Atlanta Georgian and news. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1907-1912, March 14, 1907, Image 4

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i nr, axuAAIA CfiMJUUlAA AJXU AHiV»tt. | ^n-f-rlin .Johnson-DuBose Company | Chamberlin - Johnson - DuBose Company ,| Chamberlin - Johnson - DuBose Company Tomorrow In The Dress Goods Department The Silks Will Hold Full Sway An Exposition— A Silk Textile Education If You Will Take fr ■ 1 ; . ( ; 1 ' r I 1 •• • • f The Time To Study The New Weaves Extreme efforts and centuries of knowledge seem to have crystallized in the most exquisite silks that have come here to make up a Chamberlin-Johnson-DuBose Stock. Diversified, comprehensive, teeming with novelties, and heralded with unsurpassable values. Our silk buyer was certainly inspired and en thused by the wonderful possibilities in the silk market With the best silks in the world to buy from and the greatest silk department in the South to buy for, unhampered and unhindered, we have called upon the looms of the world for their richest treasures. Marvels in spinning and coloring. -• P ,jj ' ' . * . Look here, look there; stand at this side or over there-some new surprise is there for you. For tomorrow the silks will hold full sway. Festoons and cascades of iridescent color; great heaps of soft, de lightful, delicate, shimmering stuffs in-dainty evening shades. Clear, firm, strong weaves in street shades. New faces and old friends in new dress, but above and beyond all the greatest silk showing that you have ever seen. Silk Chiffon Cloth Chiffon doth in the full skirt width with the grad uated polka dots forming borders. Dots of great sise in colors on white grounds. Chiffon cloths again in Ombre effects. And again it is printed in the effect of a dainty quilling of blue ribbon worked into a ruffle with lace me dallions in the field above the Bounce. Marquesettes Jfarquesettes in solid colors—all silk and silk and silk and wooL And the printed Marquesettes, artistic effects you might expect in finely hand-painted Japanese floral de signs upon tinted silk bolting cloth; thin as air; so del icate in textpre. A fabric exquisitely soft and sheer. And New York and Paris dressmakers are gather ing these up at a rate that if we didn’t own these we could not get hold of a yard of them for you. Ribbon Stripes All silk Voile in solid colors with a broad 4-inch band of black and white Pekin ribbon stripes. All silk voiles, tiny checks, scarcely larger than a pin point, blues and white, gray and white and other ef fects with embroidered dots and figures scattered over the surface, hit or miss. « Silk Chiffon Voile Chiffon Voile, with dark colored back grounds and light printed spots, and in contrasting coin dots, here and there. More Silk Voile All silk Voiles in the dark dull color combinations— all silk voile in Biadere stripes — brown, with black, dark blue with black, dark green with black. Silks that may not catch your eye as quickly as some of the bright er colors, but their richness grows in your favoring. f ' , L, ■ Pongees Pongee Silks—the old fashion pongees, and the new, rough pongees checked, plaid, fancy and solid color pon gees. Foulards Foulards! Yes, indeed—old friends not to be omit ted in any silk announcement. Foulards in plain col ors, in small dots, in large dots, in large or small fig ures, in satin stripes, with jacquard designs, with bor ders—foulards, but all in new dress. j Silk Nets and Cotton 1 7»ets—and nets are the' most sought after things in the dry goods line today. Sought after because it prom ises to be the greatest year for them in half a decade. Plain nets, in white and colors, dotted nets, medal lion figured nets, solid color fancy silk nets, plain and fancy nets in cotton—Chantilly diigw» in large motifs- Great rose patterns, dark shades in solid color nets. Chamberlin-Johnson-DuBose Co. r