Newspaper Page Text
Edited by
EUNICE GINN
SCOTT-IRVINE.
KH- iiinoimcenient of the engage
jl Miss Lillian Scott, of Griffin,
H ;! ,t. Willard Irvine will be of
[ ro Cartersville people. Capt.
§§ ; ;ie s on of Rev. W. T. Irvine
H n skiing elder of this dis
■ several years." The wedding
! ,lace in Grinin on the 13th
H p.cture Show Party.
S' - Marry Womelsdorf was hostess
H,. •. \;e on Wednesday of last
H onor of Misses Margaret and
Hr, Her, of Harrisburg, Va., who
H guests of Miss Maggie Irick.
■ 0 picture an ice course was
H, p : ,l Gilreath’s Drug Store.
H 0! guests were invited,
COMMENCEMENT.
I
mg 0
■t! e cl using of the Cartersville pub-
H s chu Is will be the occasion for sev
■ ; soC ial function*. On Friday night
annual reception tendered the sen-
I s ijj- the juniors will take place at
■e home of Mrs. W. W. Young. Other
H r ties and picnics have been planned
■r the following week.
CHAUTAUQUA.
■Thi Lincoln Chautauqua held in Car
■rsville for the past week was a suc-
Hss in every way. Each feature of the
■•ogrum was entertaining, instructive
■id educating. Many delightful people
■ere introduced to Cartersville. The
Banager and his wife and Miss Rut-
Bdge, who had charge of the play
Bound for the children, will be pleas
jtly remembered by the many friends
tat they have made during their stay
sre.
ALWAYS !N THE LEAD
DIXIE
THEATRE- —
li. W. GOtJLD, Mgr.
‘hone 41 1 Cartersville, Ga.
PROGRAM
Beginning Alonday, May 28
Monday, May 28th
WE PRESENT
Mary Pickford
—IN—
A Romance of the Redwoods”
By Jeanie Mac Plierson
Admission 10 and 20c.
Tuesday, May 29th
We Pi'fesent
House Peters and
Myrtle Stedman
—IN—
“AS MEN LOVE”
A Society Drama by Lois Zellner
Wednesday, May 30th
We Present
June Caprice
IN
“A fthild of the Wild”
By John W. Kellette
Thursday, May 31st
We Present
George Beban
—IN—
“The Bond Between”
A DRAMA
Friday, dune Ist
' %
We Present
Lionel Barrymore
—IN—
“The Power of Decision”
A DRAMA
Saturday, dune 2nd
We Present
A Review of
‘ America’s Fighting Force”
1 his picture shows some of the great
war monsters.
The Comedy Players
‘ —IN—
Hearts and Saddle * *
A COMEDY
Latest News, Etc.
• / Important Called Meeting.
A post [toned business meeting of the
Cherokee Club will be held Tuesday
afternoon at three o’clock at the club
room. Business of greatest importance
is to come up and every member is
urged tS be present. The annual elec
tion of officers will take "place and
reports from the chairmen of the
standing committees will be given for
the year. Also the report of the dele
gates to the Seventh District Federa
tion meeting at Rome. A change"in the
Constitution and By-Laws of the Cher
okee Club is necessary and it is im
itative that every member shall have
a voice in these.matters. Please come
if possible.
MRS. OSCAR T. PEEPLES,
President.
CLUB WOMEN MEET IN ROME.
The Seventh District Federation of
Ciub Women met in Rome on Tuesday.
Mrs. Sproull Fouche, who is the dis
trict president, presided over the meet
ing. Cartersville had the largest dele
gation of any elub in the district and
the ladies representing the Carters
vilte Club were: Mesdames L. B.
Womelsdorf, J. It. Whitaker, W. W.
Daves, Wilbur Ham. Oscar T. Peeples,
E. It. Kelley, w. A. Brown, Clark Grif
fin, Lutie Attaway, Miss Eula White
head and Miss Mamie Saxon. The visi
tors were entertained at luncheon at
the Rome Country Club.
Representative club women from
Kingston, Adairsville and other places
in Bartow county were present, and
Adairsville secured the honor of enter
taining the Federation at the next an
nual meeting upon the invitation of
Mrs. Boyd, preside®! of the Adairsville
Woman’s Club.
Taking the county as a whole, Bar
tow county is by far the strongest in
the point of number of clubs and en
thusiastic club women in the Seventh
District, and the splendid, showing
made by the different clubs in the
county is a cause for congratulation.
Main Street Bridge Club.
Mrs. Paul Akin was hostess to the
Main street bridge club on Wednes
day afternoon of last week in honor of
her visitor, Mrs. McYoy, of Selma, Ala.
Mrs. P. C. Flemister and Mrs. Logan
Vaughan were invited guests beside
the regular members. Mrs. Felton
Jones won the club prize, a deck of
cards, and the guest of honor was pre
sented with a deck of cards. |
TAG DAY.
Tag Day for the Association of Char
ities will be Friday, May 2oth. The
tags will be sold for ten cents each
and the proceeds will be used to help
any unfortunate, sick or otherwise
needy people in Cartersville. Many
are the distress calls and it is the hope
of the committee that enough money
may be realized from time to time to
at least partially meet the needs.
