Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, April 21, 1913, Image 5

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

5 THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS. MONDAY, APRIL 21. 1913. Social life this week centers in the prand opera performances and the .-upper parties afterward. To-ni^ht, at the first performance 0 f the opera, all the boxes will be filled witn beautifully-costumed women and pretty women In becom ing toilets will brighten the audience in all parts of the Auditorium. "Manon Lescault” is the opera of the evening, and Bori will be heard for the first time in Atlanta. Caruso also is in the cast. The Capital City Club will be the rendezvous for society after the opera. Several hundred guests will have supper there. The opera stars and the officers of the Atlanta Musi cal Association will be guests of the , lub at a large central table in the dining room, around which many smaller tables will be grouped, evening are the following: Among the box parties of this Mr. and Mrs. John W. Grant, Mr. and Mrs. John Little and Mr. and Mrs. Albert Thornton, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. W. ft. Kiser, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Maddox, Mr. and Mrs. Preston Arkwright and Mrs. Robert Jackson, of Nashville. Misses Laura and Mamie Ansley, Mr. Rucker McCarty and Mr. David Black. Mr.' 1 and Mrs. W. A. Speer, Mr. and Mrs. Edward Dougherty and Captain and Mrs. Jack Hayes. ✓ Mr. and Mrs. Wilmer Moore and Mr. and Mrs. Mell R. Wilkerson. Mr. and Mrs. W. D. Manley and Mr. and Mrs. Louis Schley, of Augusta. Mr. and Mrs. Alex King, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Alston. Mr. and Mrs. T. M. Cunningham and Mr. E. R. Black. Dr. and Mrs. Floyd McRae and Mrs. Charles Remsen. Mr. and Mrs. George McKenzne, Miss Annie Lee McKenzie and Mr. Milton Dargan, Jr. Mrs. .T. M. High, Miss Elizabeth High and Mr. J. J. Goodrum. Mr. and Mrs. Burton Smith, Miss Hildreth Burton Smith, Miss Joseph ine McClellan. Mr. Samuel Slicer and Mr. Saunders Jones. Mr. and Mrs. H. M. Atkinson, Miss May Atkinson and Messrs. J. B. Con- nally and James Alexander. Mr. and Mrs. Clark Howell and General and Mrs. A. L. Mills. Dr. and Mrs. W. S. Elkin and Mr. and Mrs. Jack Cutler, of Macon. Mr. and Mrs. W. M. McKenzie, Mr. and Mrs. Marshall McKenzie and Mr. C. H. McKenzie. Mr. and Mrs. J. Carroll Payne, Mr. and Mrs. Alex Smith, Jr., Miss Helen Payne and Mr. Charles Hopkins. Colonel J. W. English, Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Robinson and Miss Emily' Rob inson. Miss Margare Hawkins, Miss Har riet Calhoun, Mr. Eugene Haynes and Mr. Edward Alfriend. Mr. and Mrs. E. H. Inman, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hardeman and Mr. and Mrs. Jack Cohen. Colonel and Mrs. Robert J. Lowry, Mrs. Henry Bankhead, Miss Isma Dooly, Lieutenant English and Mr. Durant, of Fort McPherson. Sociological Congress. It is desired to obtain 500 residents of Atlanta as members of the Socio logical Society before the convention of this organization meets in Atlanta next Friday, and all Atlantans de siring to further the work of this association, and to attend the ses sions, are requested to apply at 11 Candler Building until Thursday at 3:30, and after that at the Y. M. C. A. Bidding. For miss King. Misses Jeannette Lowndes and Louifte Riley were hostesses to-day at a luncheon at the Piedmont Driv ing Club for Miss Ruth King, who will be married to-morrow evening. The party was seated in the pink room, where a large crystal vase, filled with Killarney roses, formed the cen terpiece and silver candlesticks held pink shaded tapers.