Newspaper Page Text
Friday Morning, July 27th, 1917.
Hoctal and Personal
Miss Elizabeth White is home from
Alabama. & ;
Mr. Richard Carter spert Monday
in Atlanta. :
Mr. Frank Harwell, Jr., is again
with Mrs. Paul Lovejoy. :
Miss Alice Miller, of Tampa, is
visiting Miss Dorothy Milam.
Miss Elizabeth Nolan is visiting
Miss Anna Harwell in Lagrange.
Mr. Thomas Nolan is serving as
page in the legislature this week.
Mrs. Thomas Charlton of Savan
nah, is visiting the Misses Howell.
Miss Mabel White returned from
Birmingham Wednesday afternoon.
Miss Frances Clarke, of Atlanta,
is spending awyile with Mrs. Hard
age. /
Miss Gussie Groves left Saturday
to visit relatives near Spartanburg,
S €.
Miss Mary Frances Gilbert is vi
siting the Misses Gilbert in Hamp
ton. :
Mrs. A. I. White is in Nashville,
Tenn., visiting her sisters, the Misses
Catshaw.
Mrs. O. S. Bacon, of Seneca, S.
C., is the guest of Mr§. James J. |
Daniell. , : ‘
Mr. Herbert Nichols, of Atlanta,
visited Mr. and Mrs. Irwin Smith last
week. l
Mrs. Trigg, of Atlanta, is th‘l
guest of her sister, Mrs. Horace
Field.
Miss Janie Myers, of Monticello,
Fla., is the guest of Mrs. James R.
Brumby, Jr.
Mrs. Fannie Trezevant is visiting
her daughter, Mrs. Fred Hopkins, in‘
Minneapolis.
Mrs. De Treville Lawrence, who
has been visiting friends in Atlanta,
is home again. ‘
Miss Annie Lucia Warren spent
the week-end in Madison with Mrs.
Walter Hemperly.
Miss Margaret Jones, of Elberton,
is expected next week to visit Miss
Mary Ellen Law. :
Mr. and Mrs. Lewe Sessions left
Thursday for Greenville, S. C. to
visit Mrs. Sessions mother.
Miss Gertrude Anderson and Eva
Miller have returned from a week’s
stay at Tallulah Falls.
Mrs. E. L. Moore and litfle son, l
Marion, are spending some time visit
ing home folks in Alabama.
Mrs. J. T. Corley and Miss Pauline
Corley are on a visit to Mr. Clifton
Corley in Cumberland, N. C.
Mr. Johnson Jones, of Duff, Tenn.,
spent Monday with his uncle and
aunt, Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Legg.
Miss Elizabeth Thomas, of Charles
ton, S. C., is visiting Mrs. Randolph
Anderson at Oakton, near town.
Harry Williams, of La Fayette,l
Ala., has come to spend vacation
with his sister, Mrs. J. M. Austin. I
Miss Laura Lewis Lawhon has re
turned to her home in Decatur, af
ter a visit to Miss Ida Belle Hunt. |
Master Eli White, of LaGrange, is
spending his vacation with his grand
parents, Mr. and Mrs. N. B. White.
Mr. and Mrs. Collins, of Acworth,
spent SufidaYp with their son and
;*_‘dux;'hter, Mr. and Mrs. Jim Col
ns.
Misses Ruth McCulloch and Char
lotte Law have returned from a visit
o Miss Dorothy Pomeroy in At
lanta,
Miss Jean Wallace has returnedi
from Atlantic Beach and will spendi
4 week in Atlanta with Mrs. Charles
Martin, |
Mrs. B. L. McMullen and children,
of Clearwater, Fla., who have been
;;lf‘]ti’“z: Mrs. Easterlin returned home
‘riqay.
. Mr. and Mrs. John Boston and
A'dm_':ljf will leave Sunday for Gal
braith Springs, Tenn., to spend a
month.
Mrs. W. R. Mountcastle is at
tending Smyrna Camp-Meeting near
‘pm"j.'evs and is with her mother, Mrs.
otts.
Mrs. J. W. L. Stovall went down
? Atlanta Sunday to see her sister,
;n_:‘r" E. C. Settle, who is in the hos-
Vita]
Miss Ethel Maud Davis has return
¢d t 0 her home in Austell after a
Week's visit to her grand mother, Mrs
J. M. Gann,
'\l“.\ M‘abel Cox:telyou .is visiting
& (fiplls§ at Union Springs, Ala.
. Culpliss was formerly Miss
“onnie Syler, of this city.
