Atlanta Georgian and news. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1907-1912, January 17, 1911, Image 9

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v ' IJM.III ' . THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS: ippppipp All'i TUESDAY, JANUARY 17,1911. Discontinuing All First Floor Departments This sale to discontinue everything in our entire store except Ladies’ Ready-to-Wear is pronounced* a complete success. Every one egresses appreciation and surprise at the wonderful yalues and the beauty and quality <f the merchandise. The quantities are large, put you*had best come early, for such bar gains as these are sure to go quickly. Our line of Ladies’, Men’s and Children’s Knit Un derwear is .very large, and to move them with out delay we will offer in this department for Wednesday Greater Reductions That] Ever See Oar Window Display 49 Whitehall Street Cut-Price Sale Standard BOOK SETS MRS. CRAVENS TO BE ENTERTAINED INFORMALLY Sire. R. K. Cravens, of Portland. Maine, wife of Captain Craven* of tlie artillery. Is the guest of Mrs. Harry Barnes for n few days. On Tuesday evening Captain nnd Mrs. Barnes will liave a few friends lnfurinully to play bridge and meet their house guest. MR8. NORRIS ENTERTAIN8 FOR MIS8 ALICE 8TAFFORD A delightfully Informal event of Tuesday afternoon was the tea given by Mrs. E. E. Norris at her home on Twelfth-st. In honor of Miss Alice Staf. ford, of ('liatlHnnoga, who In the guest of Mrs. Thomas Scratching. Vases of whltp carnations and nar clssl were prettily arranged In the house, and music by Mrs. Edward Wor center and solos by Mrs. John Lamar Meek added to the afternoon's pleanure. Dainty' refreshments were served In the dining room, where tho table was covered with a handsomely embroidered Japanese cloth. A cut glass vase of narcissi and carnations formed the cen terpiece, and sliver compotes held bon bons and glace nuts In white. Mrs. Emil Lnurson poured tea, gowned In a French coat of blue brocade worn with long shirt of blue cloth. a long shirt of blue cloth. Assisting In entertaining were Mrs. Thomas Scratching and Mrs. Rlx Staf ford. Mrs. Norris was a cordial hostess and was gowned for the nfternoon In yellow Japanese crepe embroidered In chr , miss Stafford, the honor guest, wore black loco made over foundation skirts of blue satin. Mrs. Norris Invited for to meet Miss Stafford, the following guests: Mrs. A. L. Mills. Mrs. Charles Allen. Mrs. H. W. Miller, Mrs. Sims Bray. Mrs. Blltchell King, Mrs. Arthur Kellogg, Mrs. Wallace Boyd. Mrs. John Kellogg, Mrs. Wallace Boyd. Mrs. John Hill. Mrs. Ransomo Wright, Mrs. T. A. Pearce, Mrs. O.’ O. Bailey, Mrs. Emil Laurson, Mrs. William Carleton, Mrs. Robt Ridley, Jr.. Mrs. Haralson Bleckley Mrs. Argo of New York, Mrs. Brader Barker, Mrs. Edward Worcester. Mrs Willis Jones, Mrs. John Lamar Meek, Mrs. Frank Jones. Mrs. James Alex ander, Mrs. Donald Loyless, Mrs. Chas. . Sims, Hurlbut Mrs. R. L. Sims, Mrs. Ben Watkins. Mrs. Alex Bonneyman, Mrs. Epps Brown, Mrs. Platte Armstrong, Mrs. Harry Barnes and her guest, Mrs. Augustus Shaw; Mrs. Edwin Johnson, Mrs. John Logan of Knoxville, Misses Cynthia and Daisy Neal. Bessie Barker. ONE WEEK ONLY t 15 Vols., $13.50 12 Vols., 9.75 16 Vols., 10 Vols., 12 Vols., 10 Vols., Shakespeare 15 Vols., t!J50 Bibles, Oxford Teachers’ Edition, this sale, $1.00. P04, Irving, Stevenson, Hugo, DeManpassant, Sue—in fact, alsost every standard author is represented in this great Dickens . . Fielding.. Balzac . .. Dumas ... Scott Thackeray 9.75 9.00 8.50 7.50 6.00 See Window Display v— Ongressrrian Smith Is Nomi nated by Taft to Succeed Van Devanter. Washington, Jan. 17.