The Griffin daily news and sun. (Griffin, Ga.) 1889-1924, September 23, 1924, Page PAGE THREE, Image 3

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

m . ■ TUESDAY SEPTEMBER 23, 1924. PATRICK NEWS 1 A marriage of much interest; to friends and relatives of the bride was that of Miss ,Janice Patrick I to Mr. Virgil Daniel, of Locust Grove, which occurred April 20, 1924 at the home of Rev. J. A. Drgwry, of Griffin, with him offici¬ ating. The marriage - kept secret was un¬ til last week. They are now at home to their friends at the home of the groom’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Joe Sandifer, of Locust Grove. Mrs. Daniel is a gifted musician and will be greatly missed by the entire community. Mr. Daniel is a prominent young business man in the garage business at Locust Grove P and has a large circle of friends. They have our best wishes for a long and prosperous life. Mrs. D. E. Clements is now the guest of her daughter, Mrs. W. S. Patrick. Joe Rowan and Andrew Burch, of McDonough, were visiting the fair sex here Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Osborne and family, of Griffin, spent Sunday with Mrs. Fannie Apple. Mrs. T. T. Henderson has return ed from a visit to points in Ala¬ bama and Rome, Cedartown and Bowden. She was the guest of Rev. and Mrs. C. V. Weathers at Bowden. Mrs. H. Stevens, of Indian Spring, spent last week with Mrs. Ida Walker and was honor guest at several spend the day parties while here. Rev. 0. K. Cull, of Griffin, spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Roswell Welden. Marcus Wallace motored to At¬ lanta for the week-end. Ringgold school will open Septem¬ ber 29. Misses Mary Fletcher and Mary Sims are the teachers for this term. Wiley Clements and Clevis son, of McDonough, spent afternoon with W. S. Patrick. Mrs. Mamie Walker spent day with Wilson Walker and ily. Mr. and Mrs. Leon Pullin Saturday in Atlanta and caled see Miss Minler Patrick, who is at the home of her cousin, Mae Cunningham. Misses Gussie Douglas, of Fla., and Adelaide Mitchell, of Cn, spent Wednesday of last with Miss Frances Nutt. Mr. and Mrs. D. L. Patrick, Jr and little son, Woodrow, of spent Sunday with Mr. and riek and Monday Mr. and Mrs. 0. W. Sims. Mrs. Georgia Pullin and ter, Miss Annie Pullin, spent one last week with Mr. and Mrs. PulSn, of Jenkinsburg. Everybody cordially invited attend "Sunday school at Union tist church every Sunday at 9:45. Heavy rain fell here Monday ternoon. Little Mary Emily Bell, of spent the w r eek-end with her mother, Mrs. Emily Wallace. Ringgold Woman’s club met the schoolhouse Tuesday They will serve hot lunches the Griffin-Spalding fair to money for the girl's scholarship Griffin high school. All friends residents of this section are ally invited to eat with them ing the fair and thereby help good cause. Mr. and Mrs. P. P. Patrick Sunday at Locust Grove with and Mrs. Jim Brown. Mrs. Wyatt Henley spent week at the bedside of her Gilbert Henley, of Locust who is now recovering from fever. Friends sympathize with Bowden in the death of his which occurred Sunday night in lanta. The remains were to Locust Grove Tuesday for ial. Several from this attended the funeral. Tom Mitchell and his bride, Gussie Doiglas, spent Sunday Mr. and Mrs. John Robert They were married in the and left for Atlanta. Little Misses Julia and Edna lin and Kathryn Futral are in grammar school in Griffin. m Mm. Si GRIFFIN DAILY NEWS AND Si > N Braiging in Shore End of New Atlantic Cable r ■ Mb if 3" |p I ' llllg -vs*' m m w - : •V ff-Si&j. i ■: . 1 ' . «■& m 'M M 1 ■ ■m w l| : v-V ' V Sps&M! 'j.,.-;-;.-.: ;.<■ '0M •‘II as * % % ■ , The American shore end of an entirely new type of submarine cable, which will transmit signals at several times the speed of any long cable now in existence and which will utilise Important new discoveries In electrical science, was landed at Itoekawuy beach, New York, the other day. The illustration shows the workers bringing In the cable end, and, at the left, watching the operation, Edward Morse ’ Seld, whose father laid the first transatlantic cable. «*•» '// SCf^ Ik® * t ,1 t 1 .* } t ( N,‘ ’4 i ' . ¥ W \ V n~r cx. t \ l— •A s') & -fl: / v.-t $ l\\V^ & rrr-, Pr<- JL c.-, ..8 S fii iLJL>« !fl 0,1 >1) I {///> m mV \\ • »9I#0(R1'Jf •«« Pip 1 iTilfeatiiiiinii HI 0|O.WVI«J, v, JllOiC ■ i!