Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, April 23, 1913, Image 3

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■ I iffF DEBATE (DELHI DPEHA S ON; LEADER BILL TO jlains Details of Revision and feet on Country—Debate to Continue Five Days. WASHINGTON. April 2:i. Demo- lie Leader Underwood opened Iff debate ip the House to-day |h a comprehensive statement of details of the new bill and .in Jlysis of its effect on the indus- of the country. Underwood spoke extemporaneous- now and then referring: to the Iff handbook and at other times Ihe Ways and Means Committee’s prt. His remarks were construed (the “keynote” speech of the de- which, by agreement, is to last legislative days, with night sea ls. |lr. Underwood declared the time come to remove protection from |flts and put American business on competitive basis. It was un- erican, he thought, to put a pre- km on business Inefficiency. Progressive Leader Murdock was to-day on his tariff report, fch will be presented to the use. Ihe Finance Committee of the |ate had conferences to-day with Fe Senators who are opposing (ting sugar and wool on the free Progressives Speak, ^efore Underwood began his speech obtained the consent of the House kn agreement whereby general de le on the tariff bill will close at ptever time the House closes on nday. Ihe Republicans will yield six hours I Progressive Leader Murdock to pose of as he sees flt. The Payne bill had hardly been cted into law before the men who ed it began apologizing for it,” Underwood. “They recognized rns Ives that it was not satisfac- to the American people. d<> not contend that increased of living is entirely due to the prote< live tariff system, but it is to say ♦he* main reason for the •use has grown out of a taxation i*i which aided only the large ufacturen and the privileged Raps Tariff for Living Cost. (ivJerwood admitted that there lias world-wide increase in the |i of living, but he contended that Vi been much larger in fch< United |tes than in countries where tariff (Bs are not so high. “Prices will be reduced until merchants have fc>osed of the stock of goods which bought under a high protective item and they will not reduce these fces until they are forced to.” lys Cotton Mills ist Cut Wages. ^OSTON, April 23.—Edwin Farn- Greene, treasurer of the Pacific of Lawrence and president of National Association of Cotton |nufacturers, speaking at the open of the annual convention of the elation here to-day, declared that i only chance for the cotton indus- ' to meet foreign competition is by Reduction in the wages of the oper- ^ves. resident Greene declared that the |ustry is facing a crisis as the re- of tariff legislation at Washing- Heinpel Scores Remarkable Tri umph on First Appearance Be fore an Atlanta Audience. Atlanta operugoe:* who hare grumbled /or three seasons because only Italian. French and German have been sung will have opportunity to night to learn whether opera in Eng lish really is preferable. The Metropolitan company is ?o sing in English for the first time in Atlanta, and a work given its pre»- miere in New York only a few w**€ks ago will be the offering. This .s “Cyrano,” written about ten years ago by Walter Damrosch, of New York, but not given a performance until last February. It has been sung by the Metropolitan but five times. The opera is novel, too, in that its title is given the baritone. Pasquule Amato, who was accorded a veritable ovation in his “Traviata” role yester day afternoon, will be the Cyrano to night. Riccardo Martin, the Ameri can tenor, who has been among tho Atlanta favorites since the first con cert season five years ago, will be the Christian. The Roxane will be Madame Frances Alda the beautiful Australian and the wife of General Manager Gatti-Casazza. It was Alda who sang Desdemona to Slesak’s Othello so well two seasons ago. Hertz to Conduct To-night. Alfred Hertz, the jovial old Ger man conductor, has arrived especially to direct the music of “Cyrano.” Pu*- nam Griswold, who sings hut a few bars in the whole Atlanta week, came with him, and will be the De Gulch*- Albert Reiss, the little tenor comedian, will have the best role he has ever sung in Atlanta as Ragueneau, the poetic pastry cook. Basil Ruysda* 1 '. the handsome basso, whose name Is Dutch, though he is American born, is another late arrival few- the .