Newspaper Page Text
[PERSONALS
| s i-'thel Goodman is visiting her
j ' j 1 W. B. Walker, in Hongkong,
|ina
I i (i Richardson will attend
r _odom wedding in Newnan
Inis. '
i\- Winship, who is now at-
Iwuse party near New York,
r, , - friends in the city next week.
I . xnita Peeples and Miss Lily
I, . pave next week for a visit to
"?.„u-.n. Miss Sheperd. in New
fork.
Do--ey E. Moorefield leaves this
5 „. f,a'a fortnight’s visit to New
1 she will be the guest of
fork. ■■■'
friend f.
Wr Crarles Sciple and Dr. Joseph
Ofbori ■ go to Savannah for the wed-
Household Economy
How to Have the Best Cough
Syrup and Save 82, by
Making It at Home.
Couizh medicines, as a rule, contain a
ir <,e quantity of plain syrup. If you
£ k e one pint of granulated sugar, add
h pint or warm water and stir about
'{minutes, you have as good syrup at
money l nt/ .
If vou will then nut. 2% ounces ol
Pinex (s*l cents’ worth) in a pint bottle,
and fill >t U P with the Su K ar Syrup, you
will have as much cough syrup as you
nould buy ready made for $2.50. It
reeps perfectly.
And vou will find it the best cough
jrrup vou ever used—even in whooping
<ougn. Vou can feel it take hold—usu
lllv stops the most severe cough in 24
aoiirs. It is just laxative enough, has a
iood tonic effect, and taste is pleasant.
Take a teaspoonful every one, two ox
three hours.
It is a splendid remedy, too, for
rhooping cough, croup, hoarseness, asth
ma. chest pains, etc.
Pinex is the most valuable concentra
ted compound of Norway white pine ex
tract. rich in guaiacol and all the heal
ing pine elements. No other prepara
tion will work in this formula.
This recipe for making cough remedy
with Pinex and Sugar .Syrup is now
used and prized in thousands of homes
in the United States and Canada. The
plan ha« often been imitated but never
successfully.
A guaranty of absolute satisfaction, or
mnnev promptly refunded, goes with this
recipe. Your druggist has Finex, or will
get it for vou. If not, send to The
Pinex Co., Ft, Wayne, Ind.
I 1 Asked a
Society Woman
*Wbai h your most valued me
dram of home entertainment and per
•onal pleasure?”
.. “My Kimball Acmelodic Player
Piano,” she replied. “While it is true
that art, sculpture, the work of the
goldsmith, quaint carvings from the
tar East and the marvelous tapestries
of France all have their devotees,
they do not speak the universal lan
guage of music.
"I must tell you a very amusing
thing that happened recently during
» reception I held in honor of Mrs.
B. Early in the evening my twelve
year old son, wishing to amuse him
«elf, went to the ballroom on the
third floor, and from the distance we
heard music; all the guests stopped
to listen to a beautiful rendition of
Liszts rhapsodic. Thinking it part
" the evening’s program they ap
plsudcd vigorously, making haste to
inquire the name of the artist. You
ran imagine their surprise when I
told them that the artist was my boy
playing a Kimball Player Piano.
' ,l 'e also use it continually for
dances and informal musicales. It
lB undoubtedly the most valued
’'circe o f p] eftsurp al)( j entertainment
our Lome possesses.”
The Kimball Acmelodic Player
tno has the essentials necessary
reproduce hand-played music.
This instrument plays the full
®8 notes—plays Kimball or
n y 8-note roll—full, round, rich,
’ no—selected materials, best
roll-guiding device,
• melodic soloist, ten exclusive im-
music roll library priv-
, .ij lake '‘ never .pi a - e ,n>
i P- ac » m part payment.
Player Piano
W. W. KIMBALL GO.
ATLANTA BRANCH
•4 North Pryor Si.
H R CALZF. Manager.
L KODAKS?":.
[|sl» Hffwkeye,
rs- \ ' lass Finishing and Isn-
»<JT K■' KA . <>n>pl»t<> stock fllmi,
Ih . l'iu>ei«. , hemleals etc.
•it.,, u - ull 1 »r.|er Department for
I, < 11 1 4 * ,u meri>
J A ..«’l^ , “ ulou ’"d Pr ' c ' Liat. i
dt k Aodji OrßjrtmM
At LANTA, OA ,
ding of Miss Sara Nichols and Mr. J.