* Misses Ruth King. Mary King, Lucy Gilbert, of Marietta; Ethel Lov ing, of Americus; Lenora Maddox, Mrs. Howard Lyon, of Baltimore, and Mrs. William Akers were the invited guests. Miss Lowndes wore a black crepe de chine, with* a corsage of black chiffon over lace, and a hat of black faced with Nell rose chiffon. Mips Riley was in blue crepe me teor, with a jaunty coat of brocaded meteor, and a hat of blue trimmed with a bronze-colored ostrich feather. Mr. Joseph Gatins Entertains. The informal dinner party at whi.h Mr. Joseph Gatins, Jr., entertained at the Piedmont Driving Club last even ing was a compliment to Mr. and Mfs. Benjamin Gatin9, of New York, who are at the Georgian Terrace for the week of grand opera. The dinner ta ble was decorated with a large bas ket of pink roses and spirga, and the guests included Mr. and Mrs. Gatins, Mr. and Mrs. Albert Thornton, Air. and Mrs. John S. Cohen, Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Kiser, Mr. and Mrs. John D. Little, Mr. and Mrs. James D. Robin son, Miss Leone Ladson and Messrs. Joseph Brown Connally, James Ragan and Charles I. Ryan. Mrs. Gatins, the honor guest, was charming in a simply fashioned gown of black charmeuse s^tin, made witl\ Russian blouse. A number of informal dinners were given at the club, and special guests present were Signors Caruso and Scotti, who, with Mr. and Mrs. Charles A. Sisson, were guests of Dr. and Mrs. W. S. Elkin. Mrs. Hill’s Guest Entertained. Mrs. DeLos Hill’s guest, Mrs. Os car Johnson, of Charleston, is being entertained at many parties, two for this week being Mrs. Fred Cooledge’s morning bridge, Wednesday, and Mrs. Wharton Wilson’s bridge on Friday afternoon. On Monday of next week Mrs. E. A. Holbrook will entertain Mrs. Johnson, who will be a guest at the opera performances through the week. Among those who entertained last week for Mrs. Johnson were Mrs. W. H. Allen. Mrs. S. C. Dinkins. Mrs. John M. Cooper and Mrs. D. R. Wild er. To Mrs. Cunningham. In compliment to Mrs. T. M. Cun ningham, of Savannah, Mrs. Samuel Wevman gave a luncheon at her home on Fourteenth Street. Spring flow ers were used in decorating the house and honeysuckles were the center- piece on the beautifully appointed ta ble. Mrs. Cunningham is visiting GRAY FADED HI, DARK, ATTRACTIVE Chamber of Deputies Agrees to Consider Plan to Bring About Electoral Reforms. Special Cable to The Atlanta Georgian. BRUSSELS, April 21—The turning point in the national manhood suf-, frage strike is expected to come to morrow when the Chamber of Depu ties will take up the motion of Dep uty M. Masson, which provides for the appointment of a commission to draft electoral reforms. Both sides are awaiting to-morrow’s meeting of the chamber with anxiety. It is feared that if the chamber sup ports the Government’s attitude th^ Socialist strikers will lay aside their calmness and begin a campaign of sabotage. Fear Vote on the Motion. Liberal members of the chamber in sist that the Masson motion shall go to a vote in the chamber, whereas the Clericals, who control the machinery of Government, evidently fear to al low this course. M. Van Der Velde, one of the chief Socialist leaders, assumes a concilia tory attitude. He believes the Gov ernment will have to give way to the demands of the workmen, but insists that the strikers’ demands shall not be excessive. Printers Return to Work. « A number of printers and stereo typers have gone back to work. thu* allowing the publication of at least a portion of the Brussels press. These workers show their sympathy with the strike by donating one-haf\of their salary to the strike fund. Hundreds of gas workers will join the strike to-morrow. The walkout of these men will greatly inconven ience the city, tying up the artificial gas industry. A union of diamond cutters at Ant werp joined the strikers to-day. Busi ness at Antwerp is stagnant. The strike leaders claim that over 400,000 men are still idle. President Asks Congress, in a Special Message, to Give $20-- 000 to Crusade on Drug. WASHINGTON, April 21—111 n gpe- cial message to Congress to-day President Wilson urged the imme diate adoption by the United States of the international anti-opium legis lation, in which practically h11 the nations of the world have concurred. The message transmits a report from the Secretary of State asking for S20.000 to continue the anti-opium crusade. President Wilson’s message follows: In 'transmitting the accompany- , ing report from the Secretary of State. 1 most strongly urge not only the Immediate appropriation of the amount of $20,000 which is asked, the absolute necessity for which is so apparent, but also the enactment of the requisite anti drug legislation to which this Government is pledged interna*- tionally. It is a source of gratification to me personally and it will a!