Newspaper Page Text
Page Five
Goctal and Personal
Mr. C. T. Carnes is at home quite
in disposed.
\ir. and Ms.r Tom Hamby spent
Thanksgiving with Mr. and Mrs,
<am Dawson in Woodstock.
Window and picture glass any
<ize and shape at Murray’s studio. I
Air. and Mrs. Eugene Mozley an-'
.ounce the birth of a daughter.
\is Lucile Arnold, of Grantville,
s visiting Mrs. W. H. Wyatt, Jr.
Mrs. G. L. Carruth, of Acworth, is
visiting her sister, Mrs. W. M. Kemp.
Ar. and Mrs. Butler Holmes are
visiting their mother, Mrs. Margaret
Holmes.
Mrs. Ella Wyly, of Darien, has
come to live in Marietta and will
pe with Mr. and Mrs. Harold Wil
lingham at Locust Lodge.
FOR RENT—Five room house on
Washington Avenue. Mrs. J. S.
Wwarren, Phone 180-L. *it
The worst case of indigestion,
heartburn, sour stomach or gastri
tis is quickly and safely ended with
Mi-o-ni Stomach Tablets. ‘No-cure
no-pay.” Hodges Drug Company.
You can’t spend the same amount
of money for anythng else that will
add as greatly to the home as picture
frames. Try us and see.
MURRAY’S STUDIO,
Framing Department.
Mr. and Mrs. C. J. Weaver have
moved to Montezuma where they will
farm. Mrs. Weaver, Miss Ella Jones
and Glenn Weaver left last Monday
for their new home. Mr. and Mrs,
D. N. Jones will occupy the Weaver
house here.
Uncle Gid Morris planted three
crops in succession on one acre this
vear and the products of the three‘
amounted to 800 bushels. The first
crop was oats. It was harvested in
July, then onions were planted and
then Irish potatoes which produced
300 bushels. |
Miss Cora Brown entertained with
a dance Friday evening inviting sev
eral married couples beside hear
young friends. Vines and autumn
leaves decorated the ballroom, and
the Marietta string band furnished
the music. Sandwiches and fruit
punch were served.
Mr. C. W. Carter, of Rome, for
merly of Marietta, stopped off in
Marietta Saturday for a short while
on his way to Atlanta. He is look
ing extremely well and prosperous
and must be an ideal superintend
ent for the life and health insurance
company he represents.
Mrs. Preston Rambo with her lit
tle son and his nurse, Isabel, have
arrived from Brazil to spend the
winter with Mrs. Holland. She is
running away from the heat of Rio
de Janiero at which place it is now
mid-summer. She left her husband
and Dr. Marcellus Rambo quite well.
Mr. and Mrs. George Montgomery’s
wedding anniversary was Nov. 27th
and they shared honors with Dr.
and Mrs. Patton Friday evening.
Mrs. Montgomery was lovely in lav
ender crepe de chine and a corsage
of pink roses presented by Mrs. Pat
ton, who shared the box of roses
sent her by a minister in Atlanta,
with her daughter and her friend.
Mrs. Tom Florence invited a dozen
ladies to a unique sewing bee at her
home Wednesday afternoon. The
benevolent association has a beauti
ful little boy, only five months old,
who was abandoned by his parents
recently with no clothing at all
Mrs. Rivers is caring for the baby
but it will be offered for adoption
soon., These good ladies have made
the little waif some pretty clothes
and he is quite comfortable in them.
There is another orphan in town to
be clothed and the ladies will sew
lor it one day soon.
g ';/ 1 ummwfifljr
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TURN THE LIGHTS
n any car that is cared for ta this
tarage and you will find it in beau
ful condition,
: WE TAKE PRIDE
' giving automobile owners more
f_han they expect in the way of atten
“on, The result is,
MANY SATISFIED CUSTOMERS
Our repair and vulcanizing de-
Virtments are in the hands of ex
perts,
CEURCH STREET, MARIETTA. GA
SUPPER CLUB ENTERTAINED. l
On Monday evening at the home
of Captain John H. Boston, Mrs.
Mills McNeel and Mrs. Boston en
tertained the supper club, which in
cludes about twenty-six married
couples.