C. Guild, of Chattanooga.
Miss Janie May ebb. of Athens, will
attend the football game Saturday and
spend the week-end with Miss Rebfe
AA ilkins on West Peachtree street.
Mrs. B. Lee Smith, who has been con
fined to her room for several days with
a severe cold, is improved, and is ex
pected to be out again in a few days
< olonel E. H. Bacon, of Eastman, is
the guest of liis daughter, Mrs. A. R.
Colcord, during the absence of Mrs.
Bacon in Augusta, where she is attend
ing the meeting of the Southern Bap
tist Missionary union.
Miss Powell Byrd, of Virginia, is in
the city for the week-end, en route
from Macon, where she was an attend
ant at the Jaques-Wadley wedding.
While here she will be the guest ol
Mrs. Luther Rosser, Jr., and of Miss
Mary Hines, accompanying Miss Rosa
lind AA'ood-to Savannah-on Saturday.
Miss Eugenia Richardson has been at
the Waldorf, New York, for several
weeks with Mrs. George Forrester and
Mrs. Rutherford Lipscomb. Mrs. For
rester returned today. Mrs. Lipscomb
is visiting her sister In Staunton, Va.,
and Miss Richardson is the guest of
friends in Philadelphia. She returns to
the city on December 1.
ANNOUNCEMENTS!
The regular monthly meeting of the
Atlanta Chapter, D. A. R., will be held
tomorrow afternoon at 3 o’clock, in the
chapter house, near the Piedmont Driv
ing club. There will be business of
importance, followed by Mrs. Frank
Orme’s reading. “Anecdotes of the
Revolution,” and piano solos by Miss
Julia Dunning.
Mrs. Frank D. Holland will be chair
man of the All Saints church restau
rant tomorrow when at urkey dinner
will be served. Other ladies in charge
will be Mesdames William Rhett, John
Glenn, Charles Black, Hinton J. Hop
kins, Frank West, Ernest Duncan, Ro
land Hall, Robin Adair, John Heard,
Jack Lewis, Thomas Longino, Walter
Barnwell and Mrs. McFarland, and
Misse Minnie Harper. Ruth Lewis,
Mary Goode, Irene Smilie, Jennie Dar
gan, May Bancker, Bessie Lambert and
Louise Black.
A ten days bazaar will be opened
Monday by the ladies of St. Anthonys
church at 3 and 5 South Broad street.
Dinners w’ill be served daily, and a va
riety of fancy articles will be on sale.
The Inman Park Students club meets
tomorrow morning at 10:30 o’clock with
Mrs. Jefferies, 30 Euclid avenue.
At a concert at the East End school
house tomorrow evening at 8 o’clock,
Miss Elizabeth Branan will recite un
der the auspices of the Ladies School
Improvement club of East End. The
club was organized last month, Mrs, A.
C. Hendley being president; Mrs. Hen
ry Johnson, vice president, and Mrs.
Forrest E. Kibler, secretary-treasurer.
The club will work in the interest of
the school.
Electa Chapter, Order of Eastern
Star, will hold a regular meeting to
morrow evening at 7:30 o’clock, at the
Alasonic temple.
Mrs. Tucker's Bridge Tea.
Mrs. John T. Tucker’s bridge tea this
afternoon was a compliment to her
house guest, Miss Maud Bellenger, of
Gadsden, Ala. The guests were received
in the drawing room, where the deco
rations were of pink chrysanthemums.
In the library roses and ferns were
used. The tea table in the dining room
was elaborately decorated in pink and
white, a tall-handled basket of pink
carnations being surrounded by pink
shaded tapers, the handle tied with pink
tulle, with many pretty decorative de
tails in pink and white.
The score cards were decorated with
Thanksgiving turkeys. The prizes in
cluded a gold pin for top score, a silver
picture frame for consolation and silver
slipper buckles for the honor guest. A
number of friends joined the players
for tea.
Mrs. Tucker wore wistaria charmeuse
satin with overdrapery of gray chiffon
and silver lace. Miss Bellenger was
gowned in pink brocade charmeuse sat
in combined with point lace and hand
embroidered.