—President Taft J nominated Representative Wal- Smlth, of Iowa, to be United liite* lodge for the eighth circuit. He cceeds Judge VanDevanter. Repre- nt.'itlw Smith Is one of the Jowa andpatterg and Speaker Cannon's iKht-hind man. MR8. M'KENZIE ENTERTAIN8. Mrs. George McKensle entertained twelve members of the younger set In compliment to Miss Carolyn King, one of the charming debutantes of the sea son, and for Bliss Cena Whitehead, of Albany, on Tuesday morning at her home on Peachtree. The young women were* seated for the game at tables placed In the library and living room. Bowls and vases of fragrant narcissi, palms and ferns were artistically grouped ‘ about the apartmenta After the galfie a course luncheon was served. There were pretty prises given for top score and consolation. The guest of . honor also received prises, boxes of dainty French handkerchiefs. The score cards for the game bore the Ini tial of the honor guest In gold. Mrs. McKensle was a cordial hostess, gowned for the morning In brojvn vel- vet combined with gold-threaded lace. Assisting her In entertaining the young guests were Mrs. Porter King. Mrs. Charles Wlnshlp and Mrs. Howell Cloud. Miss Carolyn King wore a becoming costume of champagne colored chiffon broadcloth, trimmed In brown velvet and blue satin. Her tan beaver hat was trimmed In plumes. INTERESTING MEETING OF ROBERT E. LEE CHAPTER The Robert B. Lee chapter. United Daughters of the Confederacy, of Col-' lege Park will observe the birthday of Robert E. Lee on Thursday evening, January 18, at * o'clock sharp, In the chapel of Cox college. Crosses of honor will be presented to the following veterans: Dr. William Crenshaw, Mr. F. T. J. Rasemnre, Mr. E. O. Williams, Mr. J. A. Ferlow, Blr. W. T. Crouch, Mr. David A. Banks. Mr. C. L. Brown. Blr. W. K. Allen and Mr. W. B. Broom. Miss Alice Baxter, president of the Georgia division, Uplted Daughters of the Confederacy, will present 10 In' terestlng stsreoptlcon views of the me. morlal and educational work being dona by the Daughters at Arlington. Mu sic will be rendered by Miss Carrli dmetuam. Js&h Minimum Boning In These Corsets The Corset of correct fashioning secures the beauty lines with the mini mum amount of boning. This is the ’American Lady Corset. It comes in many and varied mod els to suit all the different types of figures. Many women who were un der the impression that they had “pe culiar figures” have found out that their figures possessed only normal va riations. The American Lady and Lyra Mod els provide to fit any form. And remember, there’s no excess of boning. ' American Lady Corsets, $1.00 to $5.00 Special Lyra Models, . $5.00 to $10.00 KEELY CO D. Gray Citizens Denounce the Articles About .Mountain People as Baseless Falsifications. lean’ 1 iyrfc. Minister’s Sweet- all this week at the MUTGOMERY COUPLE MARRIED IN ATLANTA M*. Loula Andcreon and Mina Fan- e May Wynn, both of Montgomery, "ere quietly married In the office bf ordinary by Juatlce Edgar H. Tuesday. The bridegroom l« con- led with the Capital Securities Com- *'f hli home city, and the bride la h ‘ daughter of BIre. BI. Wynn. Julius I'avls, a friend of tho couple nnd ’“dent In the Southern Dental college, din. sued the ceremony. Ih young people denied that the Rome, Ga., Jan. 17.—Articles charaC' terixlng mountain people of this sec tlon as Ignorant of religion, Bible, books, lllthy as to personal habits, and behlndathc times a century as to cook ing and farming, have recently been published under the signature of Rob ert F. Wilson, of Washington, D. C., and have created great Indignation here. The articles were accompanied by photographs of Miss Martha Berry, and buildings of Berry school. R. H. Adams, principal of that Institution, deolared this morning that the artloles and use of photographs were unau thorised by the school and Join* cltl- sens of Rome In denouncing the same as a baseless falsification. from England, and Dr. D. will apeak. The public la cordially Invited to be resent. A free-will sliver offering will e taken for the benefit of the work at Arlington. Personal Mention RICE FACES COURT ON SERIOUS CHARGE There a no time to call a doctor "hen Croup orates, you must have,some Immediate v's,. mean* of relief, Vlfik'^Salve Pneumonia relives with the first Application, tnd In fifteen min* utes will ctirj the worse attack cl spasmodic Croup. If °ot ftlrour i niKKUt’s, order by mail 25c SOc $1.00 ICieatnomcalto tuvthe dollar itzc.