The Marietta journal. (Marietta, Ga.) 1918-1944, November 22, 1918, Page PAGE THREE, Image 3

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    Mrs. Joseph M. Brown and Miss
Cora Brown attended the Broyles-
Barrett wedding in Atlanta Wednes
day evening.
Miss Marie Shippen is ill with in
fluenza, but is improving.
Mr. and Mrs. Henry' Porter and
Mrs. Williamson, of Atlanta, were
recent guests of Mr. and Mrs. J. A.
Fields.
Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Coursen left
on Wednesday for their winter home
in Florida.
Mrs. Peter Smith and Miss Bessie
Campbell, of Atlanta, spent some
time with friends here last week.
Mrs. Harry Livingston went to
Camp Gordon on Tuesday to visit her
husband, who is improving after an
operation for appendicitis.
Mrs. D. W. Blair spent several
days last week with her sister, Mrs.
George McKenzie, in Atlanta.
Mrs. T. M. Brumby, Sr., celebrat
ed her husband’s birthday Saturday
evening with a beautiful dinner to
all the children and grand-children.
Mrs. Willie Milner, Jr., and chil
dren, of Atlanta, are the guests of
Mr. and Mrs. A. S. Cohen.
Mrs. N. B. Brown and baby, of
Atlanta, are the guests of her pa
rents, Mr. and Mrs. W. M. Gober.
George Wharton, U. S. N, is here
from Charleston Navy Yard on a
visit.
Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Daniell have
remodeled their pretty home on Ken
nesaw Avenue, adding a second story
and making several other improve
ments.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Butler, of At
lanta, were the week-end guests of
Mr. and Mrs. R. E. Butler.
Miss Constance Cole played in a
concert at Camp Gordon on Monday
evening.
Miss Augusta Cohen has returned
from an extended visit to relatives
and friends in Atlanta.
Mrs. Will Malone, of Villa Rica,
who, with her baby, is the guest of
her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Gab
le, has received news of the® safe
arrival overseas of her husband, Lt.
Malone. Lieutenant Malone, who is
with the Medical Corps, .is in the
Evacuation Hospital in France.
Mr. George C. Roberts is on a
business trip to Murphy, N. C.
Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Cogburn and
Miss Elizabeth Cogburn visited Ad
airsville last week.
Dr. Stafford Rambo, of Baltimore,
spent the week-end with Dr. and Mrs.
S. D. Rambo. |
Mrs. J. E. Gable and her daughter,
Mrs. Will Malone, are on a visit to
Mrs. R. W. Earnest, in Atlanta.
Mrs. Henry Nottingham, of Ma
con, is the guest of her parents, Mr.
and Mrs. R. ‘E. Butler.
Mr. J. R. Brumby has returned
from a trip to Baltimore and Wash
ington. 1
Mrs. Roy Collins is spending sev
eral days in Atlanta visiting her moth
er, Mrs. Tysor. Her sister, Mrs. Mer
cer Philips, of Acworth, is taking
care of her household for her, during
Mrs. Collins’ absence. |
Mr. and Mrs. Campbell Wallace,
Jr., spent the week-end in Atlanta.
Miss Tallulah Towers returned
home on Tuesday from a visit to rela
tives in Rome.
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Wilson, of
Duluth, and Miss Mattie Miller, of
Atlanta, were recent guests. of Miss
Elizabeth Cogburn.
Mr. M. G. Whitlock, who has beenl
spending the past five months in New
York with his daughter, Mrs. E. El
Malcolm. His host of friends are
glad to see him well and active in‘
spite of his four score and several
odd years! Mr. Whitlock reports that
our Marietta girls now in New York
— Misses Julia, Emma Katharine,
and Elizabeth Anderson, Sara Pat
ton and Irene Malone .are well and
happy.
Mrs. John R. Flannigan, of Jef
ferson, Ga., arrived on Monday_ for
a visit to Miss Mary Robeson. Mrs.
Flannigan is pleasantly remembered
by many friends here as Miss Kath
arine Holder.