The guests were Misses Helen Dar
gan and her guests, Rose Briscoe and
Martino AlucCulioch; Sarah Rawson
and her guest. Nell Brock; Mignon Mc-
Carty, Mary Helen Moody, Ruth Stall
ings, Annie Lee .McKenzie, Harriet Cole,
Aurelia Speer. Edith Dunson, Elizabeth
Dunson, Passie May Ottley, Laura Ans
ley. Jennie D. Harris, Kathryn Gordon,
Anne Orme, Harriet Calhoun and Mar
jorie Brown, Mrs. John Raine and her
guest. Miss Wilmore: Mrs. Frank Bo
land and her guest, Mrs. W. H. Craw
ford. and Mesdaines Marshall Clarke
Johnson, Charleton Ogburn, Henry
Leonard. Jr., Jack Lewis, John T. High
tower. John T. Moody, Fred Hagan,
Frank Smyly, AA’alter Barnwell, Ever
ard Richardson and R. B. Ridley, Jr.
OLD PEOPLE CAN’TKEEP
WARM WITHOUT A TONIC
With aged people, the blood is thin
and circulation poor, organs act slowly,
digestion is weak, and the body does
not get sufficient warmth from its food.
Do you wonder that they suffer with the
cold, and succumb so easily? They
need a blood and warmth making tonic
during the winter.
Jacobs' Wine Cod Liver Extract is
not only a very pleasant tonic, but un
questionably the best for aged people,
to make more blood, to increase the
appetite and to give them strength to
resist the cold. Syrup of hypophos
phites, wild cherry extract, aromatics
anil port wine are combined with the
medicinal properties of the cod liver,
and every particle of nauseating oils
and fats eliminated, making an agree
able tonic which. Instead of upsetting
the sensitive stomach, stimulates di
gestion and increases the uppetie. it
is a nourishing, blood-making tonic
and builds up strength rapidly. All frail
people need It to waul off colds, coughs,
bronchitis, grippe and pneumonia.
AVe know that Jacobs' Wine Cod
Live Extract is superior to all similar
preparations, and guarantee It unquali
fiedly. If It do. s not benefit the patient
return < mptj bottle and we will refunt
your money . and ti7< at all Jacob*
Ktnt. s. < <d» I I
xnr. ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS.SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 16. 1912.
Dinner Dance for,
Miss Dargan’s
Debut
Mr. and Mrs. Milton Dargan intro
duced their debutante daughter, Miss
Helen Dargan, to their friends in the
younger social contingent at a dinner
dance given at the Piedmont Driving
club last evening. The charming young
girl, with her two house guests, Miss
Rose Briscoe, of Knoxville, and Miss
Martine McCullouch, of Owensboro,
Ky. Mr. and Mrs. Dargan formed a re
ceiving party and stood at the end of
the ball room in front of a bank of
palms, beside which was heaped a tow
ering mass of beautiful flowers, baskets
of American Beauty roses, sheaves of
orchids, clusters of valley lilies, vio
lets, chrysanthemums and roses, all of
ferings to the debutante, who is one of
the most popular of this season's con
tingent.
Miss Dargan wore a white charmeuse
gown with draperies of shadow lace
and touches of delicate embroidery
done in white. Miss McCullough wore
white charmeuse also, with a garniture
of silver lace and a sash of old blue.
Miss Briscoe was in spangled tulle
draperies over pale pink satin.
Mrs. Dargan was handsomely gowned
in hyacinth blue satin, with garniture
of crystal and blue beads.
The ball room and other apartments
were lavishly decorated with garlands
of smilax, grouped palms and bay trees,
and mantels banked in dwarf palms.
Yellow chrysanthemums formed the
centerpieces for the tables in the din
ing room, with all decorative details of
uniform color. The flowers Interspersed
with greenery banked the mantel and
circular end of the dining room. At the
debutante's table, a large one in the
center of th»e apartment, covers were
laid for sixteen. Seated with the debu
tante were the guests, Misses Briscoe
and McCullough; Misses Annie Lee Mc-
Kenzie, Sarah Rawson, Margaret Haw-
H'lns and Constance Knowles, and
Messrs. Samuel Slicer, Hal Hentz, Hen
ry Newman, Lamar Hill, Milton Dar
gan, Jr., Dozier Lowndes, Clarence
Knowles, Jesse Draper and Jackson
Dick.
A happy feature of the evening was
the bringing in of a handsomely em
bossed birthday cake, bearing nineteen
lighted tapers, the birthday of Miss
Dargan being celebrated at her debut
party.
There were quite a number of young
people present, and a limited number of
married friends. The dinner-dance was
the first of a brilliant series of affairs
for Miss Dargan and her guests. A
second function to be given by Mrs.
