Newspaper Page Text
Edited by
EUNICE GINN
McCONNELL-HENDERSON.
Saturday, July 28th Miss .Martha
McConnell, of Gainesville, and Mr.
Ratia Henderson, of Stilesboro, were
quietly married, Rev. A. F. Truloc of
ficiating.
Mr Henderson is the son of Mr. W.
q yienderson and has many friends
in the county whose good wishes will
follow hint and his wife.
Air and Mrs. Henderson will make
their home for the present at Stiles
boro with Mr. and Mrs. W. O. Hender
son.
butler-howard.
M and Mrs. Warren P. Witworth,
0 f Adairsville, announce the engage
ment of their daughter, Alice Jose
phine Butler, to Mr. George Harold
Howard, of Cartersville, the mariige
~ tcke i lacr during August. No cards.
—Sunday’s Atlanta Journal.
Picture Show Party.
Mi.-s Helen Evans, of Allatoona,
Pent: was the honoree at a theatre
party on Friday given by her hostess,
Aliss Francis Waite. At the conclus
ion of the picture an ice course was
served at the home of Miss Waite and
assisting in serving was Miss Bernice
Tnnilin.
These nvited Were; Misses Helen
Evans. Bernice Tumlin, Caroline
Von :g. Jce Sproull, Marihill Jolly.
Maruaret Field, Emily Daves, Thelma
" n.'in, of Kentucky, Elizabeth
Bradley. Connie and Rath Tinslev.
Minerva Word and Mrs. Frank Wein
man. Mrs. Zim Jackson, Mrs. Sam
Howell and Mrs. Wilbur Nelson.
.Mi. and Mrs. E. D. Cole and chil
dren. of Sumter, S. arrived last
veek to be the guests of Mrs. Cole’s
parents, Mr. and Mrs. G. H. Gilreath,
having made the trip in their car
from Chick Springs where they spent
July. Mr. Cole returns home this week.
Mrs. Cole and children will remain
several weeks.
ALWAYS IN THE LEAD
I DIXIE
THEATRE
(DIRECTED BY
£■ W. GOULD and J. Y. HARRIS
Phone 411 # Cartersville, Ga.
Monday, Aug. I3tH
WE PRESENT
Robert W arw ick
and Qail Kane
—IN—
“The False Friend”
By Flocence C. Bolles.
Tuesday, Au*j. I-4tH 1
We Present
.Margaret Illington
—IN—
The Inner Shrine”
By Beatrice DeMille.
Wednesday, Aug. ISth
We Present
Peggy HiyjHland
IN
“The Sixteenth Wife”
By Molly Elliott Seawall.
Thursday, Aug. 9th
We Present
fieorge Behan
—IN—
*'A Roadside Impresario”
A DRAMA.
' Tiday, Aug. I7th
We Present
Viola Dana
—IN—
ALADDIN’S OTHER LAMP”
A DRAMA.
Saturday, Aug. ISth
We Present
THE CGMEDY players
, T —IN—
•tDDY at THE THROTTLE”
A COMEDY
“Mutt and Jeff”
Latest hews
.. 4 Short y Hamilton in
Adventures of Shorty" j
A DAY’S MOTOR TRtp.
| Motoring to Chickamauga Park ,r
the day to see the really wonderful
encampment of soldiers at Fort Ogle
tiiorjie and to enjoy the beautiful
drives around Chattanooga, has be
come a popular outing this summer
and one is not surprised lo meet a
Cartersville car anywhere along the
loute. The roads are in rather good
condition and with proper arrange
ments in advance for possible car
trouble and a picnic lunch the day’s
ti p is well worth the effort.
KINGSTON CLUB NOTES.
The'July meeting of.the Woman’s
History Club w r as held at the home of
Mrs. Martha Darden. Quite a large
number of members and visitors w r ere
present.
The president called the. meeting to
order. v
A miscellaneous collection of quo
tation were given in response to roll
call.
The chair appointed the various
standing committees.
Program committee read the out
line of the course of study for the
coming year’s work.
Red Cross committee made a splen
did report of the work they had ac
complished.
This completed the business ses
sion.
The subject for consideration was,
“The Conservation of Our Food Sup
ply.’’ Mrs. Emma Sheats as leader for
the occasion made a very impressive
talk on this subject and read a paper
from Herbert Hoover, one of the most
prominent men in the world’s warfare.
