Newspaper Page Text
FRIDAY, DEC. 6th
Personal Mention
Miss Susie Brumby, of Cedartown,
returned home Wednesday after a
pleaasnt visit to her sister, Mrs. Rog
er Dewar.
Miss Neel Kendrick, of Atlanta,
was the week-end guest of Miss Con
stance Cole.
Mrs. Fred Barkalow and Fred, Jr.,
who have been spending two weeks
with relatives here, have returned to
La Grange. 3
Sergeant and Mrs. Kloepfer are
visiting Mrs. Kloepfer’s parents, Mr.
and Mrs. A. K. White, this week.
gergeant Kloepfer, who has been in
+he 0. T. C. at Camp Johnson, Jack
<onville, has been mustered out.
Miss Mary Lizzie Benson, who has
been spending the past ten days with
her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Ben
son, returned on Tuesday to the G.
N I C. at Milledgeville.
Mr. and Mrs Jeff Upshaw announ
ce the arrival of a fine girl
Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Hill had as
their dinner guests on Sunday, Miss
Elizabeth Cogburn and Miss Bertha
Bullard, Mr. Oscar Sauls and Ser
geant Mulvihill, of Camp Gordon.
Mr. and Mrs. George W. Daniell
spent the Thanksgiving holidays in
Smyrna with Mrs. E. A. Gilbert.
Mrs. E. L. Harris, who has been
the popular guest of Mrs. Arthur Dav
enport, for the past five weeks, left
on Saturday to join Dr. Harris in
their new home in Louisville, Ky.
Mrs. Esmer Bullard left last week
to join her husband, Lieutenant Bul-‘
lard, who is at Camp Johnson, Jack
sonville, Fla.
Mr. Hiram E. Mozley went over to
Dallas to spend the week-end with
his wife, who is visiting her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Hudson.
Miss Virginia Gibbes came up from
Fort l\acPherson to spend Thanksgiv
ing with her mother, Mrs. A. M.
Gibbes.
Mr. William MecCulloch, who has
been studying Marine Aviation at
Philadelphia and Boston Tech, has
been mustered out, and has returned
home.
Mr. Lewis Russell, of Winder, spent
Thanksgiving with his aunt, Mrs.
Eliza McCulloch.
Mrs. Fannie Pratt and Miss Marion
King left on Friday for Georgetown,
S. C., where they will spend the win
ter.
Mr. and Mrs. Dempsey Medford
and Miss Maud Medford spent the
Thanksgiving holidays with relatives
in Woodstock.
Miss Rebecca Wyatt left on Tues
day for Birmingham, where she will
visit relatives for several days. From
there she will go with her aunt, Mrs.
John Warren, to spend the winter in
El Paso, Texas.
Miss Tallulah Towers left on Sat
urday for Philadelphia, where she will
spend the winter with Mr. and Mrs.
Donegan Towers. Miss Mary Towers
left on Tuesday for Rockledge, Fla.,
to spend the winter with Mr. and Mrs.
John Towers.
Dr. and Mrs. Herbert Reynolds and
baby, Miss Mary Reynolds, and
Messers. Dudley and Edward Reyn
olds, of Atlanta, spent the Thanksgiv
ing holidays with Mr. and Mrs. W.
M. Reynolds.
Mr. W. S. N. Neal, who has been
so ill at Piedmont Sanatorium for the
past three weeks, was sufficiently im
proved to return home on Sunday.
His many friends hope to see him out
again soon.
Mrs. E. D. Page, of Washington
City, will arrive next week to visit
friends.
Mrs. E. Matthews has as her guests
her two daughters, Mrs. S. A. Sams,
of Woolsey, Ga., and Mrs. Ewing 1.
Underwood, of Richmond, Virginia.
Mrs Mary J. Turner has returned
from an extended visit to her mother,
Mrs. Sam Jones, in Cartersville.
Mr. B. G. Brumby left on Tuesday
for a business trip to New York.
Mrs. W. W. Wakefield is moving
into the Sessions house on Cherokee
Street for the winter.
Misses Wilma and Dorothy Butler |
spent the week-end in Dahlonega.