“ \gg»fMgTlbatf«.Cw, Cmoihra.M.Gj On the charge of assault with Intent to murder, C. W. Rice was arraigned before Judge Roan' In the criminal court Tuesday. The assault on which the charge was based is said to have been made on James Denham during August of lost year. According to Denham’s story, he and Rice were walking down the street when they met a nun and his wife, friends of Denham. After Handing a few moments, Rice Is said to have called to Denham to come on. Denham did not comply at once, and when ho did, he says Rice made on Insulting remark concerning the woman. Ddn- ham says he struck him at the time with a walking cane, and that when he met Rice on the street later the latter attacked him with a pistol, shooting him thru the arm. Attorney John A. Boykin represents Rice nnd a number of witnesses have been summoned In the case. marriage was a runaway affair, saying that business had brought Mr. Ander son to Atlanta, hut both admitted that their friends would probably be sur prised to hear of the wedding; Mr. and Mr*. George Adair announce the birth of a little girl at their home on Peachtree-st. January It. The young lady will be called Sarah Adair. Mrs. W. C. Jarnagin la the subject of a beautiful plctdre In the social pages of last Sunday’s Pittsburg Dispatch, under the caption, “A Noted Southern Beauty." Miss Laura Wyatt laaves Saturday to apend several week! In Macon as a This Will Stop Your Cough in a Hurry This recipe makes a pint of better >u could buy ready few doses usi " obstinate cou conquer the most obstinate eough— ■tops even whooping cough quickly, simple as it Is, no better remedy can with H pin? for i minutes, tnfty cents worth) , sugar w “* r ' *M* r then add if warm wa Put 2jt oui :s worth) In a pint bottle; the Sugar Syrup. It has a late and laats a family a long guest of the Misses Hill. Mr. and Mrs. Frederick A. Lsvarubf, Jr., will close their home, 1700 St. Paul- st., and will leave Baltimore for At lanta. where they will make their home. —Baltimore News. Mrs. Lila Morgan, of Cartersvllte, Is the guest of Mrs. BV. S. Calhoun. Mrs. Frank Owen Is the guest of BIre. George D. Lancaster In Chatta nooga, Tenn., where she la being de tlghtfully entertained. Mr, and Mrs. W. Greer leave Thurs day for Tampa and other points In Florida, to bo gone several weeks, Mr, and Mrs. Ernest Duncan have gone to housekeeping In one of the Linden Court apartments, corner Lin den and Courtland. Mr, and Mrs. Edwin Bruton 8trangs, of Rlverdale-on-the-Hudson, New York, have sent cards to Atlanta friends announcing the birth of Edwin Bruton Strange. Jr., on Friday, Janu ary IS. Mr. and Mrs. Btrange spent some time In Atlanta laat June, and have a number of friendi here. Miss 8emplln, who has been the guest of friends on Forrest-ave., has return ed to her home In Ohio. Mias Julls Mtsdor will leave the lat ter part or the week fer New York, where she will epend some time as the guest of her sister, Mrs. Floyd MeRie entertained the members of her bridge club very de lightfully at her home on Peachtree road on Tuesday afternoon. Miss Lucy stocksrd left Tuesday at noon for Birmingham, where she will be the guest of Mrs. White, going later to spend some time with Miss Annie Cabot Hopkins at her home In Colum bus, Bflss. Mrs. Cyrus Strieklsr won the prise for top score and Mrs. James B. Baird cut the consolation, two pretty plates, at the meeting of the newly organised bridge club which was delightfully en tertained at the home of Mrs. Peter Erwin on Blonday afternoon. Mrs. Norman