Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, December 10, 1912, HOME, Page 11, Image 11

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Kir Thomas Lipton ■ To Be Dined ■ by Society Hfl c . -)■ brilliant entertainments will ■ ' ~L: , .ned by the visit of Sir Thom- i Atlanta. |K Willis Ragan, a personal K ih,. distinguished visitor, has wag fiends to meet him at a LK o.morrow afternoon from 4 io ■r ... at the Capital City club. U • ,v, ' ning ' Mr - and MrP - John |K Slaton will give a dinner at U' . ~me in the city. IK *’ !a> , v, ' ninx ( ' o,onel Ragan dinner party at his residence ,, Street in honor of the fa- K ~ evening Mr. and Mrs. John BBv ■ ' will entertain at a dinner JI . , sir Thomas. U n fo'rr>ai Party. gg Willey Halve, of Montgomery, |Ki of Miss ’Sarah Cowles, was EK, ,i gm st at an informal party K..„ te.lat by Miss Edith Dunson. ■ ; im members of the Tuesday &■. -| U s, wing club were entertained. K v eourse was served, after an , ~m|r:ny Included the club niem- J' . di-s- s Edith and Elizabeth Dun- HH. llniinie Willingham. Theodosia ~im. Laurie Hooper, .Marion U,, ismttli Annie Lou Pagelt, Mary iK i- Katie Sturdivant. Mary Lucy EH- • ! Van McKinnon; Mesdames fej.b, . Piadc. Luther Rosser. Jr., and J,; dmi Raker: also Misses Willey Sarah Cowles. Adeline Thomas Su.-ie Hallman. / ■court OF APPEALS OF GEORGIA. Argued and Submitted. B 5 vi . i'li Jackson vs. State, from Mor- K® William- vs. State, from Morgan 1 .... Franklin vs. State, from Wilkes, ft \ I’. Moss vs. 1. W. Myers, from ■ Tift. k II M. Atkinson et al., receivers, vs. s \. Taylor, from Tift. ft? Xni’vz Gin and Warehouse Company HI v - >l ■ Z <> Moore, from Emanuel. I® K Johnston, sheriff, for use. etc., ■ 1.. 1.. Pinkston, from Stewart, fe .1 \ Wilson vs. McDougald Brothers KI." co., f;..m Bulloch. U. Peteii-on vs. Ibnry Harper, from I. vv John T. Rowiand vs. W. Jay Bell. f.om Pulton. fe \t antic Coast Line Railroad Com |K \W. E. Mcßae, from Lowndes. ” 1 Nettie Ellwands vs. J. L. Roberts, fi oin Thomas. gs’T J <’. White vs c. L. Claxton, from ■ Telfair. f!, (I. W. I.inrun et al. vs. L. D. Anderson ■ ’t al.. from Fulton. I Dandruff I and Falling I Hair Remedy I Fifty Cent Bottle of Pa risian Sage Hair Tonic Best for All Hair and Scalp Troubles rivirv nan and woman who values a ft """'1 i®ad of hair should regularly use K Parisian Sage. ||| 11 "f thousands of people are using ft. i"w ry day because it is such a clean, Wi '"'ini-st remedy that does exactly what it s advertised to do or money back. > ft Please bear in mind that Parisian ' is rot a dye; that ft does not con mi -ugir of lead or any other dan ftus ingredient, and that it will stop • J ailing fair, scalp itch and rid your g ' ’l' "f every particle of dandruff. '• "I'd do more; it makes hair grow ft' i-irmis and luxuriant and puts a ra ft 'Ham heruty into dull, lifeless hair. t a bottle of Parisian Sage today ■ n any crug store or toilet goods coun- ■ Tie price is only 50 cents. Be suri- nrd ask for Parisian Sage Hair ii"; the girl with the Auburn hair on very carton. Sold by dealers ■ft ■‘lywiere. (Advt.) I Pearl Gifts I for Christmas In every respect the peafl set jewelry shown at Crank 'r'ait sis worthy of your care ful inspection. pearls are perfect in c °l°’inq, beautifully matched, ">idartistic in their settings. necklaces. pearl ’ otches, pearl circles, pearl '‘'a-ts. pearl bar pins, pearl wirings. stickpins, etc. Claries VV. Crankshaw 16 Whitehall Atlanta National Bank Bldg. A? KOD AKSC."-.,. IbILJv MTwkeyeg HStMw laradn- a * BS finishi ng and En /! ? g A complete stock fllmr t* .al t ja P ers . chemicals, eto. «t <dr town 1 < ? der department for a.„w . “ customers. » « d HAWK??'?!? 0 Bnd Pr,ce co bren au r '*NESVI LL^ E^ NSERVAT ORY. Swing Term Jim A> « P °- BOX 11 1 r, m January 21st. i Ohrs every rn.?« 8,, "J r Term June 30th. ‘ women Materla| daPte , d t 0 the need * ■‘sed m the ’ 1 e QUlpment uniur ■’Ovanu?" Uth , Vocational and so- ,„u C L * “* th « highest order, ter. Send 1,001 summer and '»<• Brenau Qi?| • 8u,,,t1 " 4nd Copy °» PERSONALS | Allss Annie Winship Bates is out again, after a week’s illness. Miss Helen Barnes, of Macon, ar rives this week to be the guest of Miss Sarah Coates and to attend the par ties in honor of Miss Coates, who will be married on December 18 to Mr. Robert Barnes, of Macon. Miss I.aura Cowles returns Friday from Athens, where she has been de lightfully entertained as the guest of Miss Marion Hodgson.' Mrs. Ernest Woodward, who has been ill for several weeks, is better, but is still confined to her home. Mrs. Warren Boyd has returned, after a month’s stay at the Woman’s Uni versity club, New York. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Winship Wood ruff return tomorrow, after a week-end visit to Mr. and Mrs. James Woodruff, in Columbus. Miss Margaret GPnnt and Mr. William Grant, the young daughter and son of Mr. and Mrs. John W. Grant, will ar rive December 21 to spend the Christ mas holidays at home. Miss Grant com ing from school in Baltimore and Mr. Grant from the Hotchkiss school in Lakeville, Conn. Miss Amy Smith, of Charleston, the guest of Mis. Peter Erwin, leaves today for her home. Mrs. Dorsey E. Moorefield has re turned from a stay of several weeks in New York. Mrs. George W. Forrester was host ess at an informal luncheon of six cov ers today at her home on Peachtree road, in honor of her guest. Mrs. Martin Cannon, of Concord, N. for whom a series of pretty parties will be given this week. Miss Mary King, who has recently returned from an extended stay abroad, will be tendered a tea by the Masters club on Friday afternoon, from 5 to C o’clock, at the studio of Miss Evelyn Jackson. Mr. and Mrs. Blackman Dunn, Jr., who have been the guests of Mr. and Mrs. S. T. Marett. in Druid Hills, have returned to Hendersonville. Tenn. Mrs. William Ellis Padgett and her little daughter. ElWbeth. are the guests of Mrs. Padgett’s sister, Mrs. Eleta Mills Cresap. Miss Harriet Calhoun has returned from a visit to Miss Jane Meldrim in Savannah. She will have as her guest after tomorrow Miss Martha Phinizy, of Athens. Mrs. Arnold Broyles, Miss Frances Broyles and Miss Harriet McCullough, of Atlanta, and Miss Emily Carter, of Dalton, have returned from a trip to New York. Miss Carter is the guest this week of .Mrs. Broyles. Miss Eleta Padgett will entertain about 40 of her young friends at a birthday party on Saturday afternoon from 3 to 6 o’clock, at the home of her aunt. Mrs. Eleta Mills Cresap. Air. and Mrs. William Bangs, of De catur, announce the birth of a daugh ter. who will bear her grandmother’s name, Mary Josephine. Mr. and Mrs. David B. Morgan an nounce the birth of a son, David Bruce .Morgan, Jr., at their home, 21 Ashby street, on Friday. December 6. Demonstration and Sale of Diamond Point Fountain Pens Values $1.50 to $5; A A Choice at tpl»vv TSgNkXk This is the famous 14-carat diamond point, some self-filler styles that work like a pump, also se *\ curity pens that can’t leak. We have secured ik the exclusive sale in this territory, and be- 31)CClul s\; Mfe W lieve t^iat we have the best Fountain Pen r • on mar h e t- Each pen is packed in* t ik individual box wit h guarantee cou- Cnip Mt’jf’p 'X. P<* n an d directions for use. C In every Style fo r men and women till wvk olain or sold ■ A/V trimmed. ■ Strictly I Values $1.50 to $5 gu t a e ran d b y Over 1,000 of these wonderful values and 1,000 men and women can buy the best Christmas Gifts known. Actual values $1.50 to $5.00. See them j early tomorrow. MAIL ORDERS PROMPTLY AND CAREFULLY FILLED. J.M.HIGH COffIWNI. Sole Atlanta Dealers THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS TUESDAY, DECEMBER 10. 1912. FUTURE EVENTS Dr. and Mrs. Charles E. Boynton have issued invitations to a buffet supper on the evening of December 19, at their residence, 707 Piedmont avenue. Lieutenant and Mrs. Castleman will entertain at the dinner dance at the Piedmont Driving club on Saturday evening, in honor of Miss Willey Gayle, of Montgomery, Miss Sarah Cowles’ guest. Miss Annie Winshlp Bate, will enter tain sixteen voting girls on Saturday afternoon. December 21, at her mother’s home on West Peachtree street. Air. and Mrs. Edward T. Brown will entertain at a dinner party on Friday evening in honor of Mr. and Mrs. James Swift, of “Rose Hill,’’ Elberton, Ga. Among the guests will be the group of Atlanta young women who have recent ly returned from a house party at "Rose Hill.” Mrs. John W. Grant will entertain 50 young people who ai? members of her Sunday school class on Saturday after noon at her Peachtree street residence. Miss Jennie D. Harris will entertain 70 guests at the buffet luncheon which she gives Friday for Miss Sarah Coates. Assisting the young hostess in enter taining will be Aliss Coates and her guest, Miss Helen Barnes, of Macon: Mrs. Clem Harris and Mrs. Henry Johnson. Jr. Air. and Airs. Robert Winship Wood ruff, whose marriage was a recent event, will be tendered a buffet supper Friday evening by Mr. and Mrs. James E. Carleton Miss Carolyn King will be among those entertaining the latter part of the month in honor of Miss Margot Cush ing, of Boston. Miss Eloise Oliver’s guest. Airs. Fred Rucker, of Dallas, Texas, is the guest of her mother, Mrs. A. G. Hudson, for the holidays. SHOP TALK Unusual interest was shown In the Brown & Cochran Furniture Com pany’s removal sale. Crowds gathered in front of their store at 62-64 North North Broad street fully an hour and a half before the time specified for the opening of the sale. This sale, which is preparatory to the company’s moving into its new building at 7 South Broad street, has been very successful. The sale will continue, for the stock is large and there Is plentv left, in spite of the low prices that prevail. Tlie North American Accident Insurance Company, of Chicago. 