- . ways be, 1 am confident, a source of gratification to the nation that this Government, realizing the extent of the opium evil, should have initiated the world-wide movement toward it« abolition. At this vital period of the move ment, to fail to take the few final steps necessary, definitively and successfully, to conclude the work would be unthinkable and 1 therefore trust that there may be no delay in the enactment of the desired legislation and the consequent mitigation, if not sup pression of the vice which has caused such world-wide misery and degradation. WOODROW WILSON. OBITUARY NOTICES. The funeral of William H. Powell, a planter, who died In his room In the Stratford Hotel Saturday, was held to-day from Bloomfield’s chapel. George M. Graham, nineteen ye.t old, died at 3 o’clock Sunday after noon In a private sanitarium. He is survived by his mother, Mrs. Alice Graham, who will accompany the body to Charleston for funeral tad interment. The funeral of Mrs. J. M. Buice, aged seventy-six, who died at her home In Lithonia, Ga., Sunday morning at t» o’clock, will be held to-day at 1 o’clock at the grave in Oakland Cemetery. She is survived by five children. The funeral of Mrs. Annie Lawson, aged fifty-seven, who died at her home, 85 Crew Street, Saturdav night at 8:30 o’clock, will be held this afternoon at the residence at 2 o’clock, conducted by the Rev. W. R. Hendrix. Interment will l»^in West view. She is survived by^\-. sisters, Mrs. L. I. Byles and Mrs. L J. Wallace; two brothers, J. F. and M. H. Hayes, and three children. F. H. and Paul Lawson and Mrs. F. J. Finley, of this city. A Hidden Danger WILSON NAMES ALASKAN TERRITORIAL GOVERNOR WASHINGTON, D. C., Apiril 21.— The President to-day sent the follow ing nominations to the Senate: Governor of Alaksa—J. F. Strong, of Alaska Surveyor General or' Alaska— Charles* E. Davidson, of Alaska. Auditor of War Department— James L. Baity, of Missouri. It is a dutyof the kid neys to rid the blood of uric acid,an irritating poi son that is constantly forming inside. When the kidneys fail, uric acid causes rheumatic attacks, headache, di/.zi- ness, gravel, urinary troubles, weak eyes, dropsy, or heart disease. Doan’s Kidney Pills help the kidneys fight off uric acid.—bringing new strength to weak kidneys and relief from backache and urinary ills. Here’s home proof— . ATLANTA PROOF Every Picture Pells a Story. Testimony of a Resident oj Glennuiood Avenue AI rs. T. C. Fincher, 412 Glenn wood Avenup. Atlanta, Ga„ »avs: I suffered from kidnev trouble, and was in misery for about a year. The kidney action was irregular and the secretions unnatural. There were dark civ cles and swellings under my eyes. Recently, J was so bad, I had to stay in bed. Hearing about Doan 's Kidney Pills. T be uan taking them, and continued use strengthened my hack and ilid me worlds of good.” “When Your Back is Lame—Remember the Name” DOAN’S KIDNEY PILLS Sold by all Dealers, Price 50 cents. Foster-Milbum Co., Buffalo, N. Y„ Proprietors Says Sage Tea Mixed With Sul phur Restores Natural Color and Luster. Gray, faded hair turned beauti fully dark and lustrous almost over night, is a reality, if you’ll take the trouble to mix sage tea and sul phur, but what’s the use, you get a large bottle of the ready-to-use tonic, Called “Wyeth’s Sage and Sul- phur Hair Remedy,” at drug stores > here for about 50 cents. Millions of J bottles of “Wyeth’s” are sold an- | nually, says a well-known drug- J gist, because it darkens the hair so 1 naturally and evenly that no one | can tell it has been applied. \ You just dampen a sponge or soft brush with Wyeth’s Sage and Sul phur and draw it through your hair, ta*king one small strand at a time. Those whose hair is turning gray, becoming faded, dry, scraggly and thin, have a surprise awaiting them, because after jus*t one application the gray hair vanishes and your locks becon^e luxuriantly dark and beautiful, all dandruff goes, scalp itching and falling hair stop. ’ This is the age of youth, gray haired, unattractive folks aren’t wanted around, so