Newspaper Page Text
¢RIDAY, APRIL 6, 1084,
Mardi Gras Ball
Is Given Tonight
phi Mu Sorority Host as
Brilliant Dance in Physi
cal Education Ruilding
Alpha Alpha chapter of Phi Mu
sorority Wwill be host .at a Mardi
cras ball at the Physical Educa
tion huilding Friday nighttrou
g to 1 o'clock. : ey
Chap 'ones are to be Mrs. Bur
ton Ferguson, Miss Mary Rosen
platt, Mrs. Lee B. Bradberry and
members Of the faculty. - %
Three no-breaks and a leadout
in which active members and
pledges of the chaptes will partici
pate, will be among the features.
In the true Marq‘,GmlmmV
(he walls will be lined with gro
tesq masks and figures with the
Mardi Gras colors, orange,;m
and lavendar, predominating. The
gancers will whirl about the big
pall to the straing of music fur
nished by Jack Dale and his ‘Geor’.‘
gia Bulldogs. f gl
Phi Mus and inelr escorts will
heM;“-y Adams and Joe Howell,
Carolyn Anderson and Clyde Jar
dine, Mary Bach and Frank Lee,
Mary Bickerstaff and " Jim m y
putch, Alberta Booth and Dan
gage, Ruth Brannon and Nat de
jarnette, Dorothy Braswell and
Bernard Ramsey, Gene Brooks and
Milton Richardson, Anita Butts
and Jimmy Pert, Sarah Calloway
and Perry Wheeler, Rosa Carson
and Pete Latimer. A
Winifred Clark and Dick Paul
con, Sue Downing and Wade
Hoyt, Mary Eckford and Sam At-
Minson, Madge Durden and Roy
Bowen, Mary Cobb . BErwin and
Bunny Neighbors, Mary Lamar
Frwin and John Q. West, Nancy
Fitzgerald and Ben Askew, Lillian
Forbes and John McKnight, Mar
tha Haffey and Harry Harmon.
Dorothy Haines and Howar d
parks, Mary Harley and Harold
Andrews, Margaret Harrell and
Curtis Carter. :
Adele Helmer and John Brown,
Mary Holloway and Clayton Jones.
gidney Hunt and Ed Cook, Sarah
King and Gordon Robinson, Flor
ence Hancock and Bobby Hodgson,
Henrijo Hudson and Beb. Snelling,
Virginia Jacobs and IListon Peo
ples, Agnes Jarnagin and Walter
gams, Lee Little and Jesse Spier,
Nelsie Long and Dan O'Callaghan,
Martha Lowe and R. P. Ludwig,
Ruth McClatchey jand Frazier Bid
|on.
Mary McCormick and Tom Do
gier, Jane McKinnon and W. W.
Baker, Belle Meador and Duncan
RBurnet, Ann Middleton and Jack
Griffeth, Margaret Miller and Litt
Glover, Mary Mmnllina and Johnny
Jones, Catherine Murry and Fred
Harrison, Mary Myers and Selman
Fortune, Frances Napier and John
Napier, Ray Neal ‘and Clarence
Nalley, Anna Newton and Billy
Taylor. :
Mary Elizabeth Nix and John
Hagermann, Dorothy O'Neal and
Ben Camp, Laura Ann Phinizy
and Albert Wier, Betsy .Powell mg,
John West, Josephine Rlley an
J. D. Todd, Margaret Riley and
Leonard Todd, Sue Rollins and
Mac Crenshaw, Nellie Rucker, Ger
hardt Paul, Betty Schilling and
Alex Ashford, Meta Shaw and
Ludwell Pierce, KErnestine Shers
ouse and Harry Hopkins, Sarah
Shipp and Reed Horne, Celeste
Smith apnd Tony Solms. s
Idawee Springer and Harold
Hunter, Frances Starbuck and
Charlie Pattom, Ida Touchstane
and Reed Manley, Matilda Treze
vant and Frank Lindsey. ’ Laura
West and Rodney Cohen, Elizabeth
Whitaker and George Vickery,
Katherine Williams and : Schyler
Clark. Sarah Williamg and. Chap
pell Mathews, Grace Winston and
Bob Stephens. Patsy: “Woodruff.
°nd Billy McWilliams, Mary
Wright and Mac Fowler. Louise
Wynn and ‘Den Waterbury.
