Newspaper Page Text
PAGE SIX
Personal Mention
. Mr. and Mrs. W. 0. Cox announce
“fie birth of a daughter, on March 10,
‘who will be named Charlotte.
. Mr. Pittnor is the guest of his
daughter, Mrs. Charles Dixon.
_Miss Mary Towers returned Mon
day from a visit to relatives in Gads
den, Ala.
~Miss Mary Holland has returned
~to Lucy Cobb after spending awhile
with her mother, Mrs. R. N. Holland.
. Mr. and Mrs. A. S. Cohen and Miss
‘Augusta- Cohen, who have been
spending the winter in Atlanta, re
turned today to Marietta.
Mrs. Patton entertained the Ken
nesaw Chapter, U. D. C., on Tuesday
afternoon. “ 5
| Misses Ruth and Ruby Webb were
guests of Miss Mary Nash in Atlanta
the first of the week. e
Mr. and Mrs. ‘Potter have taken
possession of their new. home on Cole
street.
Mr. and Mrs. Hedrick, of Gaines
ville, are spending awhile at the Ken
nesaw House. :
‘Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Richardson re
turned on Sunday from Tissimmee,
Fla., and are at home with Mrs. Lucy
Gilbert. ;
Mr. and Mrs. I. W. Ernest, of At
lanta, were week-end guests of Mrs.
J. E. Gable. ‘
Mr. and Mrs. W. I. Cox have pur
chased the home on Washington Ave,
formerly owned by Mr. and Mrs. Me-
Mahon.
Mrs. Frank Swalley has returned
from Dunedin, Fla,, and is with Mrs.
Frank Hardeman.
Mr. and Mrs. S, H. Hall have re
turned from Greensboro, wherg they
spent several days. |
Mrs. Boozer, of Rome,is the guest
of Mrs. S. C. McEachern.
Mrs. Will Malone, Jr., and little
son, are guests of Mrs. Malone’s
mother, Mrs. J. E. Gable.
Mr. F. E. A. Schilling, Miss Louise
Schilling, Mr. Harold Schilling and
Mrs. A. K. White, were guests of
Mrs. Brooks Lovelace, of Atlanta, on
Sunday.
Mrs. W. A. Sams spent several
days in Athens with her mother, Mrs. |
Albert Dobbs, this week. ‘
The infant son, of Mr. and Mrs.
Charlie McCollum has been given the
name of Hugh Lee.
Miss Katharine Matthews, of Cal
houn, was the week-end guest of her
sister, Mrs. Ewing Underwood.
Mrs. I. A. Runyan is convalescing
after an operation at the Marietta
Sanitarium. |
Mrs. Aimee Dunwoody has return
ed to Macon after visiting her daugh
ter, Mrs. Wilder Glover. |
Misses Helen Faw and Rebecca
Bick, of Agnes Scott, were week-end
guests of Mrs. E. L. Faw.
‘The Rev. J. P. Erwin is spending
this week in Blairsville.
Mrs. Edd Gilbert returned on Sat
urday from a visit to relatives in
Covington.
Miss Laura Lewis Lawhon, of De
catur, was the attractive guest of
Miss Idabel Hunt, for the week-end
Mrs. J. T. Anderson and Miss
Elizabeth Anderson attended the
Amato concert in Atlanta, Monday
evening.
Miss Cora Brown left on Monday
for Cartersville, where she will be
the guest of Mrs. Linsey Forrester
for a few days.
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Abbott and!
daughter spent Sunday in Kirkwood !
with Mr. and Mrs. T. B. Ham.
Misses Grace Mcßee and Elizabeth
DuPre, of Woodstock, were the at
tractive week-end guests of Miss |
Jeanette Anderson.
Mr. D. D. Barfield has returned
home from the Marietta Sanitarium,
and is rapidly recovering from his re
cent accident.
Misses Dorothy, Wilma and Miriam
Butler had as their guests the past]
week-end, Misses Maude Butler, of |
Greenville, S. C., and Marjorie Ham- |
mond, Loreta, Grace and Ruth Jack
son, all of Decatur.
Dr. Anthony spent the week-end in
Griffin, the guest of his parents, Dr.
and Mrs. E. R. Anthony.
Misses Charlotte Estes and Georgxia‘l
Allen, of Decatur, spen the week-end
‘with Miss Ruth Galley. |
Miss Emma May Rambo left on
‘Saturday for Rockledge, Fla., where
she will join her parents, Dr. and
Mrs. S. D. Rambo.