The general committee of the Asso
ciation of Charities is composed of
Mrs. Horace Howard, Mrs. John* Fos
ter, Mrs. Frank Matthews, Mrs. Zim
Jackson, Mrs. Tom Simpson, Misses
Myrtice Adair, Caroline Knight and
Maybelle Jones.
The following will help to make Tag
Day a success, and should there be
any others willing to help, please call
Miss Maybelle Jones, phone 112:
hisses Sara Fite, Rebecca Knight,
Roslyn Lumpkin, Ethel Adair, Gladys
White, Othello Tinsley, Sarah Vaugh
an, Guill Montfort, Marylu Young, Car
o’ine Young, Louise Dodd, MarihiU
Jolly, Elinor Jones, Jessie Wikle, Isa
Neei, Martha Colbert, Caroline Field,
Charlotte Flemister, Minerva Word,
Rachel Stephens, Roberta Wylie, Mrs.
Clark Griflin, Mrs. Sam Howell, Mrs.
Ben Gilreath, Mrs. W. T. Townsend.
B. Y. P. U. PROGRAM
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH.
GROUP NO. 1.
Miss Mae Butler, Leader,
Subject—The Home Base.
1. Bible Questions.
2. Scripture Reading, Ist Peter,
4:1-11 —Miss Eula Wheeler.
3. Introduction —Miss Mae Butler.
4. Talk—Mrs. W. J. Neel.
5. Story—Miss Josie Smith.
6. Solo—Mr. Lord.
Meeting at 6:30. Visitors welcome.
EULA WHEELER, Cor. Sec.
Mr. and Mrs. R. J. Eaves, formerly
of Savannah, spent a few days last
week with relatives, enroute to John
son City, Tenn., where they will re
side.
Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Ray spent the
week-end ih Atlanta the guests of
friends and relatives.
Mrs. James Parsons, of Birmingham,
is visiting relatives in the city.
THE BARTOW TRIBUNE-THE CARTERSVILLE NEWS, MAY 24, 1917
WOMAN’S PAGE
DISTRICT MISSIONARY RALLY
TO BE IN ADAIRSVILLE.
The following is the program for
the District Missionary Rally to be
held with Adairsville Baptist church.
May 30:
Song —‘‘All Hail the Power.”
Devotional—Mrs. A. J. Maxwell.
“What Are We Here For” —Mrs. N.
C. Anderson. /
Message from Superintendent—Mrs.
J. G. Greene.
Lunch.
Devotional Subject: “Prayer"
Mrs. W. S. Bradley.
Home Missions Outlined—Mrs. W.
B. Hawkins.
State Missions Outlined —Mrs. R.
Thomas.
Why I Am a Missionary—Mrs. Julia
Stewart.
Song—Let 1 Him Have His Way With
Thee.
God's Plan of Giving—Mrs. Collier.
Personal Service—Mrs. J. H, Gil
reath.
Woman’s Duty to the Church—Mrs.
.Hosteller.
The Music of the Rest —Miss King.
Special Prayer—Mrs. Julius Jones.
Orphans’ Home —Mrs. Robertson.
Our Georgia Baptist Hospital—Mrs..
McKelvey.
“I'LL COME BACK TO YOU.”
Stephen O’Mara with his grotesque
clothes, his fine physique, and his high
ambition to he somebody comes down
from his mountain home in his early
teens with all his worldly possessions
on his back. As he watches his first
engine with starry eyes, we hear him
exclaim, “A steam injine—she certain
ly can get up and step. I have to he
gettin me one of them fer myself some
day.” The manner in which he takes
hold of his new life, the nature of his
friendships, his engaging personality
win our admiration and respect as it
did Old Caleb and Sara Hunter, who
would have taken him into their
home. But Stephen realized that if to
win out in his fight he must go his
path alone. And the story of how ‘‘he
came, he saw r , and he conquered,” is
one of the best Larry Evans has ever
given the public.
Brave and dauntless in spirit and
courage, an athlete in body, he has
that code of honor of the mountains
engrained in his life. With the vision
of the girl he has loved for ten years
of his struggling life, ever before him,
Steve goes hack to his mountains not
as a wanderer but as master of them,
and their resources. T%e romance of
Steve and Barbara Allison lettds beau
ty to the pages like the Kentucky Car
dinal that flings its bright color from
tree to tree in the early morning.
Neither is' there humor lacking in
the story. Fat Joe with his devotion to
Steve affords us many a hearty laugh.
“I’ll Come Back To You” is a clean,
wholesome story breathing- the fresh
atmosphere of the wonderful moun
tains, a story whose characters are so
vivid and pulsating with life that they
seem more like flesh and blood ac
quaintances than new found book
friends. E. G.
TO THE MEMORY OF
MRS. A. M, FOUTE.
When our Saviour said, “In my
Father’s house are many mansions, I
go to prepare a place for you,” he
must have had in mind the purest and
most beautiful phase of human life,
the home; thus implying that home
making will go on to perfection in the
great beyond.
