Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, July 25, 1912, HOME, Page 11, Image 11

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PERSONAL MENTION Mrs- *’• Carmean left to dav Baltimore. r Charles F. Nunnally is at W right.-v!lle Beachy u r? . Roland Alston is at tile Oceanic hotel, Wrightsville Beach. I.ois Manning Is visiting friends an(i i-latives in Chattanooga. Vr Rix Stafford has joined Mrs. Stafford at Wrightsville Beach. \f rs Josephine Earnest Purse has re turned from Wrightsville Beach. jlis L. E. Buchholz and daughter, Ruth, left today for Marlon, Va. Mrs. Harrison Penn is spending some time at the Oceanic, Wrightsville Beach. Mr and Mrs. Karl W. Brittain, of •’loi East North avenue, announce the birth >f a son. Ml-- Margaret Harrison has returned from i stay of several weeks at Bruns wick and St. Simons Island. Mr and Mrs. W. A. Wimbish expect tn spend the latter part of August on the coast of Maine. Mr. and Mrs. Custis Anderson leave the middle of August for a stay at Brevard, N. C. Mr. R C. Massengale has returned to the city, after a several weeks trip to Chicago, Minneapolis and New York. Miss Martha Phinizy returns to her home in Athens tomorrow, after a short stay with Mrs. Hughes Spaldinf. Mrs. John Evins, little Miss Mary Evins and Master Glenn Evins are at the Oceanic hotel. Wrightsville Beach. Miss Eliza Patterson, of Macon, who Davison-Paxon-Stokes Co. A Busy Friday and the Half-Day Saturday When Price Reductions Like These Abound The Store Closes at One o'Clock Saturday Our necessity for removing stocks during the re building of the store results in a feast of economy op portunities for you. This sale for Friday and Saturday affords very unusual advantages, as you will note from the list below. $1.25 Combinations at 69c The supply of coql, summer Combinations needs to be replenished repeatedly. Here is an opportunity to buy them at just about half their regular price. hacy, pretty garments, they are made of soft nainsook and trimmed in various effective wavs with lace or embroidery, beading and ribbon. Priced regularly at $1.25; for this sale at 69c suit. Extra Size Night Gowns for Women--- $1.25 and $1.50 Values at 98c fhey are garments of excellent value- —and so many styles for choosing. High neck, long sleeves, low neck, short sleeves, chemise effects, (rood materials, dainty trimmings. Ihe price for this sale is 98c instead of $1.25 and $1.50. $1.25 Chemises at 59c At their regular price they are garments of extra good value, but they are slightly soiled and hence are priced at 59c. Made of soft nainsook with bands of embroidery in ■'"rtion, finished with lace edge. Infants’ Long Children’s 50c Dresses 37c Instead Drawers at 25c of 50c Pair Painty little Dresses of very soft nain- An assortment of broken sizes—some sizes made with tucked voke. missing between 2 and 12 years. Good Draw- ers. made of cambric, with dainty embroidery r £ f r\ ruffle. They are slightly soiled, but with a Infants $125 Dresses tubbing they are highly desirable at 25c, which is just half price for them. at69c Children’s 25c Liitie short Dresses, size 6 months to 2 Made of very fine, soft nainsook, lace Tjf(lU)&T*S dt 12 1 ""2(2 $1.25 Petticoats at 69c . ' Drawers of cambric with dainty tucked yMzes 6 months to 2 years: Pettieoats ruffle; sizes 2, 4 and 6 years. Priced for this of cambric; daintv tucks and lace or sale at 12 l-2c pair—they are regular 25c gar "nil»roidery trimmed. ‘ ments. - is the guest of Mrs. Leverette Walker, will visit her aunt. Mrs. Hamilton Yan t cey, In Rome, before returning home. Mr. and Mrs. D. B. Blalock, of Fay etteville, Ga„ announce the birth of a son. Mrs. Blalock was formerly Miss Estelle Zellars, of Grantville. Mrs. Bert F. Tull, of Augusta, is the guest of her mother, Mrs. George J. Hansen. Later in the summer Mr. Tull will be in the city for a stay. Miss Rosabel Chapman spent yester day in Locust Grove, as the guest of her sister, Mrs. Emerson Ham. formerly . Miss Ruth Chapman. Mrs. So| Samuels and her little > daughter, Janet Rose, leave next Tues- > day for a stay at Savannah, Tvbee, Brunswick and St. Simons. f Judge and Mrs. Arthur T. Powell ? and Master Arthur Wilkins Powell have returned from Wrightsville Beach and will leave next week for Warm 1 Springs. Mr. and Mrs. E. S. McCandless and Miss Edna McCandless, who landed in ' Bremen on July 15, went to Berlin for '■ a week's stay before going to Carlsbad, where they will be for some time. ■ Miss Rachel Nunnally