The many friends of Mrs. C. E.
Daniell will be glad to know she is
able to be at home, after a long ill
ness at Dr. Nolan’s Sanitarium.
Lemuel Carnes left Friday for
Raliegh, N. C., where he will be con
nected with the American Can Co.
Mr. Grady Barfield and Miss Ches
sie Mae Barfield spent the week-end
in Atlanta with Mr. and Mrs. J. T.
Marler. |
Mr. Charlie Raber, of Philadelphia,
was the guest of Mr. Acosta on Sun
day.
Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Dumas, of At
lanta, visited Prof. W. T. Dumas, the
first of the week. ;
The Decatur High Girl's Basket
Ball team was complimented with
two parties during their short stay
in Marietta. Misses Dorothy, Wilma
and Miriam Butler entertained in
their honor on Friday evening, about
one hundred guests being present.
On Saturday evening the Mariet¥a
Girl’'s Team gave a delightful prom
enade party for them, at the home
‘of Mr. and Mrs. T. J. Galley.
Among those attending the N. Y.
.A. C. and Rutgers College Basket-
Ball game on Saturday evening in At
lanta were Misses Pearl Roberts,
Jeanette and Ruth Anderson, Grace
McCree and Elizabeth DuPre, George
H. and Roy Sessions and George An
derson. %
Mrs. Pierre Camblos returned on
Wednesday, from a visit to friends in
Florida.
Mrs. H. C. Bickmore, of Atlanta,
was the guest of Mrs. George H. Ses
sions the first of this week.
" Miss Christine Blair, regimental
sponsor of the Georgia School of
Technology will entertain on Satur
day at a luncheon in honor of the bat
talion sponsors, and the Colonel of
the regiment, and his wife.
~ Mrs. C. .B. Willingham has re
turned from a visit to her daughters,
Mrs. George Peschan and Mrs. Rich
ard Meares, in Wilmington, N. C. -
- Fielding Lewis Chapter, D. A. R,
held their regular ‘monthly meeting
with Mrs. C. T. Noban :on Monday
afternoon.
Mr. and Mrs. Wellborn Reynolds,
Miss Mabel Cortelyou, Miss Mary
Reynolds, Mrs. E. L. Harris, Miss
Lois Gardner, Miss Rebecca Wyatt
and Miss. Mary Holland were among
those \attending the Amato concert
on Monday evening. .
Tom- Alexander of Decatur and
“Red” Laird of Atlanta, were week
end guests of Thomas Nolan.
Mrs. S. F. Reynolds is very ill at
her home on Clay street, the result of
a fall last week.
Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Norton have
moved into the home of the late Mr.
0. Q. Norton, on Cherokee road.
Mr. J. W. Lewis left on MMy
for Rochester, Minn., where he goes
for treatment to the Mayo clinic.
- Mr. and Mrs. W. M. Almond, Mr.
and Mrs. Robert McCoy and Mr. and
;Mrs. Thad MecCoy of Douglasville,
‘were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs.
W. T. Potts.
Stanton Read returned Friday
from a business trip to Detroit, Mich.
Mr. Tom White and family of La
Grange motored to Marietta for a
visit to Mr. and Mrs. N. B. White last
week .
Mr. Fairfax Montague of Charles
ton, S. C., was a recent guest of Mr.
Charlie Gardner.
Miss G ennis Hancock is spending
severa weeks in Miami, flp, at 4
house party, given in her honor by
the family of Judge Shipp. They
are enjoying surf bathing and other
delightful diversions,
Mr. and Mrs. H. J. Jolly spent the
week-end in Cartersville with friends.
Mrs. B. F. Blair, of Rome, is the
guest of her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
R. A. Hill.
Mr. and Mrs. W. D. Pawley, of
Port au Prince, Hati, arrived on Sun
day for a visit to Mrs. Pawley’s pa
rents, Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Dobbs.
. Mr. Enoch Faw and Miss Janie
Bond, of Atlanta, were the Sunday
guests of Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Faw.
Mrs. Frank Hardeman: came home
on Tuesdav from Dunedin, Fla.,
where she has been spending some
time,.
Miss Katharine Logan, of Acworth,
was the week-end guest of Mrs. Ed.
