The Marietta journal and courier. (Marietta, Ga.) 1909-1918, May 31, 1918, Image 1
The Marietta Tonrnal JOURNAL, ESTABLISHED 1866 Official Organ of Cobb County Georgia VOL. 52 SHAINERS BOOSTED \ Drive Was A Great Success More Than Was Hoped For Is Received Never in the history of the City of Marietta has more enthusiasm been shown than in the recent Red Cross Drive. The Bplendid organized ef forts of the Shriners and the work of the Red Cross members carried the collection in Marietta, on Thursday, to nearly $5,000. The quota for the county being $5,000, and all other branches thus far reported having made the full quota of collection ap portioned them, the county will make a splendid showing to go over the top. this collection will give the local pranches help towards the different lines of war work being done by them, a¢ one-fourth of the fund collected is returned to the chapter for the purchase of materials. Mr. Legg’'s Work The work done by Mr. Legg in the drive for the war fund has been all aud more than the county officers had expected when he was drafted for this work. With him it has been a labor of love and patriotism, and the marvelous results show how well the chapter selected the man for the job. In addition to the regular war fund drive work he has helped to or ganize several new branches, and it is to the number of branches in the county that the future of the work of the Red Cross will look for the carrying out of the various lines of great and good work planned by the Red Cross Society. Trinity Church Branch The latest branch to be organized was that at Trinity Church on last Sunday. The Marietta members go ing over for the purpose of assisting the very enthusiastic members to per fect their organization were Mrs. J. M. Graham, Miss Cortelyou, Mr. Dan iell, Mr. Legg, Mr. Graham, Mrs. Legg Miss Gober and Mr. Betty of the Army Y. M. C. A. The officers are as follows: Chairman, R. D. Bryant; Vice-Chairman, Miss Effie Howell; Secretary, Miss Mary Ruth White; Treasurer, Miss Lizzie May Howell; the other members enrolled on Sun day were Mrs. Will Howell, Mr. Will Howard, Mrs. Meggs, Mr. Charlie Howell, Miss Dora Coursey, Miss Re nie Pittman, C C. Baker, Mr. Robert Grove and Mrs. R. F. Strickler. New Members Smyrna reports four new members‘ for March and April, Mrs. W. A‘ Waddell, Miss Pauline Brinkley, Mrs. F. M. Delay, and Mrs. C. D. Timo thy. Blackwell reports seven new members for March and April, Mrs. R. A. McCollum, Miss Ida McCollum, Mis. Will Beavers, Mrs. Will Dunn, Mrs J T. Austin, Miss Agnes Kemp, and Miss Sarah Kemp, the last two named sent a donation of one dollar, each. Marietta reports Miss Ida Bray, Mrs. L. F. Gilbert, Miss Clara Gilbert, Mrs. W R Power, Mrs. Luth er Clayton, Mrs. H. S. Sauls, Mrs. Rembert Smith, Miss Georgia Hunt, Misses Allene Goodwin, Lucile Ses sions, Dorothy Stephens, Mary San ges, Mabel Thomas, Isabella Manning, Miriam Butler, Gertie Morris, Nellie Maddox. Colored Circles Marietta—Charity H. Pickens, Lu l2 Alexander, Cleve Pinckney, George (Gardner, Fannie Johnson, Lucy But ler, Jeff Robeson, Rachel Barr and Maggie Reid. Powder Springs—Walter Bracken, Edward Griffin, Charlie Sims, John Taylor, Carrie Miller, Georgia Lind ley, and Nath Radford. Honor Roll The pig donated by Mrs. John T. Dorsey on the day of the drive netted a large sum for the war fund, and created much amusement at the meet ing on Thursday evening. The two little goats donated by the Shriners were auctioned at a splendid profit, and it is prophesied that these goats will be treated as mascots in their new homes. The Shriners Band, no better band can be found, was not only generous with its musie but in a material way added te the collection made follow- Continued on page six : STATE HAS SLUMPED ON WAR SAVING STAMPS. Atlanta, Ga., May 30—The state of Georgia stands forty-sixth in the \sale of War Saving Stamps for the month of April, and stands forty eixt\ in the list of states for the sale of V&Saving Stamps up to May Ist, according to figures given out here by State Director, Hugh Richardson. This means that Georgia will have to