Dargan for her daughter will be a tea
for married friends, later tn the season.
To Mrs. Morrison.
A wealth of chrysanthemums, grown
by the hostess, formed the decorations
at the afternoon reception given today
by Mrs. DeLos Hill in honor of Mrs.
Robert Alston Morrison, who was Miss
Allison Badger before her recent mar
riage.
In the living room white chrysanthe
mums were used, with palms and ferns,
and yellow chrysanthemums were used
in the library, where frozen punch was
served at a table decorated in chrysan
themums and autumn leaves. In the
dining room the table w-as covered with
a lace cloth, and an effective arrange
ment of white chrysanthemums and
pink roses formed the centerpiece, the
candle shades, bonbons and ices carry
ing out a color scheme of pink and
white. An orchestra played and sev
eral hundred guests were entertained.
Mrs. Hill wore a handsome toilet of
black chantilly lace over pale green sat.
in and she carried white chrysanthe
mums. Mrs, Morrison wore her wed
ding gown of white charmeuse satin,
with trimmings of duchess lace. Mrs.
A. A. Parkhurst wore black silk and
point lace.
Assisting in entertaining were
Mesdames A. A. Parkhurst, Keren Hill,
Charles F. Whitner, A. B. Christopher
S. C. Dinkins, Mark Palmour, Lynn
Rhorer, W. M. Zirkle, John M. Cooper,
Charles Atkinson, Fannie Atkinson
Clarkson, D. R. Wilder, S. AA’. Fos
ter. Charles AA’urm and Howard McCall
and Misses AA’illie Russell Law’, Doro
thy Selby and Irene Smilie.
EnaMBmOHIIAMRKUaaB
GETTING GREY EH-OLD MAN
AND BALD TOO.
Looking twenty years older than you
really are. Being made the laughing stock
of your friends and the butt of their joke»-
“Old Age Class” simply because grey
hairs are so closely associated with old age.
It is very humiliating to be grey and bald
when your age doesn't justify either —to be
classed as a ‘‘Has Been” and set aside by
your young friends as too old for them —to
be turned down possibly, in your applica
tion for that new position because a
YOUNG-LOOKING MAN was WANTED.
Get the besi of the grey haira — don’t let
them get the best of you.
USE HAY’S HAIR HEALTH
SI.OO and SOc at Drug Stores or direct upon
receipt ol price and dealer's name. Send 10c for
trial bottle. Philo Hay Spec. Co., Newark, N. J.
FOB GALE AND RECOMMENDED
BY JACOBS’ PHARMACY.
Money Loaned!
DURHAM JEWELRY COMPANY
M EDGEWOOD AVENUE
FUTURE EVENTS
Invitations have been issued to Miss
Harriet Cole’s debut dance, which will
be a brilliant event at the Capital City
club on the evening of November 20,
given by Miss Cole’s aunt, Mrs. Harriet
Cole. Miss Cole will have as her guest
Miss Ruth Terrell, of Chicago, who ar
rives in Atlanta Monday, and will
share honors with the charming debu
tante at a series of pretty parties.
Among those to entertain, for which
dates will be arranged after the ar
rival of Miss Terrell, are Mrs. Nash
Broyles, Miss Marie Pappenheitner
Miss Katherine Gordon, Miss Annie
Nutting and Miss Helen Hobbs.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Winship Wood
ruff will be tendered a dinner party
Saturday evening by Mr. and Mrs.
Alonzo Richardson, the guests to in
clude Mr. and Mrs. Edward Richardson,
Dr. and Mrs. Foster of Madison.
Misses Mary Gray, Frances McCrory,
Alice May Freeman and Vera Jackson
and Messrs. J. D. Willingham, Rob For
rester, Edison Huff, Leaver Richardson,
George Johnston of St. Marys and J.
T. Merrin of Memphis.
Miss Mary Frances Bowden will en
tertain the West Epd club tomorrow
evening at the Hyperion hall in West
End.
Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Bergstrom and
Miss Eleanor Bergstrom, of New York,
arrive in Atlanta this afternoon to
spend the week-end wdth Mr. and Mrs.
Ernest Eden Norris. Tomorrow even
ing Mr. and Mrs. Thomas B. Felder will
give a reception at the Piedmont Driv
ing club for the visitors, and on Satur
day at 3 o’clock Mrs, Norris entertains
for them.