Mrs. Bayard Mecllntosh, Jr., is on
a visit to her sistcr, Mrs. David Irwin
in Buford, Ga.
Mrs. W. N. Youngblood and Miss
Lois Polly, of Atlanta, and Miss Dai
sy Irwin, of Elberton, were t_he‘
week-end guests of Mrs. Hope Irwin.
Edwin Sage, Osnlow Milam, Robert
Northcutt, Randolph Simmons, all
members of the S. A. T. C. at Athens,
spent the week-end at home. |
Mrs. A. H. Setzer and little son,
David, of Tampa, Fla., are the guests
of Mrs. Mayes Frey.
Mr. and Mrs. Gus Wallace motor
ed over from Elberton on Sunday to
spend a few days with relatives here.
_ Miss Mary Schilling, who is study
ing kindergarten work in La Grange,
has come home for a time, on ac
count of the epidemic of influenza in
that place.
Mr. J. D. Malone, Jr., came up from
Camp Jesup to spend the week-end
at home.
The friends of Mrs. C. M. Law are
sympathizing with her in the death
of her father, Colonel E. B. Gregory,
which occured in Birmingham on
Tuesday. Colonel Gregory was one
of the orizinal settlers of Birming
ham, and was a verv prominent citi
zen. Mrs. Law was in Brimingham
all last week.
Mrs. L. N. Trammell returned on
Friday from a visit to her sister, Mrs.
Jack Stickney, in Chattanooga.
T. J. Gray, of Camp Wheeler,
spent Saturday and Sunday with his
gl?thel‘, Mrs. Frank Burt, of Kenne
aw.,
. Miss Georgia Burt, of Kennesaw,
1S visiting in Macon.
< Miss Rebecca Sheridan and Miss
fatherine Runyan attended the mat
nee¢ in Atlanta last Tuesday.
. Mrs. George W. Green and Miss
‘d‘Et_)C'FCa Sheridan spent last Thurs
lf’-‘ in Atlanta with Mrs. C. E. Wil
;‘“mffln at the Piedmont Park
“partments,
Miss Alma Mayfield and Mrs. C.
M. Mayfield, of Atlanta, spent last
Tuesday with Mrs. George W. Green.
Mrs. Roger Dewar and children
reached here from Andrews, North
Carolina, on Wednesday. They are
?endmg a few days with Mrs. L. D.
oppe before resuming house-keeping
at their home on Forest Avenue. Mr.
Dewar is doing Y. M. C. A. work
“over there.”
Mrs. M. R. Wood, who was oper
ated on for appendicitis on Tuesday,
ils getting on nicely.
Mrs. W. S. McKinney returned on
Tuesday from a visit to relatives in
Trion, Ga.
Mr. James Coryell, who is on the
Coastguard boat, Attache, off Char
leston, is spending a ten days’ fur
lough with his sister, Mrs. John Dor
sey.
Miss Addie Setze entertained the
Wednesday Bridge Club very pleas
antly this week.
Miss Mary Lizzie Benson came
from G. N. L. College at Milledgeville
on Wednesday on account of the ill
ness of her baby brother.
Mr. and Mrs. E. E. Bird, of St.
Augustine, Fla., are the guests of
[Mrs. Bird’s parents, Mr. and Mrs.
|C. N. Mell
Mrs. Coffman, of Birmingham,
spent Thursday with Mrs. J. R. Legg.
Mrs. R. M. Wade left on Thurs
day for Atlanta, where she will keep
house for Mrs. Sam Wallace while
the latter is on a trip through the
East.
Miss Mary Reynolds, Mrs. Herbert
Reynolds, and Mr. Edward Reynolds
motored up from Atlanta to visit rel
atives on Tuesday.
Mr. Mills McNeel left on Sunday
for a business trip to Kansas City.
Mrs. S. H. Hall entertained her
Circle of the Baptist Woman’s Mis
sionary Union at her home on Tues
day afternoon.
Mr. and Mrs. E. K. Huie, of Atlan
ta, were the week-end guests of Mrs.
