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THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS.
11
I i’e Atlanta members of the Djama
League of America met Wednesday
afternoon and formally organized a
lor;< center. A constitution was
adopted and the following offlceis
elected:
Mrs. Wlljiam Clare Spiker, presi-
' ( 't ; Rev. W. W. Momminger. first
r president; Mrs. Edward Brown.
Kt «)iid vice president; Mm Roby
Robinson, third vice president; Mr.
Dudley Cowles, secretary; Mr. Lind
sey Hopkins, treasurer.
These officers, with the following,
compose the board of directors:
j Mrs. T. B. Felder, Mrs. Albert How.
£!'• Jr.. Mrs. Burton-Smith, Mrs.
Emma Garrett Boyd, Mr. Thomas
Fgleston. Mrs. J. Wade Conkling, Mr.
Robert Foreman, Mrs. H. L. Stearns,
Mr. Walter Rich.
A meeting of the directors will be
held Friday at 3 o'clock.
Breakfast for Miss Wilson.
Mrs. Hardin L. Cobb’s breakfast
Thursday at the Piedmont Driving
Club complimented Miss Helen Dar-
gan’s guest, Miss Ruth Wilson, of
New York. The table was placed
In the loggle, and was decorated
in pink peonies and pink snapdrag
ons, arranged in a mound. The place-
cards were French bouquets .in lace
paper holders. The guest were Misses
Wilson, Helen Dargan, Annie Lee Mc
Kenzie, Mary Helen Moody, Ruth
Stallings, Jennie D. Harris, Sara
Rawson, Katherine Ellis, Margaret
Hawkins, Esther Smith, Caroline
Muse, Emily Winshlp, Marian Achi-
son and May Atkinson.
Miss Wilson wore black charmeuse
satin, with girdle of old blue and col
lar and cuffs of white batiste. Her
small black hat was veiled in black
net and trimmed in old blue ribbons,
with one large pink rose. Miss Dar-
gan’s costume was of white ratine,
with blouse of whfcte voile figured in
tiny pink roses, and collar and cuffs
of light green. Her hat was a picture
model in black.
Anhual Public School Concert.
* The eighth and seventh grades of
the public schools have extended an
invitation to the parents of the Par
ent-Teacher Association to attend the
annual concert of the schools' at the
Auditorium Friday evening. The folk
song program will be composed of
songs from England, Scotland, Ire
land. Wales and America. The as
sisting seventh grades will sing four
songs of Scotland, France, Austria
and Italy.
A thousand children will 3ing in the
concert.
Through the courtesy of the At-
7 -^ ± L ... I... .
lanta Festival Association, Dr. Percy
J. Starnes will be the accompanist of
the evening Miss Kate Dee Harral-
son, the director of music, will con
duct the chorus.
For Washington Seniors.
Miss Ida Winshlp stave an informal
tea at her home on Peachtree Thurs
day afternoon in honor of the senior
class of the Washington Seminary, of
which she Is a member. The tea ta
ble was decorated in pink roses, hav
ing the mints and candle shades of
the same rose shade. Garden flowers
adorned the mantels and cabinets in
the living room where the guests were
received. About 25 girls enjoyed the
affair.
Churoh Entertainment.
The Young Women’s Bible Class of
the Central Presbyterian Church will
hold its annual “gift party" Friday
evening from 6 to 8 o’clock at the
home of Mrs. Richard Clark, 570
North Boulevard. The reception com
mittee will Include Mrs. R. D. Crusoe,
leader of the class, and the following:
Mrs. W. W. Cotton, Mrs. W. M.
Grlnnell, Miss L. V. Davidson, Miss
Cora Bruce. Miss Henrietta Welsh,
Miss Helen Greenlees and Mrs. Clark.
Memorial Association Meets.
The annual meeting of the Ladies'
Memorial Association will be held vt
Carnegie Library Friday at 11 a. m.
Officers will be elected.
Ladies’ Auxiliary to Y. M. C. A.
The regular monthly business meet
Ing of the Ladles' Auxiliary of the
Y M. C. A. will be held Friday at 3
p. m. at the Y. M. C. A. building.
Woman’s Club Board Moots.
The executive board of the Atlanta
IF YOU ARE A SHRINER,
GO TO THE BONITA
If you are not a Shrlner. go
anyway and laugh yourself sick
over the comic actions of "Sen
ator Bushneck.” being produced
by the Alex Wall Musical Comedy
Company.
Pretty girls? I guess yes: and
they can sing and dance, too.
Paraso is For Field D ay
KEELYS
KEELY’S
650 Little People
Can Be Made Happy Here Friday
Just at a time when the £ift of a
parasol would please and delight the
little one,
Keely Co.
will place on sale SIX HUN
DRED AND FIFTY Parasols for
children from
2 to 8 years
C tan
at leach
white
blue
pink
green
fancies
Included are many Oriental Styles,
plain styles and lace inserted styles.
See the w.mdow full of them.
KEELY'S
KEELY S
Woman’s Club will meet Friday at 10
a. m. at the club house.
Dance by the Gate City Guard.
The regular weekly hop by the Gate
City Guard will be held in their hall,
52 Houston Street, Friday evening.
Prizes will be awarded for waltzing
and there will be music by the Fifth
Infantry Orchestra.
Unitarian Church Rummage Sale.
The Woman’s Alliance of the Uni
tarian Church will have a rummage
sale Saturday at the corner of Au
burn Avenue and Boulevard.
Leverett- Knott.
Mrs. W. H. Shepard, 79 Whitehall
Terrace, announces the marriage of
her sister, Miss Della Leverett. to Mr.
Willis J. Knott. The young coupie
are at home at 168 Davis Street.
Rummage Sale.