»\‘Mt‘;‘"’i Myra and Mary Graves, of
5 = and Mr. Cliff Mansfield, of
. lex., spent Sunday with Mrs.
p.~ Heggie and Mrd Harvey
" Richard Banks Mower, who
\x ® visit to Mr. and Mrs. John
‘1 spent the week-end in Madi
“.ih his aunt, Mrs. Joha Dlc-
Mr. and Mrs. Oliver Hereth and
Mrs. Rennick, who have been visit
ing Mr. and Mrs. T. A. Gramling,
returned to their home in Indianapo
lis, Friday.
l Mr. Burwell Atkinson, of Waver
' ley, who is now at the Officer’s train
iing camp at Fort McPherson, spent
the week-end with his sister, Mrs. C.
T. Nolan.
Mrs. J. P. Williams, of New Or
leans, arrived Thursday for a visit to
her mother, Mrs. J. P. Leake, bring
ing with her Miss Carpenter, also of
New Orleans.
Mrs. de T. Lawrence entertained
'Mr. and Mrs. Claiborne, Mrs. Hager,
Mrs. A. A. Irwin, Mrs. J. F. Clark.
‘and Miss Nancy McGavock, of Max
Meadows, Va., at home, Tuesday.
Mr. Cliff Mansfield, of Tyler, Tex.,
a delegate for the W. 0. W. Con
vention which met in Atlanta last
week, spent part of the time in Ma
rietta, calling on his boyhood friends.
Miss Sarah Patton and Miss Alice
Lemon Anderson are visiting Miss
McCommell at her home at Montreat,
N. C. They will visit in Asheville
and Spartanburg before returning
home. |
Mr. A. M. Dobbs spent last Sun
day in town with Mr. and Mrs. Wal
ter Sams and greatly enjoyed meet-}
ing his many old friends at church, ‘
He made a beautiful talk to the Sun
day School.
Mrs. Ralph Coleman, who has been
visiting her sister, Mrs. Fletcher Rey
nolds, has returned to her home in
Columbus, accompanied by Mrs.
Reynolds and children and Miss Hat
tie Cantrell. ;
Miss Nancy McGavock will return
to her home Friday accompanied by
Mrs. Claiborne, Sr. Mrs. Hager will
remain here some time longer and
Mrs. A. A. Irwin will accompany her
to her home in Max Meadows, Va.
Mrs. R. R. Claiborne gave a spend
they-day party Friday in honor of
Miss Nancy McGavock, of Max Mea
dows, Va., inviting besides the honor
ghest, Mrs. A. A. Irwin, Miss Sa
bine Nichols and Miss Emma Gard
ner.
Mr. and Mrs. Leon Faw had as
their guests Saturday Miss Magara
Waldron and Miss Agnes Kendrick,
of Atlanta. Miss Agnes Kendrick
spent the week-end and Sunday, Mr.
Osborn Watson and Mr. Rankin came
up for the day. - ‘
The Marietta boys who attended
the dance given by Miss Sarah Schorn
at East Lake Country Club Friday
avening were Messrs. Frank McNeel,
Egbert Freyer, Malcolm Whitlock,
Joe Wyatt, Paul Owenby, George
Mitchell Morris and Onslow Milam.
Mr. B. P. Dobbs, wife and baby, of
Milledegeville, Ga., spent last week
with his brother in law, Mr. H. C.
Jobbs and with Mr. J. W. Poor, near
Beinson’s School House. He is visit
‘ng his mother at Mount Gilead in
Cherokee County this week. They
came up in their car.
Mr. Robertson, the Sunday School
worker for the Cherokee Presbytery
lectured at the Presbyterian church
Wednesday evening on the subject,
f “A Worker’s Conference.” It
vas decided to organize a Workers’
Conference in this church consisting
of the officers and teachers in the
Sunday School. The first meeting
~11l ke held immediately following
che midweek prayer service this weel
ind then they will décide the time
and place for reguiar meetings. \
Mrs. Quinn’s Experience
QOught to Help You Over
the Critical Period.
Lowell, Mass.—‘‘For the last three
years I have been troubled with the
; 1 Change of Life and
l ‘ the bad feelings
B ||| common at that
| | |time. I was in a
. W\ |very nervous condi
% < i ticn, with headaches
_ and pain a good
5 deal of the time sol
l; g was unfit to do my
, / work. A friend
asked me to try
Lydia E. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Com
pound, which I did,
and it has helped me in every wa?. I
am not nearly so nervous, no he ache
or Eain. I must say that Lydia E.
Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound is tha
best remedy any sick woman can take. 1
—Mrs. MARGARET QUINN, Reer 259
Worthen St., Lowell, Mass.
