Newspaper Page Text
Colonel Joe Hardwick, of Cleveland,
was the guest of his brother, Mr. F.
T. Hardwick, Sunday.
• • •
Dr. and Mrs. J. M. Hogshead, of
Chattanooga were here,yesterday the
guests of Mr. and Mrs. F. T. Hard
wick. Mrs. Hogshead will remain a
few days the guest of her mother.
• * •
Congressman John A. Moon, of
Chattanooga, was the guest Sunday of
his sister, Mrs. J. M. Chauncey.
• • •
Mr. Will Bryant, the Chattanooga
automobile man. passed through Dal
ton Sunday with three new “E. M.
F.” cars from Atlanta.
• • •
There were seven visiting automo
bile loads of people in Dalton Sunday.
• • •
Mrs. J. M. Hogshead, of Chattanoo
ga, is expected soon to be the guest
of her mother, Mrs. F. T. Hardwick.
* * *
Bishop-Egee.
Mr. and Mrs. L. L. Bishop, of Dal
ton, Ga.. announce the engagement of
their daughter. Lillian, to Mr. Joseph
Woodington Egee, of Atlanta, the
wedding to take place December 6 at
their home, Einwood.
• • •
Rev. H. K. Walker, pastor of the
First Presbyterian church, of Los
Angeles', California, has decided to
accept the call to the First Presby
terian church in Atlanta, to succeed
Rev. W. L. Lingle.
•* * z
Mr. W. H. Duffee, of Mobile, Ala.,
spent the weekend with Mr. and Mrs.
F. K. Sims.
* * *
Mrs. Waite- 7'avis is quite ill at
her home on V< d Morris street.
u • •
Miss Jennie DeArmond, of Cleve
land, Tenn., is visiting Mrs. Maggie
Bard.
• * •
Mr. Jim Brown, formerly of Dal
ton, now of Cartersville spent yester
■day in the city.
w * *
Mr. A. W. Elliott, of Atlanta, edi
tor of The Rescue Magazine, is in the
city today. This magazine is filling a
long felt want and necessity in this
section and it is hoped and believed it
will accomplish much in its particular
sphere which has become an alarm
ingly large one in the bigger cities of
the South.
• • •
There was a big all day singing
down in the River Bend district Sun
day. Rev. C. C. Maples preached the
morning sermon.
• • •
Little William McCarty, who had
the misfortune to dislocate an elbow
Friday is gradually improving.
* * *
Henry McLemore, son of Rev. J. S.
McLemore, is quite ill.
• * •
Mrs. G. C. Sain, who has been the
guest of Mrs. Marvin P. Fann for
the past' week, has returned to her
home in Chattanooga.
• * •
Mr. S. H. McKnight left yester
day for a business trip to St. Louis.
He expects to be gone about a week.
• • •
Mrs. Tom R. Jones, of Albany, Ga.,
arived today to be the guest of her
mother, Mrs. Frank Summerour.
John L. Edmondson is up from At
lanta.
Mrs. J. E. Satterfield has gone to
Macon to spend a few days with her
husband.
• • *
Dr. Bert E. Kennedy, of Birming
ham, is in the city with a view to
locating. He says he is very favor
ably impressed' with Dalton and her
outlook and may decide to locate here
permanently.
* * *
Mr. James Rudolph is back from
Colorado on business for abeut ten
days. He says that Mrs. Rudolph is
cdfisiderably improved in health and
spiadts.
• • •
Mrs. F. C. McCutchen returned yes
terday from a month’s visit to her
daughter, Mrs. Geo. L. Hardwick in
Cleveland, Team
Dave Alper and Ben Schwartz spent
Sunday in Chattanooga.
• • •
Miss M illena Berry has returned
from Tunnell Hill where she has been
the guest of Miss Winnie Flemister
for several days.
• • •
Little Miss Rebecca McWilliams, the
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Shelly Mc-
Williams, who has been very ill with
bronchitis, is rapidly improving.
** * *
Word has been received from Mrs.
Sue Allen, who has been visiting in
Texas that she is on her way home.
»
Miss Louise Flemister will visit in
Chattanooga next week.
■ • •
Mr. Charlie Foster has returned
from Athens.
• • »
Mr. and Mrs. R. H. Holland, of
Chattanooga, are visiting friends and
relatives in the city.
« • «
Mrs. M. M. Gordon returned this
morning from Atlanta where she has
been visiting for the past several
weeks.
* • *
Messrs. Neal Hamilton and Dick
Denton motored to Atlanta today.
• • •
Mrs. A. L. Edwards and daughter,
Miss Lois, after a pleasant visit to
Mrs. W. A. Hill, have returned to
their home in Dalton.—Calhoun News.