smoke up tremendously to put over her quota of $57,500,000, which is more than half the Liberty Loan quo ta of the entire sixth federal reserve district, comprising six states. Peo ple have got the erroneous impression that War Saving Stamps are a-thrift scheme for children, while grownups are supposed to buy Liberty Bonds and let the stamps alone. This is a serious mistake which if not correct ed by the W. S. S. chairman in every county will ruin Georgia’s showing at the end of the year, when the final accounting is taken and the books are closed on the government’s first years business in War Saving Stamps. In order to put Georgia’s quota over, 6,000 mass meetings will be held in the 6,000 school houses of the state on June 28 for the purpose of secur img signed pledges to buy stipulated amounts regularly from now until the end of the year. The same plan will be followed throughout the country on the same day and at the same hour 2 o’clock in the afternoon. Georgia’s quota, like that of all other states, is based on $2O per capita of the pop ulation. This means that many men and women must buy more than $2O worth in the course of the year to make up for those who cannot or will not'buy any at all. PRAYER SERVICE IN THE PARK THURSDAY AT 6:30 All churches will combine and all the people of Marietta are asked to meet in the park square at 6:30 P. M. Thursday, where a shart prayer service will be observed. The various churches having sep arately observed the President’s pro clamation during the day, this joint service will be appropriate. WE HAVE TO DO IT After this paper we will be forced to cut off a few of our subscribers if not paid up. The law forbids mailing when more than a year in arrears, and we could not afford to send it anyway without pay. The rate is so low any one who wants the paper can afford to pay. MERCHANTS TO CLOSE ON WEDNESDAY AFTERNOONS. We the undersigned merchants a gree to close our places of business on each Wednesday at twelve noon for the balance of the day during the months of June, July and August. It is understood that should there be a rain on Tuesday or on Tuesday nlghs, and on Wednesday a lot of people in town that we are to remain open. T. L. Wallace Clothing Co. W. A. Florence Dry Goods Co. Benson Bros & Co, Dry Goods Dept., by W.L.Benson. J. D. Northcutt T. W. Read ; Deraney Bros. Smith & Potts S. Jabaley Joseph Deraney The Fair W. S. Kelly. MecClure Ten Cent Co. E. G. Gilbert Co. This arrangement will give these merchants a few hours holiday and in no way interfere with the service as soon as it is generally understood. We would therefore advise people not to come to town to trade on the afternoon of Wednesdays. JUDGE FRANK JENKINS WILL ADDRESS BARACA CLASSES. Next Sunday mornlng the Baraca Class of the First Baptist Sunday School will meet with the Wesley Ba raca Class at the First Methodist Church 2nd hear a brief address by Judge Frank Jenkins of the Court of Appeals. Judge Jenkins is very pop ‘ular in Marietta, and a record break ing crowd is expected to hear him. " Friends who are not members of the classe will also be cordially wel comed. The address willbegln at ten oclock promptly. AND COURIER MARIETTA, GA., FRIDAY MORNING, MAY 31, 1918. JUNE 5 MUST ALL Give This Publicity And Let There Be No Slackers In Cobb County Young man, you must register if you have reached your 21st birthday on or before June sth 1918. On June sth between seven in the morning and nine in the evening, all young men in Cobb county who have reached 21 since last June sth will be required to register with the local board at the Post Office Building in Marietta. No other registration place will be open in the county. Everybody knows how important this is now, and we give it all the pub licity possible, so that no one shall forget it on that day. Let no one plead ignorance of the law, which is no excuse anyway. America is awake today to the dan ger which confronts her, and the rest of the world, and what scemed to some a hardship a year ago, is today fully recognized as a patriotic duty. BUILD TINY ONE-MAN TANKS FOR USE IN FRANCE “Mosquito’”’ tanks, which essenti ally are diminutive replicas of the powerful armored land dreadnaughts used with great effect by the British on the western front, represent the latest type of fighting machine that ‘has been developed. These one-man ‘devices, illustrated in the June Popu lar Mechanics Magazine, mount three guns, and the controls are so arrang ed that the drive ean pilot the ma chine and keep the guns busy at the same time. MARKET BUREAU WILL HELP PCTATO SHIPPERS In the current market bulletin of the State Bureau of Markets atten tion is called to the fact that the har vesting and shipping season for Irish potatoes is near at hand. Growers in nearly every section of the state will soon be gathering their crop for market. In this connection, the de partment points out that it is vitally important that the crop should be properly harvested, graded and pack ed. Proper attention to all of these factors means better prices to the grower. The same rules apply to the harvesting and marketing of other truck crops. The bulletin carries an extensive list of Georgia growers who have new Irish potatoes for sale in large quan tities. A campaign has been con ducted urging the wide general use of the Irish potato as a food, and the food administration officials believe it will have some effect. Growers of Irish potatoes who are not familiar with the grading rules, should call on the State Bureau of Markets for this information. It will be furnished promptly upon request. NOTICE SINGERS. The Concord Union Singing will meetwith the Baptist Church at Or ange Hill the first Sunday in June. All leaders, singers and lovers of Gospel Songs are invited to come and spend the day.. D. C. Moon ' President. THE PATRIOTIC LEAGUE. The Patriotic League, which was organized here by Miss Overall of Atlanta, numbers about thirty mem bers now. .The officers are Miss Daisy White, President; Miss Ella Edwards, Secty; Miss Frances Baker,e Treasurer; and Miss Helen Griffin,Pub. Agent. The members completing the sur gical dressings course are; Misses Frances Baker, ‘Nita Chandler, Ora Chandler,Mary Frances Gilbert,Helen Griffin, Daisy White, Lois and Ava Welsh, and Mrs. Edgar Hamby. The League members have com pleted 75 surgical dressings, 14 pei ticoats and one dress for Belgian chil dren; 15 scrap books for wounded soldiers in hospitals. The. League extends & hearty invi tation to new members. The Proper Spirit and Great Interest Shown in the War Work On Saturday afternoon, the color ed people of Cobb county gave a very creditable and spectacular parade in Marietta. It was also a most patriotic one, the United States flag being in evi dence, nearly every person carried a small flag. The flags of our allies were also in the line. The parade was headed by drums followed by a colored Masonic Lodge, then a colored Odd Fellows Lodge and various lodge and church organiza tions, from all over the county, each with a patriotic banner of some sort. One float in the parade carried a representative of Columbia, and this was followed by a group of young women bearing between them a huge American flag. The colored Red Cross Circles were well represented by women in the uniform. A large number of school children were also in the line, bearing flags and patriotic banners, expressing loy alty to the government. Although the costumes were simple they were very ingenious and quite spectacular. Following the parade they marched into the Court House and held a Thrift Stamp meeting that was very enthusiastic and successful. The meeting was in charge of the colored chairman, Williams, and some short talks were also made by white friends, Mr. R. R. Claiborne, Mrs. George Montgomery, and M. L. Me- Neel, who have all been active in the work. The sale of stamps for the day amounted to more than $6OO. JUNIORS ENTERTAIN - SENIORS The banquet given to the Seniors by the Juniors of the Marietta High School, on Wednesday evening, was one of the most delightful affairs held here in a long time. The banquet was given at the Golf Club, which is an ideal place for such parties and it looked particularly