Newspaper Page Text
Friday, May 27, 1910.
Goctal and Personal
HE LADIES of Marietta are invited
T to furnish for publication the social
and personal news which has long
been such an interesting feature of The
Marietta Journal. The facts can be sent
direct to the office or telephoned to No 340.
_—Mrs. Willis Everett entertained
the Round Dozen Luncheon Club
Thursday at her home in Atlanta. A
delicious menu was served with ice
cream as easter lilies and white cakes
ornamented with daisies made of frost
ing. White carnations adorned the
table and pink rambler roses were used
in the parlor. The guests included:
Mrs. Joseph M. Brown, Mrs. C. 7.
Nolan, Mrs. L. D. Hoppe, Mrs. Wilder
Glover, Mrs. M. M. Sessons, Mrs. E,
P. Dobbs, Miss Mabel Cortelyou, Mrs,
Smith, of Lynchburg, and Mrs, Berry
and Mrs. Mclntyre, of Atlanta.
—Mrs. W. A. Sams has returned
from Athens.
—Mr. Jamie Corley visited relatives
in Atlanta last week.
—Miss Clyde Malone entertained her
42 club Tuesday.
—Mrs. Fred Morris is a guest of her
cousin, Mrs. Pelleu in Macon.
—MTr. and Mrs, Scully announce the
birth of a son on the 17th.
—Mr.J. H. Barnes is in Philadel
phia to spend two weeks. |
—Mrs. Dan Anderson visited Mrs.
Payne in Smyrna last week.
—Mrs. Humphreys and children are
visiting relatives near Decatur.
—Mrs. L. N. Trammell is visiting
her sister, Mrs., Stickney, in Chat
tanooga.
—Mr, Lawrence Gignilliat has gone
to Perry, 8. C,, to visit his father Mr,
R. C. Gignilliat,
—Mrs, James Welsh has roturned{
from a two weeks visit to Mrs S. V.
Sanford in Athens, ‘
FOR SALE—Genuine Ponderosa}
tomato plants. Mrs. Paul Camp,
Dixie Ave., phone 851 L. May2o 2t }
—Mr. Henry Wyatt has bought a
new automobile, a Marion, the first oi‘
that kind in town.
~—Mrs. J. W. Marshall and two chil
dren, of Eufaula, Ala., will spend the
summer in Marietta.
—Mr. and Mrs. S. W. Hatcher, of!
F ®
f"Commeacing this week we are going to make
some radical changes in our Millinery Department.
We are going to make these changes for the ladies
of Marietta, some of whom have been putting off
the buying of their best hats, because they say they
have not seen anything in Marietta they like.
T Now I have made arrangements with Mrs.
H. R. Oldson, a high-grade milliner and saleslady,
who has just closed her season with the J. M.
High Company, of Atlanta, to take charge of my
Millinery Department, commencing this week,
and I can promise you some of the most stylish
and nobby hats ever shown in Marietta. Mrs.
Oldson is now in the market selecting some pretty
mid-summer shapes, etc. She is selecting the
very latest things, and you will do well to come
and see her. Her prices will be such as will meet
the approval of all lovers of smart millinery.
TWhen out shopping, drop in and look through
our Ladies Ready-to-Wear Department. You will
find many things that will surprise and interest
you. Very Respectfully,
H. A A WARD
Macon, are guests of their daughter,
Mrs. Ralph Northeutt.
— Miss Isabel Brumby visited Miss
Elsa McCandlish and Miss Cleveland
Zahner in Atlanta last week,
—MTrs, Tolbert, Miss Elenor Tolbert
and Miss Ethel Lindley were guests of
Mrs. Wayland Camp Sunday.
—Miss Blanche Barnes speat last
week in Woodstock with her granc
mother, Mrs. Caroline Barnes,
—MTr. and Mrs. H. P. Cook and Miss
Marion Berry wil} spend the next week
with Miss Sutton on Washington Ave,
For the swellest things in
ladies’ hats ever seen in Mari
etta, see Mrs. Oldson, at Ward’s.
Miss Elmer solicits copying., Tele
phone 827, mays-3m
—Misses Beulah and Frances Ken
drick, of Atlanta, and Miss Martha
Bitting, of Summerville, are guests of
Miss Virginia Cohen.
—Mr. and Mrs, Huguley and little
’daughters,Mary lLee and Katherine,
}of Birmingham, Ala., are visiting Mr.