Groves,
Mr. J. A. Benson and Miss Mary
Lizzie Benson were among those
going down to the Amato concert on
Monday evening, _
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Van Sant and
Mr. and Mrs. E. R. Segars and little
son, of Atlanta, were guests of Mrs.
W. R. Lowman, on Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Steinhauer, of Atlan
ta, have taken the residence formerly
occupied by Mr. and Mrs. Kenyon
White and family, on Lawrence St.
Miss Sara Little returned to Eaton
ton on Tuesday, after spending seve
ral weeks here with Mr. and Mrs.
Rosser Little,
Miss Edith Minor, of Decatur visit
ed Miss Adelle Moss, the last of the
week.
Miss Lucille Morris, of Shorter Col
lege spent the week-end at home.
Mrs. S. J. Goodwin returned Sun
day night from a visit to relatives in
Blue Ridge.
Miss Valarie Stevens ,of Craven
wood, spent the week-end with Miss
Sarah Bishop.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Butler announce
the birth of a son on Friday, March
12th, who has been given the name
of Robert Sidney Butler.
Miss Helen Lockhart, of Decatur,
wa sthe guest of Miss Margaret Me-
Neel last week.
~ David Morris, of Camp P{essup,‘
spent Sunday here with his parents,
Mr. and Mrs. B. L. Morris. |
Miss Alice Brewer of Atlanta,
'spent the week-end with her mother,
Mrs. F. T. Brewer.
Miss Virginia Watts, of Decatur,
jwas the week-end guest of Miss Ha-r
riet Leake.
Mr. W. H. Goodwin, of Acworth, is
the guest of his grand-father, Mr.
J. S. Goodwin. /
William Jett, of Tech spent the
week-end with S. A. Connor.
Mr. Jim Watson returned to Jack
son, Tenn., on Sunday night, after
la week’s visit to his mother Mrs. F.
M. Watson.
Misses Gladys and Miriam Spruell,
of Decatur, were recent guests of
Miss Gladys Gober.
Dr. Frank Mims is in South Geor
gia this week on a business trip.
Mrs. P. L. Meadows and little son,
- Lamar, Jr., of Akron, Ohio, arrived
THE MARTETTA JOURNAL
ion Monday to be the guests of Mrs.
!Meadows’ mother, Mrs. J. C. Dyson.
l Mr. and Mrs. P. B. Latimer and
children spent the week-end in Can
ton, with Mrs. F. L. DeLay.
Mrs. Trigg, of Atlanta, is the guest
of her sister, Mrs. Horace Field.
Mr. D. F. Green is able to be out
again after a short illness.
Mr. W. G. Dyson, of Atlanta, is
the guest of Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Dy
son.
Mr. Henry Ward is convalescing
after being seriously ill at Dr. Nolan’s
sanitarium.
Judge and Mrs. J. M. Gann are
spending a few weeks in Florida.
Mr. and Mrs. Herman Garrison and
children, of Atlanta, were week-end
guests of Mrs. T. W. Garrison.
~» The friends of Mrs. W. 8. N. Neal
will regret to know she is ill of bron
chial pneumonia at her home on Law
rence street.
POWDER SPRINGS
The remains of Mrs. Lizzie Green,
who died at her home in Hallsburg,
Texas, on the 18th, of February, were
brought here the 11th and carried to
the home of her niece, Mrs. W. L.
Florence, where the funeral was con
ducted by Rev. W. T. Walden and
was buried in the cemetery here. She
was the wife of Mr. Jim Green, and
before moving to Texas about ten
years ago they lived in Villa Rica.
She spent the greater part of last
‘year at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Florence with her sister, Mrs. Georgia
Lindley and made many friends here.
She is survived by her husband, three
children, Mr. Will Driscoll and Mrs.
Florence Emma Nichols, of Gadsden,
Ala., a sister, in Texas and by her
sister, Mrs. Lindley, of Powder
Springs. :
The funeral of Mrs. Mollie Hen
drix, a belover woman, whose death
Friday morning brought sorrow to
many friends who had learned to love
her thru many years of suffering was
held at three o’clock Saturday after
noon from the Methodist church. Rev.
F. E. Jenkins, of Acworth, her form
er pastor and Rev. J. A. Gray offici
ated and interment was in the town
cemetery. Mrs. Hendrix was the
wife of Mr. Henry Hendrix. Thru
her long years of bodily affliction she
was patient and served the master.
