Newspaper Page Text
PHURSDAY, JULY 14 1021,
;'Phone 30
; 4
MISSES BULLOCH VISIT
TR AVNES
mfle in Augusta Misses M’a-rvy
Margaret and Birdie Bulloch were de
li“ghvtt;ullyAentertnihe‘d for two weeks
as the guests of Mr. and Mrs. J. L.
B&gksdgge and Mr. and Mrs.JFr{;(l
Tutt. These Augusta friends are ex
peeted to be the house guests soon in
the hom¢ of Mrs. G. M. Bulloch.
s Seinhan Y
,PEQ_GBBBSL_VE HOUSE PARTY
_A cungenial crowd composed of
six l:.mé gitls dre enjoying a pro
gressive house party this week and
are guests today of Miss Catherine
Wear., Thiy are Dorothy K:ker, Cathe
;l[l:e‘ l‘i\'f'm'. S]-mea Greez, Catherine
angham, Sara nni
E’i’:"cth’ Simpson, S,
MISS ‘EVELYN M’MILLAN
ENTERTAINS HOUSE PARTY
~ The girls of the younger school set
composing a progressive house party
were delightfully entertained on
Tuesday by Miss Evelyn McMillan at
her home on Thirteenth avenue., A
swimming party at Williams pool
was given in the morning and in the
afternoon a theatre party at the
‘Cirele ‘was enjoyed, The guests inelud
ed Misses Mary Clements, Emylee
Shepparrd, Sara Mae Slade, Eliza
beth Blade, Lydia Coney, Earline Me-
Kenzie, Willie Pearl Grubbs, Estelle
4McKenzie and Mary Jane Montfort.
e ———————— e,
Luke Outler spent = yesterday 'in
Bylvster. .
Mr, and Mrs, W. H. Little spent
yesterday in Ocilla.
‘Dr! Ford Ware is away on a vaea
tion trip. "
Miss Lizzie Fussell has returned
from a visit to Atheng. :
Mr, and Mrs. J. T. Jones and little
pon, are visiting welatives in Jack
sonville, ; ‘
’ it ,"‘ ‘
Mrs, K. P, Baker and little Misses‘
Burma and Myrtice Baker are vlsfit-‘l
ing Mrs. Baker’s parents at \Culverton
. Mrs, J. 8. Shingler Jr., and Mrsl
Ketchum of Ashburn, were guests
Tuesday afternoon of Mrs. J. C. Hen
derson., D |
Miss Kitty MecKennie, of Colum
tbug, is in Cordele as the guest of
Miss Vassie Hatheox. X
: i ;
" TFriends of Mrs. T. E. Jennings
will regret to know of her illmess at
her home on Tweilfth avenue, |
Miss Leta vind.icks will lea,ve!
next week to spend her vaeation with
relatives in Troy, Ala. - ‘
Mrs. Evers and son, Bob Evers,
atid niece Miss Annie B. Parker left’
today for a visit to Bronwood. (
Mr, and Mrs. Earl Gober, of Val
dosta, are expected in a few days for
a visit to Mrs. Gober’s parents, Rev.
and Mrs, O. B. Chester.
Mr. and Mrs, C. L. Ware and chil
drep have returned to their home in
Fitzgerald after a visit of several
days to Mr., Ware’s parents, Pro
fessor and Mrs, A. F. Ware.
Friends of Mr. and Mrs. Arthuf)
Bailey will be glad to know of the im
provement of their little son. They re
turned Tuesday from Macon where he
has been under treatment of a sped
cialist. o el
Mrs. Homer Wheeler left. yesterday
for Atlanta where she will join Mr.
and Mrs. W. D. Coleman and Miss:
Edith Coleman for a stay at Wrights
ville Beach.
’ P i
Mrs. Adeline Rodgers and daugh
ter, Miss Freda Rodgers have bheed
guests the past week of Rev. Wal
lace. Wear and family en route from
Connecticut to their home in Lake
land, Fla. .