S
BLUNT-GORDON
Centering -very cordial interest
Wwas the marriage this morning ot
Miss Margaret Juanita Blunt, and
Mr. James A. Gordon, Jr., which
Wag solemnized at the home of Dr,
8. J. Cartledge, pastor of the Cen
tral Presbyterian church, who -afe
ficiated at the quiet but beautiful
ceremony, : g e
The only attendants “were the
bride’s sister Migs Louise 3!@?
and Mr. John F. Moon, The attrac
tive living room made a - lovely
setting. decorateq in spring flow
frS. The many friends of the
voung couple are extending very
tordial congratulations. hamt A
*-- . 2
WORLD CLUB HAS :
EASTER EGG HUNT
The boys. and girls. of the Oco
oo Street Methodist ¢ hufch World
tlub enjoyed 5 lovely Easter egg
hunt Wednesday afternoon at the
tharming home of Mrs. €. J..
Jones. Thare were 21 members
Present and several visitors. Many
Rimes were played and a good
time was haq by all,
-- - Z
Mr. and Mrs. J. T. McWhorter
And Mrs. T, @. Allbright of Win
der were the guesty Thursday of
Urs. C. D, MeNelile.
¢e e :
Mrs. Hugh Hubbard and littl
Sn, Bobby, have left General hos-
Pital, tq feturn to their home,
¢ s i
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Sams re
tirneq Friday fg:% and
oher points in Wiorida. L
* * o
Friendg of Miss Elizabeth A'??éf'z
1o Will regret to ‘fshen she is
M with a colg, - i
T S 9
Mr. ang Mrs. R. M. Rigdon of
Jefterson attended the Institute of
Publie Affairs helaq wfilm
M Thursday at; the University
B Ceowiis .
Fresheng the mouth . 0 .
-~soothesthethroat 3
0\ )\ /
W LT
Patis Styles Become “Protile -
. Consciq?us”; Capes To Be Good
Sloping Yokes and Raglan
Sleeves Supplant Square-
Shouldered Vogue
By ROSETTE. HARGROVE
NEA Service Staff Correspondent
PARIS—The newess styles; have
‘acquired an altogether new; com
plex*~they have become mrofile
conseious, As a mdtter jof faet
“profile” promises t 0 beé-ome g
very hackneyes word in erms of
dressmaking ere long, r’hereas.
before, & dress had its Arresting
points .centered at the fifont, the
back, .the .skirt. cut, the ‘waistline
or the necckline, today it has to
be seen and judged’ “en profile”.
If, therefore, your spring’ outfit is
generally :snub-nased, ;50 /to speak,
and without relief, you will be all
wrong, sarterially -speaking, ;
Lelond’ finds a eertpglm gimilitude.
in profile between the old romana
tic. figures that adorned Jthe bows
of ships and his new slilhouette,
It is true that his new models give
one the impression of a movement
floating ahead of the wearer in
place of the old clinging lines. This
iz even more apparent, of course,
in his evening gowns,’ day clothes
showing this effect in a more re
strained manner,
While basically the silhouette
hag undergone no drastic .change,
there are changes in details that as
usual make last year's styles look
completely wrong. The top of the
figure, for example, is as soft and
feminine as.the square-shouldered,
militaristic styles of last year were
hard to look at and to wear. The
-couturiers §eem to have come to
a. tacit accord: to defy the pro
moters of stuffed, square should
ers..and have gone to .the other
extreme with their sloping yokes
and almost wuniversal adoption of
the raglan sleeve.
Bodices, while as wsoft and
feminine as you please, underline
the natural ecurves. This gives
them a quaint late Victorian 'look,
which is emphasgized by sleeve
fullness massed just above or just
below the elbow.
The waist, too, {is clearly de
fingd. Some couturjers adopt a
higher-in-front mowvement; others
drop the belt below the normal
line at the back. Combined with
fullness concentrated at the front
or back, this qlso contributes to
the new profile of the mode.
Capes have definitely establish
ed themselves and will be almest
as popular, if not more so, than
‘the loose swagger coat, especial
ly with women whom the tailored
suit does not flatter. For the
young and slim, there are youth
ful skirts and jackets with amus
ing short-sleeved blouses, all frilly
and fluffy. Jackets of the Nor
folk persuasion, complete with
pockets and belts, assume a very
modern look on an old theme.