}and Mrs. B, F. Green.
We have several nice Hammocks
left to go cheap.
Butler’s Drug Store.
—Mrs. L. D. Hoppe entertained the
Church Street Bridge Club Tuesday,
serving a salad course on the card
tables after the game.
Flowers for Receptions and Card
Parties, also floral designs ofall kinds
can be had of Mrs. Henry Meinert, 306
Roswell Street, Phone 35. may6tf.
—Mrs. George Roberts spent several
days in Atlanta last week with her
father, Mr. W. E. Treadwell, who has
been ill but is now convalescing.
—Mrs. Cecil Cochran returned to
Augusta Saturday accompanied by
Mrs. Malcolm. They will go to New
York soon and Mrs. Cochran will later
go abroad.
—Mr. Henry J. Pratt left recently for
Florida, where he goes to act in the
capacity of bookkeeper for the Electri
cal Engineering Company, of Mul
berry and Lakeland.
The quickest delivery can be had
at Butler’s.
—Mr. J. C. Milam, wife and children
attended the Grand Lodge, K. of P.’s,
at Brunswick last week, and visited St.
THE MARIETTA JOUNAL AND COURIER
Simon’s Island while there. Mr. Mi
lam was in command of the Atlanta
Battalion Uniform Band.
— M€ I Gramling entertained
her 42 club last Tuesday. Roses beau
tified the rooms and a delicious salad
course with hot-rolls and beaten
biscuits followed the game,
—Mr. and Mrs. Robert Butler re
ceived a new daughter on the 18th,
when the earth passed through the
comet’s tail, so she willbe named Hal
ley in honor of the memorable event.
Ladies, go to Ward’s and see
Mrs. Oldson about a pretty mid
summer hat.
—Mrs. A. V. Cortelyou entertained
the Young Matron’s Bridge Club Fri
day inviting also to the game Mrs. C.
T. Nolan, Mrs. Cochran, Mrs, Mal
colm, Mrs. Henry Wyatt and Mrs.,
Eaward Hunt.
~—Miss Blanche Barnes entertained
her 42 club last Saturday. Pink Ma
man Cochet roses decorated the rooms,
the score-cards were pink roses and on
each plate was a long-stemmed pink
rose, Ice cream and cake were served.
—Mr, and Mrs. Wiiliam Coursen
have issued invitations to the wedding
reception of their daughter, Miss Lilian
Clark Bennett and Mr. John Graham
Sullivan, which will be at their resi
dence, Oak Ridge, on the evening of
May 28th,
—Miss Agnes Smith, daughter of
Prof. and Mrs. J. H. Smith has return
ed from Agnes Scott College to spend
the summer at home, 608 Church
Street. Prof. Smith is preparing to
build a beautiful home, colonial
style, on Coilege Hill,
—Mrs. William Dickson Anderson
announces the engagement of her
daughters, Susie Saxon and Mr. Rho
dum Douglass Cantrell, of Cedartown,
and Sara Katherin and Mr. John
Marlin Goodman, of Spartanburg, 8.
C. The wedding will take place June
20th at home. No cards.
FREE—One 25¢ cake Krom
Soap with every 50¢ purchase.
Butler’s Drug Store.
—Mrs. Beulah Beavers and her two
little children, Master Leland and Miss
Essie Pearl Beavers, and Miss Mollie
Reinhardt, have just returned home af
ter a three weeks’ pleasant visit to their
brother’s family, Mr. and Mrs, Hoyl
Reinhardt, at Knoxville, Tenn.
—Mrs. Keeler and Mrs. Cottingham
entertained at a bridge party of fifteen
tables Wednesday evening. The party
was av the residence of Mr., and Mrs.
Cottingham and was very charming
in every detail. Roses were used in
profusion and a two course luncheon
was served after the game on the card
tables.
- —Last Sunday morning Dr. C. 0,
Jones, pastor of the Methodist church
in Griffin, held a novel and impressive
service. By request all the ladies and
girls wore white dresses and sat in
church without hats. White flowers
and foliage plants adorned the chancel
and the text was from the 51st Psalm:
““Wash me and I shall be whiter than
snow.”” The theme of the sermon was
purity and it was one never to be for
gotten. Appropriate hymns were sung
including the old Sunday school fa
vorite ‘‘Whiter than Snow.”
See my pants patterns, before
buying elsewhere.
Jacobs, The Tailor.