has returned 1 to her home in Monroe, affer.a short stay in Atlanta as the guest of Miss , Cota Met ord Brown at the executive ( mansion. Mr. and Mrs. Adolph Samuels, of 198 Rawson street, entertained last night t at an informal party for their guests, Misses Pauline and Regina Levison, of Jacksonville. Fla., who are their guests for a stay of several weeks. Mr. G. A. Knabe was tendered a birthday party last night by his chil- > dren and a number of their friends, the THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS. THURSDAY, JULY 25, 1912. Miss Brown to Give Luncheon at Mansion A pretty luncheon of twelve covers will be glvet? by Misg Cora McCord Brown, the young daughter of Governor and Mrs. Joseph M. Brown, tomorrow afternoon at 1 o'clock at the executive mansion. Miss Constance O'Keefe, of Green ville, S. the guest of Miss Louise Broyles, will be the honoree of the luncheon, the following young girls be ing asked to meet her on this occasion: Misses Louise Broyles, Isolene Campbell, Eula Jackson, Lawson Hines, Dorothy Harman, Josephine Mobley, Theo Prioleau, Mary Brown and Rosalie Davis. young people making the fifty-second birthday of Mr. Knabe most enjoyable with music and a buffet supper. Atlanta friends of Mrs. E. W. Dut ton have received news of her death In Boston. Mrs. Dutton's husband, a well known Atlantan, died here about four months ago. since which she had been living in Boston, her former home. Mrs. Leonora Sheehan Raines, who has been spending the past two years in Paris, is in Atlantic City and will be joined the first of next week by her sister, Mrs. E. W. More, who has been spending some time at Wrightsville Beach. After a stay in Atlanta as the guest of her uncle, Mr. Charles Crankshaw, and her mother, Mrs. Mary Thomas, Mrs. Pratt Adams will go to the moun tains of North Carolina for the re mainder of the summer, accompanied by Mrs. Thomas. Mrs. Adams will spend September in Asheville. EGG SHELL DIET PROLONGS LIFE French Savants Find Tonic Which Develops Vitality and Prevents Depopulation. PARIS, July 25.—" Eat eggshells, eat eggshells. Throw away the yolk if need be and spill out the white if you will, but eat the shells. Then you will'be healthy and happy, and live to see your grandchildren's children." Such Is the earnest advice given by Professors Emmerick and Loewe, and published widely here. The words “eat eggshells” must not be taken too literally. The learned pro fessors have prepared a liquid they call the chloride of eggshells. Like the al truistic eccentrics they are, they have proclaimed the formula for this chlo ride; there is no secret about it. noth ing proprietary. So perhaps their ad vice should be worded: "Drink eggshells." Hen Is Greatest Benefactor. Professor Emmerick, of Munich, is world renowned for his knowledge of diphtheria and chai nt. He and his col league. Loewe, declare that the ma tronly- and industrious hen is one of the greatest benefactors of mankind, not because she produces eggs, but be cause the eggs are contained in snells. These learned men assert that egg shells taken in proper form lengthen human vitality, add weight to the body, destroy injurious bacilli, nourish the brain, strengthen the heart, prevent in flammation and lend courage and en ergy to the human being. Diet Prevents Depopulate,,. Even more important from a socio logical point of view is the assertion by Emmerick and Loewe that a diet of eggshells conduces to sec undity and prevents depopulation. They fed egg shells to four pairs of white mice. Within a given time ~4 very small ones were added to the population of white mice. In the same given time four pairs of white mice which had to de with cut the stimulating eggshells were blessed with a progeny which numbe re 1 only nine. Emmerick and Loewe point out ib.ct hens cease to lay when their food lacks the calcareous elements in which egg shells are so rich. They r< commend that a spoonful of tic*- cnlori.le of egg shells be taken three tl'nes a day in water. Like human life which it will prolong, the dose Is bitte-r, but not al together disagreeable. GOMPERS SAYS JUDGE WHO SENTENCED HIM IS RELIC OF PAST AGE WASHINGTON, July 25. —In bitter phrases, culminating in a diatribe against Judge Daniel Thaw Wright, President Gompers, of the American Federation of Labor, today had his say in reference to the jurist’s recent sentencing of Gompers, Mitchell and Morrison for contempt of court in the Bucks Stove and Range Company injunction case. In a signed editorial in the current is sue of The American Federationist, Gompers declared, "Judge Wright dis closes the mental attitude of a by-gone age when the masters owned the work men who were their slaves nr serfs anil the master had some form of property or property right in his slave or serf." AWARDING CONTRACTS FOrI S. CAROLINA INTERURBAN SPARTANBURG. 