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MISSIONARY CIRCLE
MEETING
The circles of the Mssionary So
ciety of Wesleyan Monumental church
will meet this week as follows:
No. 1, Mrs. Exley, leader; Monday
at 4 p.m., with Mrs. J. Tom Wood,
1004 Seiler avenue; No. 2, Mrs. Saf
fold, leader, Monday at 4 p.m„ with
Miss Estelle Pease, 630 East Thirty-
Sixth street; No. 3, Mrs. Wilson, lead
er, will not meet this month; No. 4,
Mrs. Golson, leader, has been In
definitely postponed; No. 5, Mrs. Mc-
Neal, leader, Monday at 4 o’clock,
with Mrs. N. B. F. Close, 221 West
Thirty-Sixth street; No. 6, Mrs; Mc-
Watty, leader, Friday at 10:30 o’clock,
with Mrs. Harold Murray at Tybee;
No. 7, Mrs. Addie Mae Jackson, lead
er, Friday at 10:30 o’clock with Mrs.
Porter Barnes, 18 East Fifty-Fourth
street.
The Business Woman's circle will
meet Tuesday evening at 8:15 o'clock
with Mrs. O. W. Groover, 111 East
Jones street.
The Mittie Lucas Edwards circle
will meet on Tybrisa pavilion Monday
about 12 noon-
• * •
Circles of the Women's Missionary
society of Calvary Baptist church will
meet Monday afternoon at 4 o’clock
in the church annex. The Ida Cars
well afternoon circle will meet Tues
day afternoon at 4 o’clock at the
home of Mrs. Page, 1016 East Thirty-
Third street, and the evening circle
will meet Tuesday evening at 8
o’clock with Mrs. C. W. Lowe, 1101
Ott street.
♦ • •
The circles of the Missionary so
ciety of Grace Methodist church will
hold their circle meetings on Tues
day afternoon at 4 o’clock as follows:
No. 1, Mrs. W. E. Brown, leader,
with Mrs. R. C. Kessler, Montgom
ery cross road. No. 2, Mrs. J. W. Hull,
leader, with Mrs. W. D. Hutchins,
1317 East Henry street. No. 3, Mrs.
H. E. Blackwelder, leader, will meet
at the church. No. 4, Mrs. E. H.
Strickland, leader, will meet at the
Church. No. 5, Mrs. W. B’. Swinny,
leader, with Mrs. S. H. Adams, 214
West Park avenue. No. 6, Mrs. H.
M. Dixon, leader, with Mrs. R- S.
Cabines, 702 Jlast Forty-Ninth street.
Young women, Mrs. O. Prince
Ayers, leader, with Miss Margaret
Pate, 539 E. Waldburg street, Monday
afternoon at 4 o’clock.
Business women, Mrs. J. W. Guill,
leader, with Mrs. Minnie Mingledorff,
316 West Waldburg street, Monday
night at 8 o’clock.
• ♦ ♦
The Effie White Circle <V the First
Baptist church will meet Tuesday for
an all-day meeting, from 11 to 4
o'clock at the home of Mrs. William
M. Roberta on the Montgomery road.
• ♦ ♦
The Woman’s Missionary society of
the Bull Street Baptist church will
have a business meeting Monday aft
ernoon at 4 o'clock at tha church. An
intersting program wil Ibe given at
this tme.
• * •
The Woman’s Missionary Society of
Epworth Methodist church will meet
Monday afternoon at 4 o’clock at the
church.
ALLEGED TRIGGER-MAN
TO FACE CIVIL COURT
DETROIT, Mich., July 4 (TP)—
The Black Legion trigger man, Day
ton Dean, must face a third court
hearing in August.
He has already confessed the fatal
shooting of a legion torture victim,
Charles Poole, and to leading the
night-riders’ in some of their out
rages.
Ab the August trial he will battle
for custody of his two children, Ge
neva, 13, and Robert, 12.
Dean’s divorced wife, Mrs. Marlon
McKelvey, has filed suit for the chil
dren’s custody. Mrs. McKelvey now
lives at Greenwich, Conn.
