Newspaper Page Text
Friday, August 5, 1910
Tn The Social MRealm.
HE LADIES of Marietta ar. 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 b: sent
direct to the office or telephoned to No 340.
—Mrs. Tom Wallace entertained her
19 Club Tuesday afternoon.
—Mrs. J. R. Fowler entertained the
Round Dozen 42 Club last Wednesday
afternoon.
— Mrs. Willie Blanford is a member
of Mrs. T. W. Causey’s house party at
St Simon’s Island,
—Little Bobbie Blanford McCall is
visiting her grandmother, Mrs H, A.
McCall, in Atlanta.
-The newest bridge club, of only
two tables, met with Miss Sadie Gober
Friday. Its membership includes
Misses Willie May Blair, Mildred
Brown, Annie Field, Sadie Gober,
Agnes Smith, Julia Screven and Rosa
Willingham.
—Mrs. Bolan Glover’s beautiful,
shady lawn was the scene of a 42 party
Wednesday afternoon, given by Mrs.
George Welsh. Therewere eight tables
and the score cards were daisies tied
with yellow ribbons. Refreshments
were served on the small tables after
hhe game, and the guests were delight
ed with the unusual beauty of the al
fresco parlor.
—Mrs. W. A. DuPre complimented
her guest, Miss Nannie May Shipp, of
Oklahoma, with a bridge party Wed
nesday evening, to which only young
ladies and young men were invited.
Nasturtiums adorned the rooms. Miss
Shipp was dressed in white and Mrs
DuPre in pale blue lingerie. Miss
Regina Rambo, who served fruit punch,
wore pink crepe de chine with white
dew-drop chiffon over drapery arranged
with Rhinestone buckles. The prize
[or ladies was a white gauze fan which
Miss Marie Law won and presented to
Miss Shipp. Dr. Howard Perkinson
won the prize for young men, a pearl
handled knife. A delicious hot lunch
ton was served with sherbet for the ice
eourse
—At M¥s. W. P. Dobbs Thursday
evening, Misses Ruth Milam, Era,
Donilee and Marie Dobbs arranged a
pound party to which the girls and
boys brought refreshments in pack
ages. There were three tables decked
with glass bowls of nasturtiums and
the dining-room had many growing
foliage plants on all sides. All the
girls were in white and the scene was
beautiful with Japanese lanterns shed
ding a soft light on the lawn. Games
were played indoors and out and Mrs.
Dobbs served water melons and ice
cream beside the other dainties on the
tables. There were 30 or 40 girls and
boys and they spent a merry evening.
S
The joys of hot weather at home orabroad
are encompassed in a cooling, pleasurable
bath. Rivet your attention on our su
perb quality and big assortment of bath
goods—everything you need fora cleans
ing, refreshing, delightful plunge or
spray. There are
SPONGES BATH SOAPS SEA SALTS
TALCUM POWDERS BATH POWDERS
SCRUBS BATH SPRAYS TOWELS
On that trip this summer, pack a goodly
supply of these goods in grip or trunk.
Everthing is of excellent grade and class
and is offered to you on its merits. Yet
this good quality costs no more than the
doubtful kinds.
Exactly What You Want
For Vacation.. . . .
Gantt Drug <o.
Miss Dorothy Elizabeth Milam’s
birthday will shine in her memory in
a rosy mist of blossoms, a golden
souvenir spoon and a tower of candy
boxes higher than her pretty blonde
head Dorothy was ““a smiling little
‘human rose” in pink silk mull, and
was assisted in receiving her guests
by Misses Clara Gilbert and Ruby
Stephens. The flowers used were sul
tanas growing in pots and crepe myr
tle. The birthday cake was deep pink
and 80 were the five blazing candleg
upon it, The place cards were cupids
for the girls and automobiles for the
boys. Ice cream and cake were served
in the dining-room and, while games
were played on the lawn, Mrs. C. A.