* * ■
Miss Nell Speer, of Varnell and
Mrs. Walter Bowen, of Dalton, visit
ed Miss Minnie Johnson last week
Calhoun News.
Mrs. Howard Pitner, of Cohutta,
Ga., and Mrs. Frank Manly, of Dal
ton, are visiting Mrs. S. C. Peeples
on Walnut street. —Chattanooga
Times.
• • •
Mrs. C. B. Echols, of Dalton, ar
rived last Friday to spend a few days
with her father, Judge J. C. Hix.—
Ringgold Record.
w » •
Revised to date —You may break up
your auto or do as you will; but the
scent of its power will cling to it
still.
• • •
Israel T. Duckett, of Cedar Ridge,
was in town today.
« • •
Mrs. Frank E. Shumate is desperate
ly ill.
Mrs. H. C. Erwin and daughter.
Miss Mary I)., of Dalton, visited Mr.
and Mrs. C. C. Erwin last week.—
Calhoun Times.
♦ ♦ *
Mr. B. L. Heartsill has gone for a 2
weeks’ trip up to Tennessee.
* * *
It will prove regrettable news to
many that Mr. Drummond and family
contemplate moving to Ashville, N.
C.
• • •
Mrs. Warren Davis has returned
from Chattanooga where she has been
the guest of her daughter, Mrs. R. M.
Herron.
• • •
Mr. J. R. Humphries and family
have reached Dalton to make it their
hojme. Mr. Humphries will establish
a business school in the Cannon block
in a few days. He will be a welcome
addition to the city.
Registration Notice.
All who did not register in order to
vote in city elections last year may
do so as the books are open. Those
who have changed wards please notify
me in person or writing.
10-23-ts W. M. Carroll. City Clerk.
Your Credit is Goodl
With Us
Horses, Mares
& Mules for sale
at all times. One
and two years
credit.
McKnight Bros.
Dalton, Ga
THE DALTON ARGUS, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1911
COUNTRY
CORRESPONDENCE
TILTON.
There will be an all day singing at
Tilton Sunday, Nov. 5. Everyone is
invited to attend this singing and
bring a basket dinner. This will be
the last all day singing of the season
and will be looked forward to with
pleasure. Rev. Fulle rwill conduct
the 11 o’clock service.
A number of Tilton people attend
ed the all day singing at River Bend
Sunday and enjoyed the singing and
Rev. C. C. Maples’ sermon.
The farmers in this section are
about through picking cotton and
gathering their crops and harvesting
their crops in general, in fact in a few
more weeks their entire crop will be
gathered.
Mr. J. S. Parker has accepted a po
sition with Prof. Morrison and has
gone to Calhoun to make up a school.
The school at Tilton was a fine suc
cess and was well attended.
Mr. Arthur Joyce has moved to
Dalton.
V. D. Keith spent Friday in Spring
Place.
R. B. Maynard has gone on an ex
tended trip to Texas.
Mr. and Mrs. G. W. Kinniamon were
up from Cartersville Sunday.
Miss Genevie Gentles and Mr. John
Maynard returned to Calhoun Monday
to school, having spent the weekend
with home folks.
Mt. Race Hogan and. J. M. Town
send spent Monday in Dalton.
A number of Tilton people attehd
d the show in Dalton Saturday.
The many friends of Mr. Bell Ho
gan will regret to learn that he still
remains seriously ill at his home in
Tilton.
Mr. John Stegall and Mr. John
Will Swafford are p from Fairburn.
Ga., the guests of Mr. and Mrs. G.
W. Collett.
Mr. and Mrs. V. D. Keith spent
Monday in Dalton.
t The Evening Chit-Chat ®
§
“I don’t see why I'm so tired to
day,” ruminated the lady who was
calling on me.
“Why you just told me that your
husband brought home three guests
and you had to get up a big dinner ■
for them,” I reminded her. “Doesn’t
that explain it?”
“Mercy no,” said the lady who was
caling on me. “Os course there was
a good deal of cooking to do and a
tremendous pile of dishes, but I‘m
used to that sort of thing. I’ll tell
you what I think tired me more than
the work. In the early afternoon I
had to go to R— to pay a bill for
Frank and coming back the car
broke down and I was delayed. I
was so afraid I would be late about
starting things and I knew Frank
wouldn’t like it if dinner wasn’t rea
dy at just half past six. If there is
anything he can’t abide it’s not hav
ing things just on time. And really, '
the worry about not getting home on ’
time took more out of me than the
work I did when I got home.”
How much energy do you think most
of us use up in actual work, actually
accomplishing things compared with .
the amount we use up in trying to get
along with disagreeable people, .in :
looking out for sharp corners of dis- \
ositions, in harmonizing inharmonious
people, and in general fretting lest we
may not please or satisfy someone in
some respect?