R. P. Marler. :
Lieutenant Hough visited his uncle,
Mr. J. B. Hough, several days last
week enroute from Camp Hancock,
to Camp Cody, New Mexico.
Mrs. Ed Nichols, who has been
spending some months with her hus
band at Wright Field, in Montgom
ery, Ala,, returned to Marietta on
Tuesday. /
Mr. Bill Marler, who has been in
Greenville, S. C., for some months,
has returned to Marietta. He has
;accepted a position in Atlanta.
~ Mr. and Mrs. Tom Hamby attend
‘ed the funeral of their cousin, Mrs.
T. J. Barfield, in Atlanta on Satur
day.
Mrs. S. H. Smith, of Lynchburg,
Va., arrived on Friday for a visit
to her brothers, Messrs. H. C. and
E. P. Dobbs.
The Study Circle of the Methodist
Church met with Mrs. Len Baldwin
on Thursday afternoon.
Miss Glennis Hancock, who has
been spending the nast week with her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Han
cock, returned on Tuesday to Shorter
College.
Miss Margaret MecCulloch, who
has been spending several weeks
with her mother, left Sunday for Or
mond, Florida, to spend the winter.
Miss Isabel Amorous is visiting
relatives in Montgomery, Ala.
Mr. Edward Groves spent the
week-end in Knoxville with Mr. and
Mrs. Ralph Talley.
Mrs. John Hewitt, of Kansas City,
has come to spend the winter with
the family of her son, Mr. Strafford
Hewitt.
Miss Cecil Hill spent the week-end
with Miss Nell Fowler in Decatur.
Mrs. George Montgomery and
George, Jr., returned on Tuesday
from a week’s visit to Mrs. Forest
Green in Atlanta.
Messrs. Mayes and Hugh Ward
came from Charleston on Thursday
to spend a ten days’ furlough with
their father,. Mr. Charley Ward.
Mrs. W. B. Tate and son, Bill,
spent the week-end in Tate.
Convenience in Banking
WHEN the farmer sells his grain, his
stock or other produets, places his
money in a good Bank and pays all
bills by check, he gets a legal receipt for
each and every payment made, avoids the
worry and danger attending the carrying
of money in his pocket, or keeping it
around his home, and he has a complete
record of his business affairs without the
trouble and labor of keeping a set of com
plicated books.
The facilities of this bank are at the
disposal of our customers.
Your account will be appreciated.
&
Marietta Trust and
Banking Co.
MARIETTA GEORGIA
e e
Capital and Surplus over $110,000.00
= o ‘*‘;w\‘x s *’m‘ ~| =" . »: ’ b §£;¥_‘f¢;
ening, was the week-end guest ¢
Mrs. D. C. Osborne and children
have returned from a visit to Car
michael. |
Miss Louise Casey, of Atlanta,
gent the week-end with her aunt,
rs. C. J. Feagin.
Mrs. Albert Hatcher, of Macon,
was the guest of Mrs. Ralph North
cutt, on Saturday.
Friends of Mr. and Mrs. A. A, Ir
win will regret to learn of the seri
ous illness of Mrs. Irwin in Roches
ter, Minn.,, where they have been
spending several weeks.
Judge Ben Russell, of Athens, was
the guest of his aunt, Mrs, Eliza Mc-
Cullocb, on Monday.
Miss Fannie Lou Webb has return
ed from a two week’s visit to Mrs.
W. E. Benson in Arcadia, Fla.
Mr. and Mrs. John Cleveland, who
have been the guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Welborn Reynolds, have returned to
their home in Spartanburg, S. C.
' Mrs. James Lege and Miss Mabel
Cortelyou attended a luncheon in At
lanta on Tuesday, and the matinee
afterwards.
~ Mrs. Howell Trezevant entertained
her Bridge Club on Thursday after
noon.
1 Lieutenant John Atkinson and son,
‘Sam, motored to Waverly, Ga., last
week. Sam is staying with relatives
for a time, but Lieutenant Atkinson
returned home Monday, bringing his
little daughter, Rosaile, who will visit
‘her aunt, Mrs. C. T. Nolan.