There is a distinet reminiscence
of the 1900°s in the long after
neon sgown launched by Lanvin,
cdn'mT,e%gd by a large picture hat.
It “differs from the cocktail-dress
in.. that it wusually boasts of long
sleeves and a moderate neckline,
instead of the decollete back which
distingulshed many end-of-ithe day
creations. . Worn. with a long or
three-quarters loosely-fitted coat
of plain fabrie, these dresses set
a new style for formal afternoon
wear. b
The glittering evening gown, in
sequins or paillettes, indicate an
PERSONAL MENTION
. Dr, and Mrs. Jack Wooster of
Chapel Hiil, N.. C., are visiting Dr.
and Mrs. T. J. Wooster on Dear
ing street. :
s L MR e
Mrs. E. I. Smith has returned
from an extended visit to Dr. and
Mrs. :Albert Rayle of Atlanta. Her
friends will be delighted to learn
she '{s very much improved trom
an accident several weeks ago. Mr.
E. I. Smith, jr., motored qver for
his mother Wednesday.
-. » 9
. Miss Annie Hawkins of Com
nierce was among ‘the visitors here
Thursday.
s L e
Friends of Miss Shirley Orr are
delighted to leayn that she has re
covered from a light attack of
measles. W
£ *s e
‘Mrs. G. ‘W. Joiner went over
to Atlanta Monday called there by
the serious illness.of hev mother,
Mrs. E. E. Waters,
&4 .. 8
» «Miss -Martha Heywood spent
Thursday in Atlanta.
¢- . ®
Mrs.. Helen Joseph leaves to
night for New York after an.ex
tended visit to Mrs. J. B. Joel
at the Georgian Hotel,
¢ .« % ®
Mrs. L. H. Mathews of Elber
ton spent Thursday in the city.
::« % ®
Mrs., M. Barton ,f Bowman was
in the city shopping Thursday.
- . "
Friends of Miss Louise Rhoads
will ‘regfet to learn that she is
confined t, her home with meas
les. to
For Hard Coughs or
Colds That Worry You
_Creomulsion is ade to give
supreme help for coughs or colds
It combines 7 helps in one—the best
helpy known to science. It is for
~ But careful people, more and
more use it for every cough that
starts, No one knows where a
cough may lead, No one can tell
which factor will do most. That
‘depends on the type of cold. i
_.Creomulsion costs a little more
than lesser helps. But it means
the utmost help. And it costs you
nothing if it fais to bring the quick
relief you seek. Your drufflat
%‘M&s‘tt. Use it for safetys
| NS (adv.)
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Mainbocher’'s frock of black wool
en, with a wide sash of black and
white failie emphasizes spring’s
style points — sashes, bows and
color contrasts.
attempt t, return to the siren or
‘“vamp” type of dress for formal
functions. Cut on sheath-like lines
and completed by a train, as all
the coming season’s evening gowns
are, they are destined to the proud
possessor of g perfect figure.
! Feathers of every description
adorn not only hats but sleeves,
lscarfs and capes. Molyneux's
'ostrich capes or ostrich-trimmed
‘evening wraps are as sure of suc
‘cess as his barnyard-feather capes
proved to be last season. The de
lightfully light and airy appear
ance of these delicately tinted os
trich feathers is well suited to
summer nights.
Belts are even ,more important
this season than last. With many
simple dresses, they represent
both the contrasting celor note
and the touch of fantasy and
originality demanded of modern
fashions. The newest are fash
oined of such, K unusual mediums
as cellophane, silver and gilt
wire, lacquered straw plaited
and torsaded, twine an raphia
dyed in vivid colors, and knitted
or plaited, not to speak of the
plainer box-calf, Russian leather
and Chanel's patent leather belts
bestarred with diamante.
Buckles are fantastic or cu
bistic, or merely original, but
geldom just a buckle. They snap,
they clip or d, other intricate
things, and the more unusual they
are, the quicker they will be
adopted.
Miss Margaret Bond left today
for Savannah tg visit Mr. and Mrs,
Glenn Bond.
* % =
Friends of Kenneth Kay are de
lighted to learn that he has re
covered from a lengthly illness.
*® > -
Room eleven of the Chids Street
seventh grade welcomes Hazen
Boeth, recently moved here from
Springfield, Mass.