8. July 25. The officials of the Greenville, Spar tanburg and Anderson Interurban elec tric railway are this week letting con tracts aggregating $500,000 for grading 31 miles of roadbed between Spartan burg and Greenville, S. C., prepara tory to building another link in the Interurban lino that will eventually connect Charlotte with Greenville and Anderson. Contractors have completed 21 miles in North Carolina for the Piedmont and Northern lines, the North | Carolina end of the road, anil the sec ond link from Gastonia to Blacksburg is expected to be started within a few months, leaving a stretch of 31 miles from Blacksburg to Spartanburg to complete the line from Greenville to Charlotte. jig ’ I You have to use a microscope to | see disease germs, but small as j they are, they have deadly pow r. the Powerful Disinfectant is a safeguard against them. Use a so lution of CN—one tablespoonful to the gallon of water—for washing floors and woodwork, for flushing toilets and sinks, and for sprinkling on decaying matter. It will destroy germ life and make the home healthful. " Tht Ytllffw Par ha ft with the Gable Tap” 10c. 25c. 50c. SI.OO At Drug and Dept. Stores. WEST DISINFECTING CO.. ATLANTA | Rich & Bros. Co.) | i-S| “The Real Department Store” ■5 Grand PreJnventory “Finals” in the Juvenile Dept. g 250 Children’s Dresses! gJ * Absolute Values from $1.25 to $5.00 Jj* t49c | I liese little garments, every single one of them, arc stylish, up to the moment modes — th- esses any mother would be proud to have her little daughter wear. They are made of Xf excellent quality ginghams, chambrays and other popular wash fabrics, in light and dark colors, with contrasting braid, lace applique and self trimmings. Light grounds with stripes, figures and 5U plaid effects. They are tastifully made up, gjr and no stronger values in -Children’s Dresses were ever offered than these that we now prac tically price to give away at 49c each. Up »Jj ward of 290 of these little garments are for ( ages from one to six years—and about 50 of JJ* them for ages from eight to fourteen years. gc These garments vary in their value from $1.25 to $5.00. Not □5 0,1(1 °l them ever sold for less than $1.25. The greater majority of Xu “'H this lot were originally priced from $1,25 to $3.50 —a iniinber of them at $4.00 and not a few at $5 — BT % P so the fact is extremely obvious that selling these pretty garments at 49c, is in effect simply givingßaißi W them away. Can you afford to remain unrespon- BL sive to such bargains as these? Choice now | M. Rich & Bros. Co. p | Alien’s White Shoes Are Now Reduced To $1.95 and $2.95 Wc offer every white buckskin, white nu-buck, and white can vas Low Shoe, formerly selling for $4.00, $5.00 and $6.00, at $2.95. Every white Low Shoe selling for $3.00, $3.50 and some $4.00 styles, . at $1.95. This is an unusually sharp reduction on the Shoes of the hour, as white Shoes are at the present time'.' Included in tiiesl.9s lot are two special purchases that, if we had bought them in the regular way. we would not have sold for less tl|an $4.00. W hen you come in. ask the clerk to show you style No. 1376, or if you want the nu-buck instead, ask him for No. 1375. / W < / \\ I / Z- i \\ / Jk. W / '■*/ / I ’ 9 / / waff * \ A X \ Z x. \ XxA J $1.50 Slippers in OCZr* S4.CO White CanvastfJl QE White Canvas and dOK soft kid . Boots Suckskin Colonials I Every summer low Shoe and Slipper reduced, and many Boots. $5.00 Shoes t 053.75 and $3.25 S4.CO Shoes t 053.25 and $2.45 $3.00 Shoes t 052.45 and $1.95 Broken lots of $3 to $4 Shoes, 95e. $4, $5, and $6 Shoes, $1.95. Shop as early as you can in the morning, and remember we close SATURDAYS at 1 p. m. If every lady would remember that Shoes require more careful choosing than a few yards of dress goods, rib bons <>r other things, she would not wait until 11 or 12 o’clock, when some of the rh rks are at lunch, and everybody is in a hurrv. Before 11 a. tn. you can have the undivided attention of a good salesman. Some wise ladies start in as earlv as 9a. in. J. P. ALLEN & CO. EVERY HAS A MEANING GEORGIAN •■MUI Mi-F all ITS OWN BOTH TELEPHONES 8000 11