} CARD OF THANKS
l I wish to thank sincerely all thosel
associated in the United War Work
Campaign. To Mrs. Gardner, in
charge of the ladies division, and to
all the city and district chairmen and
workers, I take this means of express
ilg mp appreciation
And to the people of the county
who have responded so nobly to the
‘call for this fund, I can only say, I
thank you.
| J. W. LEGG, Chairman,
; United War Work Campaign.
~ Remember the beautiful Annette
Kellermann, in “A Daughter of the
Cods” at The Strand, Thursday, Nov.
Zxth. 10 and 20 cents. Also comedy.
Mrs. Godden Tells How It
May be Passed in Safety
and Comfort.
Fremont, O.—*‘l was passing through
the critical period of life, being forty
six years of age and
:o:o:o:c:otozt:o’o’o’hfg,‘_oft'o:ozozozt:o:o:c:l:o: had all the symp-
E’:’:’:’:'T.f ;.’A'o:':o:o:o:o: toms incidenttothat
X & e, MR change —heat flash-
EXy es, nervousnessi and
DT am, e BEEXXX WaS in & general run
.:.:.;{:1;;--5_:--;;1:_,,.}}} down condition, so
R e X it was hard for me
:0:0:0:0:0:0:0t:.t‘:b‘.:’:‘:‘: to do my work.
el 3% 9| Lydia E. Pinkham'’s
o% 7 v |Vegetable Com
w, % 7 p" |pound was recom
o mended to me as the
27 = lbest remedy for my
: troubles, which it
surely proved to be. I feel better and
stronger in every way since taking it,
and the annoying symptoms have disap
peared.’”” — Mrs. M. EODDEN, 925 Na
poleon St., Fremont, Ohio.
Such annoying symptons as heat
flashes, nervousnsss, backache, head
ache, irritability and ¢‘ the blues,’’ may
be speedlly overcome and the system
restored to. normal conditions by this
famous root and herb remedy Lydia E.
Pinkham’s Vegetable Compeund.
If any complications present them
gelves write the Pinkham Medicine Co.,
Lynn, Mass., for suggestions how to
overcome them. The result of forty
years experience is at your service and
your letter held in strict confidence.
“'HE MARIETTA JOURNAL
A very common error with most
people is to assume that a gunner
necessarily works a gun. The duties
of the gunner and those of others of
his rank lie in the magazines and shell
rooms. It is the gun-trainer and gun
layer who are responsible for the
work of the guns, says Patrick Vaux
in Boys’' Life for November.
When their ship goes into action
the men in the shell rooms and other
munition stores know it is all or noth
ing for them. They reach their posts
only from the upper deck, for all
the watertight doors leading from
compartment to compartment are
‘closed, and overhead the heavy ar
mored door in the deck is shut down.
They can hear hardly a sound as the
ship steams onward to the attack.
Already the hydraulic or electric lifts
have gently hoisted the great projec
tiles and the cartridges directly to
the breech of the turret guns.
Suddenly, bang! goes the left gun
of the particular turret overhead, and
everything, including the floor of the
shell room, shakes violently, and the
concussion, coming down the armored
casing of the hoist that leads up into
'the gun chamber, sends a blast of air
through the magazine, stinking with
the sharp acrid fumes of explosives.
Bang! goes the right gun almost si
‘multaneously. Then ensues a con
tinuous crashing of the great cannon,
and through the clamor and tremen
dous clatter come the sucking hiss of
the hydraulic pressure and the faint
hollow-sounding voices shouting or
ders from the working chamber of
the thundering monsters.