pretty on this occasion. The three long tables were in the form of a double “T” and were all alight with silver and crystal, with attractively arranged decorations of Dorothy Per kins and Crimson Rambler roses. After the delicious five course ban quet was served, ‘“a feast of reason and a flow of soul” were indulged in. Professor Kinnaman, principal of the High School, was the toast master and a most entertaining and witty one he made, and some bright re sponses were made by both Seniors and Juniors. This was the first entertainment ever given here by the Juniors to the Seniors, but it is hoped that this ex cellent precedent will be followed by all the succeeding ones. The Seniors present were Misses Charlotte Law, Audrey Boatner, Ka therine Runyan, Augusta Cohen, Lu lu Kemp, Alice Gober, Fleta Black, Amilie Sewell, Louie Dean Stephens, and Messrs Archie Sessions, George Anderson, Onslow Milam, Dallas Os born, ¢ Edwin Sage, Randolph Sim monds, and James Smith, while their hosts were Misses Helen Faw, Kath erine Galley, Dorothy Lewis, Ruth Mc Culloch, Mary Nash, Elizabeth Nolan, Nancy Lee Polloch, Gertrude Reed, Thelma Rickenbaker, Blanche Rice, Muriel Williams, Rebecca Cole, Eliza beth Smith, Myrtie Mae Fowler, Lois Dobbs, Myrtle Dodd, Irma Dobbs, Gertrude Kincaid, Katherine Bishop, Wilma Butler, and Messrs S. A. Con nor, Wallace Montgomery, and J. R. Criggs. The members of the faculty pre sent were Miss Georgia Hunt, Dr. Kinnaman, Mr. Guthrie, and Mr. Lee. “All Germany asks is a place in the sun” says one of her leaders. We are willing to give her a hotter place than the sun. IE_YOU WANT TO BUY OR SELL, USE JOURNAL WANT ADS. FIELD PEAS URGED AS AN ARMY RATION Atlanta, Ga., May 30-—ln view of the large amount of field or cow peas beld by the farmers of Georgia, the State Bureau of Markets, of the Ge orgia Department of Agriculture, has just addressed an urgent letter to the subsistence division of the war De partment at Washington, urging the use of this valuable and nutritious product as a part of the army ration. It is pointed out that thousands of soldiers who were regular consumers of these field peas, have gone into the army and are now deprived of a food to which they were long accustomed, since the army furnishes only a white bean commonly called the navy bean. For this white bean the govern ment pays around 12 cents a pound, while the well known Georgia field pea can be had at about 5 cents a pound. The market bureau’s letter quotes figures to show that the field pea is of higher nutritious value than the navy bean. It is richer both in pro tein, carbohydrates and fat, the three essential food elements. - While the navy bean shows a total of 71.9 per cent digestible food matter, the cow pea shows 76.4 per cent and it is also much more easily prepared for con sumption. While it is impossible to state ac curately just what quantity of field peas are now being held, the bureau states it is within the bounds of rea son to estimate it at ‘around twenty five million pounds. The use of these field peas as an army ration would give the govern ment a better food value at the cost of less than fifty per cent of that of navy beans and would, at the same time, save the farmer a loss of many hundreds of thousands of dollars. A further good effect of such action would be to encourage the south to continue the planting of food crops. The department has been asked to give the matter immediate attention as the situation is growing very se rious. METHODISTS WILL RAISE BIG SUM FOR MISSIONS The recent General Conference of the Southern Methodist Episcopal Church, which was held in Atlanta, Georgia, gave its full approval to the Centenary of Missions Movement, which proposes to raise $35,000,000 in the next five years for home and foreign missions, church extension, and war work. Laymen in all sec tions of the south are enthusiastic regarding the measure and the lead ers in the great movement are san guine of success. GOES TO GRAND LODGE Mr. J. H. Groves is one of the rep resentatives of the Odd Fellows of Georgia to the Grand Soverign Lodge of Odd Fellows, which