Newspaper Page Text
Friday, Oct. 17, 1913
SSOCIAL AND PERSONAL
MRS. CARTERS' PHONE
X 340 X
Telepbone Mews for this Page to
Mrs. Carter.
PHONE 340.
All last week was so warm that
lns were needed in church.
~ Miss Nina Frost is seriously ill at
her home on Locust street.
Mrs. Horace Duncan, of Atlanta,
was in town Monday for a brief
visit.
Miss Annie Burnap is spending the
week in Decatur with Mrs. W. D.
Ferris,
Will sell store property on the
square, H. C. Dobbs.
Mr. and Mrs. E, M. Cantrell, of
Atlanta, visited thir sister, Mrs. Joe
Carter, last Sunday.
~=Miss Bertha Hughes, of Atlanta, is
spending the week with Mrs. Sim
monds, at Locust Lodge.
Misses Mary Glenn and Millie La
Fontaine, of Atlanta, spent the week
¢nd with the Misses Schilling.
See Wallace’s window. Ladies $3
shoes this week. T. L. Wallace Clo.
Co.- 10-17-s¢t
One surrey and some pigs for sale.
Mrs. C. R. Hatcher, 1012 Whitlock
avenie. Phone 15-L.
Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Keesey, of
Jamestown, N. Y., are with Mrs. W.
A . Bishop for the winter.
Mrs. John Byrne, of Dublin, has
returned home after a visit to her
mother, Mrs. Pace, at the Whitlock
House.
FOR SALE — Four-room house,
large lot, Campbell street. H. C.
Dobbs. 10-17-4 t
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Dunn’s guests
last Sunday were Mr. Homer Mec-
Cleskey and Mr. C. G. Buell, of Chat
tanooga.
Miss Gertrude Guerard, of Atlanta,
and Miss Lula Hardee, of Gainesville,
Fla., spent Saturday in town with
friends,
Mrs. Margaret Moon is visiting her
son, Mr. J. J. Daniell. Miss Lydia
Holland is with her as a companion,
and Mrs. Daniell hopes to keep them
all the winter.
We are showing this week a very attractive line of ladies’ shoes at $3.00. We say attractive because
the style is absolutely correct and the wear is there also. Our shoe window space this week will be
taken up entirely by this most attractive line of Ladies’ Shoes at $3.00 and we invite your inspection.
NOTICE
These $3.00 specials are shoes
which we have just received from
one of the largest shoe factories in
the world that make a specialty of
this price shoe and for this reason
we are in a position to give you ex
ceptioned values in them.
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BUSINESS PHONE
x 18 X
Mr. Thomas Irwin and Miss Mary
Anne Irwin have gone to visit rela
tives in Buford and will also go to
Knoxville and Asheville before re
turning home.
Mrs. John Warren left on Tues
day for a visit to relatives in Elber
ton, stopping in Athens en route to
attend the wedding of Miss Starke
Cobb and Mr, A. E. Davidson.
We carry complete stock of Lum-l
ber, Shingles, Laths, Brick, Lime and
Cement at both yards. You can getl
what you want at either place.
BLACK BUILDERS' SUPPLY CO.
Mr. John D. Northcutt was ill,
only a few hours after his acute at
tack last week and has entirely re-'
coverted. - Mr. R. H. Northeutt is
also quite well. |
Mr. and Mrs. Sam Way leave in a!
few days for Arcadia, Fla., to spend
the winter with Mrs. Mary H. Smith.
They will carry 300 of their beauti
ful hens with them and raise chick-‘
ens, as they did last winter. 1‘
Last Saturday was a briglltf@m}
day and many farmers brought their
wagons full of cotton to town.
Among the visitors was a man with
a wagon full of Shockley apples,
which sold readily.
Mr. Richard Sessions, who is in
ill health, is a guest of Mrs. C. M.
York, and on last Sunday she had
with her for the day Misses Bertha
York, Ida Greer, Effie Hilburn and
Inez Wilknson, of Atlanta.
Gadsden Times-News: Miss Fran
cess West, of Atlanta, has accepted
the position as bookkeeper for the
Southern Manufacturing Company.
She has had considerable experience
in the lumber manufacturing busi
ness and is an expert accountant.
Mr. L. B. Carnes and Mr, Harold
Schilling took two automobiles full
of children, chaperoned by Miss Ar
rie White and Mrs. George
White, for a picnic on top of
Kennesaw Mountain last Saturday. A
severe rainstorm drenched the merry
party and cut short the picnic, but
no one is ill on account of getting
wet.
Remember we are sole agent’s the famous Dorothy Dodd Shoe for
women. The recognized style leader $3.50 to $5.00.
I. L. Wallace Clothing C
. L. Wallace Clothing Co.
MARIETTA WE SELL “BETTER” SHOES PHONE 292
Mrs. Henry Meinert is recovering
from an illness of two weeks.
Little Glenn Weaver, who has been
ill with typhoid fever, is better.
Mr. and Mrs. L. A. Foster, of At
lanta, spent Sunday with Mr, and
Mrs. Ralph Kirk.
Mrs. Sue Stokely and Mrs. Will
Paden, of Smyrna, visited relatives
in Marietta Tuesday. :
Mrs. George White and Miss Daisy
White are spending a few days in
Atlanta with Mr. and Mrs. T. W,
White,
Mr. J. M. Austin motored to the
Bartow County Fair last Friday with
Mrs. J. E. McNair, Misses Ruth and
Annie Brown Gable and Mr. Austin
McCleskey.