*i .. CELLE J i. n iSr ill ■ Of v:> a M imui \K mm i i; £ ft j m k\\ / m m i J A* A [jj m lij S3 : 'vz~ 2L3ES m v !L_ Jk ■I ■! t M . M V 43L fcri 1 i mim B iSMWSPif fhJ/ m in L »<• . £9 x\ I j \ 1 O-l C V. m // \\\ i V 't 1,1 //: t I •3 wxi m i S NZ. -V K '■ mMmm th, y. /A m I ll S 'TT% S >A L7 t&f * Ik ml }:.p V / «h1i! V» r. "/ ' i I * m/k / /,< I w m I'W. I 4 r? ] /// /) / in "■■-e It- y m f L .7 x / ■■ ’ / » /i $ Xr '-is> rb-c, (£« ’ ' Vt,vji lil ft 0 \>L <*( iiki If ,1 I# If J /^|lr ; Ml (j ill!: ic. i m i I ■ - W ;■ ill S\5 'III r i?* j r Plain Pastry Steamboat Days—and Gold Leaf Flour for One Pie \\'i cup3 of sifted Gold Leaf Cake and Pastry Flour (5 ozs.) /~YUT over the river floated the as C i Gold Leaf” Flour, had long Vi teatpoonlul cf salt (gener¬ ous measure, cheery song of the darky roust¬ since won a permanent place In the Vi (if teaspocniul desired) bukinj powder abouts, as they toted barrel after \oTV ' - •» \ 1 F -> * V -pine cf its Vi cup (2 to 3 ounces) of short¬ bar rel of flour from Cape Couni j U-M I 1 ..c p.l able ening, and cold water. i « Sift together the ftour. salt and Mills aboard the floating palace, quality. baking powder; with a knife or Belle of Memphis, at the Cape Gir¬ Today, -V Gold Leaf Flour is still first the tips of the fingers work the shortening into the flour mix¬ ardeau levee. choice with housewives who are par¬ ture, then adding cold water, with a ticular about their baking, Thou- few drops at a time, a That was in the palmy days of 1840, knife stir the mixture to a paste. before railroads known in the sands of in of the Add no more water than is were women every pat;t needed to form the ingredients Mississippi Valley, and when the South say Gold Leaf is the very best into a stiff paste. This paste is now ready for use. a Father of Waters” and its tribu¬ flour they have ever used. The above recipe is by Mrs. Janet taries the commercial high¬ M. Hill, editor of ’’American Cook¬ were How fine, and smooth, and wonder¬ ery,” baking. end Mrs. noted Hill authority has compiled on fine a ways to the South ancTSouthwest. fully white this soft winter wheat book of recipes especially for users of Gold Leaf Flour, which we will Even in those early days, the Cape flour is. It takes less of other in¬ gladly send you free, if you will mail J* your grojc er’s name. 1 Jackson, gredients than ordinary flours, and j County Mills of Missouri, were an old established concern, it always gives smendid results. Try their first mill having been built in Gold Leaf, and You’ll know why it f \ 1799. And their product, known is called, “The Flour of the South. ir\ l%4 44 XjFLour ^ Your Qrocer Has Qold Leaf or Can Qet It For You . of the South" CAPE COUNTY MILLING COMPANY, JACKSON, MISSOURI CASH GROCERY CO. xam Plain or Self-Rising; A Vy $ Retail Distributors GRIFFIN, GA. •m % r, s3 **o. LjkSa >■ 4 j FLOUR u 8010 *•*» nr i A \ . c. T. U. TO HOLD IMPORTANT MEETING TOMORROW AFTERNOON The Woman’s Christian Temper¬ Union of Griffin will hold ah meeting Wednesday after¬ noon at 3:30 o’clock at the First, church. Mrs. A. F. Gilleland and Mrs. Ed Scales will give a report of the recent district W. C. T. U. meeting held in Barnesville. All members are urged to be pres¬ ent Puritan* and Pilgrim* A distinction must be made between the Pilgrims who settled Plymouth and the Puritans. Ttie Puritans sought to reform the Church of Englnud, The Pilgrims were Separatists from the first, who had already left England and formed an Independent congrega¬ tion in Leyden, whence they came to PAGE THREE, m . = INFANT DAUGHTER OF MR. AND MRS. E. D. MOORE DIES THIS MORNING Funeral services for Mattie Eloise, infant daughter of Mr. and Mrs. E. D. Moore, who died at the home this morning at 5 o’clock, will be held from the residence, Georgia Mill No. 2, this evening at 7:80 o’clock. Rev. Mr. Williams will con¬ duct the services. Burial will be in Georgia Mill cemetery tomorrow at 11 o’clock. Besides her parents, she is sur¬ vived by an only brother, Master W. P. Moore. Mexico Look* Ahmad Chaulmoogra trees have been plant¬ ed In the state of Morelos by the Mexican department of agrlcultuns with the expectation that In the tutors they will furnish an adequate supply of chuulmeogra oil for the treatment