meets at St. Louis, next September. There are three others from this state: J. E. Bodenhamer, of Decatur; Homer Ash ley, of Atlanta; and H. R. McClatch ey, of Rome. Mr. Groves was in attedance of the state Grand Lodge, in Atlanta, last week. SPECIFIC ADDRESS NOW FOR THE SOLDIERS’ MAIL In the future mail for the Regular Army, the National Army, or the Na tional Guard, will not be dispatched unless it is specifically addressed to company and regiment or other mil itary unit. Avoid delay to your letters by us ing full and plain address. CARD OF THANKS I want to thank the good people of Cobb County for the very generous support they have just given to the American Red Cross Second War Fund by subscribing about $B,OOO in money and pledges, in addition to their unstinted labor, which they so willingly gave. I will give 2 more detailed account in next week‘s papers. Yours to help win the war, J. W. Legg Chapter War Fund Chairman 2nd Red Cross War Fund. P. S. You will find your pledge cards at Hodges Drug Store. Please call and pay them. J. W. Legeg. COURIER, ESTABLISHED 1901 Official Organ of the City of Marietta Sixteen are Graduated from Marietta High School Last Week High School Distinctions. Archie Drake Sessions, first honor; George Anderson and Dallas Osborn, second honor. In the District Meet. : Louie Dean Stephens, first place in Music; J. E. Sage,ssecond place in Declamation; James Smith, third place in Boys Essay; Helen Faw, first place in Girls Essay; Geo. Anderson, first place in Boy‘s Spel ling. To the Marietta High School, The Literary Cup. Perfect attendance. Ist Grade A. Eugene Beshers. 2nd Grade A, J. H. Galt. 2nd Grade B, Georgia Shaw. 3rd Grade A, Carroll Dobbs. 4th Grade B, Addie Maddox. Hsth Grade A, Lottie Mitchell and Robert Benson. : sth Grade B, Louise Land and Douglass Northcutt. 6th Grade B, Annie Laurie Benson and Willie Mae Gibson. 7th Grade A, Lorena Conyers. 7th Grade B,.Robert Fowler and Eldridge Williams. Ist Class High Schol, Gober Os borne and Frances Brown. * 2nd Class, H. S. Nellie Maddox. 3rd Class, H. S. James Smith. History Prizes. The D. A. R. prize for the best rec ord in United States History for the year, John Robert Fowler. U. D. C. prize for the best record in Georgia History in the 6th Grade for the year, Robert Gilbert and to Sue Nichols, Honorable Mention. Thrift Stamp Prizes. M. L. McNeel prizes for the great est sales or purchases of Thrift Stamps by any grade, First prize to 7th Grade B, $1240.29, Second to 2nd Grade A, $316.02, Spelling Prizes. Prizes offered by Mr. T. A. Gram ling. The following were perfect in spell for the year: 2nd Grade A, Martha Johnson Gramling, Rachel Galley, | Luther Eenson, Bond Carswell. 2nd Grade B, Mary Hodgesand Mary Frances Cheney. sth Grade B, Max Pavlovsky. 7th Grade A. Sara Francis North cutt. 7th Grade B, Emmaline Hamby. The commencement exercises all passed off pleasantly as planned and outlined in program published last week. The School Annual is one of beau ty and of unusual preportions for a school in towns the size of Marietta. To the faithful teachers, the young graduates, and the pupils of the low er grades, we extend the best wishes for the future. METHODIST CHURCH The Holy Sacrament will be ad ministered at the 11 o’clock service at the Methodist Church on Sunday morning. The children of the Sun day School will remain for it, as usual and the parents are urged to come and take part with their children. U. D. Cs. CELEBRATE DAVIS’ BIRTHDAY The U. D. Cs. will celebrate the birthday of Jefferson Davis on next Tuesday afternoon at the residence of Mrs. Tom Florence on Henderson Street, at 3 o’clock. All of the old veterans are urged to be present and the U. D. Cs. will be the guests of honor. , PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH NEWS The Presbyterian Sunday School is to have a service flag soon. Prayer service was held in the church at 7 o’clock on Thursday morning with a good attendance. The usual Sunday services will be held and your pastor will be cheered by your presence. Remember the Community League service Sunday night _ NO. 22