“Cyrano” performance. The opera follows closely, until the finale, the Rostand play which caused such a furore about, twelve years ago. and in which Coquolin in France and Mansfield in the United States made such great dramatic successes’. The music is said to be excellent, running the gamut from the frivolous comedy of Ragueneau to the solemn and weirdly beautiful deaU) song of Cy rano as the curtain falls. The book is by W. F. Hepderson, one of the lead ing musical critics and writers of New York, and adheres as closely to the Rostand lines as is possible in a really “singable” libretto. Ponchielli’s “Gioconda.” with-Des- tinn, Caruso, Gilly and Homer, will be the bill to-mdrrow afternoon. There will be no night performance to-mor row Third Presentation of “Cyrano.” “Cyrano,” which will be presented in the Auditorium to-night by the Metropolitan company, is regarded by many of the critics as the production to meet the cry for a new and thor oughly worthy American opera. That the music for the opera was written a dozen years ago by Walter Damrosch does not in the least de stroy its characteristic of newness, for it received its first presentation only last February, when it w r as staged in New’ York. It was given a second time in the metropolis and to night it will have its third presenta tion. The book, following in its plot mAny of the essentials of Rostand's “Cyrano Buy for Cash Where Prices Are Lowest Buy at Rogers’ Where Qualities Are Highest Thursday Specials 1 Quart New Irish Potatoes ■! O 1 Can Fancy String Beans | A This is a lot of the finest 1 canned string beans we have ever had. One can contains an amount equal to two quarts fresh beans and they are tender and sweet and taste like fresh beans. The price quoted on the combination is for Thursday onlv. BETTER-BREAD, 4c Loaf Not only Better-Bread, but the best bread that can be made. There's a reason. We pay a premium to get a spe cially cleaned flour. The granulated sugar, Fleishmann’s yeast, and other ingredients are the best that money can buy. The mos^ modern, sanitary ovens, the latest improved machinery installed in the cleanest, lightest shop in Atlanta, and the most expert baker in the South combine to make a loaf which is surpassed by none. Look for the label. Better-Bread. Rogers’ Special Jelly Roll, 6c Have you ever tried our famous Jelly Roll? If not, by all means do so. They are delicious. They are specially priced at the regular price, tor. but at do they are a bargain. Rogers' Cinnamon Rolls, dozen 6c Small Lunch Itiscuit. pound 9c Renown Ginger Snap3, pound 7c L-W. Special Fig Bars, pound ... ■ : 12e Spiced Jumbles, pound 1 2c Lemon Jumbles, pound ■ ..12c California Evaporated Peaches, lb. 8jc This is the fourth shipment of these peaches, and it is not likely that we will have another this season. At this price they will not last long, so place your order immediately. New York State Evaporated Apples, peeled and 7 C cored: regular loo package f Complete Line Fresh Vegetables at Lowest Prices Also First Shipment Extra Fancy Fresh Pineapples j TI1E AT LAM A ULUKlitA.N AM) .MAW \\ Ifil l.\ ivfcU.V ) . Ami L Z-i. IJ M. >. TO NIGHT’S OPERA Damrosch's ‘ • Cyrano. ’ ’ (IN ENGLISH.) Cyrano Pasquale Amato Roxane Frances Alda Duenna . Marie Mattfeld Lise Rosina Van Dyck Mother Superior Maria Duchene Christian Riccardo Martin Ragueneau Albert Reis» DeGuiche Putnam Griswold LeBret William Hinshaw A Musketeer. . . . Basil Ruysdael Montfleury Lambert Murphy A Monk Antonio Pini-Gorsi Conductor, Alfred Hertz. de Bergerac,” is the work of W. J. Henderson, who collaborated with Damrosch. It is pronounced admir able in structure and versification and in its picturesque English Work Is Meioaious. Mr. Damrosch says of his own work: “It is not a music drama; it is an opera 1 have gone to older models than Wagner. The scoring is light; the work is melodious. There are set arias and the singers have as much melody to sing as the orchestra.” A pleasing scenic effect in the first act is the reproduction of a tiny thea ter in the Hotel de Bourgogne in 1640. Soon after the arrival of the minia ture theater’?