Other warning symptoms are a sense
of suffocation, hot flashes, headaches,
backaches, dread of impending evil,
timidity, sounds in the ears, palpitation
of the heart, sparks hefore the eyes,
irregularities, constipation, variable
appet.it,e. weakness, inquietude, and
dizziness.
If you nerd specizl advice, write to
the E dia E. Pirkham [ sdicing Co
(confi(};ntial), Lya.-l, ot ol
THE MARIETTA JOURNAL AND COURIER
Misses Catherine Jones, of Deca
tur, and Julia Legg, of Morristown,
Tenn., have returned to their homes
after a visit to Mr. and Mrs. J. W.
| Lege.
Mrs. Lucy Edwards entertained
Miss Nancy McGavock with a picture
show party Thursday inviting also
Mrs. A. A. Irwin, Mrs. Claiborne,
Mrs. Hager, Mrs. Gibbs. .
Mrs. Irwin and Miss Mary Anne
Irwin have Treturned from Fort Col
lins, Colorado, accompanied by Mr.
David Irwin’s two children who will
visit them for some time.
Miss Mary Lou Baker left Thurs
day for a week’s stay in Gainesville
and will return to her aunt’s, Mrs.
’Woodrow, and Miss Bessie Baker,
‘the latter part of this week. |
Mr. Widder Nichols, of Atlanta,
‘was stricken with paralysis a week
ago and is not expected to live. Mr.
Nichols is a brother-in-law of Mr.
Irwin Smith and Miss Janie Smith.
Mrs. James R. Brumby, Jr., en
tertained her bridge club Wednesday.
Those present besides the club mem
bers were Miss Sabine ‘Nichols, Mrs.
Edgar Nichols, and Mrs. Wellborn
Reynolds. '
Dr. Patton has decided not to take
his regular vacation this summer,
but will not conduct the evening
services for the next two months.
It is hoped that by then his health
will be fully recovered.
Mrs. C. T. Nolan complimented
Miss Nancy McGavock and Mrs. Ha
ger, of Max Meadows, Va., with a
luncheon Thursday inviting Mrs.
Hager, Miss Nancy McGavock, Mrs.
Alexander Irwin, Mrs. Claiborne,
Miss Margaret Camblos, Mrs. John'
S. Atkinson and Mrs. Herbert Hague.
A congenial swimming party wentl
in the pool Monday evening chaper
oned by Mrs. Brown. The pool was
reserved for the girls men being
barred for the evening. The party
was composed of Mrs. Henry Wyatt,
Jr., Misses Laura Margaret Hoppe,
Elizabeth Hague, Cora Brown, Lil
lian Dobbs and Elizabeth Anderson.
At the called meeting of the civie
league a committee was appointed to
meet with the mayor and council to
confer about the gift of four con
crete benches to the park by the
league. These substantial and per
manent seats will be a fine acquisi
tion to the park even if they are not
as beautiful or as picturesque as some
other kinds. i
Little Paul Lovejoy, Jr., wasi
christened at the Methodist Church
at six o’clock Sunday afternoon by
the Rev. Rembert Smith. The im
mediate family of Mrs. Lovejoy which
consisted of Mr. and Mrs. Lovejoy
and family, Mr. Burwell Atkinson,
who is in the officer’s training camp
it Fort McPherson, Lieutenant and
Mrs. John S. Atkinson and family,
Dr. and Mrs. C. T. Nolan and family,
and their cousins, Mr. and Mrs. Har
old Willingham, were present at the
christening.
Why A Young Man Going To
War Should Insure His Life
Why A Father Should Help Him Pay
‘ the Premiums:
Every young man’s life is of value to; Mother,
Father and Sister. The time comes in the life of
nearly every young man when he must help sup
port a dependent mother, father or sister.
If he ghould be killed in war,’ he is denied this
service to a loved parent. He can insure the value
of his life to a loved relative—Mother for instance
—for a $1,000.00 in the Equitable: It will pay his
mother an income of $lO.OO a month for NINE and
one-half years, total income paid on one Thousand
Dollars Insurance, $1,140.00. This may mean the
difference between want and hunger and inde
pendence later on. It will at least supply the nec
essities of life. He may lose his life in one year
and yet provide an income for a mother for ten
or twenty years.
If he is in service several years and does not
lose his life he has a valuable policy, well along
toward completion and at the,end of the period
he can if he desires receive back every dollar of
regular premium he has paid and more. The
Equitable protects: Over Fifty Years Old; Over
Half a Billion Dollars—SAFE. Drop a card to
’ SPECIAL
N. K. SMITH 007
Phone 391. Marietta, Ga.
and he will call and see vou.
| MANNING-OSLIN-HAYES REUN.
’ ; 10N.