get busy with the Sage and Sulphur to-night and you’ll be amazed at your youthful appearance and the real befcuty and healthy condition of your hair with in a few days. Inquiry at drug stores here shows that they all sell lots of “Wyeth’s Sage and Sulphur” and the folks using it are enthusi astic. Elkin Drug Co., special agents. Mrs. Robert Alston during the opera. Mrs. Weyman Hostess. Mrs. Samuel Weyman will give a dinner to-morrow night in compli ment to Mrs. George Connors and Mrs. Richard Massey, both of Bir mingham. who are stopping at the Georgian Terrace. For Visitors. Mrs. Porter Langston was hostess at a luncheon to-day at the East Lake Country Club in honor of several vis itors who are here for the opera. Tea for Visitors. Mrs. Edward T. Brown gives a tea to-morrow afternoon, the honors of which will be shared by Mrs. Albert L. Mills, of Washington. D. C., the guest of Mrs. Jlark Howell; Mrs. Marshall Johnston, of Macon, 'the guest of Mrs. Richard Johnston, and Miss Mary Ewing, of Nashville, Mrs. Brown’s guest. For Mrs. Claiborne. Mrs. Ernest E. Norris entertained at an informal tea this afternoon for her sister, Mrs. William T. Claiborne, of Knoxville, who is her guest for grand opera. For Miss McClellan. Miss Marion Goldsmith will enter tain at luncheon on Wednesday for Miss McClellan, who is the guest of Miss Hildreth Burton Smith. Mrs. Moorefield Entertains. Mrs. Dorsey E. MooTMield enter tained six guests at a luncheon to day at the "Capital City Club in honor of Mrs. Frank Pearson’s guest, Miss Edith Bowron, of Birmingham. PERSONALS Good „ Home | c Made Bread I / Put 1 tablespoon butter, 1 tablespoon Silver-Leaf Lard, 1 tablespoon miszar, IVi teaspoon salt In large bowl. Pour on 1 piut boil!njf water and 1 pint scalded milk, when lukewarm add 1 dissolved yeast rake ana l quart of flour. Stir until thoroughly mixed. Add 2 quarts of flour, mix and turn on - floured board. Knead until smooth and elastic and until bubbles appear under the surface. Cover and set In a warm place to raise. Cut down, knead,JJnJ® , loaves, place In greased pans, cover aud let raise to oouble bulk. Lake In hot oven. A good recipe, closely followed and good materials will give you good, sweet* wholesome, fine grained, tender bread. Swift’s Silver-Leaf Lard is the best shortening you can use in your bread. It is Government inspected, guaranteed pure, put up in tight cov ered new tin pails to keep it sweet land clean, until the last spoonful is used. Swift’s Silver-Leaf Lard Mrs. Moultrie Hanes and son, S. M. Hanes, Jr., of Asheville, N. C., are visiting relatives in Atlanta. Mrs. Hanes was Miss Virginia White, of Atlanta. Mrs. Herbert C. White, of Albany, is the guest of her sister,. Mrs. A. J. Simmons, 44 Bedford Place.* Mrs. L. R. White and children leave to-night to visit relatives in Merid ian, Miss. They will join Mr. White in Birmingham later, and after Sep tember they will make their home In Memphis. Mrs. E. A. Jones returned home yesterday from a trip to New York, Jamaica. Havana, Colon, Panama, and a visit to Mrs. Percy S. Darlington, in West Chester, Pa. Mr. J. H. Dozier and sister, Miss Dozier, of Athens, will attend grand opera. Miss Glenn Allen, of Athens, will attend grand opera this week as the guest of Mr. and Mrs. W. S. Cole man. Mr. Victor Lamar Smith arrived this morning from New York to join Mrs. Smith, who has been the guest of her mother, Mrs. Henry Johnson, for two or three weeks. They have a box for the grand opera, and will en tertain friends at each performance. HERE IS A REAL DYSPEPSIA CURE! ‘ ‘ Pape's Diapepsin ’ ’ Settles Sour, Upset Stomachs in Five Minutes. Do some foods you eat hit back —taste good, but work badly; fer ment into stubborn lumps and cause a sick, sour, gassy stomach? Now, Mr. or Mrs. Dyspeptic, jot this down: Pape’s Diapepsin di gests everything, leaving nothing to sour and upset you. There never was anything so safely quick, so certainly effective. No difference how badly your stom ach is disordered you will get happy relief in five minutes, but what pleases you most is that it strengthens and regulates your stomach so you can eat your fa vorite foods without fear. Most remedies