* audience of cavaliers, burghers, lackeys, pages and fiddlers, the violinists play an overture which Damrosch describes as based on the style of Lully. It Is a most delightful and delicate bit of instrumentation. The second act is marked by the Feminine Atlanta All a-Flutter It’s Scotti, ‘the Grandest Thing!' q.#.;. Peachtree Stares as He Swings By A N Julius Kruttschnitt, Head of the Southern Pacific, Indorses Forbes’ Suggestion. Scotti snapped by a Georgian photographer as he strolled along Peachtree Street. clever patter s»ong, “How to Make Al mond Cheese Cake,” and by another song, not dissimilar in style, "We Are the Gascony Cadets.” The scene is laid in Ragueneau’s pastry shop, “the poets’ eating house.” Mme. Alda Perfect Roxane. The street before the house of Rox ane is the scene of the third act. Rox ane. who has just parted with De Guiche. goes into the house as Cyrano and Christian appear. Then follows the balcony scene, in which Cyrano makes love in the darkness for Chris tian, and tells of his own love unrec ognized by her. Act four opens on the camp of the Gascony cadets and the second scene of the act shows the park of the con vent where Roxane learns the truth of Cyrano’s love for her. Madame Frances Alda has been de scribed bv the critics as a perfect Roxane. Th erole of Cyrano has been developed admirably by Amato. BRYAN GIVES SENATE A UNIVERSAL PEACE PLAN WASHINGTON, April 23.—A plan for a series of arbitration treaties * for universal peace was present- ed to the Senate Committee on For- | eign Relations to-day by William J. I Bryan. Secretary of State. After a conference lasting nearly two hours Secretary Bryan announced that the committee is favorable to his plan and that he will at once report to President Wilson the result of his conference. CORONER IS PROBiNG DEATH OF NEGRO SCHOOL TEACHER Coroner Donehoo to-day is investi gating the mysterious death of Beat rice Raiford, a nepro school teacher in the White Star Public School, on Houston Street, who died in Grady Hospital of what is supposed to have been morphine poisoning. The woman, becoming suddenly ill yesterday, is said to have taken medi cine prescribed by a negro woman doctor. DUCHESS OF CONNAUGHT SUFFERS SLIGHT RELAPSE Special Cable to The Atlanta Georgian. - LONDON. April 23.—The Duchess of Connaught, wife of the Governor Gerera] of Canada, who was operated on.Tof appendicitis April 11. fjffered a slight relapse ear^ to-day, but her condition is got considered alarming 2 Georgia U. ’07 Boys Are Victims of Cupid Raoul and Turner, Football Stars, Art Last to Join Ranks of Benedicts. The class of 1907 at the University of Georgia is stirred to-day over news that two more of Its Atlanta members are soon to wed. A brief double announcement made it known that Loring Raoul and Lewis Turner will embark on matrimonial seas. Raoul was captain of football and track teams at Athens, a member of Sphinx and a captain of one of the crack military companies. Turner was a football player and wore thy chevrons, epaulets, etc., of a lieuten ant in the military. Both were “sea men” in the far-famed Boating Club. Several other members of the class of ’07 arc marked for matrimony. Ru mor has it that Harrison June** has definite plans and that "Bill" Brant ley won’t be left behind. As for Rol- lin Broughton, of Mobile, formerly of Madison. h« married early this month. NATION-WIDE SEARCH ON FOR MISSING GIRL CHICAGO. April 23.