Excellent papers were read by Mrs.
McKelvev and Mrs. Gaines upon this
subject. The keynote was, “Save the
Waste and Win the War.’’
This completing the program, ice
cream and cake were served. After a
delightful social hour the club adjourn
ed to meet at the home of Mrs. Jim
Jelly in August.
LEJI.A DARDEN, Pres. Cor.
RED CROSS NOTES.
It would seem at first glance a mere
matter of form to ask the women of
Cartersville to help with the Red
Cross work. But the fact remains,
that while the work rooms are open
every day and competent instructors
are there to impart instruction and
material in abundance for the work
ers, there is a lamentable absence of
women. Whether this is due to lack of
enthusiasm, or interest is a question.
This preparation of surgical dress
ing is no passing fad. To those in
touch with the Red Cross activities
there is the knowledge that this is
not child’s play—that we are in this
work “for keeps. ’
* * *
Mrs. Ben Gilreath has received a
notification that all the- dressings
made by the Cartersville chapter
should be shipped at once as Asa G.
Candler, Jr., manager of the Red
Cross supply service, is storing sup
plies and shipping them as fasr as
they are needed.
A box of dressings will be sent this
week from the Cartersville work
rooms. The women who aref wdrking
are deeply interested and are asking
for a co-operation from the other wo
men of Cartersville.
There will be a full report in nAa
week's Tribune of the contents of the
Iwx shipped this week.
Many of the bandages are of such a
nature they can be made at home
after they have been cut in the work
rooms.
The cutting committee is composed
of Mrs. A. W. Fite. Mrs. Ben Gilreath,
Mrs. H. P. Womelsdorf, Mrs. Frank
Matthews, Miss Christine Lumpkin.
These ladies have ready a number of
bandages ready for making any dav
that onp desires. The supervisor in
charge will be glad to give directions
as to the making of the bandages—
either at home or in the work room.
* * *
The invitation is open to all. Indeed,
it ceases to he an invitation; it Is an
appeal!
Come and “do you bit.”
Mr. Merchant:
We have a good
stock of white com
sacked in even weight
bags for the feed
trade.
Let us fill your or
ders at market price.
Field Milling Cos.
THE BARTQW TRIBUNE-THE CARTERSVILLE NEWS AUGUST 9, 19!/
WOMAN’S PAGE-
FROM OUR EXCHANGES.
Miss Kate Uillam and Miss Lena
May Burwell, of Cartersville, are vis
iting Mrs. G. W. Redmond in South
Rome—Rome Tribune-Herald.
* * *
Misses Dorothy and Lucy ( unvus
\ and Louise Dodd, of Cartersville, and
Miss Lois Brand, of Atlanta, are visit
ing Miss Mabel Owens. —Rome Trib
une-Herald
* *
Miss Frances Wikle and her house
guest, Miss Cornelia Milam, of Car
tersville, and Miss Glennis Hancock
and her house-guest, Miss Davis, of
-Albany, were the honorees at a very
pleasant party on Monday afternoon
given by MiSs Fredonia Field. —Cobb
County Times.
* * *
Miss Dorothy Milam entertained
with a (tarty at the Strand on Satur
day afternoon, in honor of her cousin,
Miss Cornelia Milam, of Cartersville.
and her house-guests, Miss Alice Mil
| Florida, and Miss Virginia Mc
i Jenkins, of Atlanta. —Cobb County
j Times.
* * *
j Miss Daisy Spence, of Cartersville,
w visiting Mrs. Worley on Stewart
Avenue.—Marietta Journal.
* * *
Miss Dorothy Milam gave a spend
the-day party last Saturday in honor
of her guests, Miss Marjorie Taff. of
j Cartersville, and Miss Virginia Mc-
Jenkins, of Atlanta.—Marietta Jour
nal. ,
PERSONALS.
Airs. Talmadge, of Atlanta, is the
guest of Mrs. D. B. Freeman.
Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Field announce
the birth of a son on August iith.
Aliss Muriel Williams, of Marietta,
is the guest of Miss Oneida Taylor.
Mr. and Mrs. W. S. Peebles are
pending several weeks in Virginia.
Mrs. Charles LaFoutaine, of Atlan
ta, is the guest of Miss Jessie Wikle.