give you relief sometimes—they are slow, but not sure. Diapepsin is quick, positive and puts your stomach in a healthy condition so the misery won’t come back. You feel different as soon as Diapepsin comes in contact with the stomach—distress just van ishes—your stomach gets sweet, no gases, no belching, no eructa tions of undigested food, your head clears and you feel fine. Go now, make the best invest ment you ever made by getting a large flfty-cent case of Pape's Diapepsin from any drug store. You realize in five minutes how needless It Is to suffer from indi gestion, dyspepsia or any stomach disorder. Dainty HID Makes Perspiration Odorless is always good and will give you uni form, good results in baking. Use Swift’s Silver-Leaf Lard for tasty pastry. Swift & Company u. S. A. At Your Dealers Ailing Skin Eczema, Psoriasis. Dandruff, Pimples, skin troubles of any kind —WASH THEM AWAY with D. D D. Prescription for Eczema This mild wash will bring you instant relief from that awful ltrh. Prove it with a 50c bottle. We guarantee the regular $1.00 size bottle to end your distress and begin your cure or your money back. D. D. D. Soap helps, too; ask us. JACOBS’ PHARMACY. Exquisitely dainty, it enhances the toilet of refined people. Hid is a pure, dainty deodorant, which destroys all odor of the body ema nating from perspiration or other cause, without Interfering with functions of the pores. Through perspiration the body excretes impurities. If you retard perspiration the Impurities remain in the system, to result, perhaps, in painful skin eruptions. HID is a deodorant, very pure, very dainty, and it can not harm you. Refined men and women t’SE HID. It keeps the body sweet, as fresh and free from unpleasant odor as when you step from the morning bath. Hid has not the slightest odor of its own. You may use perfume, and nothing unpleas ant will spoil its charm. Hid will not soil dainty lingerie. 25c. Jacobs’ Pharmacy MAIN STORE, 6-8 WHITEHALL 9T. 23 Whitehall St. 245 Houston St. 102 Whitehall St. 266 Peters St. 70 W. Mitchell St 152 Decatur St. 544 Peachtree St. 423 Marietta 6t. 216 Lee St., W»«^ F-nd. CMBERLIN'JOHNSON'DuBOSE COMPANY Atlanta New York Paris Marked By Huge Quantities and Remarkable Prices A Great Lace Sale Gets Under Way Tomorrow at 9 o’Clock It you have laces to buy, prepare to buy themto-morrow. The values, the tremendous values that this Lace Sale brings ■ are simply nof to be overlooked—they are too full of meaning, too full of savings. They tell in a very pleasing manner that summer dresses and underwear this year are going to cost less. And such laces!—Beautiful affairs, filmy, cobwebby shadow laces, real Irish crochet laces, Venise laces, Smyrna and Cluny laces. Indeed, laces that hold their heads high above the ordinary kinds. But the big and interesting facts you may gather from the prices—the former prices arid the sale prices. The one set tells the worth, the quality, the fineness; the other tells just what an op portunity this brings. We trust that many of our Opera Week visitors will avail themselves of this sale. We would like them to know at first hand what a Chamberlin-Johnson-DuBose lace sale amounts to. The details— At 15c a yard At 69c a yard At 98c a yard At 12 l=2c to $1.75 At 20c to 59c Real Irish Crochet, shadow and Venise lace edges and bands and insertions i n white and cream. Real Irish Crochet, shadow and Venise lace edges and bands in cream and white. Real Irish Crochet, shadow and Venise 1 ace edges and bands, in cream and white. Cluny and Smyrna edges and insertions in widths from 3-4 to 3 inches wide. A lot—a fine, big lot of Venise medal lions wanted for waists and under wear. Regularly 35cto75cayd. Regularly 75c to $2 a yd. Regularly $2to $4.50 yd. Regularly25cto$3.50yd. Regularly 75cto$1.50 each Valenciennes Flouncings At 59c a yd. At 75c a yd Are those that were 75c to $1.25 a yd. They Are 9 to J2 inches wide, and in high favor for dresses and petticoats. Are those that were $1.25 to $1.75 a yard, they are 12 to 20 inches wide—all beautiful patterns, some very dainty, others very elaborate. Agents for Butterick Patterns and Publications. Chamberlin=Johnson=DuBose Co.