—Mrs. Bird Winters, mother of Katherine Winters, the 9-year-old Newcastle, Ind., girl w'ho lias been missing since March 20, w'as in Chicago to-day awaiting the arrival of her husband, Dr. \\\ E. Winters, who will direct a nation wide search for the little girl. Mrs. Winters is on the verge of a nervous breakdown. “I have traveled miles and miles looking for my child,” she said. PENNSYLVANIA PASSES WOMAN’S SUFFRAGE BILL HARRISBURG. PA.. April 23.-Th* woman’s suffrage amendment to the State Constitution was passed by the Senate here bv a vote of 2u to 22. The resolution has already passed the House. It will be presented to the Governor at once to be signed. HELD ON SLAYING CHARGE. CHATTANOOGA. TENN.. April 23 — As the result of the death of James Turney, a former member of the County Court, last Monday, A. G. Smith was hound over to the Grand Jury* this afternoon under $5,POO bond on a charge of murder. Baritone’s Saunter Has Douglas Fairbanks or J. Drew Eclipsed, Declare Fair Admirers. There’s Signor Antonio Scotti. Why can't we all make diadems out of our me,re straw hats, and scepters out of our cause, and play the Urfhce'-Charm ing to the utter rouY'^df ’fnrriden- everywhere? Because, 'ihoKt likely, we are not Antonio Scotti Style and savoir-faire seemed to radiate from the stalwart, erect figure that made its way leisurely along downtown Peachtree to-day. Military precision was there, and yet a natural grace that made it plain that the dig nity way innate ana not artificial. A tailor, measuring a customer, glanced out into the street and saw the figure pass his shop door. He rushed to the door and gazed at the tight coat, the square shoulders, the ultra-correct trousers, with eyes of artistic appreciation. Then he went back and changed a few entries on hi* customer’s order blank. An automobile sped along tne street with a long-drawn blast of a siren whistle. Four girls saw the stalwart figure. “Gee, It’s Scotti!” "Ou-u-u-u-u.” Four blended gasps echoed the siren and resounded above it. The automobile slowed and turned “It's* Scotti,” said the girl at the wheel, whispering, awe-struck. Scotti sauntered leisurely. Get the Scotti saunter. It has Douglas Fair banks, John Drew and every other idol overshadowed. Not even a mov ing picture man has anything like It. Atlanta maidens have spoken. Shoulders immovable. Arms swing in an arc of four and three-quarters inches. Head five degree?* to the right. Toes out. Lord help the Atlanta man with the pigeon toes. Scotti throws his feet out But back to the ptory of how fdur tender hearts went fluttering, ro mance-winged, out into a dream world. And not only four The automobile crawled slowly alor^g Peachtree, in the wake of ihe sauntering Scotti. Oblivious to traf fic dangers, pedestrians, shop win dows. everything four pairs of eyes stared. Four girls talked in whispers. "Did you see him at the Auditorium yesterday afternoon, walking ground the boxes? I think he' is the gran-n-ndest thing. Look at that little cane hooked over his arm. Isn’t that the cutest thing? Watch him walk. Ou-u-u-u.” Then the four rapt maidens saw the luckiest woman in the world. \ handsome automobile swept by. Its occupant, a woman, gowned and glo rious, also saw the superb Scotti. She spoke to her chauffeur, and th? automobile stopped at the curb. The great man smiled, and raise ': his hat. His bow. from his hips, awoke a convocation of rapturous squeals from the automobile of the four maidens. The Scotti Handshake. Scotti held out his hand to the woman. Get the Scotti handshake. Palm up. Fingers curled slightly with the subtle compliment of being eager to grasp the other person* hand. And then a firm, unnjoving grip for three seconds, exactly, and a convulsive quiver, lasting while you count one, rapidly. The maidens sighed in chorus. They saw Scotti ascend , to the woman’s side, with the air that iie preferred a seat in her automobile than a re posing place on the bosom pf Abrt- ham. ‘Who Is it? What ? her qamel Do you know her? Tell me quick." All of which, i? a composite con versation of four heart-strj' ken girls. And the Luckiest Woman. The other automobile rolled away. NEW YORK. April 23. The “open Inter to railrcwtds” printed by the New York American is cordially