Mrs. Jere Caldwell and baby, and
her sister, Miss Laura Mayes, who
have been spending the past two
months in Anniston, Ala., where Cap
tain Caldwell is stationed, returned
on Saturdl?{y and are with their moth
er, Mrs. Mary J. Turner. '
Mr. and Mrs. T. M. Brumby left
in their automobile on Tuesday for
their winter home in Dunedin, Fla.
Mr. Henry Black, of U. S. S| New
Jersey, visited his sister, Mrs. M. D.
Norton, last week. |
Mr. Robert Bouchman, of Tennes
see, who is at the O. T. C. at Camp
Gordon, was the week-end guest of
his aunt, Mrs. C. M. Law.
Mrs. E. E. Mulecolm, who is Presi
dent of the Dixie Club in New York,
invited Miss Sara Patton to sing at
the beautiful annual entertainment
given by that club at the Waldorf-
Astoria last week.
Harry Norton is spending the week
with relatives in Gainesville.
Miss Mary Kate Mell returned on
Saturday from a visit to her sister,
Mrs. Loyd Reed, in Ashland, Ala.
Mrs. John M. Warren left on Tues
day for Elberton to attend the funer
al of her sister-in-law, Mrs. Brewer,
the wife of Col. H. Jule Brewer.
Mr. and Mrs. Byrd, who have been
spending two weeks with Mr. and Mrs.
C. N. Mell, returned on Thursday
night to their home in St. Augustine,
Florida. Miss Eveivn Mell accompan
jed her sister home, and will be her
guest for some weeks.
. Mrs. Goode, of Atlanta, was the
guest of her sister, Mrs. W. T. Potts
last week.
The many friends here of Colonel
Earl D’Arcy Pierce, 319th F. A., will
be glad to know that Mrs. Pierce has
received a cable announcing his safe
ty and well-being.
Mr. and Mrs. George Welsh enter
tained at dinner recently for Mr. and
Mrs. Jack Stickney, of Chattanooza,
their other guests being Mr. and Mrs.
Ryburn Clay and Mr. and Mrs. L. N.
Trammell.
~ Captain Fred Morris came over
from Camp Sevier, Greenville, S. C.,
to spend the week-end.
- Mr. and Mrs. Enoch Faw and baby,
of Atlanta, spent the Thanksgiving
holidays with Mr. and Mrs. Leon Faw.
Mr. Lemuel Carnes, Jr., who is a
member of the S. A. T. C., at Athens,
spent the Thanksgiving holidays here
with his parents,
Mr. Roscoe Black is spending the
week at his farm in Paulding county.
Miss Bessie Baker, who has been
the guest of Mrs. W. Black, has re
turned to Atlanta.
Mr. and Mrs. J. Marion Dobbs
spent the week-end in Atlanta with
Mrs. John MecEachern.
Miss Cora Brown went on last
Wednesday to Americus for a visit to
Mrs. Frank Harrold. Miss Louise
Walker, of Monroe, is also the guest
of Mrs. Harrold, adn the girls are be
ing charmingly entertained by the
numerous officers of the Aviation
Camp in Americus.
Mrs. S. H. Smith, of Lynchburg,
Va., who has been the guest of Mr.
and Mrs. E. P. Dobbs, is now visiting
Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Dobbs.
Mrs. Hammond and two children,
of Macon, spent the week-end with
Mrs. Will Haynes.
Mrs. E. Matthews visited her daugh
ter, Mrs. Keever, in Calhoun, last
week.
Mrs. Joe Brown entertained her
Bridge Club on Wednesday after
noon.
Mr. R. M. Wade is on the sick list
this week.
Mr. Charles Jones, of Lockport,
'New York, is visitng his sister, Mr.
F. R. Burton.
Mr. Guy R.. Manning, of Augusta,
‘who is a member of the S. A. T. C,,
at Tech, spent Thanksgiving with his
grandmother, Mrs K. L. Manning.
~ Mrs. Cornelia Dorsey left on Tues
day for a visit to relatives in Gain
esville.
Miss Mary Gantt spent the week
with friends in Griffin.
