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PAGE TWO
~Society Home Making Milady’s
Mrs. G. H. Johnson To Entertain
WILL BE HOSTESS TO MEMBERS OF LADIES’ AID OB' 1
PORT SOCIETY AT COUNTRY HOME.
Tomorrow Mr.s G. H. Johnson will
be hostess to- the Ladies’ Aid of the
Port Society at her country, home,
with a spend-the-day party.
The guests will assemble at the
home of Mrs. Johnson on Oglethorpe
Avenue at 10 o’clock will motor out
to the country together, returning to
the city in the late afternoon.
Mrs. Johnson is president of the
society and the other officers are:
Mrs. W. O. Hicks, vice president;
Mrs. Peter Schafer, second vice pres
ident; Mrs. John Ralston, secretary;
Mrs. J. G. Kitchell, corresponding
secretary; Mrs. J. W. O. Sterly, treas
urer.
The guests for the day include
the officers named above and the
members, who are as folows: Rev.
and Mrs. Alfred Shelley, Mrs. E. A.
Smith, Miss Ana McNeil, Mrs. John
Cabell, Mrs. E. W. Cubbedge, Mrs. C.
G. Laird, Mrs. W. T. Belford, Mrs.
Paul Dewberry, Mrs. Victor Lewis,
Mrs. J. C. Lewis, Mrs. John J. Cor
nell, Mrs. B. P. Bullard, Mrs. W. T.
Walker, Mrs. Frank Sloat, Mrs. Rob
ert Perrin, Mrs. J. M. Capellan, Mrs.
Miss Betty Hunt Announces
Plans For*Wedding Saturday
Wide social interest centers in the
announcement made today cA the
wedding plans of Miss Betty Hunt,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George
Wellington Hunt and Albert Willard
Burts of MJacon, Ga.
The ceremony will take place Sat
urday, June 6, in the St. Paul’s Lu
theran church at 4 o'clock, the Rev.
H. J. Black will officiate.
Miss Hunt will have as her maid of
honor, Miss Inez Barthelmess and
her two bridesmaids will be, Miss
Betty Allen of Newark, N. J., and
Miss Elizabeth Guest. Mr. Burts’ best
man will be his brother, Theron Burts,
and the ushers will be, George W.
Barthelmrss and Hubert Lovein of
Macon, Ga. The groomsmen will be
Theron Burts, Jr., and Ransom Burts
of Hartwell, Ga.
Immediately following the wedding,
Mr. and Mrs. Hunt will entertain
with a reception at their home on
East, 36th street.
Numerous parties have been given
Miss Hunt and this afternoon Miss
Elizabeth Guest is complimenting this
popular bride-elect with a bridge
party at her home on East Forty-
Eighth street.
In the living rooms are a profusion
of garden flowers and an attractive
arrangement has been uasd in the
decorations to carry cut the color
motif of pink and green.
Invited to meet Miss Hunt are Miss
LouiZe McLeod, Miss Mary Baldwin,
Mln Elizabeth Baldwin, Miss Anne
Blount, Mrs. John C. Byler. Miss
Betty Allen, Mrs. Thuron Burts, Miss
Claire Stillwell, Mrs. C. M. Jones,
Mrs. Robert Lovett, Miss Virginia
McCall, Mrs. George Hunt, Mrs. H.
B. Stanton, Miss Laßruce Ulmer,
Mrs. J. D. Rlsher, Miss Emily Guest,
and Mrs. Edgar P. Eyler.
Tomorrow evening Miss Laßruce
Quality Furniture
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I SEVERAL ODD NEW VANITIES, DRESSERS AND
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SPOT CHAIRS, $3.95 SPOT ROCKERS, $4.95
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PHONE 4611 118 WEST BROAD STREET PHONE 4430
i J. A. Ward, Mrs. L. A. Falligant,
: Mrs. Frank Teeples, Mrs. L. E. S?a
, ward, Mrs. James Smith, Mrs. John
Paulsen, Mrs. Otto Seller, Mrs. W.
> A. Eyler, Mrs. H. O. Smith, Miss
! Annie Hesse, Mrs. A. C. Lee, Mrs. W.