in dorsed by JuRug Kruttschnitt. chair man of the board of the Southern Pacific Company. He declares: The most effective way to se cure relief from the oppression under Which the railroads are suffering is to. secure the aid and co-operation of the general pub lic. of voters, ih controlling the politicians. ” Mr. Kruttschnitt mud" the state ment in answer to The American's open letter urging that steps be taken by the heads of railroads to alleviate —harassment they have complained of ho bitterly Mr. Kruttschnitt explained that the Southern Pacific had been co-operat ing with farmers, boards of trade and tha public in general to obtain relief by way of the ballot for the railroads. That this work is having beneficial results was reflected by the action of the people of Oklahoma and Texas in tinning down oppressive laws dealing inimieally with the rail roads. It was also tin* belief of Mr. Krutt schnitt that the decline in the credit of the railroads, as reflected by a falling market for their bonds, was due to the increased burdens imposed upon the roads by the legislators and to constant attacks. “The railroads of the United States.” said Mr. Kruttschnitt. “were never in better physical condition nor more economically operated than ttoey are now, but the activities of the poli ticians prevent people from invest ing in them, because nobody want# to buy into a property that is being pounded and hammered all the time” Mr. Kruttschnitt. referring to the open railroad letter printed by the American, said: I think the suggestions made by Mr. Forbes, in the New York Amer ican are very good. The officers re sponsible for the management of rail road properties Lealize the increasing difficulty of securing from legislators in matters vitally affecting their in terests. We realize the most off ac tive way to secure relit'f from the oppression under which the railroads are suffering is to secure the aid and co-operation of the general public,of voters in controlling the politicians. The only . States in which legislation to needlessly increase the expenses of railroads has been defeated have been those in which the assistance of the people themselves has been secured .after campaigns of educa tion, argument and reason Rye Bread and Skim Milk 9 Cents a Day Professor Finds That This Diet Helps to Solve High Cost of Living. SAX FRANCISCO; April 22, - Hav ing’discovered that art is long and that the purses cf crilege profusion's are not. Charles Kruger, of tin* de partment of mathematics of the Uni versity of California, has sought and found a solution for the high cost ,*f living. “It is absolutely foolish for any per son to spend more than 9 cents a day for food,’’ says Professor Kruger. “Americans spend too much money on food and other living expenses,” he says. “If they would live on rye bread and skimmed milk, their health would be better.” t Banquet Friday for Medical Graduates; Thirty-eight Members, of Atlanta j College Class to Attend Spread at Elks’ Club. The graduating class of the At lanta Medical College will be given a dinner at the Elks’ Club on Friday evening of thin week Mt 7 o’clock. !)r, R. T. Dorsey will act as toast master. The class history will be read by S. A!. Howell, the prophe-v by N. R. Thomas and the valedic tory G W. Williams. Several members of the college faculty also will apeak. The thirt vrulght 1013 graduate are: Claud Douglas Barkley, (Jem -c \\. lielk, Robert Howell Bradley, /..mule Brantley. Grady Lurr.sden te Malcolm Dexter Clayton, st Ira Colvin. Vergil Clyde Divvn's, Id us Carl DeariPo. Grover Cleveland Edwards. Kimsey Elam Kosti r, . .Geprge Willis Hammond, W illiam ScQtt Hancock, Harry Wai ter Harps ter, Samuel Monroe How ell, Stanley Wilton Johns, Leo Lak® Jameson, IJSee Fultdn Keen, James Murray. Samuel Edward Mole. Hugh i rest M< M&nus, Dah ftlcl *od, Il#b* ert Harley McDonald, George Tracy Olmstet&d. Mark Pearson Pentecost, Paul Jean Peniston, William Harry Powell, Boyce Tucker Rainey, R. T). Rawlins, lutiue Milton Reynold*, Gilbert Alfred