* ® ¥
Friends of George Nixon will re
gret to learn that he is confined
to his home with measles.
. % =
Friends of Chester Jarrett will
be sorry to learn that he is ill with
measles. oJalald
* = 3
Friends of Miss Jane Scott will
regret to learn that she is confined
to her home with measles.,
* = *
The many friends of Miss Dor
othy Davison .are delighted to
learn that she has recovered from
a recent attack of measles.
s B 8
~ Miss Martha Burch was a re
cent visitor in Watkinsville.
* - *
Friends of Mrs. Harry Bailey are
‘delighted to learn that she has re
covered from a recent illness.
y- - -
' Friends of little Harold Maguire
[are glad to learn that he has re
covered from a recent attack of
'measles.
f .
~ Mr. and Mrs, R. L. Moss II
ileave Saturday for Cordele to visit
[.ijs. Moss’'s mother, Mrs. Clarence
H. Cubbage.
I* s @
~ Mrs. Miles Lewis of Greensboro
spent Thursday in the city with
her mother, Mrs. Robert Toombs
Dußose.
- % =¥
Mrs. Alice Towns, Mrs, Lena
Williams and Mrs. Tom Comer of
Athens were guests Wednesday of
Mrs. J. E. Randolph of Jefferson.
..
Mr, and Mrs. E. Parker Dodge,
Jr., of New York will arrive Satur
‘day to spend several days with
Mrs. Dodge’s sister, Mrs. C. K
White.
2. % *
Mrs. Arthur Griffith, of Atheng
lis visiting Miss Sue Burnett at her
‘home on Peachtree road and wil
act as matron of honor in the
‘marriage of Miss Burnett and
2& Tradewell Davis on 3:,uur-1i
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
Loyal Philathea
Class Holds Meet
Monthly Business Meet
ing Is Held at Home of
Mrs. Rufe Turner
. The monthly business meeting
of the Loyal Philathea class of ‘the
First Christian church was held
held Monday night, April 2, at the
homeé of Mrs. Rufe Turner on
Cobb street, . .
The meeting was opened with
some of the class songs. A chapter
jir our Missionary book was read
by Polly Bowden. The following
talks were given: Impossible Camp
—by Helen Parr; Antonio Prepares
and Shares—by Una Rumsey; 1
Am Your Leisure Time—by Eth
‘elvn Cook. -
It was decided .that we have a
picture made of the Philathea
class, ‘Sunday, Aperil 21,
Mrs. Brown read a most inter
esting letter from a teacher of a
Philathea class in Atlanta. Minutes
of the last meeting were read. All
quilt squares are to be in by the
next meeting. The Secret Serv
ice committee was discussed.
After the business part of the
meeting delicious refreshments
‘were served, There were fifteen
i‘present. The next meeting to be
‘held with Mrs. Brown.
—CONTRIBUTED.,
‘ . - >
How To Release .
Children From
6 ¢ »
False Friends
Taking a child away from a
false friend calls for tact and
strategy, as Olive Roberts Bar
ton points out in this article
in her Child Training series.
By OLIVE ROBERTS BARTON
When a mother takes thg atti
tude that her children are always
getting the worst end of it, it will
react against them.
It soon gets to be known that
Jimmy and Jean have some one
to fight their battles. And as a
rule this pair will be ashamed of
it. Even though justified, and at
times it most certainly is, they
will be distressed about their
mother calling up the teacher
every week, or Dickie Jones’
mother, or the gym instructor.
As a matter of fact there
aren’t many such mothers. Most
of us are careful of interference.
And as a matter of fact, it is to
the careful mother this article is
addressed-—the mother who leans
over backwards not to interfere,
Hands Off Attitude
It has been drilled into parents
now for some little time that they
must keep hands off. They must
‘let the children fight their ovgr‘g
‘battles with their playmates,
shake down to circumstances, and
develop their social rights alone.
But I contend that the parent
can do harm as well as good by
keeping out of the picture en
tirely . o
It won’t be neceéssary to become
a chronic Kkicker, or a front door
dragon, to do a little quiet ob
serving and learn a few facts
about our children‘s friends, es
peciaily if for some unknown rea
son the boy or the girl seems to
be unhappy. ‘
To do it quietly is best. What
we must avoid if possible is shak
ing his faith in other children, As
it happens, it is often the friend
he is most devoted, to who is do
ing him the most harm and mak
ing him genuinely‘unhappy.