Foster, of Trenton, N. ... will arrive In Atlanta Wednesday and will be the guest of Mrs. Porter King st her home on Peachtree road. Mlse Adrienne Battey left Tuesday afternoon for Birmingham, where she will be the guest of Mrs. Campbell Ma- ben for several weeks. Mrs. John Csrtsr will entertain the "Karten Clique" on Thursday after noon, her guests te Include only mem bers of the club. Mrs. Bernard Wolff will entertain the Thursday Bfomlng Bridge club at her home on Peachtree place on Thursday morning. Mrs. Charles Pettigrew and her sis ter. Mrs. Daisy Harrison, have returned home from Hillsboro, N. C„ where they 'ake a teaspoonful every one; two or three hours. Tou can feel this take hold of a cough In a way that means business. Has a — 1 tonic effi— and Is slli less bronchitis, ,nd luojj troubli feet, oraces up the appe- llghtly laxative, too. witch L Kandy remedy for hoarse- asthma and all throat _ raw wegian white nine extract, and Is rich In gulalcol and all the natural healing pine elements Other prepkratlons will not work In this formula. This Pines and Sugar is attained great popularity _ ut the United.States end C has often been" Imitated, though nsvtr fully. success: «A guaranty of absolute satisfaction, or montjr promptly refunded, goes with Ths Pines Co. '. .Ypur druggist has Pinas t It tor you. If not, send to Co..PL Wayne, Ind. gregntlonal church, the wedding to be n beautiful event of the week. Mr, and Mrs. Alexander 8mlth will entertain on Tuesday evening In honor of Miss Sophie Mcldrim, of Savanna) who Is being delightfully entertalnei os the guest of Mrs. John D. Little. ZACHRY WILL IS FILED FOR PROBATE TUESDAY The will of the late John Morton Zachry has been probated In common form In the offlee of the ordinary. Ac cording to the terms of the Instrument, practically all the estate goes to the widow. Mrs. Sarah Low Zachry, and three daughters, Hattie Olivo Zachry, Lucy Morton Zachry and Sarah Mary John L. Zachry, Walter H. Zachry, Joe. H. Zachry and Edward B. Zachry, are named aa executors. The estate con sists chiefly of two houses at 374 and 376 Glcnn-st. CHANGE IN WOMAN’S UFE Made Safe by Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. Granite ville, Vt — . . I wag passing through the Change of Life and suffered Home rrom tiiiiBDora, »i. «nnr nicy attended the funeral of their brother. Blr. Allen Ruffin, whose death occurred In Philadelphia last week. Mrs. Martin Dunbar entertained the members of the Ansley Park Bridge club at her/home In Ansley Park on Tuesday afternoon, the afternoon being one of much pleasure to the club mem here. Mias Ruth Barry entertained Inform ally on Monday evening for her guest Miss Ramsey, of Toccoa, Gay attended the Chi In Athens recently. Mrs. W. J. Tilton and her son are visiting BIre. Murchison Thomas, In Sa vannah. Mrs. Harry Barnes has aa her guest at her apartment In the Marlborough Mra. R. K. Cravens, of Portland, Maine. Miaa Charlotte Green and Mr. Percy Hoyla Adams will he married on Tues day evening at 1:10 o’clock at the Con front nervousness land other anhoving symptoms, and I [can truly say that pdla E. Flnkbam's . egetablo Com. pound haa proved worth mountains of gold to me, as it restored my health and strength. if to tell never forge my friends what Lydia E. 1’Inkham’s itable Compound has dono for mo _ .— - . -jg period. Complete restoration to health means so much to me that for the sake of other suffer, ing women I am willing to make m; ing women i am willing to make my trouble public so you may publish this letter.”