The buffet supper at which Miss
Laura Cowles will entertain this even
ing will be a compliment to Miss Ma
rian Hodgson, of Athens, who will
spend the week-end with her; Miss
Louise Hunt, of Nashville, Miss' Aimee
Hunnicutt’s guest, and Miss Hallie
Morton, of Tennessee, Miss Mary Hines'
guest. Informal dancing will follow
supper. The guests will include only
the visitors, their hostesses and an
equal number of young men.
MI-O-NA Conquers Dyspepsia
Best Indigestion Prescriptio n on Earth—Money Back if
It Does Not Promptly End Gas, Sourness and All
Stomach Agony or Misery—Only 50 Cents.
Never Any Distress After Eating
If You Use MI-O-NA Stomach
Tablets—Always Keep Some
on Hand.
If you want to be healthy, first be
wise—a whole lot of ailments are due
to an unclean stomach.
Clean up your stomach; drive out the
poisonous gas, the sourness, stop the
fermentation and heaviness and you
will find that nervousness, despond
ency, dizziness, sick headache, sleep
lessness and bad dreams will not both
er you any more.
MI-O-NA Stomach Tablets will
DEVELOP YOUR BUST
3 TO 5 INCHES IN 30 DAYS
SOc PACKAGE FREE TO ANY WOMAN WHO
WANTS A BEAUTIFUL FIGURE
I BBftU < ■ 4 W
It ■ v < 1
■ JI h|| L
ii ; / i fel fe. J
LrfyH § p rjjl
These pictures show the Improvement that may be made by using Dr. Kelly’s Form
Developer. Bust full and plump. Wrinkles gone. Complexion beautiful.
A full, beautifully developed bosom is a
woman's charm that makes her more at
tractive than bright eyes, regular features
or flowing hair. Women who are thin,
flat-cheated and undeveloped always feel
humiliated and embarrassed when out in
the society of the more fortunate mem
bers who possess the beautiful curves of
a perfect figure.
A discovery that is of vital interest to
all thin women, to all who wish perfect
and full development, is offered to read
ers of this paper absolutely free for intro
ductory purposes. This scientific treat
ment is the result of long study and In
vestigation by one of the leading physi
cians in New York state, who in seeking
to overcome the defects in her own figure
without the use of pads or forms, discov
ered a happy combination of tissue-build
ing elements that increased her bust some
lour inches, made her arm; - , round and
shapely and her neck and shoulders plump
and symmetrical.
This prescription of Dr. Catherine
Kelly's is a real discovery on far different
lines from ordinary form development
treatments, and this explains its almost
uniform success. A peculiar feature of
her prescription which makes it especially
valuable In the present styles of dress Is
that it lias no effect upon hips, and it
simply makes the bosom full ami firm,
does away with the scrawny, skinny neck
and gives plump, symmetrical arms
Iler treatment Is absolutely harmless
and has been tested with almost unbellev
able results by many hading society
women Read a few extracts from those
who ire thankful to Dr. Catherine Kell)
for their beuullflll figure
MRS. M. HAYWOOD tay*
"I'lease send me another |«ckage of
your Form Developer. I cun see a vast
change in myself and feel so much hot
ter It certainly Is one great reined) "
RUTH BILLINGTON says
"I write to tell you (hut I buve til.
ml cd with jour treatment umi fin.i |i oil
ion isiuiiimend It to be: excellent f (/ |
ib> < uniplexloii. fm nerve* siai for d*
Miss Nunnally to
Become Bride
Tonight
The marriage of Miss Frances Nun
nally and Mr. John Charles Wheatley
will be the chief social event of this
evening, taking place at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. James H. Nunnally, a
reception to follow the ceremony.
Miss Nunpally will have as her maid
of honor Miss Juliet Nourse, of New
York. Mrs. Winship Nunnally will be
matron of honor, and the bridesmaids
will be Misses Alice Scott, of Philadel
phia; Anne Orme, Esther Smith and
Nancy Hill Hopkins.
Mr. C. J. Hunter, of Savannah, will
be best man, the groomsmen to be
Messrs. Alex Smith, Jr., Ernest Ott
ley, Arthur Clarke. Bowie Martin and
AA’inship Nunnally.
Mrs. Seabrook Entertains.
Mrs. William Buehler Seabrook en
tertained yesterday afternoon at tea
at her home on the Boulevard.