To those who knew this sweet
spirited woman, who has gone to pc>
sess her mansion, she will always he
associated with a refined, elegant,
Christian home, a home largely shaped
by her own strong but gentle person
ality; a home from which there went
forth an influence to advance not only
her own church and community, but
which brightened and made stronger
in Christian courage, all whose l‘ v ® s
touched her’s.
Mrs. Foute, before marriage, Miss
Laura Anderson, was brought up in
Adairsville. She came to Cartersville,
as a bride, in the late seventies, and
spent almost the remainder of her life
here.
The home life of this sweet woman
was ideal, yet she did not neglect a
duty to her church or pastor. Modest
and retiring in nature, she did not give
forth her opinions unless the necessity
demanded expression, then, her con
victions were strong, her conclusions
well drawn and her counsel wise.
The memory of such a Christian,
such a mother and such a friend will
be treasured. May an unbroken family
assembly in her heavenly mansion.
M. B. G.
PERSONALS.
Mrs. Bert Sims and children, of Mur
freesboro, Tenn,, are the guests of her
sister, Mrs. A. B. Cunyus.
Rev. C. L. McGinty, who has been
attending the Southern Baptist Con
vention in New Orleans, returned
home this week.
Mrs. John W. Jones is eonvalesing
from ,a serious illness at the home' of
Dr. and Mrs. Garnett W. QoiHlan in
Atlanta.
EVERYONE SHOULD DRINK GLASS
OF WATER TO CLEAN
KIDNEYS
If Your Back Hurts or Bladder Both
ers You Drink Lots of Water.
When your kidneys hurt and your j
hack feels sore, don’t get scared and j
proceed to load your stomach with a j
lot ef drugs that excite the kidneys
and Irritate the entire urinary tract.
Keep your kidneys clean like you
keep your bowels clean, by flushing
them with cold water and kidneco
which removes the body’s urinous
waste and stimulates them to their
normal activity. The function of the
kidneys is to filter the blood. In 24
hours they strain from it 500 grains of
acid and waste, so we can readily un
derstand the vital importance of keep
ing the kidneys active.
Drink lots of water —you can’t drink
too much; also get from your druggist
about one dozen 5 grain kidneco tab
lets, take one tablet before each meal
and at bedtime with a glass of water
for a few days and your kidneys will
act fine. This famous remedy is made
from perfectly harmless ingredients
and acts quickly, and has been used
for generations to clean and stimulate
clogged kidneys; also to neutralize
the acids in urine so it no longer is a
source of irritation, thus ending blad
der weakness.
Kidneco is inexpensive, cannot in
jure, make no rnitsake insist on kid
neco which everyone should take now
and then to keep their kidneys clean
and active. Try this, also keep up the
water drinking and no doubt you will
wonder what became of your kidney
troubles and backache. —(advt.)
J. W. VAUGHAN & CO.
Just in
by
Fast
(Express
The|New Wirthmor’s at SI.OO
A New
Welworth
Model
New $2 Blouses You Would be Proud to Wear
10th and 24th °* eac h month we receive 6
x dozen New Styies of the always desirable Wirth
mor and Welworth Blouses. You will enjoy looking them over
each time.
J.W.Vaughan & Cos.
iliss Louise Van Gilder, of Ocean
View, N. J., will arrive soon to be the
guest of Miss Eva Saxon.
Mrs. N. E. Sanders and litt4e daugh
ter, Ruth, from f’howchllla, Cal., are
guests of Mrs. W. W. Daves. Mrs.
Sanders w'as Miss Louise Hopkins and
before her marriage was often the
guest of her sister, Mrs. Daves.
Mr. and Mrs. H. I. Gray, of Rome,
were guests of friends in Cartersville
Sunday.
Mrs' Lilm-Caihoun Morgan "and Mrs.
Fd Strickland, Jr., are guests of Mrs.
Ed Cole in Sumter, S. C.
SHAW’S CASH STORE
SATURDAY
ONLY
48 lb. Merry Widow Flour $3.60
24 lb. Merry Widow Flour | # BO
48 lb. Orris Flour . . 3.95
24 lb. Orris Flour . . 2.00
48 lb. Thistle Down Flour 3.50
24 lb. Thistle Down Flour | # 7s
48 lb. Swans Down Flour 3*90
24 lb. Swans Down Flour | .95
Thanks Awfully,
JIM SHAW
Phone 244 " E. Main St.
A
| Mr. and Mrs. Strickland, of Fair
mount, and Mrs. Bradford, of Pine
1 Log, were the guests last week of
! Mrs. Robert Maxwell.
l Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Miller anf little
j Miss Helen Miller left Saturday for a
visit of several weeks to Mrs. MilleNs
i parents in Columbus, Ohio.
-
Mrs. A. J. Collins spent the week
end in Athens with her son, Charles,
who is attending the University.
Miss Maud Brewer and.Miss Louise
Barker, of Atlanta, were guests last
week of Mrs. George Robertson.
We have the exclusive
sale for this city of the
justly famed Welworth
and Wirthmor Blouse.
Telephones
3605 or 304
Modest
Pretty ,
Conservative
£2 Styles
Shown
For First
Time This
Week