There is a type of child who
demands a vassal, a shadow, a
devoted slave. He (or she) will
choose this satellite from among
those who admire him.
I think this David and Jonathan
friendship none too admirable. It
works | at times without much
harm, but if the dominant one
demands and accepts too much
sacrifice from the other, it isn't
fair.
The trouble is that the selfish
child has the power to wound the
other thtough is devotion and
will ~do so very often, without
mercy. If another child comes
along who can be more of use at
the moment, the faithful little
shadow will be ditched without a
thought. Then follows heart
break. His happy days will be
those in which the king (or the
queen) smiles. His miserable days,
those in which he is ruthlessly
cast aside Mhen the glightest
excuse offers. When he is needed
again he is whistled back and goes
running. The sun is out once
more.
‘ Breaking Friendship
It is a difficult situation, for it
must be recognized that this false
friend bhas grown real roots in
the child’s affection. To tear them
out ruthlessy.can have most cruel
and . unfortunate results. Such
emotion cannot be blown up with
dynamite. And besides, any criti
cism of his god may only fix his
devotion more firmly.
To try by strategy to take his
interest away is bétter. To fill
his time busily and happily with
vital new interests that will in
clude another pleasant child and
exclude the selfish one is a good
plan. After a while the thing will
settle itself, but for a while the
tyrant may be disgruntled and.
mean—therefore to spare our boy
or girl from another unpleasant
reaction, diplomacy and deliber
ateness are very necessary. No
‘one must suspect what we are
abaut. - *
DON'T FEAR MOTHERHOOD
Mrs. F. T. Fuller of 531
Carter St., Orlando, Fla.,
) said: ‘“‘Before the arrival
g of my little girl I became
R nervous, felt weak and
P tired out, had dizzy spells,
i.::.'.'.f,::E: headaches and was very
i i restless. I took Dr. Pierce's
T Favorite Prescription and
i was much improved: It
: strengthened me in many
ways. T gve birth to a fine healthy baby.”
Write Dr. Pierce’s Clinic, Buffalo, N. Y.
New size, tablets 50 cts., liquid SI.OO. Large
size, tabs. or liquid, $1.35, “We Do Our Part.”
PRINCE AVE. BAPTIST
NEWS ITEMS
Dr, A. Chamblee, president oi
Bessie Tift College, will speak a.f
the 8 .o'clock service Sunday eve
ning. Dr. Chamblee is a magne:
tic speaker and the general publig
is invited to hear him. All the
Bessie Tift graduates are invited
to meet him at the close of the
service, 1
.Dr, T. W, .Tippty will speak al
the First Baptist ctmrch at Winder
Friday night at 8 o'clock at the
Worker's Counecil of the Sunday
School officers and teachers.
The friends of Miss Edna Arch.
er will be delighted to learn that
she is greatly improved and hopes
to be out again within a few days
The friends of Mrs, Gordon, the
mother of Mrs. H. E. McKinney
and Miss Katherine Gordon, will
be delighted to learh that she con
tinues to improve folowing a re
cent operation.
. The Joy Class, Mrs. C. R. Lucky,
‘teacher, held their monthly busi
ness meeting at the home of Lucile
Crowley with Mrs. W. C, Jordan
as hostess. Twenty-four members
of the class were present.
The program over the Baptist
Radio Hour will be conducted hy
Prof. H. H, Shiflett and members
of* his school at Whitehall.
Mr. P. 'S. MeCune was taken tc
the Georgia Baptist Hospital this
week. His condition is still very
serious.
" The friends of Mr. Eugene Wil
liams will regret to learn of his
illness, :
Miss Rozelle Gabel's friends are
delighted to see her out after an
illness of several days. i
Mrs. A. T. Webb's friends will
regret to learn of her illness with
the measles.
Mrs. J. . Adams who has been
ill for the past ten days is doing
nicely now.
The Sunday School, Prof, L. P
Green, supt., is planning to take 2
religious census of the city and
would appreciate the cooperation
of the people.
Mrs. H. H. Shiflett who has been
sick for several months is muech
better and is ahle to be back at
Sunday school and c¢hurch servive.
Little Charlotte Lucky ig visit
ing her grandmother in Augusta.