Mrs. Jack Brumby is spending a
few days with Mrs. L. D. Hoppe be
fore going to Mrs. E. J. Setze’s for
the winter.
The Rev. Mr. Shell, the new preach
er of the Marietta Circuit, has moved
with his family to the parsonage at
the Marietta Camp Ground.
Mrs. Charles Mayfield and Miss
Alma Mayfield, of Atlanta, were the
week-end guests of Mrs. N. J. Horn.
Mrs. Martha Burton, of Kokomo,
Indiana, has come to spend the win
ter with her son, Mr. F. R. Burton.
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Cohen have
moved into their lovely new home on
Church Street.
Mr. and Mrs. Roscoe Black, of At
lanta, were the week-end guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hardeman. Mr.
Black used to work on the Marietta
Journal, but for some years has been
a liontype opeator on the Atlanta
Journal.
Mrs. Homer Hamby, of Atlanta,
spent the week-end with Mrs. T. E.
Hamby.
Mrs. B. E. Kelley and son, Emer
son, spent the week-end with Mrs. G.
F. Hagood.
The Rev. J. B. Gresham and Mrs.
Gresham were the guests of Mr. and
Mrs. B. T. Frey several days last
week. They were en route from Trion
to Mr Gresham’s new charge at Mid
dleton.
Mrs. John Atkinson who has been
ill with typhoid fever for the past
eleven weeks, is convalescing at the
home of her sister-in-law, Mrs. C. T.
Nolan.
Mrs. Campbell Wallace, Jr., enter
tained her Luncheon Club on Wednes
day, her guests being Mrs. Floyd Nor
thcutt, Mrs. Guyton Parmer Reynolds,
Mrs. J. E. Massey, Mrs. Leon Gil
}aert and Mrs. Groves Cohen, of At
anta.
JAMES H. GROVES
Fire, Accident, Liability & Automobile Insurance
100 Whitlock Avenue
Place your business with the oldest, agency in Marietta.
Money To Loan
e —————— e ——————
Notice To Real Estate Owners
If you need money, you can get all you are entitled to on
long time, reasonable terms, right here, without going to Atlanta
or elsewhere. Its your loss as well as ours if you fail to see us.
We also have loans for sale.
Sessions Loan & Trust Co.
MARIETTA, GEORGIA
Arriving and Departing Time at Marietta. Ga.
a—daily b—daily except Sunday c¢—=Sunday only
ARRIVE LEAVE
Cincinnati and Louisville xa 6:46 am xa 11433 pn
Cincinnati and Louisville a 4:43 pm a 11:45 pm
Murphy, Knoxville and North a 8:10 am s &1 pm
Blue Ridge a 4:31 pm a 9:40 am
Atlanta a 9:45 am s 14:31 pm
Atlanta a 4:20 pm a 8:10 am
Atlanta xa 11:11 pm xa 6:46 am
Atlanta a 11:45 am a 443 pw
Copperhill ¢ 4:31 pm ¢ 9:40 am
Trains marked (x) will stop only to take on or let off passengers for or
from Knoxville and beyond, and to and from points on the thru car line
to Macon and beyond. e
Mrs. Newt Heggie entertained at
Thanksgiving dinner Mr. and Mrs.
Georfi_ %B“finn, Mrs. Fannie Heggie
and Misses Mary and Myra Graves
and Mrs. Proudfit, of Memphis.
Miss Glennis Hancock returned
home from Shorter College on Sat
urday, bringing with her Miss Bess
Walton, of Clarksville, Miss., and Miss
Frances Fleming, of Wayeross, Ga.
Miss Fleming has gone home, but
Miss Walton will be Miss Hancock’s
guest for some time.
Miss Mamie Marler spent the week
end in Atlanta with her sister, Mrs.
E. A. Huie.
Mr. and Mrs. Stark, of Atlanta,
and Mr. Paul Fraser, of Camp Jesup,
spent Thanksgiving with Mr. and Mrs.
W. T. Mosher.
Mr. Newt Heggie is at home sick
this week.
Ensign Joe Brumby, who has been
visiting his parents and other rela
tives in town, returns this week to
New York.