) B. Morrison, Mrs. C. C. Paccettl, Mrs.
) J. C. Slater, Mrs. Charles Ehlers,
Mrs. E. E. Auerback, Mrs. Nellie
> Gnann, Mrs. E. E. Heidt, Mrs. H. Grif
fin, Mrs. J. H. Heery, Mrs. G. A.
Wolffe, Jr., Mrs. Vincent Rose, Mrs.
• Maud Cox, Mrs. R. J. Knight, Mrs.
; D. U. Schofield, Mrs. E. J. Bowman,
! Mrs. G. A. Sanders, Mrs. W. S. San-
• ders, Mrs. J. C. Harsh, Miss Daisy
Wilett, Miss Alice Bouleneau, Mrs.
! Sam Oppenheim, Mrs. Rumph, Mrs.
• S. E. Thompson, Mrs. V. M. Dryman,
. Mrs. G. T. Mallard, Mrs. G. H. Rich
. ter, Mrs. J. G. Kitchell, Mrs. J. L.
i Stonebridge, Mrs. Fred Beach, Mrs.
. H. F. Schuster, Mrs. R. P. Marsh,
. Mrs. B. K. Armstrong, Mrs. H. S.
, Dreese, Mrs. Frank George. Mrs. C.
D. Elis, Mrs. M. J. Soutter, Mrs. Fred
. Howard, Mrs. A. Bridger, Miss Dollie
• Kennedy, Mrs. Louis Ambos. Miss
. Georgia Sack and Mrs. J. M. Ralston.
Ulmer will entertain with a bridge
party for Miss Hunt and the guests
will include a few close friends.
Friday evening after the wedding
rehearsal, Mr. and Mrs. George
Barthelmess will entertain the mem
bers of the wedding party at their
home at Tybee.
Meetings
' Tomorrow
The Savannah W. C. T. U. will
meet tomorrow afternoon at the Bull
Street Baptist Church at four o'clock.
• • «
Pythian Sisters, Franklin Temple
No. 2 will meet tomorrow evening at
eight o’clock at the K. of P. Hall
• * *
A Father's night program will be
given tomorrow evening at eight o’-
clock at The Massie Street School.
Prior to the meeting the school will
open at seven o’clock to enable the
parents to inspect the exhibition of
work done by the pupils during the
year.
SALAD SALES
The Theta, Gamma club of Girl Re
serves will give a salad sal- Satur
day. Anyone wishing salad is asked
to call Mrs. Harold Hotte, advisor of
the club or Miss Christine Crawford,
president.
• • •
The C. I. C. Philathea class of
Trinity Baptist church will have a
salad sale on Saturday. Those desir
ing to purchase salad are asked to
see any member of the class or call
Mrs. J. M. Blakewood, chairman of
the oommitte, 2-3740.
BRIDGE PARTY TODAY FOR
BRIDE-ELECT, MISS
ELSIE KUCK
Among delightful affairs of this aft
ernoon will b? the bridge party with
which Mrs. Norman Berninger of
Allentown, Pa., is complimenting Miss
Elsie Kuck, bride-elect.
The party will be given at the
home of Mrs. Mabel Chew on East
Forty-First street at 4 o'clock.
The tea table covered with a white
Irish linen cloth, has been attractive
ly arranged with a crystal bowl of
pink rosebuds, flanked on either
side by small crystal vases filled with
rosebuds.
Miss Kuck will be presented with
a sandwich tray and the prize for
the high score will be a coffee pot.
Both the sandwich tray and the cof
fee pot are of an unusual kind of
china called Fiesta. The second and
consolation prizes are linen guest
towels.
The guests will include, besides the
guest of honor Miss Elizabeth Beggs,
Mrs. Edwin N. Maner, Miss Mary
Harms, Mrs. Lindsey P. Henderson,
Mrs. Carl W. Seiler. Miss Mary Eyler,
Miss Juanita Graham and Mrs. H.