The young married group of the
B. Y. P, U. department has elect
ed Mr. Wyatt Inglett as presidént
and he is expecting at least fifty
young people present Sunday
night. The union will meet in the
Men’s Bible class room. i
There are 6,582.000 miled of high
ways in the world.
All ports of the Great Lakes hes
come icebound at timeg in winter.
Chihuahua ig the largest state in
Mexico,
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el Lt/ :*; THE STORE GOOD GOODS MADE POPULAR
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s presents another
e vast assortment
"VRR '\, of NEW SILKS
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YL It seems to be a suit
o | season . . . but a suit
e without scads of blouses
%b&‘” & - is a cigarette without
i g g VR a match!
At Enough material for a
eLI N lovely silk blouse costs
o
F& a 0 only abouta dollar. We
§ needn’t tell you of the
‘ /kflf@ &g | beauty of whole dress-
G N es of these new silks—
-8 . just come down and
% @@% A e gee them!
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N : Miss Mable Hedges
‘WA % Butterick Stylist, will
Ja G Help You Plan Them
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4 6N Michael’s---Piece Goods
Stage Is Brightest Lure to Children
Of Harlem; Most of Them Plan to Be
“Entutainuhs” in New York’s Hot Spots
| ‘BY PAUL HARRISON
~ NEW YORK—Up in Harlem' it
seems that all God's chill'un got
theatrical ability , musical talent,
101’ educated féet.
~ Ask.almost any urchin on Lenox
avenue what he's going to be, If
he doesn't say “a entutainuh” or “a
orch’stra player” it's probably be
cause he already has had a taste
of the legitimate theater as ong of
the many little angéls in “The
Green Pactures,” In that case he'll
ey & Yastul’l. .
Ask some sepia lass and she'll
confide an ambition to dance in a
night club, or.in the chorus of
Lew Leslie’s annual “Blackbirds” on
Broadway, or maybLe to sing in
the celebrated Hall Joihinson choir
.+ » Ask one of those amazingly
lagile couples who haunt the Har
' lem dance halls every night and
they'll tell you they're not there
just to pleasure themselves; hut to
practice for a turn in vaudeville
or a spot in a cabaret. ;
Before these eager children of
the night are always shimmering
mirages of names in ten-foot lights
on Broadway, and tantalizing ‘re
collections of Negro celebrities who
have gone before. , . . Of Ethel
‘Waters, the dynamic songstiress
who began in a tawdry little joint
near Atlantic City and now makes
more money .than any other mem
ber of her race. . . . Of Cab Callo
way, the orchestra leadey whose
automobile hears more shiny
chromium than a modernistic soda
fountain, and whose wife brought
$4,000 worth of clothes before they
sailed for Burope a few weeks ago
. . . Of the late Florence Mills
whose obsequies resulted in a de
monstration of me&s mourning sur
passing even the hysteria of the
Rudolph Valentino funeral.
Boys Who Made Good
Harlem knews all about Jules
Bledsoe, Flo Ziegfeld's “Old Man
River,” who gives high-brow con
certs these days and divides his
time between his suburban New
York estate and many a salon in
Europe . . . Paul Robeson has
fared nearly as wel. And Duke
Ellington, dusky classicist of Jjazz,
has stirred staid critics to lavish
superlative 'with his concerts
abroad . . . Adelaide Hall, who
speaks Jewish fluently, is the new
star of the Cotton Club revue . ~ .
Richard B. Harrison, De Lawd of
“The Green Pastures,” is leading
the all-Negro cast through the
fifth year of that nation-wide
tteatrical triumph ~ . . Josephine
Baker, only a saffron memory in
Gotham now, remains the high
priestes f hi-de-ho in Paris,
And an there’s Bill Robinson,
honor “May.:' of Harlem anl
probé the world’s greatest tap
dance- Deeply religious and
stron; ‘ce-conscious is “Bojan
ig.\ea" i agon, and not eyen in
the bla.s belt do they know the
!ex;tem of his philanthropies. He
i;ax Broadway's gratitude, too, for
Pill has been known to cancel a
| lucrative engagement to dance at
a benefit for jobless performers
.. . Harlem is mighty proud of
Bill's $12,000 imported car, ~which
!he. says he bougl't ‘because he lik
ed its color. And there are all
'manner of legends about his gold
lnlated revolver, presented by the
police force. Harlem is sure that,
like the Emperor Jones’ silver bul
let, Bill's golden gun will keep him
from ;all possible harm.