The apartments w r ere lavishly deco
rated in smilax, palms, ferns and
chrysanthemums. In the reception
apartment, big pink chrysanthemums
were used, the window and door arches
draped in smilax, and palms and ferns
were grouped in the corners. The
mantel was banked in chrysanthemums
and small ferns, and jardinieres of the
flowers stood on the tables. The li
brary, in the rear of this room, was
similarly decorated, the chrysanthe
mums used being of the variegated yel
low and red variety.
Tea was served by Mrs. George How
ard in the library, from a table gar
landed with smilax.
Miss Elizabeth Hines and her guests,
Miss Ruth Huffman, of Chicago, and
Miss Hill, of Greenville, Ga„ presided
at the punch bowl, in the reception hali.
The decorations there were in white
chrysanthemums and ferns, which sur
rounded the punch bowl, wreathed in
grapes and smilax. The dining room
was in yellow, a centerpiece for the
table being a vase of yellow’ chrysan
themums, surrounded by yellow shaded
quickly clean up your stomach and put
it in such splendid shape that you erkt
eat a hearty meal without fear of dis
tress.
MI-O-NA Stomach Tablets mean that
dyspepsia or gastritis or catarrh of the
stomach, or whatever the doctor
chooses to call it, will bother you no
more.
MI-O-NA Stomach Tablets are sim
ply splendid for any stomach sickness,
such as vomiting of pregnancy, result
of overindulgence in eating, drinking
and smoking, and for sea'or car sick
ness. Sold by druggists everywhere 5C
cents. Trial treatment and booklet fre«
from Booth’s Mi-o-na, Buffalo, N Y
(Advt.’
veloping the bust. You may use this
letter if vou wish.''
MRS. C. KOEHLER says:
“I am so well pleased with your Form
Developer that I have recommended it
to one of my friends, and she wishes to
try it. I herewith inclose money <srder,
for which please send me another treat
ment. Thanking you for the results
your remedy has brought me.”
KATHERINE HEIMES says:
“Your treatment is tine. 1 feel and
look much better. The wrinkles in my
face are gone, my appetite is better and
I feel just fine all over. Many thanks
to you.”
MRS. L. H. CARSON says:
“I have used your Form Developer
and liked it so much that two of my
friends want roe to order it for theni.
Inclosed find the money for two com
plete treatments. Please pack in one
box.”
I>t Kelly not only gained a beautiful
form by her own prescription, but used it
■u< cessfully with many of her patients.
Women, this Is a personal message from a
physician of your own sex. and al! we
ask Is to prove to you without a penny's
expense on your part that Dr. Kelly's
form developer will give you a perfect
figure, beautiful complexion and improve
tho general health. Attach the coupon
below to your letter ami send It with 10c
to help pay distribution expense, and a
.’Or treatment will be mallei! at once In
plain package Write us today Dr. Kelly
Medical Company, hept. 322-LA, Buffalo,
N. Y
FREE TREATMENT COUPON.
This * oupun with 10c to help pay
distribution expense, entitles any
lender of The Atlanta Georgian to one
M>< treatment of Dr Kelly’s Form De
-1 ve|*.per, post ng** paid, mailed In plain
l wrapie i I fit KFi.I.Y MEDICAL
I'uMI’ASl, Dept |,\, Buffalo,
N V
MMBMMMMHM*II ■ —BM^MM—MWMBBBBWBB-. I 18, ■
tapers. A fresco of yellow and red au
tumn leaves added an artistic touch to
all of the rooms open to the afternoon
callers.
.Airs, Seabrook was gowned in white
charmeuse, hand-embroidered, and
wore a corsage bouquet of pink roses
and valley lilies. Mrs. A’irginia Field
wore black velvet and point lace, with
a corsage bouquet of white roses. Mrs.
Frank Holder, the house guest of Mrs.
Seabrook, wore white chiffon with crys
tal garniture, made over white char
meuse, Her corsage bouquet was of
pink roses.
Mrs. Preston S. Arkwright. Mrs. Ho
mer AVillard Brown, Mrs. Colquitt Car
ter and Mrs. Julius DeGive assisted in
receiving, and a group of friends as
sisting in entertaining included Mrs.
Charles Hopkins, Mrs. Samuel Stewart
Wallace, Mrs. John A. Boykin, Mrs.
ELDERLY FOLKS! CALOMEL. ITS
AND CATHARTICS AREN’T FOR YOU
Harmless, gentle “Syrup of Figs’’ is best to cleanse
your stomach, liver and 30 feet of bowels of sour
bile, decaying food, gases and clogged-up waste.