.+ Miss Genevieve Gaudry, of Savan
nah, will come up in a few days and
take little Clio and Richard Joyner
with her to Dallas, Texas, where she
will spend the winter with her sis
ter, Mrs. Richard Joyner.
Through the generosity of the
Civic League Marietta will soon have
permanent trash boxes around the
square. The boxes have been order
ed, and we hope the people will show
their appreciation by using the boxes
instead of throwing trash on the
streets.
Miss Irene Schilling has returned
from a visit of four months to Rev.
E. S. Doan’s family in Louisville,
Ky. While there she enjoyed the cel
ebration in memory of Commodore
Perry, one of our greatest naval he
roes, which lasted a week and was in
the nature of a carnival.
WIN TWENTY-SIX PRIZES.
(Acworth Post.)
Mr. Roy Tippin and Mr. Roger
Lemon have brought back a trunk
ful! of pigeon prizes from the Na
tional Conservation' Exposition at
Knoxville, Tenn.
Mr. Tippen entered twenty pigeons
in the national show and won even
twenty prizes.
Mr. Lemon entered six birds, win
ning a prize on each entry.
These gentlemen will enter their
pigeons in the State Fair at Macon
and in the Southern International in
Atlanta.
Chrysanthemums $2 a dozen;
roses, pink and white, 75 cents a
dozen; dahlias; assorted colors, 75
cents a dozen; asparagus ferns, in
pots, very fine, $1; bell peppers, 15
cents a dozen,
MRS. HENRY MEINERT.
Phone 35. 10-17-tf
$ 300
MARIETTA JOURNAL AND COURIER.
DEATH OF MRS MALLARD.
Mrs. Charles Screven Mallard died
at her home in Darien, Ga., October
9, 1913, She was the daughter of
Mr. Norman Page Gignilliat and his
wife, Charlotte Trezevant, and was
born on the 21st day of May, 1845,
at Windy Hill, her father’s country
home, five miles from Darien,
Mrs. Mallard is remembered in Ma
rietta as Miss Minna Gignilliat, hav
ing resided here from 1866 until Oc
tober 27, 1875, when she married
Mr. Mallard and returned to her na
tive county to live.
She had been gick for some months
and, while her loved ones knew from
the nature of the disease she was
doomed, no one realized her end was
SO near.
Miss Minna Gignilliat united with
the Baptist Church April 11, 1860,
thus giving her life and services to
God in her youth.
. Many still living in Marietta re
member how she nursed the sick,
visited those in affliction, taught in
the Sunday school, loved her church
and attended its services. Promi
nent men still living here and else
where have testified to her influence
over them for good.
After her marriage she went to
reside on her husband’'s plantation,
which adjoined that of her father, to
which many of the old slaves had re
turned. How good she was to them|
The sick blessed her for her kind
ness. Freedom to the young negroes
was a blessing—to the old, a calam
ity.
Mrs. Mallard leaves her devoted
husband, one daughter, Mrs. J. Howe,
and a son, Mr. Charles Screven Mal
lard, Jr.; a sister, Mrs. Margaret
Holmes, and three brothers, Mr. G.
W. Gignilliat, of Seneca, S. C.; Mr.
R. C. Gignilliat, of Perry, S. C., and
Mr. J. F. Gignilliatt, of Spartan
burg, S. C., to mourn her loss.
Don’'t forget that November 4th is
the date of the Civic League bazar—
the time and place to buy your
Christmas gifts. They are all tied
with ribbons and in dainty boxes,
just ready to send away. More and
prettier things than last year, at
very reasonable prices,
MEETING FOR MEN.
Dr. Patton invites the men of Ma
rietta to the meeting for men only
at the Presbyterian Church Sunday
afternoon at half-past 3 o'clock.
STOMACH TROUBLE #
[OR FIVE YEARS
Majority of Friends Thought Mr.
Hughes Would Die, But
One Helped Him to
Recovery.
Pomeroyton, Ky.—ln interesting ad
vices from this place, Mr. A. ]J. Hughes
writes as follows: ‘Il was down with
stomach trouble for five (5) years, and
would have sick headache so bad, at
times, that I thought surely 1 would die.
I tried different treatments, but they
did not seem to do me any good.
I got so bad, I could not eat or sleep,
and all my friends, except one, thought I
would die. He advised me to try
Thedford’s Black-Draught, and quit
K I Kareful Klothes Kleaning Kompany | K
Always have your clothes well pressed. To have your
clothes well pressed become a member of the Kareful
Klothes Kleaning Xompany. Phone 118.
8 Suits per m0nth....51.00
4 Suits per month.... 75¢
2 Suits per month ....50¢
We do all kind of dry cleaning. Try us once and you
will call again. Agents for Guthman Steam Laundry.
Kareful Klothes Kleaning Kompany.
CLAYTON BROS., Managers.
K I Kareful Klothes Kleaning Kompany. | K
MISSES’ AND CHILDREN'S
SHOLS
BUTTON OR LACE IN ALL
LEATHERS
. LOW HEELS.
taking other medicines. 1 decided to
take his advice, although I did not have
any confidence in it.
i I have now been taking Black-Draugit
}for three months, and it has cured me—
ihaven’t had these awful sick headaches
since | began using it.
I am so thankful for what Black-
Draught has done for me.” |
Thedford’s Black-Draught has been
found a very valuable medicine for de
!rangements of the stomach and liver, It
‘is composed of pure, vegetable herbs,
;contains no dangerous ingredients, and
acts gently, yet surely. It can be freely
used by young and old, and should be
kept in every family chest.
Geta package today.
Only a quarter, 388
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