Miss Lucile Morris, who is a stu
dent at Shorter College, came home
on Monday. The college is closed un
til the first of January on account of
an epidemic of influenza there.
Mr. Stanley Welsh, who has been
for the past three months in the
0. T. C. at Camp Zachary Taylor,
returned home on Tuesday.
Misses ‘Marion and Kate Gregg
spent Thanksgiving in Atlanta as the
guests of Mrs. Horace Reeves.
. Mr. C. M. Law returned home on
Tuesday from a business trip.
Mrs. Elizabeth Frey was called to
Birmingham on Saturday by the ser
ious illness of her daughter, Mrs. J.
‘Paul Lyle.
~ Mr. and Mrs. A. S. Cohen, Miss
'Augusta Cohen, and Miss Augusta
‘Groves went to Atlanta on Sunday to
attend the dinner-party given by Mr.
‘and Mrs. Willis Milner, Jr., to cele
brate the fourth wedding anniversary
of Mr. and Mrs. Groves Cohen.
Mr. M. E. Rivers, of Macon, is
spending the week with Mr. George
Griffin.
Mrs. Lemon Awtrey, of Acworth,
visited Mrs. Roy Collins this week.
Mr. and Mrs. A. H. Setzer, who
have been the guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Mayes Frey, left on Tuesday for their
home in Greenville, S. C. Mr. Setzer
is a professor in Furman Univer
sity.
Mrs. Ralph Butler visited Mrs. Carl
Butler last week.
Mr. and Mrs. Howard and family
have moved from their country home
on the Bells’ Ferry road to their
home on Forest Avenue.
Miss Jennie Cohen, who has been
viisting the family of her brother,
Mr. A. S. Cohen, left on Tuesday for
her home in Virginia.
Miss Mary Robeson is sFending the
week with Mrs. Wilis Milner, Jr., in
Atlanta.
Mrs. D. F. McClatchey and daugh
ter, Adolyn, and Miss Adelaide
Setze, of Atlanta, visited relatives
here on Friday.
Miss Georgia Burt has returned
from a visit to friends in Macon.
Miss Pearl Lyon and Miss Georgia
Burt went to Atlanta Thursday to
hear McCormack sing.
Mr. and Mrs. Virgie Gray were
visitors in Acworth on Saturday and
Sunday.
Messrs. Harry and Richard Hargis,
of O. T. C., at Camp Gordon, visited
their. aunt, Mrs. Glenn Giles, last
week.
Mrs. Harry Steele and little girl,
who have been the guests of Mr. and
Mrs. W. M. Gober, returned home
Saturday.
Misses Henrietta Rhodes and An
nie Armstrong, of Atlanta, and
Gladys Ingalls, of Richmond, Va,
were the guests of Miss Odene Flor
ence from Friday to Tuesday.
Miss Sarah Bishop spent the week
end in Roswell as the guest of Miss
Pearl Lyons.
Captain Fleet, of Atlanta, was the
dinner guest of Mrs. A. S. J. Gard
ner on Monday evening. Cagtain
Fleet has been with Lieutenant Char
lie Gardner in France, saw him last
on the day the armistice was signed.
THE MARIETTA JOURNAL
“Dr. E. P. Frazier gave a beautiful
tsag dinner at his country home,
‘Stonedge,” near Macon last evening,
the guest of honor being Mr. Martim
Calvin, State President of the Geor
gia Agricultural Society. Covers
were laid for sixteen.” Condensed
from the Macon Telegraph.
Mr. and Mrs. Ryburn Clay enter
tained informally at dinner on Wed
nesday evening, for their house
guests, Mr. and Mrs. Jack Stickney,
of Chattanooga. Those invited to
meet them were Mr. and Mrs. L. N.
Trammell, Mr. and Mrs. George
Welsh, Mrs. Cottingham and Mr. C
W. DuPre.
Mr. W. H. Blakemore has gone on
a business trip to St. Louis.
Mrs. W. H. Malone and baby left
Wednesday night for a visit to rela
tives in Villa Rica.
Mrs. I. A. White entertained the
Baptist Woman’s Missionary Union
on Monday afternoon. !