Babbitt served punch from a bowl
hidden in crepe-myrtle. Several
grown up friends called and every one
brought a gift. The guests included
Mary Gilbert Virginia McJenkins,
Mary Sue Potts, Sarah Wood Gram
ling, Evelyn Cheney, Katharine Run
yon, Marion Morganson, Christine
Blair, Annie and Elizabeth Hender
son, Ruth and Jeannette Anderson,
Emmie Moutgomery, Pearl Roberts,
Mildred Lattimer, Sarah Stephens,
Lillian Grogan, Mildred Beshers, Ida
Belle Hunt, Emily Scully, Nancy
Legg, Katie Maddox, Robert Gilbert,
William and Banks DuPre, Charles
Willis, Newell Henderson, Freddie
Freyer, Bela Barnes, George Sessions,
Charles Marchman, Robert Fowler
and Onslow Milam.
—The Helping Hand Club, which is
Mrs. Cater’s class of boys inthe Metho
dist Sunday school, will give a “Soap
Shower’’ in the lecture room of the
church Friday afternoon, August the
sth One cake of soap is a ticket of
admissien, although the club will be
glad to receive more., The boys will
serve ice-cream and cake. Many vis
itors will come from Atlanta. The
soap will be given to the Decatur Or
phan’s Home.
—Mr and Mrs, L. N. Trammell are
guests of Mr and Mrs. C. W. DuPre
on their trip over the National High
way to New York. This is Mr. Du-
Pre’s third journey by automobile over
this route. They will visit Atlantic
City and other points of interest and
will spend several weeks on the trip
which began last Friday.
—Mr. Roy Roberts is at home, after
a two weeks’ rustication near Murphy,
N. C., with Mr. George Muse. Their
outing was delightiul in the cool
mountainous region and fish were
plentiful, but there were rattle-snakes
also in terrible numbers. Mr. Roberts
killed one and brought the trophy
home. It had seven rattles.
—Mrs J. D. Malone and Miss Clyde
Malone have returned froin a lovely
trip that included a visit into Canada
across Lake Ontario and up the St.
Lawrence through the Thousand Is
lands. They visited Niagara Falls and
on returning sailed from Boston to
Norfolk.
THE MARIETTA JOURNAL AND COURIER
—Mrs. Herbert Brown and Misses
Eloise and Mildred Brown will spend
August at Fairfield Inn above Lake
Toxaway and Miss Mildred Brown will
2o from that resort to Raleigh to re
sume her studies at St. Mary’s School.,
—Miss Agnes Smith entertained the
Wednesday Morning Bridge Club this
week,
—Mrs. Weed, of Knoxville, is a guest
of Mrs. Edward S. Doan.
l Personal Mention |
_
—Mrs. Walter Sams is in Athens.
—Mr. and Mrs. Bigler have returned
to Little Rock to live.
—Miss Eilleen Gober is visiting Miss
Laura Candler in Decatur.
—Miss Pauline Gramling is visiting
Miss Gleaton in Conyers.
—Mr. and Mrs. Marion Dunwoody
and children have returned to Macon.
—DMiss Forley McEachern, of Atlan- |
ta, is a guest of Mrs. S.C. McEachern,
—Mrs. Floyd Northcutt is spending
a few days with her iather in Eatonton,
—Mrs. Will Gunn and three children,
of Macon, are guests of Mrs. E. J. Setze.
—Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Gilbert are at
home again in their remodeled house.
—Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Matthews, of
Milledgeville, are guests of Mrs. G. S.
Owens,
—DMiss Bessie Jones, of Fitzgerald,
is visiting her sister, Mrs. Cecil Man
ning.
—Mrs W. A. Florence and daughter,
Miss Odene, are at Wrightsville Beach
for two weeks.
—Miss Mamie and Mr. Joe Mont
gromery, of Texas, are guests of Mrs.
Emma Haynes.
—Mrs. Jackson, of 405 Keanesaw
avenue, is the guest of relatives for a
week at Conyers.
—Miss Emma Leila Gramling will
spend August at Lookout, Mountain
with Mrs. Bradley.
—Mrs. A. L. Oslin and her sons,
Gerald and Loftin, were guests of Mrs,
B. T. Frey last week.
—Miss Emma Moss expects to enter
the Sophomore class of Agnes Scott
College in September.
—Miss Eva Campbell is taking a
business course at the Southern Busi
ness College in Atlanta.
—Miss Fannie Morris and Mr. J.
Gid Morris, of Belmont, attended the
band concert Sunday afternoon.
—Miss Lizzie Hardeman and Mr.
Allen Hardeman will go to Wrights
ville Beach tomorrow for two weeks.