Rendezvous of Celebrities
For Bohemian soirees, complete
with celebrities, entertainment,
corn whiskey cocktails and buffet
Jluneh, there's Georgette Harvey's
place. It's a large apartment, dim
ly lighted, and jammed after mid
night with dusky folk whose names
are well known on Broadway, and
in music and art and letters. Even
“Scotty,” who plays the piano here,
has a role in the Theater Guild
play, “They Shall Not Die.”
Also at Georgette's, occasional
ly, are famous white stars of the
stage who like to wvisit Harlem
without being ogled in the public
hot-spots.
Miss Harvey is a celebrity her
self—or maybe an ex-celebrity —
now mainly content to bask in the
romantic aura of one who has
traveled around ‘the world sung
before royalty and even kep’' com
p'ny with a Russian prince. Geor
gette spent twelve years in Russia,
and was among the entertainers’
occasionally marooned two or three
days and nights W the Villa Rode
by ‘the prolonged, solitary debauch
es of Rasputin , . . She still sings
still speaks Russian like a native,
and vows that one of these days
she's gonta set down and write a
book.
Over 100 Seed Loan
Applications Already
Made in Clarke Co.
More than 100 seed loan appli
cations have already been made by
Clarke county farmers, according
to Miss Virginia Wiillams, of the
Emergency Crop Loan section.
Many of these have been ap
proved by the local committee and
sent on to C. C. Roberts, field
supervisor, who has to pass on
them also. His headquarters are
in Winder.
Miss Williams announces that
her office on the second floor of
the court house is still open for
applications, “She asks that all
farmers desiring seed loans should
see her in the next few days.
The sheep population of the
world is 500,000,000, or one-fourth
as great as the human population.
michael’s men’s store
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‘I O e 79
Society Brands
For You ng Men-=
[t isn’t a beauty prescription, but a new
Michael’s Men’s Store Suit is practical
ly guaranteed to make you look—and
feel—years younger. Remember the
formula for a well-dressed man: 1.
Quality in Clothes; 2. Carefulness of
Style; 3. A Michael’s Label. .
Blues, Greys, Tans; * Stripes, Plaids *
Single and Double- and Checks |
Breasted Styles * Celanese Lined I
PAGE THREE
Athenian Is Named |
Vice-President of
University Actors
Sims Bray, Atlanta, was elected
president of the Umvemifr‘#
Georgia Thalian-Blackfriars W’i
matic club for ‘1934-35 at the am
nual elections announced todwyiyf
the club. i e
Edward Hodgson, Athevng,Q fi%%
elected vice president and Mar-
guerite Palmer, Blythe, was made
secretary, at the same meeting.
Bray is a member of the Chi Psi
social fraternity, the Glee club, the
Commerce club, and a captain in
the R. O. T. C. unit. He played
the masculine lead in the first two
shows to be presented by the com- 1
bined Thalian-Blackfriars Drama- %
tic club, “Thunder in the Air” and
“Perfect Alibi.” Vil
Hodgson is & member of tha
Kappa Alpha social fraternity,
swimming team, Glee club, Mdm&é
adjustant captain in the Umniver- «g
sty R O I Couik This his
‘third year as a member of the
Thalian-Blackfriars. G
Miss Palmer ig a former mems
ber of the old Teachers college
dramatic club and became a mem=
ber of the ‘Thalian-Blackiriard
this year when the two clubs were
merged. She played a role in the
fall production of the club, “Beg
gar on Horseback.” She is a mém
ber of the Tau Epsilon Phi local
social sorority. TR e
Black-Draught Brings
Refreshing Relief of
Constipation Troubles
o R TRy Lo N e
Constipation produces many dis- %
agreeable sensations, several of
which are mentioned by Mr. TE“%‘
Stith, of -~ Boonville, Ind., who
writes: .“I have used Thedford’s
Black-Draught many years when
needed for biliousness and other
minor ills when a laxative was é
needed. I have a tight feeling in °
my chest when I get bilious. 1 get
dizzy and feel very tired, just i{*
don’t feel like doing my work.
After taking Black-Draught, I feel |
much better. This is why I cson--“é
tinue to use it when needed.” . . .
Thedford’s Black-Draught is a
good, purely vegetable laxative,
obtainable for 25 cents a package.
—(adv.)