For a woman, I should put the pro
position at about one for one.
For a man, perhaps less energy is
utilized in this way. Somehow peo
ple don’t expect men to look out for
other .people's crochets and please i
everybody in quite the same way !
women are.
The woman I spoke of at the be- '
ginning dissipated her energy for fears
she would be a little bit late.
COHUTTA.
Miss Mamie Bridges visited Chat-
Itanooga on Saturday last.
j Mrs. Will McWhirter, of Atlanta,
after a pleasant visit to her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. W. M. F. Morgan, re
turned home on Sunday last.
Mrs. Jessie Glenn, of Dalton, and
Miss Lena Ridley, of Mugray, were
the guests of Rev. and Mrs. W. C.
'Haddock on Sunday last.
Mr. W. H. Pitner is in Chattanoo
ga today.
i Mr. 0. L. Bridges spent Saturday
and Sunday with friends in Sugar
Valley.
A. J. Snyder returned to Chatta
' nooga on Monday last.
Mr. Frank Boyd, of Cleo. Tenn., was
here Sunday.
T. J. Bagbv, J. J. Copeland. Wal
lace Cooper, W. L. Williams and Fred
Bagby motored to Parkersville, Tenn.,
i last Sunday.
Mr. Sam Huffaker is much better.
Charles Pless, P. O. Parker and R.
C. Hall made a quick trip to Dalton on
Wednesday last.
Mr. Rov Hardy, of Atlanta, after
;a pleasant visit to Mr. Will King, re
! turned home on Sunday last.
Mr. Felix Sloan as here last Sunday.
FOR SALE—Pure bred Barred
' Plymouth Rock cockerels. Mrs. B.
F. Bates, Tunnel Hill, Ga., Route No. 1
' w-11-2-9
“You must have a terrible expe
rience with no food, and mosquitoes
swarming around you,” T said to the
shipwrecker mariner who had been
cast upon the Jersey sands.
“You just bet I had a terrible ex
perience,” he acknowledged. “My
experience was worse than that of the
man who wrote, “Water, water every
where and not a drop to drink.’
With me is was bites, bites everywhere
and not a bite to eat.”
Perhaps you’ve done that.
But if you haven’t, surely you
have dissipated energy in worrying
lest someone or other would not be
satisfied with what you were doing.
“I really like to iron,” I heard a
; patient little mother say the other day
“but I just hate to iron Marion’s
shirtwaists because she’s so particu
lar about them. I declare it takes
less out of me to do a whole dress for
myself than a simple waist for her.”
A dressmaker once told me that she
would never work for people who were
apt to be expressively critical and
hard to please, because the day’s work
tired her so much more than when she
worked for reasonable people.
These are but two examples of the
way in which other people’s crochets
and whimsies and eccentricities and
exactingness take more out of us than
our work. Doubtless you can supply
■ an hundred such instances from your
’ daily experiences.
And please, in case you are suffi
ciently interested in the line of
tought to follow it up, please look
for he ways in which % YOUR eccen
tricities and exactingness take it out
jof other people as well as the way
other people’s eccentricities and ex
' actingness take it out of you.
I assure you, you will probably find
one branch of the subject as fertile
as the other and —in case you are one
of those people with whom seeing a
fault within themselves is equivalent
to trying to correct it—much more
valuable.
RUTH CAMERON.
Mr. Fox, who k connected with
.the Dalton Novelty Company, of Dai-
Jon, Ga., was one of the out-of-town
j merchants in Chattanooga this week.
He purchased his entire winter and
spring stock from the Chattanooga
wholesale dealers.—Chattanooga .Times
goYAL.
; Baking Powde®
ABSOLUTELY PURE W
I
(u
y? Makes delicious home-
M baked foods oi maximum
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m Makes home baking a W
pleasure W
The only Baking Powder
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hp Cream of Tartar M
JVb Alum No Lime Phosphates
—y—
DALTON BUSINESS COLLEGE
A REALITY I |
The Time
Nov. 15 at 9 a. m.
The Place
In office formerly occupied by E. V. Camp, City
Engineer.
After Nov. 4th, I will be in my office every morn
ing from 9:00 until 12:00, and will give any infor
mation relative to a course of study.
J. R. Humphries, Principal
V ; -2™. ■■■■■ ! .
We are
in the market to buy Peas,
Cane Seed, Rye, Walnuts,
and All Kinds of Produce
BOWEN BROS
i
MARK DOWN SALE
50 Long Coats at practically your
own prices. The greatest values in
coats ever offered in Dalton. Don’t
buy a coat until you see these. We
are receiving new suits and dresses
almost daily. Always the correct
thing in millinery at the lowest prices
DALTON MILLINERY CO
TRY AN ARGUS WANT AD