IW
fc P 4 '. Its -/ - *»■ i
YOUR EYES
THE ONLY TWO YOU
WILL EVER HAVE
111 Are They Really
MFit For the Hard
Work of Summer
Play?
> ‘ ‘ At this time of the year the call
! j * of the open is in the air—it’s
I < I vacation time —but there’s no rest
————for y OU r eyes in their battle with
Oculist Prescrip- the dreaded glare of summer’s
Wil j th blazing sun. So we say fit your
tions Filled —lt S eyes f or their work that you may
Ea-sv to Pav enjoy F°ur play. ACT NOW—DE-
J J LAYS ARE COSTLY.
Friedman Way
4 DR. F. B. RABURN~ OPTOMETRIST
2 LOCATED AT
I FRIEDMANS’ JEWELERS I
ft 25 Broughton, West, 2nd Door From Whitaker
Stores Savannah, Augusta, Brunswick, Ga.. Columbia, S. C.
VISITING IN MACON
—Photo by Rich.
MISS ANNE GORIN, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. J. W. Gorin, who left on Friday to be
the guest of Miss Stevens Dessau in Macon for some time.
MARTINI'S CAFE IS
JUST A MEMORY
FAMED LANDMARK HAS
SERVED ITS LAST
CUSTOMER
MILWAUKEE Wis., July 4 (TP)
The famous Martini’s Case opened its
doors to the public for the last time
today. The case was frequented by
prominent persons for 50 years.
The case’s owner 71-year-old Theo
dore Lautenbach, said that his res
taurant is financially sound, but he
wishes to retire. Lautenbach said he
is too attached to the famous case
to permit its operation under any
other management.
Many were the famous visitors from
all over the world who dined in the
old restaurant. The brother of Kaiser
Wilhelm, Prince Henry of Prussia,
sipped chocolate in Martini’s 25 years
ago. The composer of the opera,
“CavaJlerla Rusticana,” Pietro Mas
cagni, was a frequent visitor.
‘ Tc’'!"’’.!:,'’ ."'H T-aiitenbaeh. “Mar-
tini’s Case will be no more.” The fur- '
nishings will be sold, leaving an em
pty building steeped in the memories |
of the past.
PATROL BOAT SPEEDS
TO AID OF SCHOONER
GLOUCESTER, Mass., July 4 (TP)
—The coastguard patrol boat Harriet t
Lane swept out of Gloucester this
Another Costume for Etta
ETTA KETT CUT-OUT—NUMBER TWO
JU- ■
zf V"'
/ I
COPYRIGHT, 1936, CENTRAL PRESS ASSOCIATION
JUST AS we promised yesterday here is another dress for Etta
Kett’s wardrobe. Cut out this costume and try it on the cut-out
paper doll which we published yesterday. ,
Two more costumes will appear tomorrow. Look for them in to
morrow’s
SAVANNAH DAILY TIMES, SUNDAY, JULY 5. 1936
afternoon enroute to the side of the
; stricken fishing schooner “Bernice.”
The schooner asked for assistance
through the Pollack Rip lightship,
approximately 10 miles off Chatham,
Mass. She reported that she had
I lost her propellor. The “Harriet
Lane” will reach the “Bernice” early
this evening. “The Bernice” is out
iof Vineyard Haven, Mass. She car
ries a crew of three.
MILK OF TODAY
IS ‘CLEANED’ BY
MODERN MEANS
By LOGAN CLENDENING, M. D.
THE MOST important food for man
is milk. This is true for any age but
espscially as the extremes of life.
In summer, milk used to be quite
a -problem. Because it is a good food
for germs too. Most of the Infantile
deaths of former years were due to
such contaminated milk. And the
saving in this death is due to our
modern improvements in the hand
ling and preparation of milk.
The first campaign for clean milk
was the outgrowth of a temperance
movement. In 1835, Robert M. Hart
ley, secretary of the New York City
Temperance society, was thrown into
a frenzy of indignation by finding
that distillers of whiskey were selling
mash to dairymen for use in feeding
cattle. This distillery slop produced
a good flow of milk, but it was an
acid milk. The cows were, with few
exceptions, unable to survive more
than nine months on this food.
