornton avenue.
Hi Hi Hi
Mrs. Ernest Henderson, of Chatta
nooga, is visiting her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. T. F. Pierce.
Hi Hi Hi
Mrs. Scott Brazleton, of Arch
Creek, Fla., is the guest of Mrs. John
S. Thomas.
Hi Hi Hi
Miss Willene White, of Chattanooga,
spent the first of the week with rel
atives here.
Hi Hi Hi
Miss Ruth Barnhill, of Madisonville,
Ky., is the guest of Miss Dorothy
Farrar.
Hi Hi Hi
Mr. .T. O. Langston, of Madison, ar
rived last week for a visit to relatives
here.
Hi Hi Hi
We will sell Pee-Gee house paints
at reduced prices during July and
August. City Drug Store.
Hi Hi Hi
Mr. Jack McKnight arrived the last
of the week for a visit to friends and
relatives here for several days.
Hi Hi Hi
Miss Carol Mae Prentiss, of Macon,
arrived the first of the week for a
visit to Miss Minnie Freylach.
Hi Hi Hi
Mrs. F. K. MeCuchen arrived the
last of the week from a pleasant visit
to relatives at Monroe and Atlanta.
Hi Hi Hi
Miss Fiances Milam spent Thurs
day here on her way to Newport News,
Va„ where she has accepted a position
with the Western t'nion.
Hi Hi Hi
Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Harris, of Ma
rietta. spent the week-end with Mr.
and Mrs. Van F. Kettles, on West
Morris street.
Hi Hi Hi
Mrs. Frank Ferguson, of Portland.
Ore., and Mr. Jim Grigsby, of Chatta
nooga. spent the week-end with Mrs.
J. L. Grigsby.
Hi Hi Hi
Misses Fay Mundy, of Cedartown;
Mary Gibson, of Chattanooga, and
Kathryn Byrd, of Calhoun, are the
attractive guests of Miss Helen Ridley.
Hi Hi Hi
Rev. and Mrs. O. E. Buchholz ar
rived, today to visit their mother, Mrs.
L. Buchholz, and family, on King
street. \
Hi Hi Hi
Mr.. Glenn Combee arrived the last
of the week from Atlanta to join his
wife who has been visiting relatives
here for some time. -
Hi Hi Hi
Mrs. G. W. Hamilton, Sr., and
daughters. Misses Jennie and Bessie,
left the last of the week for Montreat,
X. C., to be gone about two weeks.
Smoke Stachelberg’s
WHITE SEAL 10c.
RUBY
The Sirthstone for
JULY
We have a very fine
selection of Tiffany
and Fancy Mounted
RUBY RINGS
for ladies, and for
the gentlemen
heavy mounted and
encrusted Shrine
Emblem, to select
from, in Ruby.
They are the kind of
Gifts That Last
R. E. HINKLE
JEWELER
consider certain matters relating to
Baptist schools. He expects .to return
Saturday night, and so will he here
to fill his pulpit on Sunday morning.
CHURCH NOTES
Hamilton Street M. E. Church, South
Rev. Chas. Williams, Pastor.
Sunday school—9:45 a. m. Sundays.
Preaching—11:00 a. m. and 7:00 p
m. Sundays.
Epworth League—6:00 p. m. Sun
days.
Prayer meeting—Wednesday, 7:00
p. m.
Preaching every Saturday 7:00 p. m.
Bethel—Chas. H. Williams, Pastor
Preaching—2nd and 4th Sunday
fternoons, 2:30.
Mineral Springs—Chas. H. Williams,
pastor.
Preaching, 1st and 3rd Sunday after
noons, 2:30.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Caylor and
little son, Warren, are spending the
week with Mr. John Caylor and' family
near Cohutta.
Hi Hi Hi
Mr. and Mrs. F. C. Black and chil
dren and Mr. and Mrs. R. E. Nolan,
of Atlanta, spent Monday with rel
atives and friends here, making the
trip by automobile.
Hi Hi Hi
Miss Margaret Detter Shelton, of
Washington, D. C., is the guest of
Col. and Mrs. W. C. Martin and Mrs.
D. L. Detter. Mr. T. L. Shelton, her
father, spent the week-end with them.
Hi Hi Hi
Dr. F. C. Bivings arrived here Sun
day night from Atlanta, joining Messrs.
G. W. and H. C. Hamilton and Hubert
Judd for a fishing trip to Murray
county.
Hi Hi Hi
Mayor W. E. Wood left Tuesday
morning for Atlanta to put himself
under the treatment of a specialist
Mayor Wood's many friends are glad
to know he is recovering from his re
cent serious illness.
Hi Hi Hi
Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Satterfield and
daughters, Misses Catherine and Mary
Frank Satterfield, of Macon, and Mr.
and Mrs. Will Patton, of Sweetwater,
Tenn., are here and have opened their
suburban home for the summer.
Hi Hi Hi
Mr. R. E. Hinkle left this week for
Pittsburgh, Pa., to be gone about ten
days. He was called their by the
death of his brother. His many
local friends will sympathize with him
in liis bereavement.
Hi Hi Hi
Mr. S. F. Westbrook, of Omega, ar
rived the first of the week for a visit
to relatives here. He had shipped
here from liis South Georgia farm a
fine carload of watermelons, which he
sold here this week.
