The Marietta journal. (Marietta, Ga.) 1918-1944, December 27, 1918, Page PAGE THREE, Image 3
FRIDAY, DEC. 27th Persomal Mention Dr. and Mrs. F. I. Woodbridge and children, of Shanghai, China, who are visitng in this country arrived this week to spend the holidays with Mr. and Mrs. George H. Keeler. Mrs. A. S. J. Gardner and daughters, Miss es Emma and Lois Gardner, were also the Keeler’s guests for Christmas din ner. Mr. Ed Nichols, who has been sta tioned at Montgomery, Alabama, came home Monday to spend Christ mas with his wife. Mr. and Mrs. C. B. Willingham, of Atlanta, are spending Christmas with Mrs. E. A. Nichols. Captain Frank Mims is at home with his family for the holidays. Mr. George A. Moore is up from Waycross to spend the holidays with his children here. Mrs. Roger Dewar and children left on Monday for Cedartown, where they will spend the holidays with relatives. Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Brown, of Hawkinsville, are the guests of Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Hawkins for the holi days. . Miss Aimee D. Glover has arrived from Agnes, Scott College, Decatur, to spend the holidays at home. Mr. and Mrs. Hill Hall and Mrs. Lizzie York motored down to Greens boro on Christmas day to spend a few days with Mr. Hall’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. V. S. Hall Messrs. George Wharton, Mayes Ward, Hugh Ward, Johnny Christian, Eugene White and Hubert Hagood are home from Charleston for the holidays. Mrs. Alvin Smith, of Macon, who is now visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Collins, in Acworth, will arrive this week to vist her brothers, Messrs John D., Jim, and Ray Col lins here. Mrs. Aimee Dunwoody and grand son, Robert Dunwoody, of Macon, ar rived on Saturday to spend the holi days with Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Glover. Miss Fredonia Field, who has a school near Atlanta, is also spending the holidays with Mr. and Mrs. Glover. Mrs. Roy Collins and children are spending the week in Atlanta with her mother, Mrs. Tysor. Mr. Collins spent Christmas day with them. Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Florence gave a very pleasant bird-supper on Fri day evening, their guests being Mr. and Mrs. Claude Gurley and Mr. and Mrs. George Griffin. Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Oslin and sons, and Mr. J. P. Bowie, of Smyrna, and Mrs. J. J. Taylor, of Atlanta, were the Christmas guests of Mr. and Mrs. B. T. Frey. Miss Sadie Gober, Director of the Bureau of Civic Relief, Rocky Moun tain Division, came home on Monday to visit her parents, Judge and Mrs. George F. Gober. She is rapidly re cuperating after her serious illness. Miss Arrie White, who teaches in Fitzgerald, Ga., reached home Satur day to spend the holidays. Miss Frances Dobbs, who is a stu dent at the State Normal in Athens, is at home for the holidays with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Dobbs. Mrs. Arthur Davenport leaves on Friday for Louisville, where she will spend two months with Colonel and Mrs. G. A. Parks and other friends. Dr. and Mrs. E. L. Harris are very pleasantly locate dat 974 South Four th Avenue ,Louisville, Kentucky. Mrs. S. H. Smith, who has been the guest of her brothers, Messrs. E. P. and H. C. Dobbs, for some weeks, has returned to her home in Lynchburg, Va. Friends of Mrs. Arlena Murphy, of Atlanta, are glad to know that she is improving after her serious ill ness. Mrs. Fitzhugh Lee, of Washignton, and her uncle, Mr. Loren Fletcher, of Mineapolis, who have been the guests of Mrs. H. G. Cole, left on Wednesday evening for Sea Breeze, Fla. Miss Virginia Boston will have as her house-guests this week, Misses Louise Berry, of Rome, and Saline Woodside and - Catharine Tannehill, of Greenville, S. C. Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Robertson, of Thomaston, were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. A. A. Bishop on Wednesday. Mr. Ed Hunt, of Macon, is spend ing the holidays with his family here. Mrs. A. A. Bishop is suffering from a badly sprained ankle. TI ® The Greatest Christmas m American History ' LET OUR GIFTS BE WORTHY. Out of our great thankfulness let us give happiness to othérs. The best way to express this feeling is through well thought out gifts. : These suggestions for your Gift List: FOR HER FOR HIM Mesh Bags ----$5.00 to $50.00 Cigarette Cases $3.00 to $25100 Vanities ------$5.00 to $35.00 Match Safes __-$1.50 to $lO.OO Cameos --- ___s6.oo to $50.00 Cuff Links ___-$l.OO to $25.00 Porins - —-—-- _51.50 to $lO.OO Stick Pins _.