¥ e
'Mr. and Mrs. R. E. Harris and
daughter, Miss Mamie Laurie Harris
motored to Fort Valley today. Miss
Harris remained for a visit of sevs
eral weeks to Mrs. Annie Laura Ay
ers, |
‘The construction work on the hand
some brick home of Mr. W. F. Mar
kert at the corner of Fourteenth
avenue and Fifth street is fast pro
gressing. This new home will be
among the prettiest in the eity. |
o
The residence at the corner of Thir
teonth avenue and Second séreeY
belonging to George Miller is bei}m'
much improved. Additions and repairs
are being made, greatly enchaneing’
the appearance of the . residence.
When the improvements are ecom
pleted Mr. Miller and family wil
make their home there.
To a letter just received, from Mri
Ernest Thompson, Miss Lizzie Fu_sse“
Joarned of the death of her f!‘leflfl
Mrs. C. J. Thompson, of Coluntbia, 8.,
0, mother of Mr. Thompsor which
obekrred. ANy Sed.. Mrs. Thempeit
and family resided in Cordele” ptudd
wears aco and have friends among
the older residents who will be grle"\'
¢d to lcarn the sad mews.
Soriely
Mrs. P. M. Browning and son, Paul
Lamar, have returned from a visit
to relatives at Lakeland, Fla.
ez
Mr. and Mrs. Merriweather have
apartments row with Mrs, R. Boniske
on Thirteenth avenue.
Miss Myrtle Wear will leave to
morrow to be a guest at the house
party given by Miss Evelyn Fenn at
Ler home in Rochelle.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Reynolds had as
their guests yesterday their sister,
Miss Ida Reynolds, of Pinchurst, and
her guest Miss Blanch Reynolds, of
Riverside, California, a cousin.
;
OFFICER GRACE BADLY BEATEN
—WILLIAMS ARRESTED IN
CORDELE.
Chief of Police Grace of Pitts was
beaten and painfully injured by two
negro hobos stealing their way on
|Seaboard fast freight train No 86,
castbound last night gt that place
'when he attempted to place the
negroes under arrest. A fight fol
lowed a refusal of the negroes to
come out of a box car in which they
were riding and submit to arrest.
Chjef Grace was armed with a re
volver gnd entered the car. In the
darkness the negroes pounced on
him, attempting to wring the revolver
from hig hand, He was thrown to the
ground choked and kicked, sustain
ing brusies ahout the right hand,
body and lower limbs. One of the
negroes was shot in the leg by the
officer. Following the fight the negroes
escaped.
Clarence Williams., one of the
negroes, was arrested in Cordele this
morning by L. M. Sumner, special
agent for the Seaboard, and L. N.
Sirmans of the Cordele police force.
The negro has made a complete con
fession, implicating the other negro
whose name he gives as Dennis Maul
din. Williams, who is now lodged in
the city barracks gnd against whom
a warrent hag been issued by Chief
Grace charging assault with intent
to murder, states that Mauldin was
shot in his left leg by the Pitts
cfficer. The two negroes, states Wil
liams, started walking toward Cor
dele from Pitts. Between Pitts and
Seville Mauldin became exhausted
and lay down by the roadside. There
Wiilliams abandoned -him and walked
in to Cordele.
Williams is a former brakeman for
the Seaboard and liveg in Americus
He says that Maulglin’s home is in
Savannah. Special Agent Sumner
following Williams arrest communi
cated with {Wiilcox officers regarding
Mauldin and a posse was sent out
from Pitts to affect his ‘capture if
possible. Mauldin is described as a.
young negro, about 24 years of age,
black; weight about 160; height gbout
5 feet, 9 or 10 inches, wearing dark
pin-striped trousers and overall jum-'
per, j
CARD OF THANKS 1
Words cannot express our appre
ciation to our many friends who have
been such a comfort to us during the
illness and death of our own little
Martha Lauva. We wish to thank them
for their expressions of sympathy
and beautiful floral offerings.
Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Matthews.