~—Mrs. G. O. Allen, of Faro, with her
two children, Lucile and Hubert, are
guests of Judge and Mrs. J. M. Gann.
—Mrs. James S. Mitchell and four
little daughters, of Cocoa, Fla., are
visiting Mr. and Mrs. A. U, Stanley.
—DMisses Sallie and Lottie Dobbs
havs retured from a visit to their sis
ter, Mrs. D. A, Perry, at Talking Rock.
—Mr. and Mrs. Edwin McCook and
son, Edwin, Jr, have taken rooms
with Mr. and Mrs. J. W. L. Ssovall for
the summer.
—Mr W. A. Florencz has ordered a
1911 model Maxwell touring car from
Mr. C. W. DuPre but it will not arrive
until October,
—Mrs. J. L. Reed and her daughter,
Miss Marguerite, are spending this
week at Tallulah Falls
—Miss Annie Loyd Bond, who has
been the guest of Miss Janie Bond,
Atlanta street, for the last two weeks,
left Monday for her home at Tallahas
see, Fla.
—Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Treadwell
spent Sunday with Mrs. George Rob
erts and Miss Augusta Sawtell is with
her again, after a week in Atlanta with
Mrs. Davis,
~ Mrioand Mis, B 3. Frey, Mr,
Mayes Frey and Miss Daisy White
have gzone to Oklahoma to visit Mr.
and Mrs D. W, Frey, stopping on the
way at Cincinnati.
—Miss Catherine Charlton and Mr.
Thomas Charlton, of Savannah, are
guests of their grandmother, Mrs,
Howell. Mr. Thomas Charlton will
go later to Alexandria, Va., to attend
school.
—Mrs. Alfred Robertson, formerly
Miss Julia Meacham, and child, of
Washington City, is the guest of Miss
Fannie Morris for a month at Belmont.
Mrs Robertson as Miss Meacham was
the guest of Migs Morris five years ago
and is pleasantly remembered by many
Marijettans.
—Miss Allene Fields, who has been
the guest of relatives in Albany and
Sycamore for the past five weeks, re
turned home Monday afternoon, leav
ing Tuesday afternoon, accompanied
by her sister, Miss Lucy Fields, for
Mint Hill, N. C , where they go to vis
it their sister, Mrs. K. A, Campell, for
two weeks.
W*#H#*fi“fiww
T K : b 3
s"“The Kosmic Kerosene.”s
THEEEEPEP PRI 1444 t b 0040
The Georgia Federation of Women'’s
Clubs has sent appeals to country
editors to arouse the interest of
farmers’ wives in adding two experts
‘on domestic science to the teachers in
‘the institutes conducted over the
‘state by the State College of Agricul
‘ture. Heretofore this teaching has
‘been to men on ‘‘how to raise corn
’and cotton and keep the pig from
dying.”
While reading one of these circulars
‘and wondering what to say to the
farmers’ wives of Cobh County on the
}subject. these words from a long
haired philosopher in trousers,fstruck
‘me in both eyes from the corner of a
newspaper: ‘‘The oleo of authority
does not much interest them. They
want the Kosmic Kerosene thatj sup
plies the caloric.”” Those words were
like a lighted match to a train of
thought that has been absorbing ker
osene oil for months., Time was when
I abhorred Kerosene oil 1n all its uses
and phases and pitied the unfortunate
woman who attempted to cook on the
advertised oil stoves. Since coming to
Marietta, I have been converted to oil
stoves, and feel like proclaiming the}
advantages of cooking with ‘‘the Kos
mic Kerosene that supplies the calor
ic”’ where it is needed and re!rainsi
from broiling the cook along with the
steak. |
The first thing 1 would advise a
farmer to do for the comfort of his
wife and daughters is to prepare a
summer kitchen with an oil stove and
a steam cooker in it. I mean a real
out-door kitchen on the order of the
ventilated sleeping tents. Such
kitchens, being cool, do not attract
flies. They can be arranged with
pipes or troughs from a well so a big
supply of water can be always con
venient, and they can have sinks and
drain-pipes to carry away all water
after it has been used in preparing
food or cleaning up the kitchen. It
seems to me it would be a wise thing
to ‘‘demonstrate’’ the methods of using
oil stoves and steam-cookers to class
es of women in the country. People
need to see how work can besimplified
and reduced. Seeing is believing.