Tie Clasps, Rings, Beauty Pins, at
H. E. Kerley's.
Mrs. Lucy Edwards entertained at
Thanksgiving dinner Mrs. Tom Irwin,
Miss Mary Anne Irwin, Miss Mary
Nagle, of Atlanta.
The Baptist Philatheas were de
lightfully entertained by Mrs. J. W.
L. Stovall on Tuesday afternoon. Dr.
;nd Mrs. I. A. White were guests of
onor.
Mrs. Ada Jolley Williams, of Chat
tanooga, is visiting her aunt, Mrs. D.
F. Green after spending several weeks
with her husband at Fort Screven.
Mr. and Mrs. Bowers, of Barnes
ville, are with Mrs. D. F. Green.
REV. G. T. SHELL TO PREACH
SUNDAY AT HOLLY SPRINGS
Rev. G. T. Shell will be with us
the latter part of this week and will
preach at Holly Springs, Sunday
morning and evening.
Diamond Stick Pins, Lavaliers and
Cuff Buttons at H. E. Kerley's.
THEY NEVER ASK
FOR MONEY BACK
More than 250,000 bottles of Lax
anodine have been sold on a guaran
tee to satisfy or money back and no
one has ever asked for a refund. The
people who have used it say they
have never found its equal. It is ton
ic and healing, agrees with everybody
and quickly relieves liver, stomach
and bowel troubles, It relieves sick
headache in 30 minutes, indigestion
in 5 minutes, dysentery with one dose
and is the best remedy for chronic
constipation, always builds the pa
tient and improves the condition. Sold
on a guarantee to satisfy or money
back by Griffith’s Pharmacy. adv.
B S A G iS A P ARN .
On Tuesday, December 10, 1918, at Cherokee Farm
(about one-half mile north of Smyrna), I will offer to the
highest bidder, all Live Stock, Farming Implements, Feed,
ete., owned by me.—TERMS CASH.
Among the items to be sold are the following:
Two mules Roll top desk and chair
One grade Holstein heifer = One Thomas two-speed 6
Two wagons in. mowing machine
One International steel bal- Ranney Canning outfit with
ing machine No. 2 and 3 cans
One Combination Fertili- Horge clipping machine
zer, wheat and oat drill T ol o -
Alfalfa and small seed drill Cwo-cy ;n :rlcwl elr n;(l
y £ otton See eal, Kainit,
Lime distributor : Phocolicric Rat
175 ft. new 11 in. Hemp 4
rope Chicken house
Incubators Corn, Fodder, Hay, etc. etc.
NOTICE—The sale will begin at ten o’clock and in case
the weather is extremely unfavorable, sale will take place
on Wednesday, December 11th. To r e ach Cherokee
Farm, get off Marietta car at Belmont Station, go north
about 300 feet and take road to left next to the woods.
H. Koni Kk
.Konigsmar
Smyrna, Ga. Phone 43-J
600 LOCOMOTIVES HAVE
BEEN ORDERED BY M'ADOO
. Washington, December 4.— Con
tracts for the construction of 500
standard locomotives were awarded
today by the railroad administration
to the American ;Locomotive com
pany. Director General McAdoo
said this order is in addition to one
for 100 Mikado Standard locomo
tives recently placed with the Lima
Locomotive Works, Lima, Ohio. The
two orders involve the expenditure
of approximately $40,000,000.
City Tax Notice
The books are now open for the bgy
ment of City taxes, at the Clerk’s offi¢e on
Atlanta Street. : st
You are urged to come forward and
‘pay now as the books will positively -be
closed on December 20th and fi-fas issued
against deliquents.
C. R. Power,
City Clerk Marietta, Georgia.
Office Phone 204.
——DEALERS IN —
Rough and dressed iumber, shingles, laths, lime,
cement, plaster, brick and Pattons Sunproof Paint
We carry the most com;})llete and largest stock of
building material in North Georgia. :
Your orders, large or small, appreciated. @We
can give you lowest prices and prompt deliveries.
Mill and Office, Church St., in front of car barn.
NOTICE!
I am prepared to,
do all kinds of auto
mobile trimming and
painting. Give me a
call.
W. W. Watkins
PAGE THREE