—Mrs. Chas. Barclay, B.F.D., Granltoville, Vt, No other medicine for woman’s ills has received such wide-spread and uni qualified endorsement. No other med icine we know of hss such a record of cure* as has Lydia E. Mnkham’s Vegetable Compound. For more than 80 years it has been curing woman’s ills such as Inflamma tion. ulceration, fibroid tumors, irreg ularities, periodic ‘ * sins and nervous prostration, and if% unequalled for carrying women safely through the ‘ ‘ ‘ of life. period of chango i Mrs. Pinkbam, at Lynn, Mass., Invites nil sick women to write tier for advice. Her advice is free, and always hclpfuL Chamberlin-Johnson-DuBoseCo Word of in-omen—INCURABLE. It terrifies tho pluckiest heart. The death sentence may bo uttered in flattering terms and accepted with dauntless indifference. But where is the valor that will not cower be neath the terror and horror of the portentous word-- INOURABLE? Tho brave man forgets his courage; the buffoon drops his mock when that word of awe is pro nounced. It makes frightened, trembling aspen leaves of us all. ITS GLOOM SHUTS OUT HOPE Men make merry with danger. They chaff at bullets and greet bayonets with ridicule. The gantlet to the cannon’s mouth is gay with blood and sweet with groans, but soldiers stand by their guns and raise a rallying cry with their LAST GASP. THAT IS GLORY. Scientists say strange things. They tell us nothing is AS IT SEEMS TO BE, » We would like to believe appearances are de ceitful at the HOME FOR INCURABLES. Are they? Are those withered brows and clouded eyes nothing more than pale chimeras? Let the scientist insist that what we think large is to an elephant very small, that the motion which would be rapid to a snail is exceedingly slow to the eye of an eagle, that this heavy glass paper weight, which to the sight and touch is so smooth and even, is nothing more than an unequal congregation of projections and cavities, that the bronze base of this electrolier is a sieve consisting of more pores than solid matter, that the hand holding the pen from which these words roll, lodges and feels multi tudes of animals which may think themselves the masters of the universe. These objects escape our vision. The law of optics makes a straight stick, thrust into, water, seem*to be bent. BUT THERE IS NO TRICK OF THE IMAGINATION THAT CAN TURN THE REALITIES OF PHYSICAL PAIN INTO ILLUSIONS. “There is no such thing as body,” exclaims the philosopher. Don’t tell it to the dying woman with a cannibal cancer gnawing her breast. She knows, with Epicurus, that “THERE IS NOTHING BUT BODY.” If we can’t snatch the fatal claws of disease from the flesh of INCURABLES there are other things that we SHOULD do. We can’t restore them to health, but we may cast a gleam of brightness into their gray lives by ministering to their necessities in many ways. A group of Atlanta women who have a world of charity and not an atom .of vanity will establish a store next month, AND ALL PROFITS ARE TO BE APPLIED TO THE NEEDS OF THE IN MATES OF THE HOME FOR INCURABLES, We beg our customers not to buy anything from us that can bo had at the eleemosynary enterprise. GOING TO FLORIDA? The Annual Show ing of Palm Beach Hats Begins Today. Come see the display of mid-season novelties before they scat ter. At longest, the time is short-breathed. Such beauty, in Milinery, is fugitive and brief. Like happy skies and dying music. Our $1.25 Kid Gloves at Our $1.50 Kid Gloves at Our $1.75 Kid Gloves at Our $2.00 Kid Gloves at 65 There are only three hundred pairs of them— some have ben tried on, some are a little awry from careless handling, the clasps of others are tarnished. They are the Gloves that were caught in the Christ mas squeeze. Practically all right—but not fresh. They will be ffold without privilege of being tried on, and will not be taken back or exchanged. We are seeking a tenant for 21 East Hunter street. The building abuts ours—adjoins, grazes, touches it. Two floors and basement—66 feet wide and 185 feet long. Entrance midway between Whitehall and Pryor streets. We wish to sub-lease it until September 1. After that date, permanent arrangements may be made with owner. Posses sion given February 1. Chamberlin-Johnson-DuBose Company