Hi Hi Hi
Col. S. P. Maddox, 'accompanied by
Mr. Fred Parinalee. left Sunday for
Rochester, Minn., where Col. Maddox
will enter the Mayo sanatorium. His
many friends hope to see him fully re
covered on his return home.
Hi Hi Hi
Rev. Josiah Crudup. pastor of the
First Baptist church here, is in Ma
con for the latter part of this week as
a member of a special committee to
EARL OF CRAVEN
Smoke Stachelberg’s
WHITE SEAL 10c
For Three Generations
Have Made Child-Birth
Easier By Using
SOLD
BY ALL
DRUG
STORES
Write FOR BOOKLET OM MOTHERHOOD ANDTHE BABY. FUR
Bradfield Regulator Co.. Dept. 9-D. Atlanta. Sa.
MRS. JAMES J. DAVIS
L. A. PROUTY SODA FOUNTAIN
BEST MADE IN AMERICA
If interested, let ns know and we will mail you catalogue
and photographs. We also carry a complete line of Soda
Fountain Supplies. Distributors for J. Hungerford Smith,
Concentrated Syrups and Crushed Fruits.
KOLMAN FOUNTAIN SUPPLY* CO.
302-4 Bryan Street, West, P- O. Box 1273, Savannah. Ga.
• f
9
DEMAND FOR TANLAC
BREAKS ALL RECORDS
Amazing, Success Achieved by .Celebrated Medicine Not
Only Phenomenal But Unprecedented—Over 20,-
000,000 Bottles Sold in Six Years—For
eign Countries Clamor for It.
Never before, perhaps, in the history of the drag trade has the demand
for a proprietary medicine ever approached the-wonderful record that is
now being made by Tanlac, the celebrated medicine which has been ac
complishing such remarkable results throughout this country and Canada.
As a matter of fact, the ’marvelous success achieved by this medicine is
not only phenomenal, but unprecedented.
New photograph of Mrs. James J.
Davis, wife of the new secretary of
labor. She is young, good-lopking and
has a boy of four and a baby of eleven
months. When her husband took the
oath of office she congratulated him
with a kiss.
Men
Look
The first bottle of Tanlac to reach
the public was sold just a little over
six years ago. Its success was imme
diate and people everywhere were
quick to recognize it as a medicine of
extraordinary merit. Since that time
there have been sold (throughout this
country and Canada something over
Twenty Million (20,000,000) bottles,
establishing a record which has prob
ably never been equalled in the history
of the drug trade in America.
Fame Is International.
The instant and phenomenal success
which Tanlac won when it was first
introduced has been extended to prac
tically every large city, small town,
village and hamlet in North America.
Its fame has become international in
its scope and England, Japan, Mexico,
Cuba, Hawaii, Alaska. Porto Rico and
many European countries are clamor
ing for it.
From coast to coast and from the
Great Lakes, TanlaC is known and hon
ored. Millions have taken it with the
most gratifying and astonishing re
sults and have pronounced it the great
est medicine of all time.
Tens of thousands of men and wom
en of all ages in all walks of life, af
flicted with stomach, liver and kidney
disorders, some of them of long stand
ing, as well as thousands of weak, thin,
nervous men and women apparently on
the verge of collapse, have testified
that they have been folly restored'to
their normal weight, health and.
strength by its use.
Restored to Health.
Still others, who seemed fairly well
yet who suffered with indigestion,
headaches, shortness of breath, dizzy
spells, sonr, gassy stomachs, coated
tongues, foulness of breath, constipa
tion* bad complexion, loss of appetite,
sleeplessness at night and of terribly
dejected, depressed feelings,-state that
they have been entirely relieved of
these distressing symptoms and re
stored to health and happiness by the
use of Tanlac.—Adv.
What Do You Think About This
Great Special?
DOLLAR A BOX HOSE
Not dollar sox, but dollar a box of twelve sox (six
pairs). These are combed cotton half hose, and
they are in all colors. Fellow can* afford to wear
sox at these prices, can’t he? ’ And they’re known
as “Tuf-Toe” hose. They’re what we call a real
bargain.
Get yourself a box before they’re all gone. Just
one buck.
HARLAN & NEAL, Dalton, Ga.
William George Robert Craven,
fourth earl of Craven, is visiting thb
United States. He married, in 1893,
Cornelia, daughter of the late Bradley
Martin of New York.
Smoke Stachelberg’s
WHITE SEAL 10c.
REDUCED PRICES ON PEE-GEE PAINTS
■■ - M « .
We will sell Pee-Gee Paints"during July and August at very low orices.lCiK;
Pee-Gee Double-Thick. There is no better. One gallon makes two. IHSl
Price per gallon - . |*'-fg|g '$2.65
Pee-Gee Banner Paint. One of the best. One gallon makes one-and-a-half.
Price per gallon - f - - - - - - $2.75
Pee.Gee Mastic Paint. The very best. One gallon makes one-and-a-half.fi
Price per gallon - - . - - - $3.00
You cannot get first-class paint cheaper, There is a Pee-Gee Paint for
every purpose WFf JgiS IgEO
CITY DRUG STORE, ? w - CRAWro M^ 10