Palms, ferns and other foliage
plants beautified the rooms with au
tumn leaves and pine boroughs over
the windows and doors adding tO4
the festive appearance on all sides.
Misses Evelyn Clay and Lulu Me-
Michael, as Puritan maids, and
Misses Cora Brown and Corinne Ger
dine, as Indian maids, welcomed the
guests as they arrived and a group‘
of little girls in Indian dress usher-‘
ed them upstairs to the cloak rooms.i
The first floor of the handsome
residence was thrown together and
five rooms were used, tables being‘
in four and one served as Indian
fortune teller's home with a realis
tic tent. Mises Allene Fields and
Emily Griffin, as Indians, read palms
for the guests who were called in
by Mr. Joe Brown, costumed as an
Indian chief with feather head dress.
Virginia and Nancy Boston, Chae
lotte Northcutt, Julia McNeel, Kath
erine DuPree, Christine Brail, Em
mie Montgomery, Harry McNeel andf
Steve Clay were all dressed as In
dians and posed around the tent in
a flood of red light, with fine pic
turesque effect.
Mrs. Jim Welsh, in Indian dress
played catchy music most of the time
adding much to the pleasure of the
evening. The other girls in Indian
and Puritan dress who assisted in
entertaining and serving were Miss
es Willie May Blair, Alice Wellons,
Jean Wallace, Margaret Couper,
Agnes Smith, Anne Field and An
nie Hahr Dobbs.
There were four large tables and
several small ones on which th 2
Thanksgiving supper was served in
courses, each of them in a differe:nt
style of decoration.
One large table had the Mayflow
er, covered with snow sailing on a
large mirror as a centerpiece, and
with. Puritan maids as passengers
and also as place cards.
Another large table had an In
dian canoe as a centerpiece and tiny
wigwams. Indian dolls and pots as
favors.
The music room had a table with
a large golden wire basket filled
with bright fruit and with grapes
festooning the candelabra, which
held yellow candles.
The table in the breakfast room
had a white cloth with turkeys on
it, a basket of fruit for the center
and turkeys as place cards and fa
vors.
All the tables had white Puritan
caps and strands of beads for the
ladies and Puritan collars, toma
hawks and corn cob pipes for the
‘men.
- After dinner there was a contest
in guessing conundrums made from
‘the names of the guests. Mrs. George
Sessions and Mrs. Floyd Northcutt
won the prizes.
Mrs. Boston was very handsome in
pink satin and Mrs. McNeel in blue.
There is nothing that adds so much
to a room as a picture nicely framed.
At Murray's Studio, you will find a
complete line of picture moulding.
Seeing Is Believing
We appreciate telephone orders, and are
olad to wait on you when you driveto the
front, but we would much prefer to have
you come in and see the many nice things
arriving daily.
We now have fresh Nuts, Raisins
and Crystalized Fruits, also Mince Meat
and Plum Puddings.
Our new Prunes, and Sweet Mixed and
Dill Pickles are now in. Also Buck Wheat
and Pancake Flour.
We will have fresh Breakfast Bacon and
Hams in time for the Conference Dele
gates.
We will also try to have Bread and
Stone’s Cakes enough to meet all de
mands.
If you have the Instant Postum and
George Washington Coffee and a box of
Cocoa, with a pitcher of boiling water you
can suit each individual taste.
E. L. FAW,
The Fancy Grocer
Phone 20. Marietta, Ga.
MARIETTA JOURNAL AND COURIER
POINTS OF VIEW.
The Alpharetta Free Press said
last week:
‘““Marietta chickens are roosting
bigh this week—the North Georgia
conference of Methodist preachers is
on hand.”
Why should preachers be teased
on the subject of their fondness for
chickens? It is an evidence of good
taste, refinement and discrimination
to like chickens. President Wilson
prefers chicken to almost any other
digh in substantials. Serving chick
ens to preachers is only an evidence
of the esteem in which these good
men are held: house-keepers delight
to give them the best they can, anid
we know by experience that one con
ference hostess served delicious
chicken pie to her preachers every
day.