Mr. A. D. Bentley, of Holly Springs,
was in the city Monday, his first visit
gince April sth, when he was painfully
hurt in alighting from a street car at
Butier’s. As Mr. Bentley stepped from
the car the current was turned on and
he came down on one of his legs with
such force that a leader was torn loose,
Mr. Bentley was not able to get out
until last Friday. His many f{riends
will be glad to know that he is nearly
well again, though he still limps and
suffers considerable pain.
FOR SALE OR RENT-Cottage, 5
rooms and reception hall, closets,
pantry and ample porches. 5 minutes
walk from square, full information at
Journa! office. May 6 tf.
Will Promote Beauty. ‘
s i
Women desiring beauty get wonderful |
help from Bucklen's Arnica Salve.
It banishes pimples, skin eruptions, |
sores and boils, It makes the skin soft
and velvety. It glorifies the face. Cures
sore eyes, cold sores; cracked lips,
chapped hands. Best for burns, scalds, |
fever sores, cuts, bruises, and piles,
25 c at W. A Sams Drug Store, |
e SRS i
!
NOTICE.—AII personal taxes hflve‘i
to be returned on or before June Ist;|
otherwise, you will be double-taxed.—~ |
W. J. Black, Clerk. mal3-3t |
ey 1
#
Sermon to Confederate |
Veterans Next Sunday.
—— |
The Confederate veterans, their fami- !
lies and all persons interested in the!
cause for which they nobly fought, are,
invited to attend the First Methodist|
Church next Sunday, where a sermonj
will be preached to the veterans by the |
pastor, Rev. J. S. Bryan. All cordial-|
ly invited to attend thiz service.
]
HON. GORDON LEE
; 'H
‘Makes Some Caustic Com
- ments On the Letter of
; His Opponent.
\
|
I\’l‘o the Voters of the Seventh District:
. A publie official can not give proper
.attention to his duties and at the
same time give answer to every let
!ter fired at him by professional office
| hunters and their heelers. I am here
giving the best service I can to the
| district, while they are burdening the
air at home with speeches and letters,
1 in part false, and in whole,deceptive and
misleading. I ask the fair minded peo
; ple of the District to carefully re-read
my letter of April 25th.
Trading himself into office rather
running for it before the people ap
peals so strongly to Judge Wright that
he seems unable to distinguish Dbe
tween an agreement relating to personal
property over which the parties have
absolute right of control and an agree
ment relating to a public office to
which they have no right whatsoever,
except as it is given to them by the
people for public use. 1 am not re
sponsible for this mental stupidity on
his part and am sorry that he can not
bring himself to a saner view of the
matter, :
After years of scheming and plan
ning, it is, of course, disappointing to
him to find that the people object to
the consummation of his shrewd con
triving. I thought Judge Wright was
a better man, as well as a better poli
tician than to keep clinging with such
desperation to an incident that he
should be praying for the people to
forget.
The Judge's statement—that he
“would not betray a personal or polit
ical friend to be President”—sounds
well and might deceive the unsuspect
ing. Scarcely was the ink dry on his
splendid tribute to himself before I
was receiving letters from his neigh
bors, and others, who know him well,
advising me not to take it seriously.
The temptation to make a rejoinder
in kind to the Judge's impeachment of
my political integrity is almost too
great to resist, because of the abun
dance and richness of material that
has been furnished me by his past op
erations in office getting. But such
an exercise at this tinfe would not be
profitable or edifying to the public,
and would be contributing to his very
‘evidem desire {o conceal the
‘real question before the people, name
-Iy, who, of these offering, will make
‘the most useful member of Congress
for the District? His determination
to limit, by every means in his power,
‘the choice of the people to himself
alone is pursued with an energy and
industry worthy of a better cause. If
he had studied public service and its
needs, as industriously and assiduous
ly, as he has devices and irregular
methods of office-seeking, he would not
be making such foolish speeches over
the District ridiculing my Successfull
labors in getting pensions, paymenti
for property destroyed, appropriations
for public buildings, and public high-!
ways, and opening of our rivers furf
navigation as mere ‘‘pie-grabbers.” ‘
Naturally the Judge is disturbed by |
being brought face to face with thel
fact that in objecting to my name be
ing considered in the primary thlsl
vear, he is contravening the wishes
of thousands of people to whom hel
must appeal for support. So he seeksi
to enlist sympathy for himself by
claiming that he made a great “per-|
sonal sacrifice” for me in signing an
agreement not to desert his post as.