Rhodes, William Roy Richards. Gilbert Madison Roberts, Arturo R. Row Rangel, John Wash ington Thomason Napoleon Rose >e Thomas. Alvah W. White and Guy Watkin Williams. Huff Bankruptcy Case Nearing End Definite Steps Toward Settlement of Litigation of 14 Years’ Standing Under Way. M.U’uN, GA., April 23. —Definite st* ps toward the settlement of the long-pending and celebrated W. A. Huff bankruptcy litigation are under way to-day in the United States** Dis trict Court. Fourteen , years ago Colonel Huff, ex-Mayor of Macon, now 81 years old, was declared in bankruptcy over his protect. Although costs, interests and special claims have piled up since then, there is now $94,000 in the pos session of the court, besides unsold realty assets which are more than sufficient to pay all charges and leave a surplus for Colonel Huff. The lat ter claims that this shows he has nev er been insolvent, while it is the court> position that the property has developed in value under the hand ling of the court. Pauper ‘Vet,’ Posing Rich, Weds Widow, 60 Goes Back to Soldiers’ Home After Hotel Ejects Him and Bride For Not Paying Bill. MAGNOLIA, MISS., April 23.— Chester M. Bisl^ee, veteran of the war between the States, an inmate of the soldiers’ home in Austin, Texas, re turned to the institution to-day after a little flyer in matrimony. Posing as g man of wealth, Bisbee married Mrs. Myra Scott, a sixty- year-old widow and a member of a wealthy old Mississippi family. Mr. and Mrs. Bisbee then be^an their honoy/nopp.. After incurring a big bill at a hotel, Bisbee was ejected. Then It developed that he* is an-old soldier and was hei> on a .furlough. “I had a good time while it lasted and it probably will be the last good time I’ll have on this planet,” said Bisbee to-day. Atlanta Now Cleanest City in America, Says Washington Sociology Expert. Paying high tribute to Chief Beav ers ami Marion Jackson for their suc cessful campaign against commercial ized vice in Atlanta, Wilbur F. Crafts to-day declared the South in a few years would become the cleanest and most moral part of the world. Mr. Crafts is superintendent of ihe International Reform Bureau, witn headquarter** in Washington. He is In Atlanta to attend sessions of the Southern Sociological Congress, which begin Friday. One of the firs; things Mr. Crafts did after his arrival was lo go to headquarters for a conference with Chief Beavers on the details of the anti-vice campaign waged here. “It is patent," he said, “that vice has gone from Atlanta to stay. With such a man as Beavers in charge of the situation it can not come back. I had heard much of the city, but I was surprised beyond m.v expectations at finding it morally the cleanest city in America. Atlanta has gone at the problem in the only effective and log ical method—by instant extermina tion. Dr. Crafts is known in Washington as “Speaker of the Third House." Fourteen laws written by him have been passed by Congress. While in Atlanta he will deliver addresses to the Boys’ and to the Girl’s High Schools, as well as to f«everal churches. Sunday night he will speak at the Harris Street Presbyterian Church. 15 Miles of Paving Started by Decatur Different Materials Tested for Street Work on Six Thoroughfares in Nearby Town. A fifteen-mile driveway that does not double on itself will be the boast of Decatur when the paving of six streets is completed. Oak Street, Jefferson Place and Candler Street will be paved with macadam with chert olnder; McDon ough Street, from the Court House to the Georgia Railroad, Tarvia binder; College Street, from the Georgia Rail road to the Sams Crossing, Tarvia; Ponce DeLeon Avenue, from the Court House to the city limits in Druid Hills, macadam, with Standard oil asphalt binder. Work will begin immediately *>n each of these streets. -It will be rushedtocoimfletiorr^^^^^^^^^^^ ‘Service’ Keynote of .. Sunday School Talk Ware and Henry Counties Lead State in Organization—Con vention in Session. KI.BkAtON, GA.. April 23. St u- ice” was the keynote of the addressee delivered