111., has opened a Southern department office in Atlanta to cover the states of Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi. Tennessee and North Caro lina. Harry C. Conley and Fred W. Van derpool, under the firm name of Conley & Vanderpool, are now Southern managers for the company. Both Mr. ('onley and Mr. Vanderpool are prominent in At lanta Insurance circles. Mr. Conley up to a few months ago was manager of the Southern department of the United States Health and Accident Insurance Company, of Saginaw, Mich. Mr. Vander pool has been actively engaged in in surance newspaper work in Atlanta for the past seven years and resigns his po sition as assistant secretary of The In surance Field to become a member of the new firm. They have extensive of fices in the Candler building. M. Fordon, the well known tailor, re turned Thursday from New York, where for the past ten days he has been se lecting new woolen fabrics. Mr. Fordon states that while in New York he made a fortunate purchase of several hundred yards of line woolens from a Fifth avenue tailor retiring from business. The wool ens are now on display at both of his shops, 8-10 North Pryor street and 5 Au burn avenue. CRITICS DO NOT ■RT BLEASE Carolina Governor Declares He Has No Apologies to Make for Lynch Speeches. I’OLUMBIA. S. Dec. 10. -Declar ing that he meant every word he said. Governor Cole L. Blease today issued a formal statement to the newspapers in answer to the criticism that has been heaped upon him because of his speeches last week at the conference of governors in Richmond, Va.. in which he defended lynch law for negro assail ants of white women. The statement follows: “1 stand by every word I said. I have absolutely no apologies to make to any man or set of men in this state, or out side of it. and. as 1 said in Richmond and repeat now , I do not care what the governor or governors of any state or set of states thought about it or what anybody else in the Ameirean union thinks about it. "This is what I think and I said there only what I said on the stump all pver South Caiolina. And J am receiving letters and telegrams from all over this state and from many other states of the Union congratulating me upon my po sition. If your papers desire it. 1 will be very glad for them to have the origi nal letters, provided they will publish them." Governor Blease said he intended to incorporate his Richmond speeches into a message to the South Caorllna gen eral assembly and to that end today dictated a letter to the secretary of the conference of governors, requesting a transcript of the stenographic notes of his speech made the day the resolution of the governors, condemning him, was adopted. In this letter he said: “1 hope that when these governors have been repudiated by their people retiring them to private life—l told them they soon would be —and when they have more time to think, that they will realize the fact that we Southern people are not negro lovers as some'of them clearly seem to be. "If you take your report from . the newspaper accounts, your official rec ords will bear a distinct lie upon its face.” Referring to the speech wanted, lie calls it “copy of speech made on Friday after the adoption of the Mann substi tute resolution opposing, 1 presume you would say, the protection of the white women of the Southern states from the negro race.” Governor Blease returned yesterday from Richmond. He charges that he was misrepresented by the newspapers. IF YOU BUY AT ZAKAS’ IT IS FRESH AND PURF2 The first consideration at the Zakas Bakery is purity, and the sec ond, which is Just as important and as rigorously observed, is cleanli ness. These features, combined with the thorougli knowledge of the baking business of Philip Thompson, the Bos ton expert, guarantee nil that goes to make the products of this bakery the best to be had anywhere. Call at the store, 30 Peachtree street —Five Points—make one purchase and you will cal! again. (Advt.) DEFEATED FOR GOVERNOR BY 29. BUT WON’T CONTEST ToPEKA, KANS.. Dec. 10.