Mr. John Hill, Jr., of Bessemer,
Ala., is visiting homefolks in the city.
Miss May belle Archibald, of Atlan
ta, is the guest of Miss Evelyn Wat
kins.
Mrs. Grace Norcross, of At La n’t a
was the week-end guest of Mrs. Milo
Co'.'uis.
I Mrs, J. S. Brannon, of Mempihs,
I Tenn., is the guest of Mrs. W. T.
Burton.
Mrs. R. D. Crow and children, of At
lanta, spent the week-end with rela
tives here.
Mrs. Mary Daniels and Miss Francis
Daniels, of Atlanta, are guests of Mrs.
S. A. Garwood.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Rogers and
children, of Atlanta, spent last week
with relatives.
Misses Clara Howard and Ruth Wo
melsdorf have returned from a visit
to Tennessee.
Mr, John Anderson, of Lindale, Ga.,
was the guest of his uncle, Mr. John
Hill, last week.
Miss Mvrtice Adair has returned
from Tybee where she was the guest
of Mrs. A. C. Heath.
Mis. Luther Trippe and children, of
Perry, Fla., are guests of the fg.mil v
ot Mrs. T. W. Milner.
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Kennedy and
children, of Atlanta, are guests of Mr.
and .Mrs. r ;>eff Hannon.
Mrs. Carl Jenkins, of Etowah, Tenn.,
spent the week-end with her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Ray.
Mr. and Mrs. Zim Jackson and fam
ily have returned from a two weeks’
stay at Cohutta Springs.
WANTED —Two salesmen to travel j
Georgia for Chicago Portrait Cos. Good
proposition. Call at Cartersville Hotel
Saturday evening for Driskell or Coles, j
Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Johnston and
sons. Billy and Laurie, are sending a
few days in Rome and Plainville.
Miss Carolyn Davis, of Athens, and
Miss Sarah Swift, of Elberton, are
guests of Miss Evelyn Satterfield.
Mr. and Mrs. W. M. MoCafferty and
Miss Elizabeth Ann McCafferty are
spending sometime at Atlantic ( :t>.
Miss Jimmie Joyce, of Tifton, and
Misses Eva and Lucy Callahan, o!
Chattanooga, are guests of Mrs. J. "
Bradford
Mrs. John Satterfield and Miss Sat
terfield, of Macon, were the guests lor
the week-end of Mr. and Mrs. W. C.
Satterfield at their camp on the Eto
wah.
J Misses Gertrude and Uira May
■ Smith > °f Tifton, Ga . are visiting
fiiends and relatives- in and near Car
tersville.
Miss Jessie Hopkins, librarian of
j the Carnegie Library, of Paducah,
| Ky„ comes today to be the guest of
, her s * ste *’. Mrs. W. W. Daves.
fOR RENT— After September Ist,
one good eight room house on South
Erwin Street, with all conveniences.
Apply to Buck Patterson at Young
Bros. Drug Store.
Mrs. G. H. Gilreath has returned
f'om Chick Springs, S. C., where she
was the guest of her daughter, Mrs.
E. D. Cole.
Misses Dorothy and Lucy Cunyus
and Miss Izouise Dodd have beeu
guests of Miss Mabel Owens in Rome
recently. *
Airs. George Thornton, who has
been spending the summer with Mr.
and Mrs. Wilbur Nelson, left last week
for a visit to Oklahoma.
Mrs. Beverly Head and children, of
Tuscaloosa. Ala., are spending Ihis
month with Mr. and Mrs. Horace How
ard.
Mr. and Mrs. A. C. Gibson, Col. .T.
K. Barton and Miss Sallie Trimble, of
Birmingham, were week-end guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Horace W. Howard.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Blair, of Chat
tanooga, and Mr. and Mrs. J. P. Allen,
of Dalton, were the, guests last week
o l ' Mr. and Mrs. Amos Keith.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert G. Gilreath, i
i
Mr. Miles Gilreath and Mr. and Mrs.
W. C. Satterfield and Miss Evelyn Sat
terfield come in this week from their
summer camp on the Etowah river.