An investigation of what Mr. Hart
ley dubbed “swill milk” was begun,
but not until 1848 did the New York
Academy of Medicine investigate it-
No alcohol was found in the milk, as
had been fervently predicted by the
temperance societies, but the poor
quality of the milk was evident and
in 1853 ordinances were adopted to
prohibit the feeding of distillery slop
to cows. The sanitary conditions of
dairies were also subject to improve
ment by this ordinance.
Bacterial Analysis Made
Not until 1890 were bacterial ana
lyses of milk made, first by Dr. wil
liam T. Sedgwick at the Massachu
setts Institute of Technology. He re
ported on the milk supply of Boston,
and not particularly favorably.
In 1891 the Walker-Gcrdon Labo
ratories provided a superior grade of
milk for infant feeding formulas.
But the improvement which
brought a good grade of milk to the
great majority of the population oc
curred in 1894, when a new grade of
i| TuW'-you can buy this full- family size I
FRIGIDAIRE
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: at# t’iu£y ' J
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G' ves ou A** These Genuine Frigidaire Advantages
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Q U iet • S c ° S \ tection against service expense tftUVM.
IT CtffS bO h£ I on the sealed-in mechanism for Food-Safety Indicator built
\ TO . fire’s s? eC * C c oVl \ onl y $ 5 included in purchase right into the cabinet-visible
ANOTHER SPECIAL! \ . e B iveS Toutst* o*l' 0 * 1 ' \ P rice • Super-Freezer . Stain- evidence that foods are kept
6 cubic-foot FRIGIDAIRE \ co'V^’‘o& \ less Porc^ in in Sca ”' ess In ' « Safety-Zone Temperature,
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FRIGIDAIRE for families who \ bU „isture \
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usable. 84 big ice cubes. 8 \ [m—m——i i" 1 r\. 11 L)/\ IF\ E_ ■«■■■■■■■]
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1 r CC Look for this Name-Plate
$189.50
Advanced Refrigeration & Specialty Co.
‘ SALES SERVICE - AIR CONDITIONING”
PHONE 3-1430 37 WHITAKER STREET
L. F. SIMMONS H. J. STRANGE H. H. THOMPSON
Statesboro, Ga. Glennville, Ga. Lyons, Ga.
TAKE A PEEK AT THE LANDON HAT
F W '||F
HIL
AT--' % jg
is
MISS DOROTHY DREW
Adorning the head of this Kansas beauty is the Landon hat.
It is made of sunflowers. The beauty is Miss Dorothy Drew of
Topeka, shown above as she “pre-viewed” the hat for New
Yorkers. —Central Press.
pure milk, known as “certified milk’’,
appeared on the market. Its introduc
tion was due to Dr. Henry L. Coit,
of Newark, N. J. He had lost one of
his children in a milk-bome epidemic
of diptheria. He prepared a plan for
the production of safe and sanitary
milk in large quantities, by the cer
■ tification by local medical societies
, as to the purity of commercial milks.
The first bottle of certified milk
was delivered in 1894 to Dr. Ccit
himself, who had a new arrival In
his home, and the baby was decorated
PAGE THREE
with a blue ribbon in honor of the
event.
This pioneer in the cause of clean
milk was an example which other
cities could not afford to ignore, and
gave an impetus to the system of
grading market milks.
In fact, the certified milk idea of
1894 is responsible for the vast im
provement in all milk supplies in our
day.
Pasteurized milk began to be known
in this country about 1900 give years
after the invention of the vat pasteu
rizer by Professor H. L. Russell. In
the years that have passed, the old
objection that pasteurization affect
ed adversely the dietetic properties
of milk, has been stilled, and while
it cannot be for a moment consider
ed as a substitute for cleanliness and
sanitation in the dairy, it is a nec
essary additional safeguard for a
milk of high quality.
AUTOMOBILE LOANS
If You Need Cash —See Ub
GEORGIA INVESTMENT
COMPANY
311 SAVANNAH BANK BLDOb
DIAL 4184
WITH AMY OTHER
BRAND OF
Woe the judge.
LET YOUR OWN TASTE