A golfer playing on the Tancaster
Country Club course at Lanecaster, @
killed” a blacksnake while striking at
the ball just as the snake raised its
head from where it lay ‘concealed in
the grass. ‘
| ; .:< s i :
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4;:;;-:-.'-::?::':‘:‘:;:: r——x . eo & « REALART PICTURES
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A delightful, snappy socicety play wih plenty of romance
and refreshing humor. A picture the whole family will
. ‘ ‘
enjoy. Also Comedy. J 7 ns gy T
‘ TOMORROW—FRIDAY. 2 4
GARTERS COME HIGH @
: ONMILADYS BILL |
: FIARRIET g
MOST COSTLY ARTICLE OF FEMI
NINE WARDROBE IS HOSE SUP|
PORTEUR DECLARES ATLANTA|
FASHION EXPERT—WAS EVER
THUS.
;> e 1
_ Atlanta, Ga,, July 14,—One of the
itashion shops in the Peachtree Ar-
Ecadfz to wll’lc}l ftminine steps lead
during shopping hours tells the
‘correspondent of this news service
‘that the garter iy now one of the
imos;t costly articles of the Atlanta
!l‘,‘dy’s wardrobe. As if this informa
"tion ‘was news. When, for instance,
'was that mot the case? Shakespeare
\tand contemporary authors wove love
)zmd romance around the garter and no
body appears to recall when it wasn’t
the pride of the women and the joy
of the men.
A writer of the restoration period
speaks of the court ladies ‘as “fairg
frail beauties, who lift their petti
coats to show the gallants the for
tunes hung around their legs as gar
ters’’ This love of display was evi
dently not confined to the women of
the restoration for a sarcasie poet
about the middle of the eighteenth
century wrote
Make your petticoat short
That a hoop eigt yards wide i
May decently show
How your garters are ty’d
The garters worn by men in the
sixteenth and seventeenth centuries
often took the form of riehly em
broidered searfs fringed with point
lace of gold and tied in a how at the
side of the knees.ht a later period
they were adorned with diamonds,
or steel buckles and were broad or
‘narrow. according to the fashion of
the day.
i Tt was natural perhaps that our
‘most fashionable men should take up
and lavish on the garters much money
in colonial - times when pictures of
the day show us General Washington
and others adorned in knee trousers,
with flashy garters, and powdered
‘hair. Tho women of that period
wore lengthy skirts and one may guess
at the lingerie that those draggingt
garments covered.
Now that women are prome to shov{
more of their anatony than ever’’
said the fashion expert in the Arcadd
shopping center who supplies femiy
nine wardrobes, ‘‘it would be odd
if they did not wear garters no less
dainty, elaborate or costly than of
vore, even if they are mow more for
an ornament and sentiment than for
uee. And os for mere man. who hasn’t
noticed the anxiety on his face when
something goes wrong with his gar
ters.”’
e e
e
Milledgeviffe, Ga., July 14 —Max!
Miller and Morrig Flax, of Atlanta,
are in a local hospital here almost
at the point of death as the result
of being struck by a Georgia railroad
passenger train at a late hour Mon
day night.
Miller and Flax were in an auto
mobile on their way from Atlanta
to Milledgeville, Just after getting
within the city limits, they had ocl
casion to cross the track of /the
Georgia railroad and as they did so
they were struck by the outgoing
passenger train. The truck on which
they were riding was drug for a dis
tance of about two hundred yards
before ‘the train could be stopped.
The left legs of hoth men werel
broken; their ribs almost crushed in
and they came out of the wreck with
serious internal injuries. It is be
lieved by physicians at the hospital
that the chances of Flax’s recovery
are slight and but little hope is en
tertained for the recovery of Miller.
Both men have families residing in
Atlanta. -
Home
Phone 313
THE CORDELE DISPATCH
~ The Season’s Most Important Event'”“
nantziper' s
~'§' ~p, FINAL SUMMER g )
Begins Tomorrow And Continues For 8 Days
e Bk e e
Summer Shoes---nothing reserved. \
All Summer Footwear Must Go
Costs And Former Prices Not Considered
Read The Items--Then Plan To Be Here Tomorrow
SPECIAL!