H. Kuck, Sr.
Tomorrow morning Mrs. Fred Wes
sels, Sr., and Mrs. Fred Wessels, Jr.,
will entertain for Miss Kuck with a
bridge-luncheon at the Hotel General
Oglethorpe. The guests will motor
down to the hotel about 11 for bridge,
after which luncheon will be served.
The guests will include, besides
Miss Kuck. Miss Virginia McCall,
Miss Christine Dillard, Miss Mary
Harms, Miss Annie Kuck, Misses So
phie and Meta Asendorf, Mrs. John
Paulsen, Mrs. J. H. Harrison, Mrs.
Joseph Booker, Mrs. J. H. Paulsen,
Mrs. Harry Kaufmann, Mrs. Grover
Paulsen, Mrs. F. H. Quante, Mrs. W.
B. Clarke, Mrs. Norman Sensinger,
Mrs. Carl W. Seiler, Mrs. Robert
Thompson, Mrs. E. A. M. Schroeder,
Mrs. Linc'sey P. Henderson, Mrs. C.
H- Schafer, and Mrs. H. H. Kuck
Yesterday afternoon Mrs Carl W.
Seller entertained for Miss Kuck with
a lovely bridge party in the Georgian
Tea room at the Pink House.
The guest of honor was presented
with several pieces of her chosen din
ner set. The prize for the high score,
a crystal smoking set, was won by
Mrs. Lindsey P. Henderson, and hors
d'oeuvres dishes were won by Mrs.
Norman Sensinger, who was second
high and Mirs. Robert Thomson, who
cut the consolation.
SOCIETY BRIEFS
Mr. and Mrs. R- L. Moorehead of
Macon will arrive Friday to attend
the Hunt-Burta wedding on Saturday.
• • *
Mrs. Charles Mac Lean and Miss
Betty Mac Lean will go to Atlanta to
day to visit Mrs. Maclean's mother,
Mrs. St. Elmo Massengale, for a short
time.
* •
Mr. and Mrs. John W. Oarawell and
family are spending some time at
Savannah beach.
• • •
Mr. and Mrs. D. M. Mcßae will ar
rive Friday to attend the Hunt-Burts
wedding on Saturday.
Mrs. Norman Sensinger of Allen
town, Pa., has arrived to attend the
SAVANNAH DAILY TIMES, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 3, 1936
| Affairs Os Tonight |
The Opera club will hold their an
nual meeting this evening at the
studio of Mrs. E. E. Hackn'y, 810
Drayton street.
The Opera study will be presented
by Mrs. Marshall Morgan, pianist and
Miss Phoebe Elliott, reader. The opera
will be “Linda di Chamounix” (Done
z.tti). Current events will be given
by Miss Joy Mendes and Mrs. Mongin
Nichols. Election of officers will be
held.
• • •
The American Legion auxiliary to
Post 135 will hold their regular meet
ing tomorrow evening at the Hotel
Savannah at 8:30 o’clock.
• ♦ •
The Pape school will hold its com
mencement exercises this evening at
the Lawton Memorial at 8:30 o’clock.
The girls who will receive their di
plomas are: college preparatory.
Miss Mary Garrard, Miss Nedra
Marlene Householder, Miss Rose Lu
cille MacDonell and ML : s Elizabeth
Mercer; classical, Miss Marjory Hey
ward and Miss Jeanne Spencer: gen
eral, Miss Annette Bull, Miss Evelyn
Byrd Fagan, Miss Barbara Gilchrist
and Mi'-s Elsie Gnann.
ST. VINCENT’S ACADEMY
TO GIVE DIPLOMAS
THIS AFTERNOON
The St. Vincent's Academy will
present their graduating exercises this
afternson at five o’clock at the Cath
edral of St. John the Baptist. His ex
cellency, Most Reverend Gerald P.
O’Hara, will preside and confer the
diplomas.
The graduating class has been the
recipient of many delightful parties
during the past few weetss.
Those who will graduate this after
noon are Miss Mary Best. Miss
Helen Infz Brennan, Miss Julia Ann
Cleary, Miss Margaret Mary Cron
in, Miss Mary Jane Fahey, Miss Essie
Teresa Fountain, Miss Mary Drew
Freeman, Miss Mary Bernard Goette,
Miss Helen Marie Jackson. Miss Kath
erine O'Connor Kelly, Miss Frances
Brandon Kilroy, Miss Ann Frances
McDonald, Miss Helen Mary Oetgen,
Miss Gertrude L. Russell, Miss Cecelia
Magdalen Smith and Miss Mary Oe
terholtz.
