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PAGE SIX
: OFFICE PHONE 204
' —~DEALERS IN—
Rough and dressed iumber, shingles, laths, lime,
~ cement, plaster, brick and Pattons Sunproof Paint
- We carry the most complete 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.
The Marietta Journal $l.OO Per Year
MONEY TO LOAN— |
We at all times have money on hand for Long Time loans
on Georgia Real Estate.
MORTGAGES FOR SALE— »
If you have money to invest you could not beat Georgia
first mortgages as to security and rate of income.
FIRE INSURANCE—
We are prepared to write any size risk anywhere in Cobb
County and represent several large American and English
Companies. GET OUR RATES ON AUTOMOBILE
INSURANCE.
Sessions Loan & Trust Company
Marietta, Georgia
WE WRITE
INSURANCE
OF ALL KINDS
CROWE & HOLLAND
PHONE 134 REYNOLDS BUILDING
MARIETTA, GEORGIA,
. ~
Black Undertaking Co.
———f—lOS Winters Street——mMmMm —————
Funeral Directors and
Embalmers
CALLS ANSWERED Established 1875 and doing
DAY OR NIGHT business in same place since
DAY PHONZ 400 NIGHT PHONE 246
Children Cry for Fietcher’s
RO AR A 3 S
. ,'... a-..?. ¥ ¢ oo "-\'.;f;-l""l;}"] BAU TR ;{_*3' N L f
3 . 2
g - 2 e o B B A =
2ZAN NN NN e - % 7 R e i \\;_«'
AR A A R
The Kind You Have Always Bought, and whi-h s been
in use for over thirty years, has borne thc ¢ -zature of
' : and has been made u-der his pere
MWT sonal supervision sinc: i's infancy.
‘ ; T Allow no one to deccive you in this,
All Counterfeits, Imitations and ‘* Just-as-good ” are bug
Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of
Infants and Children—Experience against Experiment.
s :
What is CASTORIA
Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric,
Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is pleasant. It contains
neither Opium, Morphine nor other ncrcotic substance. Its
age is its guarantee. For more than thirty years it has
been in constant use for the relief of Constipation, Flatulency,
Wind Colic and Diarrhoea; allaying Feverishness arising
therefrom, and,by regulating the Stomach and Bowels, aids
the assimilation of Food; giving healthy and natural sleep.
The Children’s Panacea—The Mothes:’s Friend.
GENUINE CASTORIA ALways
Bears the Signature of
A 7) M/‘
The Kind You Have Always Bought
THE CENTAUR COMPANY NEW YORK cCITY,
Yl WI cl Al cA'LI-s ?
2,000 Women Expected to Gath
b
- er in Cleveland the Week of |
April 13-20, 1920, for Na- |
tional Convention. 4l
iy ik
p 1
MEETING POSTPONED |
TWO YEARS BY WAFR
Delegates Wiil Discuss New Member
ship Basis for Students and Question
of Future Support for Work.
Many Other Things.
The Young Women’s Christian Asso
ciation of the United States of America
will meet In national convention in
Cleveland, 0., the week of April 18 to
20, having postponed the convention
from the spring of 1918 in. order to
comply with a government request that
expense and travel be reduced to a
minimum during the war,
' The department on conventions and
conferences of the National Y. W. C.
A., of which Mrs, Harry Emerson Fos
dick is chairman, estimates an attend
ance of 2,000 women, representing all
departments of Y. W. C. A. work—
board members, secretaries, students,
club girls, Girl Reserves, girls from In
dustrial Service Centers, women from
the International Institutes for foreign
born women, members from city, town
and country Associations,
Each Assoclation in the United
States will be entitled to one voting
delegate for every one hundred voting
members in the Association,
Two of the most important questions
which will come up before the conven
tion will be the membership basis and
the question of support. Of old busi
ness to be considered the most impor
tant question will be the membership
basis for student associations, the
granting of charter membership privi
lege to the Chicago Young Women’s
Christian Association and a recommen
dation providing an increase in mem
bership of the National Board of the
Association will also be presented.
Rev. Charles W. Gilkey, pastor of
Hyde Park Baptist Church, Chicago,
will give a series of morning addresses
during the convention week. Dr. Rob
ert E. Speer, secretary to the Foreign
Mission Board of the Presbyterian
Church, North, will also give an ad
dress. Mrs. Speer is chairman of the
National Board of the Y. W, C. A.
The convention will be In session
morning and evening, the afternoon
being given over to sectional meetings
beld In various churches. Attendance
at these meetings will be determined
by group membership and also by ac
tivities,
Mrs. W, P. Harford of Omaha, Neb.,
will preside at the opening session,
having been elected as president at the
lust convention of the Young Women's
Christian Association, held in Los An
geles in 1915,
The committee on business to come
hefore the convention has for its chair
woman Mrs. John French and includes
among its members Mrs, John D.
Rockefeller, Jr., Miss Eliza Butler, sis
rer of Nicholas Murray Butler, presi
dent of Columbia University; Miss
Martha McCook, Miss Mabe: Cratty,
zeneral secretary for the National
Board of the Y. W, C, A,, and Mrs, Wil
llam Adams Brown, all of New York
«'il)’:
HAVE Y. W. C. A,
Association Maintains 52 Town
Secretaries—Wants to Ex
pand Work at Once.
“During the war girls all over the
world had their first lesson in pation
wide and world wide thinking,” says
Miss Mabel Head, director of Town and
Country Work for the National Y. W.