Ladies’ Patent, Dull, Brown and
White Pumps, Strap Slippers
and Oxfords. All Sizes.
Sold from $5.00 to $B.OO
UNUSUAL VALUES IN LADIES’
. REINCLOTH SLIPPERS
White Reincloth Pumps, Ties, Strap
Slippers and Oxfords; Full Louis, Baby
Louis and Military Heels.
SEWMVallles ... ... .« i B
BOOFNVANICE . . v ioviiiiomisimsne o BATD
00 Valvor ... ..., ...
PONVGIER . . /.~ 0o st vaes oo 0009
SPORT
OXFORDS
Ladies’ Black
and White Sport
Oxfords.
Sold for $B.OO
$5.95
’
MEN’S OXFORDS
Hanan, Bostonian and Walk-Over Ox
fords; Brown or Black, Kid or Calf
Leathers, Conservative or Full English
Last.
81200 NAIBE -- .. i iiiinsin 0000
$10:00 Valtles ........«i. ... 309 D
8000 Valies . ......voueesnis BESE
B 800 WaIIEE 2 00, i 000 D
All White Footwear Greatly Reduced
Startling Bargains In Men’s Footwear -
Children’s Slippers Sacrificed
Patent, Dull, Brown and White Strap Slippers and Oxfords. Suitable
Styles for Dress or Play. Sold from $2.50 to $4.00
All Sizes 95c¢ All Sizes
Such An Opportunity Has Not Been Offered By Any
Store This Season '
It’s To Your Interest To Be Here Tomorrow
per’s Shoe S
Kantziper’s Shoe Store
115 EIGHTH STREET |
i HOSIERY SPECIALS
Ladies’ Pure Thread Silk Hose.
Colors Black, Brown and White.
A $£2.50 value
|
L 95¢
SPECIALS IN “KEDS”’
White Duck Pumps, Strap Slippers, Oxfords and High Shoes;
Vulcanized Rubber Soles. Sizes for Men, Women and
Children.
$3.00 Men‘s Shoes. ...$1.45
$3.00 Women’s Shoes $1.45
£2.50 Boy’s Shoes ....$1.25
$2.50 Misses’ Shoes. ..$1.25
Note
Ihe
Prices
%2.50 Womens Slippers $1.45
$2.50 Boy’s Slippers ..$1.25
%2.00 Misses’ Slippers $1.25
$1.75 Child’s Slippers $l.OO
BIG SAVINGS
IN
MEN’'S SOCKS
Silk or Lisle
Thread. All col
ors. A 75¢ value
29¢
~ SPECIALY
Ladies’ Brown, Dull, Patent and
White Pumps, Strap Slippers
and Oxfords. All Sizes.
Sold from $6.00 to $lO.OO "
$2.95 .
LADIES' WHITE KID SLIPPERS
' AT BIG SAVINGS
White Washable Kid Pumps, Strap Slip
pers and Ties; Full Louis, Baby Louis
and Military Heels.
$12:00 Nallles: .. iviin s 80000 DA
$lO.OO Values ...,..vivo.iiioices S 0
8000 Valies ...uciiissevivie o voliil
$BOO Values ....ocvcvereeson. . 5090
’ " "
MEN’S HIGH SHOES
Bostonian, Hanan and Walk-Over High
Shoes; Black or Brown, Kid or® Calf
Leathers, Conservative or Full English
Last. o ‘.\ A
$12,00 Vallles . i.eeeneat2ei coch SIY
$lOOO Walties | ..... . ~iss s SR
$ 9.00 Valtes ...-...oevuns... #5OBO
$ 8.00 Valuer it .. leoiiedsics PR
L]
PAGE THREE
SATIN
SLIPPERS «
Ladies’ Blaek
Satin Slippers;
Baby or Full
Louis Heels. .
Sold for $B.OO
$4.95