--$l.OO to $25.00 Brooches -- ---$l.OO to $75.00 Tie Clasps ._-- .75t0 $lO.OO Bar Pins _____sl.oo to $50.00 Fraternal Embs. .50 to $25.00 Mail orders given prompt attention. If you wish your gift sent direct, enclose Post Office Money Order to cover cost and mailing, excess postage will be returned and your gift will go forward im mediately on date requested, carefully and attractively wrapped. E. A. MORGAN Jeweler & Op&qmetrist : 10 E. Hunter Street Atlanta, Georgia e Mr. Bob Goodman left on Satur day for Knoxville to spend the holi-i days with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Will Goodman. “ Miss Lula McMichael left on Mon day for Oxford, where she will spend the holidays with President and Mrs. Edgar Johnson. | Miss Virginia Boston spent the week-end in Rome with Miss Louise Berry. Miss Irma McCleskey, of Macon, is the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Me- Cleskey. . Mr. and Mrs. Orlando Awtrey, Jr., of Acworth, spent the week-end with their parents, Mr. and Mrs. R. E. Butler. Mrs. Warren Stokes left on Mon day for Rome, where she will spend the holidays with relatives. i Miss Isabel Amorous is spending 'the holidays in Atlanta. Lieutenant-Commander John At ‘kinson and Mrs. Atkinson and chil ‘dren have gone to Waverly, Ga., for, ‘the holidays. ~ Miss Sarah Williams, of LaFayette, ;Alabama, was the week-end guest of her sister, Mrs. Shackleford. | ~ Mr. and Mrs. Fincannon and Jack Murphy, of Atlanta, are the guests of ‘Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Barnes for the holidays. | ~ Lt. Jamie Corley, in a recent let-“ ‘ter to his mother, says that he will ‘not return home. for awhile yet, as he is with the army of occupation. He| has recovered entirely from his ‘wounds. He says there is not muc'hi‘ for officers to do now so they are riding and flying and sight-seeing. He had just visited Metz and Strasbourg 'when he wrote. Lt. Corley.is an aerial observer. ~ Mrs. A. M. Gibbs is spending the holidays with her daughter, Miss Virginia Gibbes, at Fort McPherson.i Mrs. Josiah Carter, formerly con nected with the Marietta Journal, has ‘been spending several months in Washington, D. C., with her dhugh ter, Mrs. Hardy Ulm, but has now re turned and is again at home with Mr. and Mrs. Joe Carter at 15 Claire mont Avenue, Decatur. Mrs. Clifton Lovelace, of Rome, and Miss Julia Schilling, of Savannah, are suending the week with their father, Mr. F. E. A. Schilling. Mr. and Mrs. E. Leon Faw had Mr. and Mrs. Enoch Faw, Miss Agnes Kendrick and Miss Janie Bond, of At lanta, with them on Christmas day. Mrs. J. T. Corley has as her holi day guests her cousin, Mrs. Andrew D. Martin, of Lebanon, Tenn., her sis ter, Mrs. Pauline Jarman, of Cov ington, her son, Mr. Clifton Corley and his wife, of Cumberland, N. C,, and her daughter, Miss Pauline Cor ley, of Atlanta. Mrs. Idelle Herren and son, James, spent Chrstimas day with Mrs. D. T Baker. Mrs. J. B. Dudley spent last week in Atlanta but is again with her sis ter, Mrs. Allen Hardeman. Mr. and Mrs. L. H. Chappell, of Columbus, Ga., will arrive Thursday for a visit to Mrs. W. B. Tate. | Misses Mary Lizzie Benson and Lulu Kémp are at home from Georgia‘ Normal and Industrial College at Mil ledgeville, for the holidays. ' Mrs. Dora Simmonds and son, Ran-‘ dolph, spent the week-end with rel atives in Atlanta. ‘ Mr. and Mrs. L. B. McGavock, who‘ have been visiting Rev. and Mrs. R. R Claiborne, have returned to their} home in Max Meadows, Va. ‘ Miss Annie Waddell is spending‘ her Christmas holidays at home. | The news has been received of t‘ne( death of Mr. Marshall King, at Gar nett, S. C., after a short illness, of influenza and pneumonia. Mr. King lived in Marietta several years ago andwas a clerk in the store of Faw and Rogers. ‘ Miss Theola Harter is spending the holidays with relatives at Forest City,‘ North Carolina. ‘ Miss Katharine Coryell spent‘ Christmas with her sister, Mrs. John Dorsey, on Roswell Street. ! Mr. and Mrs. Henry Wyatt, Sr-,i will leave soon for a trip to Florida. Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Carriker and‘l son, ‘Jack, are spending the holidays in Barnesville with relatives. | Miss Clara Thornton returned last week from a visit to Nashville. Mr. Fred Rohner, of Charleston, is spending the holidays with his father. Miss Sarah Wood Gramling will not return to Marietta for the holidays, but will be with her sister, Mrs. Oli ver Hereth, in Indianapolis, until the reopening of Tudor Hall school. | Mrs. M. L. Alsop, who has been visiting Mr. and Mrs. G. N. Alsop, has returned to her home in Richmond. ‘ The family of Mr. A. 8. Cohen spent Christmas in Atlanta. S Mr. and Mrs. Clinton Crissey are rejoicing over the arrival of a little daughter at their home at Butler's. Miss Frances Baker is ill with in fluenza. | Mrs. John Dorsey is expecting her friend, Mrs. Sam Guy,. formerly Miss Alle Chandler, on Friday, and her guests next Sunday will be Mrs. W. A. Verdier, Sr. and Mrs. W. A, Ver dier, Jr., of Kirkwood. Mrs. Roy Thornton, of Marion, 0., is visiting Mrs. W. E. Thornton, and will be joined