. A\
“Girls learned something of the
inspiration of working with hundreds
anid hundrefs of other girls, un
selfishly and unstintingly, through Red
t'rosy work. Now the Y. W. C. A,
through its world wide program of
service for women, is planning to ex
patiid its work so that girls all over the
waorld, and particularly in smaller com
munities, will not lose this experience,
“Citizen<hip forums are being organ
ized for girls in small communities,
wlere girls may come together to learn
more about their country and their re
snonsthility to it and as citizens of
the world.
“Neading courses have been planned
at National Headquarters in New York
so that a girl in any community may
carry on a course of study, either by
herzelf or with other girls, on a wide
variety of subjects.
“The Y. W. C. A, has at present thir
tv-nine secretaries doing county work.
Tlis means that they travel about from
one community to another helping
sirls to plan out social, recreational,
educational and religious activities for
themselves and organizing them to car
rv on these activities, These secreta
ries work with the county agents of
the Department of Agriculture in car
| ryving on home economics work. They
help plan pageants, arrange benefits,
assist the girls in going to Y. W. C. A.
summer conferences and help plan all
sorts of social good times for the com
} riunity.”
THE MARIETTA JOURNAL
MAKE GOOD HEALTH A NEW
YEAR AIM
Let’s make the new year notable
for good health-on. the: farm.
Let’s ask the state board of health
for its bulletins and study them.
Let’s make it a rule to have a doc
tor give each member of the family a
physical examination once a year so
that any latent disease may be .de
tected and checked before it becomes
serious. . ;
Let’s have a good dentist examine
the teeth of the family and do any
needed filling, cleaning, and pulling
(letting the dentist decide just what
is necessary), and then let’s insist on
every member of the family using
the toothbrush daily and visiting a
dentist at least 6nce a year. = .
Now while farm work is less press
ing, it will also be well to build a
sleeping porch and screen the house
for summer, if these things are not
already provided. ~ e
And last, but by no means least,
any farmer should be ashamed to £0
through 1920 without a sanitary-privy
if waterworks and sewerage disposal
systems have not already been install
ed.—The Progressive Farmer.
——
LEND THE HELPING HAND
Every citizen of this community
should stand loyally by and lend a
helping hand to our public schools,
for education is one of the strongest
bulwarks of our modern civilization.
Loans On Real Estate
s
O Per Cent
UNLIMITED FUNDS
HOLLAND & McCLESKEY
Reynolds Building
MARIETTA :: GEORGIA
ANNOUNCEMENT
Jno. C. Cogburn Co.
| SUCCEEDS
Standard Mercantile Co.
STORE NO. 1
Next to First National Bank
The new business will sell for cash---
“Money’s Worth or Money Back”---and
handle a complete line of Men’s and
Boys’ furnishings, Shoes, Clothing,
Hats, Underwear, E. & W. Shirts and
Collars and Neckwear. The incorpo
rators of the new business are John
C. Cogburn, Dempsey B. Medford,
1T: 8. Smithwick, N. K. Siith, . P,
Reynolds. T
£6 Iy
COGBURN’S
Invites your patronage and offers un«
usual values in a complete line of
merchandise for men and boys.
Instead of criticising, and knocking?
and disrupting this social and com
mercial necessity, let us exert our in
dividual efforts to its advancement
and expansion.
The public school is one of our
greatest constructive agencies, and
without its aid and assistance in creat
ing and cultivating the intellect of
our young people this community
would soon be sinking to the ancient
plane of ignorance and superstition.
~ There is nothing to be gained by
jeopardizing: the work and influence
of our public school system, but there
is everything to gain by fostering and
encouraging .and extending it a help
ing hand.-
- .Education is a vital necessity of
the day and its effects are feit in
every walk of life. Without it a
young man enters upon the serious
problems of life handicapped in a
.thousand ways.
We of the community are person
ally interested in the welfare of the
community and there is no way in
which we can better serve our. indi
vidual and collective interests than
by standing loyally behind our public
schools.
‘ They need cur good will and en
couragement—not only need them,
‘but should have them.—Summerville
}News.
\ el
' WITH THE Y. W. C. A, -
l The past Tuesday the Board of Di
'rectors of the Y. W. C. A. enjoyed a
FRIDAY, JANUARY 16, 1920.
most delightful luncheon served in
ehe rooms, The, monthly business
meeting was held after the luncseon.
The Business Women’s Club served
supper.to about forty Shriners .last
Wednesday. As most of the men were
from out-of-town we wanted them to
leave with a good taste in their
mouth: g .
At their last meeting the Business
Women’s Club elected new officers as
follows: President, Mary Lizzie Ben
son; Vice-president, Daisy White; Sec
retary, Ella Edwards; Treasurer;
Kathryn Runyan; Chairman Probram
Committee, Fannie Lou Webb; Chair
man Social- Committee, Louise Kin
caid; Chairman Membership Commit
tee Edna Gable; Chairman Service
Committee, Lucy Fields. .
Miss Mary Brock Mallard, the
County Work Secretary, is no longer
with us but has left to begin Y. W.
work in Florida.
| Misses Brown and Mahoney have
‘returned from holidays spent in Mis
sissippi and Kentucky.
Kindergarten opened Monday with
an attendance of seventeen.
Join a Y. W. C. A. gym class—
classes for all ages. ‘Do It Now.”
MARIETTA JOURNAL $l.OO YEAR