Judge of the Rome Circuit, (to which
he had been elected for four years), a‘
few months after it had been given
him, to enter the race for Congress in!
1908. Can you figure out what that
sacrifice was? ‘
I am certainly entitled to some cred
it for keeping him at his job two years
longer than he said he would have
stayed, that is, provided he did that
work creditably. |
I feel quite sure that the people of
the District are too intelligent to be
deceived by his plea that he has part
ed with a valuable consideration at a
personal sacrifice to himself to keep
me out of the race this year, and has
failed. i
The people are the Court of last ap
peal in the distribution of offices, and
when the evidence is all before them
1 do not fear their verdict, despite the
strenuous efforts of a special pleader
like Judge Wright to deceive and mis-i
lead them, GORDON LEE.
Washington, D. C.,, May 21, 1910. “
i L !
Death of Mrs. Arthur Hames. |
A |
Mrs. Arthur A, Hames died at her
home near Oakhurst Sunday morning, |
after a short sickness, and was buried
in the city cemetery Monday morning, ’
Rev. J. S. Bryan conducting the fu-|
neral services, ,’
Besides a husband, Mrs. Hames%
leaves several small children, the)
youngest of whom is only a few days |
old and the oldest is under ten. To
the bereaved family is extended thei
sympathy of many friends, neighbors |
and acquaintences. ’
One 25¢ eake Krom’s Soap given,
with every 50c purchase, of 1;’111-‘
ler's, Friday and Saturday.
Gfe “Drug S 1473
e "Drug Store Hid.”
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H Our roaps, the “Kid™" will guarantse,
Are jusr whot they re roppond to bew
o QF puress; frmest quality.
S .
N Soap and Lumber E
E are better when seascaed. From dainty R
perfumed toilet soros to fine semi-laundry
soaps, we make & fine showing. Geu our v
S special quantity noces, put a fav dozen
cakes on a shelf and see how tae goodness l
grows with age. C
4]
’ 2’ S
< Butler’'s Drug Store. 2
Do You Worry About Your Bills
e SOO T o .
\-'-.»f,{! S %% % or notes when they are coming
FFICE 77 ‘I due? May be we can help
2 ? ‘I you! We certainly can it
:{:‘\g(_;)';\ [ o g;é/“ you are a depositor at this
_v\'\' = _ '.’Q‘:_ bank, as that is a part of our
\"=f , \Eid methods here, to give all pos
laad L= ~,' i sible aid to our patrons when
: = : »' /" ‘ .
; | they need it.
Nes N e :
| [ e Surplus $12,500.
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@54 %/4 lélffl |
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/wm ””W &
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areia, Ja.
CAPITAL $75,000.00, SURPLUS & $12,500.00.
J. D. MALONE, A. H. GILBERT, GEO."H. SESSIONS,
President. Vice-President. Cashier,
DIRECTORS:
D. W. Blair W. A. DuPre, I. D. Malone, 8. D. Rambo,
T M. Brumby A. H. Gilbert, R. H. Northeutt. George H. Sessionan,
T. A. Gramling.
HISTORY REPEATS ITSELF.
In ancient times the wise men of the KEast based all their
business affairs and calculations on the positions and move
ments of the stars. And now in 1910 the wise men here pat
ronize the STAR PRESSING CLUB and TRIO LAUNDRY,
Moral--GET wism,
Harry Haynes, Mgr. Phone 254
Over Grogan's Barber Bhop
(Successor to Faw & Rogers. )
DEALER IN FANCY GROCERIES.
As successor to the above firm, I will continue
the business along the same general lines as
heretofore, always watching out for the best the
market affords, and endeavoring to give full
value for every dollar spent here.
You will find here a very complete assortment of Heinz
“57 Varieties” of Pickles and table condiments; also the
latest products of the National Biscuit Company, such as
Dinrer Biscuit, Cameo Biscuit, Chocolate Tokens, Harmony
Bircuit, Nabiscos, etc.
[ will still handle the famous Chase & Sanborn Teas
and Coffees, and if you will let me know your preierences
I can =uit your taste in this line, and give you values that
cannot be duplicated.
[f you appreciate the highest quality in food p:oducts,
and the best of service, call or phone your orders ¢
E. L. FAW,
The Fancy Grocer.
Phone 20. Marietta, Ga.
Page Five