PERSONAL
Mrs. Wilbur Murray of Miami,
Fla., who was a patient in the Tel
fair hospital has returned to her fa
ther’s apart m-nt, Col. R. Lee Wylly,
in the Graham.
• • •
Mrs. R. J. Ellis and young son have
returned to their home from the St.
Joseph’s hospital.
Kuck-Bailey wedding on the 18th.
Mr. and Mrs. Lowry Axley have
moved to their new home, 210 East
Forty-Ninth street.
• • •
Mr. and Mfrs. Lindsey P Henderson
have moved to 327 East Fifty-First
street.
«- • • •
Mr and Mrs. G. Arthur Gordon
and Miss Peggy Gordon are spending
several weeks at Savannah Beach.
FACTORS IN
DECAY OF TEETH
DENTAL CARIES CAUSED
BY IVORIES’ NATURE,
DIRT OR DIET
By LOGAN GLENDENING, M. D.
“A clean tooth does not decay’’—
such was the slogan of a previous gen
eration, as announced by J. Leon
Williams
In that era, the starches and jweets
were supposed to be the greatest ene
mies of sound teeth. It was shortly
after the discovery of bacteria that
Miller, in 1881, showed that bacteria
are present in all mouths in enor
mous numbers, and that they grow
upon residues of starch and sugar in
the teeth crevices to produce lactic
acid, and that even dilute acid tends
to decalcify the tooth enamel.
This was for a long time believed
to be the only factor in tooth decay.
With the universal practice of tooth
brushing and use of dentifrices, the
day was visualized when no tooth
decay would exist.
But this happy dream faded. Caries
continued to occur, even in those
who observed the most scrupulous
care over their dental toilet.
Some Able to Resist
Apparently some teeth were able
to resist all the destruettev factors
of lactic acid decalcification.
As in agriculture, the ground is
just as important *s the seed in pro
ducing a crop.
What influenced the resistance of
the tooth to invasion was _x>inted out
in 1918 by Mrs. Me Ilan by, an Eng
lish research worker. She was able
to produce at will, sound or un
sound teeth of any grade in dogs by
varying the diet.
The structure of the surface of
teeth is an important factor in denial
caries. “In general.” wrote Mirs. Mel
lanby, ‘the rougher the surface
enamel and the more interglobular
spaces in the dentin?, the greater
the liability of the tooth to become
oariout.”
The structure of teeth must neces
sarily depend upon the mineral of
which they are formed. These are
largely calcium and phosphrous. But
it depends also on the utilization of
these minerals by the cells of the
tooth to build a strong structure.
Calcium and phosphorus supply is
depen-lent on the diet, and their utili
zation depends upon the presence of
Vitamin D, also obtainable in the diet.
Vitamin D can, of course, be formed
bj the body itself by the action of
sunshine. The parathyroid glands also
play a part.
Calcium, phosphorus and Vitamin
D are most easily obtained in cod
liver oil or irradiated milk.
Dietary Factor Proved
. The study of isolated communities
of mankind, where good teeth are
the rule, tends to confirm this belief
in the Importance of the dietary fac
tor in tooth health. The inhabitants
of the Westren Hebrides in Scotland
are distinguished by their fine teeth.
They eat fish, oatmeal, milk; a favor
ite dish is baked codfish head, stuffed
with chopped cod Mvers and oatmeal.
The cod livers are, as is well known,
“War Veterans”
AS YOU KNOW
Experience Is the Best Teacher
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Lillian Duval, of Georgia, the Broadway night club singer,
whose reputed engagement to Paul Curley, the young son of
Governor Curley of Massachusetts has caused a furor of interest
throughout the East, can be remembered as the sister of W. W.