In another column will be found the
ad of Dr. Parks. This is your oppor
tunity to have your eyes examined by
an expert. He is at Young Bros. Drug
Cos. for this week
Mr. and Mrs. J. W Adams, of
Augusta, have been visiting Mr. and
Mrs. George Waldrup on their way
heme from Detroit and New York.
Miss Mary Waldrup accompanied them
to Augusta where she will spend the
month of August.
Thirty members of the St. Paul
church, of Atlanta, motored up on
Wednesday night to hear Rev. Arthur
Moore at the tabernacle.
Miss Julia McNeel and Miss Vir
ginia Boston, of Marietta, are guests
jof Miss Mary Peeples at Stack Hol
low Camp.
Miss Margaret Screven, of Savan
nah, and Miss Ethel Stiles, of Bruns
wick, are spending the summer with
their grand-mother, Mrs. Stiles, at
Malbone.
Mrs. Fate Manly and little daugh
ter, Estelle, have returned from a
three weeks’ visit to the former’s par
ents, Mr. and Mrs. Edwards, of Oak
dale, Ga.
Mr. Lewis McEver, who has beer!
, visiting bis sister. Mrs. James Par
j sons, of Birmingham, Ala., several
weeks past, returned home iast week.
Marilu Young’s kindergarten will
o l>©n September 3. Parents wishing to
enter their children please let me
; know at once, as the school will be
; limited in number. Kindergarten $2.50,
| kindergarten and primary $3.00. .\o
reduction for absences of less than
i one month.
The friends of .Miss Rachel Steph
ens regret to hear of her illness with
typhoid fever at the home .of her sis
ter, Mrs. Madison Milam.
M’ss Lizzatbelle Saxon, who is study- !
iug at Columbia College, New York j
City, will return home the latter part
of next week.
LEMONS WHITEN AND
BEAUTIFY THE SKIN
Make This Beauty Lotion Cheaply for I
Your Face, Neck, Arms and
Hands.
At the cost of a small jar of ordin- j
ary cold cream one can prepare a full
quarter pint of the most wonderful
lemon skin softener and complexion
beautifier, by squeezing the juice of
two fresh lemons into a bottle con
taining three ounces of orchard white,
i are should be taken to strain the
i juice through a fine cloth so no lemdn
pulp gets in, then this lotion will keep
fresh for months. Every woman knows
tl’at lemon juice is used to bleach and j
remove such blemishes as freckles, j
sallowness and tan and is the ideal |
skin softener, whitener and beautifier. i
Just try it! Get three ounces of j
orchard white at any drug store and
two lemons from the grocer and make
up a quarter pint of this sweetly fra
grant lemon lotion and massage it
daily into the face, neck, arms and
hands. It is marvelous to smoothen
rough, red hands.—-fadvt.)
You Should be
Photographed by
J. A. Morris
before you go to
the armv i,isadu,y
me drniy, you owe
your family.
DELCOLIGHT |
If FOR THE MAN OF MODERATE MEANS |
■ ■ DELCO-LIGHT i* for the men of moderate mean*. Let our j\
1w repreeentative show you how eimple it ia, how easy to run, how
\l economical to operate. Uaee kerosene or gaeoline. Furnithea |a
A} abundanca of light for home and farm, and powar to operata small U
In machinery. Over 30,000 satisfied users. -
l| Complete with Standard Size Battery (I. a. a. Die*. O.) ... $350 II
jj FOR ACTTUAL DEMONSTRATION^
Good Health
to You.
Good health to you means every
thing, comfort, happiness, plenty.
No one can do life’s work with
out health, But at best, most of
of us find it necessary to have a
prescription filled once in a while.
Prescriptions are our Specialty.
We use pure, fresh drugs and com
bine them with the greatest of care,’
exactly according the directions
of your physician.
Our Prices Are Reasonable.
Bring us your next prescription so
we may show you how well
we can take care of it.
Every prescription that comes to
our store is filled by a registered
druggist of long experience who
knows how.
Ben C. Gilreath Drug Cos.
“A Safe Drug Store”
Telephones
.360,5 or 304
TttE TENDEREST MEAT AfORK '
everjtackleo in
THE TENDEREST MEAT
that was ever forked in the di- t
rection of an, anxious hunger is
in this market awaiting your call.
A visit to this shop will add joy
to your meal time. We’re cour
teously considerate of the wants
ot our patrons.
L. F. Shaw & Sons Cos.