here by her husband about the first of January. Mrs. Grady Roberts is quite sick with influenza at her home on Atlan ta Street. Miss Christine Rlair is visiting Miss Christine McEachern in Atlanta, and was honored with a dance by her hos tess on Tuesday evening at her home on Briarcliffe Road. Miss Blair also attended the dance last Friday even ing at the East Lake Country Club. ON SATURDAY afternoon we shall move to our new banking building, and will open for business there on Monday, December 30th. We will therefore begin the year in our new home, and we will welcome all our friends there. ——————lBBBl9lB——— OR over thirty years the FIRST NATIONAL has been the leading banking institution of Marietta and Cobb county. During this entire period it has worked for the advancement of the county and its business interests, as well as for the welfare of every individual within its borders. . It has witnessed Marietta grow from a village, with one or two small manufacturing plants, to one of the larg ost and most modern little cities in Georgia, with manufacturing concerns that employ thousands of people and whose products are sold throughout the country. Throughout this thirty years the FIRST NATION AL has actively promoted and assisted the farming interests of Cobb county, watching it develop to the position of Georgia’s Banner County—rich in agricultural re sources and offering unlimited opportunities to the farmer. X Having participated in the wonderful growth and development of Marietta and Cobb county during this period, the directors of the FIRST NATIONAL have had instilled in them a lasting confidence in the future growth and development of this section and have built a handsome banking house to better enable them to serve their customers. The strength of a financial institution lies not only in its capital and surplus, but also in the honesty and judgment of its officers and directors. It goes without saying that a connection with such an institution is advantageous and the FIRST NATIONAL is prepared to extend all accommoda tions that intelligent and conservative banking methods will justify. Make This Bank Your Banking Home Because—lts facilities are unexcelled and any accomodation consistent with good banking is at the service of its patrons. Because—lt is the oldest and largest bank in Cobb County and offers most security to depositors, therefore it merits your patronage. Officers s J. E. MASSEY, President gilas J. M. BROWN, Vice-President JOS. M. BROWN o ki , J. E. MASSEY THOS. C. ERWIN G. P. REYNOLDS, Cashiier A. V. CORTELYOU R. E. BUTLER D. R. LITTLE, Asst.-Cashier G.P. REYNOLDS The First National B he First National Bank Resources Over One Million Dollars e THE MARIETTA JOURNAL Mrs. D. T. Baker has received the news that her son, Dan, who has been with our army in England, has arriv ed in New York. | Mrs. John Manget, of Atlanta, is spending several days with her par ents, Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Hardeman. Miss Ellen Howell, of New York, is the guest of her sisters, Misses Ju lia and Mary Howell. | Mr. Roberts Everett, who has been at Illington Aviation Field, at Hous ton, Texas, is with his wife and little daughter at the home of Mrs. A. S. Clay. Mrs. Trasker Camp arrived last Saturday from Fort Worth, Texas, and is visiting her niece, Mrs. J. E. Massey. Judge and Mrs. S. H. Sibley, of Union Point, William Hart Sibley and Misses Sarah and Weldon Sibley are visiting Mrs. W. B. Tate. Miss Mary Byrd Tate is also at home from Or ange, N. J. where she has been attend ing school. Miss Charlott Law is at home from Brenau College for the holidays. Mrs. John Collins is visiting rel atives in Acworth. Mr. and* Mrs. Ewing Underwood are spending the holidays with Mus. Underwood’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. . Matthews, on Washington Avenue. Miss Elizabeth Brakefield, of ¥lor ence, Alabama, is visiting Mrs. Wal ter Brakefield, on Cherokee Street. MONEY TO LOAN Plenty of six per cent money for five year loansom high class improved farms in Cobb and adjoining coun ties. Prompt attention given all applications, and quick results obtained. Call or write me. ) J. D. MALGNE, Marietta, Ga. J. E. DOBBS E. C. GURLEY Y We represent some of the strongest American and English companies. We solicit your Fire Insurance business, and - will look after your renewals promptly. DOBBS & GURLEY,Agts. SUCCESSORS TO H. G. CORYELL Office in Merchants & Farmers Bank No safer place could be devised for the safe keep ing of valuables than the modern and fully equip ped Safety Deposit Vaults in the new building. The new vaults of the FIRST NATIONAL are modern in every particular, offering absolute pro tection from fire and burglars. Individual and business firms are invited to make their reservations now for their requirements. PAGE THREE