Another absurd thing, from my
point of view, is the universally ac
cepted opinion that women fear mice
and bugs. It is not fear but aver
sion that causes women to repulse
such creatures. They are so irre
sponsible and undependable one nev
er knows where to put her foot dowa
in order to crush the nimble little
beasts. But it is not fear that ani
mates women in their hostility to
ward mice |
Our Mergenthaler Linotype, we
fondly call Bill, is a marvelous good
fairy when every one of his 23 dis
tinet functions is working smoothly.
Instead of setting type “Bill”’ drops
into place little brass moulds into
which the molten metal is forced,
thus forming what is called a “line ’o
type.” Sometimes these moulds re
fuse to fall and,/there is an illus
tration of the result in the nonsense
song about spelling blind pig. If
the small i sticks in Bill’'s throat
we are compelled to spell blind pig
b-1-n-d and p-g. Some times the e
will not ‘come to light and again
Bill will refuse to make two letters
fall when he feels that one is enough
and often he transposes letters with
disastrous orthographical results. Of
course the blame is placed on the
fine curlly head of Judson Stanley,
who is Bill’s keeper and a very sweet
tempered gentleman who stands be
tween the machine, the proof reader
and the public.
But other mistakes occur that
cannot be laid to either Bill or Jud
son. For instance the recent item
about a Cobb County man raising
two car loads of pumpkins on one
vine. No one, except the author
has taken us to task for that. She
writes a rather flowing hand
any way and that t in cart was in
distinct. It proves the importance
of getting everything right to a t.
But no loyal Cobb County proof
reader would hesitate to accept as
truth the statement that one of our
vines had borne two carloads of
such an easy-going old tramp as a
pumpkin. R (5
RIDDELL—OWEN.
On Saturday evening, September
12th, 1914, at the residence of Rev.
Frank J. Fleming, of 16 Augusta
Avenue, Atlanta, Ga., Miss Lola
Belle Riddell, of Athens, Ga., and
Mr. Geo. S. Owen ~ of Marietta, Ga.,
were quietly united in matrimony,
Rev. Mr. Fleming officiating. Only
the family of Mr. Fleming and Miss
Beulah Saxton, niece of the bride,
witnessed the impressive ceremony.
SCHOCL NEWS. .
Those on the honor roll for No
vember were:
First class: Archie Sessions,
George Anderson, Walter Scott, Dal
las Osborn, Lillian Beall and Coloma
Lambert.
Second class: Fred Morris and
Slaton Awtrey.
Third class: Ralph Flower.
Fourth class: Gertrude Smith.
The Athenian Literary society
elected the following officers:
President, Emma Hedges; vice
president, Hattie Black; secretary,
Lois Gardner; treasurer, Elizabeth
Anderson; sergeant at arms, Mary
Frances Gilbert.
The Jeffersonian Literary society
debated the following subject:
Resolved: That it would be to
the best interests of our country to
have the president elected for one
term of six years and not be sub
ject for reelection.
Affirmative. Negative.
Eugene White Lawrence Brumby
Greer Edwards John Heck
William Stephens George Teipel
Decision in favor of the negai've.
Professor Quillian was in bed with
tonsilitis on Thanksgiving, but Pro
fessor Spencer went to visit rela
tives in Jackson. There were unusu
ally interesting exercises in some of
the grades last Wednesday.
THANKSGIVING.
The harvests yielded a plen.cous
supply.
The corn shocks dot the fields so
brown, ;
Out in the God-made meadows lie,
Bare things of beauty idly, down.
The mistletoe gleams from bougns
a near,
The whispering pines in the si
lences,
Grow vocal o’er autumn’s lonely
Bier,
Through leafless valleys echo
with melodies,
Tho summer roses no more blow,
The Thanksgiving door is open
wide,
Buried roses lie 'neath the snow,
Smiles follow tears at Thanksgiv
ing-tide.
No wars have racked us ill,
No pestilence has stormed us
rude;
The fertile earth our multitudes
feed still,
Let us render thanks with grati
tude.
Nov. 26th, 1914,
EMMA McGINTY.
There’s More than Just “‘Looks’’ to These
Hart Schaffner & Marx
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You'll appreciate their luxurious “feel”,
you’ll marvel at their perfect fit. Best
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318.00 to 330.00
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Six Pair 5] 50
I. W. Read
u‘ £\ Il . All About?
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Friday, December 4, 1914
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