You have seen pictures of ancient
cranes in old kitchen fire-places with
stone hearths extending across the
room? What great fires a cook re
quired in olden times—for boiling
roasting, baking—and what a variety
of utensils and vessels was necessary
to cook a good meal,
At this time, one steam-cooker over
one gil-burner prepares at the same
time meat, vegetables, fruit and ce
reals, and the only attention needed
is keeping a plenty uf hot water in the
cooker,
Few country women have oil stoves
and summer kitchens—because they
do not understand what a saving of
work and time and discomfort they
are. Work in a real summer kitchen
is like play compared to cooking be
side a hot stove. A, L O
Foley's
Kidney
Pills
What They Will Do for You
They will cure your backache,
strengthen your kidneys, cor
recturinaryirregularities, build
up the worn out tissues, and
climinate the excess uric acid
that causes rheumatism. Pre
vent Bright’s Disease and Dia
bates, and restore health and
strength. Refuse substitutes.
FOR RENT--Store house formerly
occubied by Carnes Furniture Store,
augs-4t D. W, BLAIR, Attorney.
£ I i e it T
SHORTHAND
AND TYPEWRITING
Classes day and evening
Miss V. T. ELMER, 100 Rosweli
Street
MONEY TO LOAN-— We
can make loans at 7 per cent on
good real estate as security.
[Loans on farming lands a spec
ialty. It costs nothing to see us
at our office in Marietta and find
out all about it. |
R N Holland & Son.
Won't Need a Crutch. |
When Editor J. P. Soseman, of Cor- |
neling, N C, bruiged his leg badly, it
started an ugly sore. Many salves and |
ointments proved worthless. Then
Bucklen’® Arnica Salve healed it
thoroughly Nothing i 8 so prompt |
and sure for Uleers, Boils. Burns |
Rruaises, Cute Corns, Sored, Pimpler
Ezemna or Piles. 25c at W. A, Snml‘
Drug Store,
Ghe “Drug Store Hid.”
3
W
O
P
H
O
N
E
S
4]
< Butler’s Drug Store. 2
AR o, g PNk e
s Ny TF
' 2 K
@ e /WILL GROW£S
&\\ % ! :
\ "AND SO i~
€Y WILL MONEY
X_& . 17 g
"IN OUR BANK:Y
87 N D PN 2
5 = ) ‘
0548 A 0
TS e N R
BABIES grow and so does money
in the bank. Both growthsare
constant; and, taking place night and day alike, you
can provide for your baby by putting money in the
bank and letting it grow with him.
e
othe _Sflartelia
Hal& fanking €
- @
r
© Haricle, C.
CAPITAL $75,000.00. SURPLUS $15,000.00
J. D. MALONE, A. H. GILBERT, GEO. H. SESSIONS,
President. Vice-President. Cashier.
DIRECTORS:
D. W. Blair W, A. DuPre, 7. D. Malone. 8. D. Rambo,
T. M. Brumby A. H. Gilbert. R. H. Northeutt. George H. Sessionn.
T. A. Gramling.
@ de a ,
(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
Dinner Biscuit, Cameo Biscuit. Chocolate Tokens, Harmony
Bircuit, Nabiscos, etc.
I will still handle the famous Chase & Sanborn Teas
and Coffees, and if you will let me know your preferences
I can suit your taste in this line, and give you values that
cannot be duplicated.
[f you appreciate the highest quality in food products,
and the best of service, call or phone your orders ¢»
2. L FPAW.
The Fancy Grocer.
Phone 20. Marietta, Ga.
R R - : _,,,, '- %
e U] e
B gl
]by T
v =Y | ] T fi i
Tesr EEE ili‘ ;& Ll
: . A\ e E T
\ &\‘\H ‘@fl'w?lé\ {IH | '
e L
STI
f" ” il
" Our trust in bim we all abide A
For kis sales are always bona-fide,
Our drug sore “Kid"' is our greatess pride.
: R
1s a constant factor in all our
dealings.( In trading here you
havc‘ that” comfortable feeling
that “our ' prices are right and
your account is correct in every
detail.
[ ———
Page Five
P
R
@
M
P
T
S
=
R
v
/
C