You old people, Syrup of Figs is
particularly for you. You who don’t
exercise as much as you need to, W’ho
like the easy chair. You whose steps
are slow and whose muscles are less
elastic. You must realize that your
liver, ten yards of bow’els hav
also become less active.
Don't regard Syrup of Figs as
physic. It stimulates the liver and
bowels just as exercise would do if you
took enough of it. It is not harsh like
salts or cathartics. The help which
Syrup of Figs gives to a torpid liver
and weak, sluggish bowels is harmless,
natural and gentle.
AA’hen eyes grow dim, you help them.
Do the same with your liver and bow
els when age makes them less active.
There is nothing more important. Cos
tive, clogged-up bow’els mean that de
caying, fermenting food is clogged
there and the pores or ducts in these
DIAMONDS
Our display merits your consideration, not only because
of the enormous selection, but the quality and price as well.
The Solitaire or Fancy Ring, the moderately priced or more
expensive brooch, or the most elaborately designed necklace
are here for your choosing.
Where it is not the desire of our customers to pay all
cash we will be glad to arrange terms whereby the indebted
ness can be liquidated without inconvenience. Call or write
for the plan in detail.
UEWEUEUO - 3T
Take a Look At Our Hand-
Painted Gift China
You can pick up some beautiful china
in our line of Nippon and Jap Hand-paint
ed goods; either sets to sell at from 10c to fSOSyiro J
$1 per piece; or. many pretty and quaint /
designs in single pieces, no single piece ’ jLu-
priced more than SI.OO,
To those who are buying wedding gifts
*" lr stock offers an opportunity to select
choice and deelrable gifts at a saving of
from 50 tier cent to 100 per cent.
If you are a judicious shopper you can
rot afford to pass these bargains by.
OPEN STOCK
Many choice patterns in open stock ware. Ev
ery housewife who loves pretty Tablewear
should secure a Dinner set from our open stock.
Buy in single pieces and match at any time.
Save the Price-Difference
On Our Home Sundries
Wire Goods 10c
1 ‘ M Wire Dish 1 Hf*
I Ji ‘<L Drainers each lUG
\ Wire Toast- 4
N- ,1 ir jjJM A ers, each IUG
4-quari Gray Enamel ' z
Oyster . .
..’’IP Baskets,
m i oc
Wi re P°P Corn
Poppers, each . .
10-quart Gray Enamel ..
. »« Wire Bath Tub lA f
Soap Dishes, each .
■ •' j ————- ■ - -
XSSSSSEEKF Double
»»€
Round rn | Roasters
Sllr WNrawmSSM
Each . 25c and 50c
McClure Ten=Cent Co.
63 Whitehall Street, Corner Mitchell
George Y’undt. Mrs. H. E. Maddox, Mrs.
W. T. Billings, and Misses Nancy Hill
Hopkins, Annie Lou Padgett, Loula
Johnson and Jennie Sue Bell.
3,000 TEAMSTERS’OF
CHICAGO ON STRIKE
CHICAGO, Nov. 14. —Three thousand
teamsters, members of the Chicago
Teamsters Union, No. 705, and the In
ternational Brotherhood of Teamsters
of America, went on strike here today.
Refusal of the teaming and transfer
companies to renew’ contracts with the
men and to accede to some new de
mands made by them was the cause.
The teamsters refused to take out
their teams this morning. As a result
of the strike all the freight houses,
warehouses and mercantile stablfsh
ments are crippled.
thirty feet of bowels suck th!* decay
ing waste and poisons Into th«\ blood.
You will never get feeling right until
this is corrected—-but do It gently.
Don’t have a bowel wash-day; don’t
use a bowel irritant. For your sake,
please use only gentle, effective Syrup
of Figs. Then you are not drugging
yourself, for Syrup of Figs is composed
of only luscious figs, senna and aro
matics which can not injure.
A teaspoonful tonight will gently, but
thoroughly, move on and out of your
system by morning all the *our bile,
froisonotis fermenting food and clogged
up waste matter without gripe, nausea
or weakness.
But get the genuine. Ask your drug
gist for the full name, “Syrup of Figs
and Elixir of Senna.” Refuse, with
contempt, any other Fig Syrup unites
it bears the name—prepared by the
California Fig Syrup Company. Read
the label. (Advt.)
11