The tenth annual reunion of the
Mannin-Oslin-Hayes families was
held in Grant Park on the ISth of
July with 150 members present. Two
(came from Texas, Mrs. Ocie Williams
and Mr. Lawrence Hayes. Mrs. Wil
liams has been away frony Marietta
30 years. Mrs. Kate Manning could
not attend on account of an indjs
position. Mrs. C. P. Stephens and
her daughter, Sara, Mr. Ed Manning,
of Nashville, Mrs. Bessie Carpenter
and Mr. J. W. Gaines and family
went from Marietta and from Smyr
'na Misses Estelle and Annie D. and
Messrs. Clarence and Eula Manning
attended. |
Rev. Fletcher Walton and Rev.
B. 8. Railey made talks and so ‘did
Mr. J. W. Gaines and Mr. W. F. Pa
tillo.
The officers elected were Mrs. An
na Johnson, of Atlanta, president,
Mr. J. W. Gaines, vice-president, Mrs.
J. M. Hilburn, secretary and treas
urer and Mrs. Clint Carpenter, his
‘torian,
~ As usual the first song was “Blest
Be the Tie that Binds” and the clos
ing one was “God Be With You Till
We Meet Again”. A delicious pic
nic dinner was served and a happy
day was spent by every one. Some
had not met in many years.
MRS. McCULLOCH’S BIRTHDAY.
Saturday was Mrs. E. M. McCul
loch’s eightieth birthday and her
daughter,. Mrs. Ben Wellons, of
Knoxville, who is visiting her insisted
that she spend the day with a friend
and during her absence baked a
birthday cake, iced it in pink and
white and put on it eighty tiny can
dles. When Mrs. McCulloch arriv
ed home she found awaiting her, Mrs.
Palmer Walthorn, Miss Mille McGlas
han, Mrs. Walter Brady, of Atlanta,
and Miss Nelle Avery, of Savannah.
The birthday cake was used as a
centerpiece for the table and the
color scheme of pink and white was
carried out in the decorations, pink
rhododendrons being the flower used
MISS WILLIAMS BIRTHDAY.
Theé 18th of July was Miss Lillie
Williams’ seventeenth birthday and
was celebrated with a merry evening
party.
After enjoying music and games
delicious refreshments were served.
" The guests were Misses Shaddow
and Hooper, of Atlanta, Martha Ac
kers, Cora Eubanks, Jamie Rohner,
Elizabeth Rohner, Helen Hall, Ruby
Wilson, Vashti Alexander, Walla
Nell Teems, Mary Williams, Messrs.
William Acker, Juddie Pair, Norris
Garrison, Howard Garrison, Grady
FEubanks, S. A. White, Clarence Roh
ner, Fred Rohner, Durant Barber,
Lowney Byrd, Harry Looney, Duard
Alexander, Sam Worley and Grady
Roberts.
Friday, July 27th.
Louise Huff and Jack Pickford
i X B
“FRECKLES”
Also Comedy
Saturday, July 28th.
Chapter 2 of “THE GRAY GHOST”
Comedy, “A ROYAL ROGUE” and MUTT and
JEFF CARTQON.
Monday, July 30t1.|.
FANNIE WARD
GCSRERY g an ‘
“UNCONQUERED”
And TRAVELOGUE.
Tuesday, July 31st. :
CHARLES RAY
ks LB
“THE MILLIONAIRE VAGRANT”
And COMEDY.
Wednesday, August Ist. By
WILLIAM S. HART
witiie B 8 ol
“WOLF LOWRY?”
And COMEDY.
Thursday, August 2nd.
ik B M i
“THE COMMON LAW”
All seats today 15 cents
FIRE INSURANCE
| THAT INSURES AND ENDURES
W. E. Schilling Fire Insurance Agency
Office with The Marietta Trust & Baaking Co.
SEEY Long Distance
L a Alv.vays Gets ;
>, PR Quick Attention
Dol “ v “I always answer
fé' g (;/// Long Dis.tance Tele
_4' /i A phone calis promptly.
g Usually it means prof
itable business or an opportunity to settle a
problem quickly and satisfactorily.
e
“When I talk to a man over .the Long
Distance Telephone it is like being face to
face with him. [ can inject my personality
into the matter and win his confidence with
out loss of time. | ‘
“The telephore, both Local and Long
Distance, plays an important part in our °
business. We have a Bell Telephone on 1
every desk and the time and traveling ex- ‘
penses we save make the cost of our serv- |
ice one of the most profitable investments.” !
Every Bell Telephone is a Long Distance Statiom, ]
SOUTHERN BELL TELEPHONE |
AND TELEGRAPH COMPANY
Page Five