Being paralized she was unable to
walk. She was a member of the Me
thodist. church and when the weather
was warm her hulband, who, was
always so thoughtful of her brought
her to church, where she sat in the
car near a window in order to hear
the preacher’s voice. She is survived
by their two adopted children Elzie
and Miss Maggie, and her husband
and one sister, Mrs. Elisha Lindley.
Miss Sarah Manning, of Marietta,
spent part of last week with her aunt
Mrs. J. F. P.Lindley. Mrs. Guy Lind
ley and children are now with her.
Mr. W. R. Tapp, from Columbia,
S. C., spent the week-end with his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Tapp.
Mrs. Bulah Camp is at Piedmont
sanitariami in Atlanta where she un
derwent an operation on Monday.
Miss Ethel Landers is visiting re
latives in Atlanta.
Mrs. P. M. Edwards and children,
of Smyrna, are visiting her parents.
—Polly.
MOUNTAIN VIEW
We are sorry to note that Miss Car
rie Wilmoth has the flu.
Mr. Edgar Haney ,of Waco, Texas,
who, at one time, made Georgia his
home, but who has been in Texas for
the past several years was here last
week for a visit to his father.
Mrs. Otis McTyre and little daugh
ter, spent Thursday ard Thursday
night with their uncle, Mr. Bob Mec-
Tyre, of near Macland.
Mr. and Mrs. Lona Dobbins visited
relatives in Atlanta Saturday and
Sunday.
We are sorry to note that Mrs.
Mary Dobbins is on the sick list<at
this writing. ‘
Miss Laura Veitch had as her guest
Saturday night and Sunday Miss
Ethel MeTyre.
Miss Corine Scott had as her guest
Saturday night and Sunday Misses
Eugenia Chandler and Kate McTyre.
Mr, Hoyle and Jesse Dobbins, of
Midway, spent Saturday night with
their grand-mother, Mrs. Mary Dob
bins.
Rev. Paul Camp will preach at
this place Sunday morning at 11:00
o’clock. Everybody is invited to
come, —Violet.
’ LOG CABIN
We are glad to say at the start,
that all of the sick of the neighbor
hood are up and able to be out.
The teachers met with Mr. and
Mrs. Logan this week.
The men and boys are all invited
to the Cabin Saturday night to help
do some work on the inside. Supper
will be served to all. Come early.
It seems that most of the Ladies’
have gone in for raising chickens, a
good many incubators are busy.
The birthday bank was almost fill
ed up Sunday as five grown folks
had had birthdays.
Mr. and Mrs. N. T. Durham compli
mented Mrs. J. A, Camp with a birth
day dinner Sunday. A large birthday
cake decorated the center of the table
with a few, but Eve won’t tell how
many candles.
Everyone be sure to remember the
prayer meeting Friday night. -
Mr. Tate filled Mr. Porter’s place
Sunday. Several of Mr. Porter’s
people are down with the flu.
.~ Mrs. Gann’s little girl is no better
we are sorry to hear.
~ We are glad to see so many new
faces at Sunday School Sunday. Hope
the‘will continue to come.
—Tell Me.
THE-WANDERER
RETURNED
By GENEV-I;;E ULMAR
[Copyright, 1920, Western New-fi.p;r Untonv)
¢ He had left his native town a raw,
yndeveloped hamlet, he had returned
to find it a small city. In those back
years a narrow-gauge cut off had run
a baggage and a second-class passen
ger coach once a day; now the trunk
line direct operated twenty. The estab
lishment of four great plants at Vir
den had come about, and Donald Bruce
strained his gaze to find something fa
milier,r and experienced a strange
sense of disappointment, of loneliness
and of fear, for he knew not how
many of those he had come back hop
ing to find might have passed away
with the new order of things.
He was bronzed, bearded, uncouth
as to dress, and his pose was not that
of a man attended by fortune. He
met no one he knew as he left the
depo* He passed the site of the old
Rai’ house to find it occupied by
a mu.u.ficent hotel. Where a minia
ture lake had covered the ecenter of
the public square there was an ornate
city hall.
Donald checked his steps as he
turned a corner round which he had
played “hunt the gray!” in his boy
hood days. His eager glance sought
the pleasant porticoed structure he
had known as home. It was not there.
A public garage had ' superseded it.
His heart sank. An oppressive, brood
ing chill assailed him. Home, father,
mother—these he had dreamed of, and
had longed for—and now the initial
augury was one of menacing despair.