—Arthur Capper, Republican candidate for gov ernor, who was defeated by Georg.? Hodges, Democrat, by 29 votes, accord ing to official returns, will not contest the election. In a signed statement to day Capper.says he believes he was elected by 3,000 plurality, EMPLOYEES TO SHARE IN AUTO COMPANY NEST EGG CLEVELAND, OHI<T Dec. 10.—Two hundred thousand worth of stock will be distributed as Christmas gifts by the Baker Electric Company, manufacturers of automobiles. Half of the stock will go to the employees ana tne other half to officers. • Quick Action Prescription Cures Colds in a Day The best and quickest prescription known to medical science for colds and coughs is as follows: "From your drug gist get two/iunces of Glycerine and half an ounce of Globe Pine Compound (Con centrated Pine). Take these two ingre dients home and put them into a half pint of good whisky. Shake it well. Take one to two teaspoonfuls after each meal and at bed time. doses to chil dren. according to age." Be sure to get only the genuine Globe Pine Compound <Concentrated Pine). Each half ounce l ottie comes In a tin screw-top sealed case. Any druggist has it on hand or will quickly get it from his wholesale house. There are many cheaper preparations of large quantity bur it doesn’t pay to ex periment Th|f treatment is certain cure. This has oeelt published here for six win ters and thousands say it has no equal. Sore Feet Corns, Callouses, Bun ions. Frost Rites. Aching and Sweaty Feet A spoonful of Caloride in the foot-bath gives instant relief. Get a 25c box at any drug store. (Advt.) The Joy of the Coming Season Is Reflected in This Store ' I Even the WEARING Apparel seems to have taken on the glow of this CHRISTMAS SPlßlT—though perhaps it is the reflection from the thou sand and one bright things especially intended for GIFTS. Or possibly only an imaginative mind can see this all-pervading holiday atmosphere casting its influence over even the m ore prosaic staple merchan dise. But one does not have to be in the least imaginative to see that this is a really, truly BRIGHT AND MOST CONVENIENT CHRISTMAS STORE. JOIN THE JOLLY THRONG TOMORROW. Many People Buy Umbrellas for Gfits For those, we have a stock of new Gift Umbrellas—especially provided for the holidays. Umbrellas of various styles,*all correct and desirable. For men and women; silver handles, some combined with pearl. Prices $3 to sls. The Buying of Fancy Ribbons 1 —has been unusually brisk for tin* last few days. So many gifts to make in • the next week or two. and these lovely Ribbons suggest all sorts of pretty and useful things that one may give. Select from this novelty Ribbon Wednesday at 29c yard—'tis the s()c kind. Persian, Dresden and rich floral effects. Narrow Ribbons for tying gifts; holly and poinsettia designs; 5c bolt —5-yard bolts. Solid red and green ribbons, 15c bolt —ten yards. Wise Shoppers Are Choosing Holiday Neckwear Now And there will be no other time so good as now, while stocks are fresh and new, and one may select leisurely at counters not thronged with belated ’yers. These in Pretty Gift Boxes For as little as 25c an<l f soe and up Io $5 one may find a pretty and most ac ceptable .gift, among these various pieces of stylish Neckwear, and each piece is at tractively arranged in a holiday box which will add largely to the pleasure of the re cipient. There are fashionable stocks with or without jabot. Robespierre collars, high or Davison-Paxon-Stokes Co. Hand-Engraved Solid Gold Bracelets, $5.00 Uft; Bangle bracelets are very much in vci£ue fjO this season, and there is a large demand for Ktl them. They are particularly desirable and appropriate for gifts. ipLI This special $5.00 bangle is full size, 6 1-2, 7,7 1-2 and 8. You can have your pick of English. Roman, or Rose finish. This bangle can not be duplicated in Atlanta for less than $7.00 or $7.50. Write For Catalogue. Our 1913 illustrated catalogue solves all gift problems. Mail Orders are shipped prepaid. Safe delivery and satis faction guaranteed. A postal request will bring a copy by return mail. Write for this catalogue today. Maier & Berkele, Inc. Gold and Silversmiths. Established 1887. 31-33 Whitehall St. Atlanta. Ga. low, dainty conceits of silk and lace: fasci nating little velvet bar pins with wee silk rose-jewels; many especially pleasing little creations are here to help shorten your ( hristmas gift list. Little Nosegays and Corsage Bouquets Are in Favor The world-wide accepted accessory of the toilet, that neither fades nor withers, but imparts the graceful touch and delicacy of flowers. These are in the Neckwear Section, there are single flowers, roses, chrysanthemums or small bouquets. They make dainty Christ mas gifts. Prices 50c to $5.00. 11