to-day before the 500 dele gates attending the State Sunday School Convention now in progress here by W. C. Pearce, of Chicago, and W. D. Sims, of Atlanta. Speakers this afternoon will be J. Randall Farris and -Professor M. L Brittain, of At lanta. and John D. Walker, or Sparta. Ware and Henry Counties won the distinction of being the only counties in ihe State attaining perfect organi zation during the past year. The most interest!ng person present at this convention Ih Thomas Moore, of Bolton, who for 75 years has been an active Sunday sohoo] worker. Big Shakeup Near In Rail Mail Service Burleson’s Threat to Reorganize "From the Top Down” Causes Uneasiness in Department. WASHINGTON, April 23.-Offi cials of the Railway Mall Service are stirred greatly by the statement of Postmaster General Burleson that he will reorganize the service “from the top down." Various officials have been unectsy sine* 4 the election. Under th** surface much feeling exists in tiie Railway Mail Service, the troubles y pich existed during the Taft administration having left bad blood, it is said. 1 bearing Scotti and the luckiest woman in. the world. \Vhy cpn’t we all—but we. settled that at the first. We can t; that's all there is to it. ' The funny -part of this story, though, is yet to come. The men of Atlanta have noticed the Scotti style and the Scotti air also, apprecia tively. “I’m simply Avild about Scotti,” said the maiden who drove the automobile with the four passengers. "And, some* 'how. I wasn't afraid to tell Harry. He didn’t mind. He just made a noise ilke this.” She tried to imitate ;* man's sigh. Which she couldn’t. It betokens an agony of »**ul and a yearning that is titanic. * of. course, Harrj si^hod. Fido, Too, Wears His Mistress’ Pet Color Peachtree Strollers Stare at Dog’s Green Coat Beside Green Feathered Hat. Dog blankets and millinery now match in color. It’s the latest fad among aristocratic dogs, whose mis tresses study sartorial symphonies for Ftdo as thoroughly as they do for themselves. When a fashionably dree seel woman usterday afternoon rode down Peachtree in a limousine, which had the top thrown back, and a pamper ed curly white huired dog perched on top of the hood so that he was in the same horiental plane as the costly confection of the milliner, pedestrian* stopped to look. For they observed that the briliant green feathers which surrounded and sur mounted the woman’s spring hat were exactly matched in color by the blanket which protected Fido from the west wind. LECTURE. “TATER DIGGIN’,” AT PRYOR STREET CHURCH j Tater Diggin” will be the subject *f a humorous lecture to be delivered by Dr. Edwin Hall, of New York, at the Pryor Street Presbyterian Churc h. South Pryor and Glenn Streets, on Thursday night at 8 o’clock. An admission fee of 25 cents will be charged. Proceeds will be devoted to the,church building fund. Shetect l/cuMety. Get the Original and Genu ne HORLICK’S MALTED MILK The Fcod-drink tor All Ages. For Infants, Invalids and Growing Chil dren. Pure Nutrition, upbuilding the whole body Invigorates the nursing mother and the aged. Rich milk, malted grain, in powder form. A quick lunch prepared in a minute. Take no substitute. Ask for HORLICK'S , Not in Any Milk Trust BALKAN, the neckwear de luxe. A cravat silk of rare beauty and tex ture of designs suggest ed from decorations of Servian origin combin ing color combinations unique and beautiful. These Balkan figures, a reproduction of which is shown in the above scarf, are designed for wear with the col lars which are named the “Boulevard,” also a new creation in collar- dom. Note the cutaway corners, the “V” shaped opening at the throat, and note also the effect produced by the combi nation of the cravat and the collar—both new. The cravats sell at One Dollar and One- Fifty. The collars are the popular two-for-a-quar- ter variety of your fa vorite brand—the Lion. Fixclusice fiepresenta - tires After burp System Clothet. Cloud-Stanford Co. “The Shop of Quaiitv” 61 Peachtree St. id »99 4 SS7 ^WtetTa/, /