Phillips, of Swainsboro. Leaving this section with the avowed
intention of going to the ‘Great White Way’ and making good,
Miss Duval has achieved her ambition and is performing in
leading night clubs along the world’s “greatest street.” Miss
Duval said the reason for her not saying “yes” to the young scion
of one of the leading families of the East, was that “he hasn’t
a. job and very little money.”
rich in Vitamin D. Such a diet con
tains twice as much calcium and
phosphorus as ian average diet else
where. The African natives of Kenya
and Johannesburg have good teeth,
because from earliest infancy they
wear little or no clothes.
The importance of coarse foods to
cleanse and harden teeth, mentioned
yesterday, has been largely nullified
by the general use of dentifrices and
tooth brushes.
While the dietart factors are ad
mittedly important in tooth health,
it will not do to ignore infection al
together, and tooth cleanliness should
still be emphasized.
QUESTIONS FROM READERS
F. S.: "Plcaise tell me wftit causes
granulated eyelids?”
Answer: Granulated' 7 eyefis ■* are
due to infection. The common form
may be the result of astigmatism or
improperly fitted glasses, the use of
which causes eyes to itch and hence
are rubbed by dirty hands, which
brings the infection there. A spe
cific form of granulated eyelid,
known as “trachoma.” is much
more serious epidemic disease.
Sally’s Sallies
\-(M’
Jr
My Sis is so dumb she thinks a corkscrew
is the key to a revolving door.
operation. Opens automatically at a touch of the
moderp Touch-Open Doorman.
Press the button and Conservador opens—giving
easy access to the Main Food Compartment with:
Adjustable Shelves Automatic Electric Light —<
and finned evaporator unit with eleven-point tem
perature selector.
FIANCE, JEALOUS,
SAYS SWEETHEART
‘CHEATS’ ON HIM
STATE CONVENTION
FOR REPUBLICANS
By VIRGINIA UEE
“Dear Miss Lee: I love him and I
know he is genuinely in love with
me. But he is very suspicious and
jealous for no reason at all.
“Although I repeatedly tell him
he’s the ‘only one/ and that I do not
go out with other men, he doesn't
believe me, but accuses me of ‘step
ping out’ when Im not with him. I
see him five n'ghts a week—the oth
er two I’m home. He calls me up
when I’m in and tells me he just
KNOWS I’m going out with someone
when he hangs up—which is abso
lutely unlive. ’
“If I inavertently say something
that he doesn’t like, he won:t say
anything about it, but in his mind
he will twist it around until he ccr
verts it into something—anything.
Only after much coaxing on my pan
will he tell me what it was that 1
said that troubled him, and then it’s
some meaningless, insignificant thing.
“I wouldn’t mind his being jealous
if there were a cause for it. But to
become jealous and suspicious of ab
solutely nothing doesn’t make sense
to me.
“After I’ve proven to him that he
has no cause to entertain suspicious
thoughts, he becomes very apologetic
and promises ‘it will never happen
again,’ but it does.
“I hold a good position. His work
is not steady. He’s afraid of losing
me because he can’t give me the
‘things I’m acustomed to.’ I’ve asked
for nothing. I’m willing to wait un
til he secures a steady position. I’ve
assured him he won’t lose me due
to his inability to give me ‘luxuries.’
“DOLORES.”
It would be interesting to know
how many of this young man’s pecu
liarities are natural and how many
are caused by economic insecurity
and social frustrations. If he natu
rally is as jealous and suspicious as
his fiancee states, he certainly would
never make z any woman a good hus
band. Her days would be spent in
trying to prove that the milkman,
iceman.., grocer and insurance agent
as well as all male friends mean
nothing to her; and that what she
said day before yesterday and forgot
had no sinister meaning. It would
be hideous.
It may be that with a position
which he feels is steady, and a happy
home with the girl he loves he will ‘
have a feeling of security so that he
will be able to overcome these very
undesirable tendencies. As you love
him Dolores, maybe you will want td
take a chance. Possibly if he sees
this in print he will realize, as he
probably does not now, what mean
traits he has developed, and make a
very earnest effort to overcome them.
That is your only hope, I am afraid.
If he keeps on in his present irra
tlonal way he will ruin his own life
and yours too.