From time to time the men in the
AN OLD TIME
MEDICINE IMPROVED
Laxanodine is based on the private
prescription of Dr. R. B. Moore of
Gwinette, Ga. in which there has
been an improvement made by sub
stituting a distilled extract of man
drake for the common water extract,
‘which separates the properties that
‘act on the liver from the irritating
resin that injure the stomach. Lax
anodine is a combination of liver
medicine with tonic and healing medi
cine, and is far superior to other pre
parations for liver, stomach and bow
el troubles. Fine for bilious fever,
jaundice, sick headache, indigestion,
constipation and dysentery or bowel
troubles. Sold on a guarantee to
satisfy or money back by Griffith’s
Pharmacy.
Tri-Weekly Constitution Almost a
Daily Carries Associated Press Cable
News of War---156 Papers a Year
For Only $1.50 '
In these strenuous days of war every red
blooded American wants direct news from
the battlefront in Europe that he may read
of the wonderful victories of the Allies; he
also wants to read the details of every move
that is made toward peace, and he wants to
read the casualty list among the boys who
went from his section of the country. He
not only wants all this news, but he wants
it hot off the wire, and if he can afford to
pay $9.50 a year for a daily paper he has
one coming right to his mail box every day.
But there are thousands of people who
cannot afford to pay $9.50 a year for a daily
paper, and their desire for news is just as
great as their more fortunate neighbors. For
these The Tri-Weekly Constitution fills the
bill completely. It is published three times a
week, carries the Associated Press cable
grams from the battle front, and every item
of interest regarding the war, together with
all the news worth while throughout the
world. In addition to this it carries the
latest market quotations, spiendid editorials,
farm department, women’s department and
USE THIS COUPON, OR WRITE LETTERS IN ABOUT SAME FORM
Ll i W i. N ReEd - e e e o
Publishers Tri-Weekly Constitution, Atlanta, Ga.—Find herewith $6, for which send The Tri-
Weekly Constitution one year to the following: v
Name ’ Postoffice :'l R.F.D. | State
‘ |
';l; -a::;;;ci;nc-e wit_h your offer send me The Tri-We ekly Constitution 1 year— fc;; —g;tl—i;g_ —tl-n.a_::l;!: -o-f-;
lgunhonse shout down scraps of in
formation. ‘“First ship, on fire an’
sinking fast.” “Our last shot fetched
away for'a'd smokestack of third
ship.” “Flagship sank a big cruiser.”
But, apart from such items of news,
the men in the magazines and shell
rooms know no more of how things
go in the fight and on their own
ship than the man in the moon.
HAND LAUNDRY
At Last we are Forced to Raise our Price to 24 cents “on
Collars. Our Prices are still Lowest.
Quong Sing
202 Church Street, Handley Lee, ProPrietor.
200 Acre Farm
T his farm is 5 or 6 miles from
Marietta, good improvements
well fenced, good land, on good
road; finest of woodlands; in
splendid shape for subdivision
into 40 and 60 acre farms.
This farm has just been listed
with us, and only for a short
time, so if you are looking for
something with a future to it,
this will certainly appeal to you.
See us at once for price
and terms
Holland Realty Co.
Marietta, Ga.
a wealth of interesting reading to interst ev
ery member of the family.
Your local paper gives you the news of
your community, while The Tri-Weekly
Constitution gives you the news of the world.
Send your $1.50 NOW and have The Tri-
Weekly Constitution come one year regular
ly three times a week to your home with all
the news. If you prefer send us four yearly
subscriptions with $6 and we will send you
The Tri-Weekly Constitution one year for
getting up this club. Two years for eight
yearly subscriptions with $l2. Or if you
start to get up a club and fail to get four
we will send you The Tri-Weekly three
months for every yearly subscription' with
$1.50 that you send. Try it today. You will
find it easy to get up a club of four now while
the war news is so interesting. Remember,
the subscription price of The Tri-Weekly
Constitution is $1.50 a year; 75 cents for six
months; 40 cents for three months.
Address all orders and remittances to
Tri-Weekly Constitution, Atlanta, Ga.
STUDY STENOGRAPHY!
| Bhcßag i
Simplest and best System
Adopted by U, 8. Government
Price of the Course $25.00
Enroll Now :
Taught by Miss Olive E. Faw
at
“The Little School on the Corner.”
PAGE THREE