Eight years’ exile, long, weary wait
ing! He turned from the spot feeling
like a stranger in a strange land. A
square farther on his glance swept
a neat little cottage, set in a charm
ing nest of greenery. It was the first
remaining token of the past that had
met his view. There was the old-time
garden, and even the horse block upon
which he had often rested. Donald
sat down upon it now, his head bowed
in reverie.
His mind went back eight years to
the old home, now swallowed up by
the monster of progress. His father
conducted a village general store—
slow, methodical, a plodder. For two
yvears Donald worked there. He was
paid no wages. He rebelled at strict
ness and discipline.
“Father talks of ‘slow but sure.’ It
isn't the world’'s way nowadays,” he
had one day told his great friend, Lucy
Gray, the daughter of the village phy
sician, whose house he now faced.
“I'm tired of it! I'm going away to
see real life and earn real money.”
And then and there he and Lucy, mere
children that they were, pledged them
selves one to the other and parted with
a Kkiss.
How he had dreamed of pretty, lov
ing Lucy all those succeeding years!
How he had built up a fabric of gaudy,
gilded ambition—a fortune won, a re
turn to his native town loaded down
with riches, to prove to his methodical
father that dull grubbing was a poor
business system!
But his was net the path of for
tune. He had worked hard, but suc
cess had always eluded him. He lost
his grip—his nerve—at last. He was
homesick, dispirited, all broken up.
Without a dollar he had left Virden,
without a dollar he had come .back.
Contritely, humbly, he was ready and
willing to assume the burden he had
once disdained, to acknowledge that
his father was right and he himself
wrong. longing for the old sweet home
life, with all its loveliness as the
greatest boon in the whole world.
And now? His soul shrank within
him. His parents were probably dead,
the little business enterprise of his fa
ther engulfed by the rush and havoc of
STATEMENT OF THE CONDITION OF THE
MERCHANTS & FARMERS BANK
Located at Marietta, Georgia, at the close of business, March 10, 1920
RESOURCES
Demand Loans _.__._____s 49,652.37
Time: Liogne ....isnin: 146,387.9)
Bonds and Stocks owned ~
by thelßanKk. ... ... ... 5,800.00
Other Real Estate______ 4,650.00
Furniture and Fixtures__ 3,853.08
Cash in Vault and
amount deposited in Banks 24,384.02
Overdiamm ... ... ..o 169.79
TOEAL .. -uaincsr--0123454%.17
STATE OF GEORGIA, COBB COUNTY: .
Before me came W. E. Schilling, Cashier of The Merchants & Farmers
Bank, who being duly sworn, says that the above and foregoing statement is
a true condition of said Bank, as shown by the books of file in said Bank.
: : W. E. SCHILLING, Cashier.
Sworn to and subscribed before me, this 15 day of March, 1920.
HUGH A. HILL, N. P., Cobb County, Ga., My corhmission expires June
3rd, 1922, 3 4 . r
the new rule or aavancement. HHe Stare
ed up as a step sounded near him,
and a kindly voice spoke: =
“What is it, my man?”
Donald thrilled as his eyes rested
on the speaker. He recognized him
in an instant. It was Doctor Gray,
changed, grown old, but the friendly,
sympathetic face was the same. At
that moment a speeding automobile
passed by. Its electric lights focused
on his face.
“Why, it is Donald Bruce!” ex
claimed the doctor. He sat down on
the horse block, retaining his hearty
grip on Donald’s hand. “Where have
you been all these years? Get in, I
want to talk to you.” 3
Doctor Gray led the way to the
gravel roadway where -his old-fash
ioned phaeton stood ready for him.
Slowly the ancient horse attached took
them down the street. With manifest
interest the physician listend to the
story of the wanderer. As they reached
the city ball he said: :
“Your father passes most of his
time there—just elected mayor for a
second term.” i
Then, after urging up the laggard
steed and reaching a handsome man
sion on the principal residence street,
he added: “There is where your fa
ther and mother live. My old friend
Bruce made his fortune when the town
boom came. &o in now, lad. The
prodigal son? That's no shame. You
will get a sure welcome from those
who have never forgotten you.
For only a moment Donald lingered.
Eager longing was in his face, rapt
tenderness in his eyes as he asked
softly:
“And Lucy—"
“Nor hes she forgotten,” spoke the
good doctor. - “Come around to the
house as soon as you are settled, and
she will tell you so.” :
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