The Home for Incurables will hold
a rummage stale Friday and Saturday
at 117 Piedmont Avenue. All inter
ested are asked to contribute.
For Miss McClellan.
Miss Margaret Beck entertained in
formally at luncheon Wednesday at
the East Lake Club for Miss Joseph
ine McClellan, the guest of Miss Hil
dreth Bbrton-Smith. Her guests
were Miss McClellan. Miss Burton-
Smith and Mrs. Dissells.
Mrs. Speer Hostess.
Mrs. W. A. Speer will entertain her
euchre club next Monday at her
home on Peachtree Street.
Mrs. Roy Collier to Entertain.
Mrs. Roy Collier will entertain at
luncheon Wednesday, May 14. for
Mrs. James Hook Spratling, of Ma
con, who arrives Sunday to visit her.
For Miss Seabrook.
Mr. Agnus Perkerson and Mr. Ju
lian Murphy gave a dinner Wednes
day evening at the East Lake Country
Club for Miss Frances Seabrook. who
is visiting Mrs. W. B. Seabrook.
Guests included Misses Annie L>j
Pagett, Katie Sturdivant, Margaret
Haverty, Frances Seabrook, Messrs
John Paschal, Marion Swanson, Mr
A L1BERAL0FFER
Anyone Can Try Samose, the Re
markable Flesh-Forming Food. *
When one of the leading drug
gists in Atlanta tells you that
they have a preparation which
they will refund your money if it
does not do all that is claimed for
it, it shows that the article must 1
have unusual merits. It is this
way that Jacobs’ Pharmacy is sell
ing Samose, the remarkable flesh
building food.
Samose is in reality a concen
trated food, and restores life and
vitality at once to the blood. It
mixes with the ordinary foods and
aids digestion; if- extracts from the
food that you eat the flesh-forming
and strength-giving elements,
building up the tissues and the ;
general health.
Any one can get a 50-cent box
of this remarkable flesh-forming
food, knowing that their money
will be refunded if it does not in
crease weight and restore the sys
tem to health.
YOUTH DIES PROM
T
Went for Days Before Telling of
Fractured Skull—Manner of
Injury Not Known.
As a result of a mysterious fracture
of the skull, which he is supposed to
have suffered about ten days ago, Carl
Bartlett, 14 years old, son of P+ O.
Bartlett, of Forest Park, is dead, and
his parents and relatives are making
efforts to determine how he was hurt.
Two theories have been advanced
by the parents as to the cause of the
wound. One is that the boy was struck
on the head with a soda water bottle
in a flght with a neighborhood boy.
Another is that he fell from a tree
when playing.
Young Bartlett, though he must
have been suffering from the wound
for several days, did not complain un
til Tuesday morning when he came
down to breakfast. He said he had a
terrible headache. Dr. J. R. Barton,
the family physician, who was sum
moned, pronounced the Injury a frac
tured skull, and ordered the boy to
Wesley Memorial Hospital. There the
youth was operated upon, and died
Wednesday.
Surgeons found two wounds on the
boy’s head. Dr. Frank Boland, who
performed the operation, declared the
nature of the wounds sustain the the
ory that he fell out of a tree the more
plausible one.
Skirts Doomed, but
‘We Should Worry’
Twon’t Happen Until 2013, According
to Suffrage Drama—Kissing
To Go, Too.
WASHINGTON, May 8.—These
things will come to pass in the year
2013, according to a drama written
by Mrs. Christian Hemmick, a suf
fragist, who will produce the play
here this month for the benefit of
the suffragist cause;
Skirts will be discarded.
Both sexes will wear Oriental
trousers.
Kissing will be unknown-—except In
histories.
A rule compelling individual health
certificates for all matrimonially-in
clined couples will be in force.
‘Want Ad Fiance,’
Jilted, Asks $35,850
and Mrs. Russell Bridges and Mr. and
Mrs. W. B. Seabrook.
Evening Bridge.
Mr. and Mrs. William B. Seabrook
will entertain at bridge Thursday
evening for their guest, Miss Prances
Seabrook, of Maryland.
Guests will include Misses Frances
Seabrook, Katie and Lillian Sturdi
vant. Annie Lou Pagett, Nancy Hill
Hopkins, Louise Johnson, Jennie Sue
Bell, Mary * Blalock, Laura CowIm,
Frances Connally, Carolyn King.
Penelope Ciarke, May O’Brien, Messrs.
Palmer Johnson. Julian Murphy. An
gus Perkertson, George Street, Joseph
Burton, Gillespie. Ben Daniel. John
Paschal, Paul Reid, Marion Harper,
William Allen, Peter Hill and Ed-
ward Clarkson.
Mirs Cassin Hostess.
In honor of Miss Lillian Beattey, « f
Columbus. Ohio, who is visiting Mrs.
Henry Troutman, Miss Emily Cassin
will entertain at bridge Tuesday aft
ernoon.
For Miss Winn.
Mrs. R. G. Blanton gave a lunch
eon Wednesday at East Lake Club
for Miss Elizabeth Winn, of Rich
mond, a guest of Mrs. Ruddle this
week.
Luncheon was served on the ve
randa facing the lake. Mrs. Blanton’s
guests were Miss Winn. Mrs. Ruddle
and her mother. Mrs. Hall, of Rich
mond; Mrs. John Tyler and her
daughter, Miss Josephine Tyler, of
Richmond: Mrs. J. L. Brown and Mrs.
Brewer, of Eatonton.
Dance at East Lake.
The regular week-end dance will
be given at the East Lake Club House
Saturday evening. The occasions are
informal and a large number of the
young society set is present.
Parties for Graduates.
A bright series of parties will be
given for members of the senior class
of Washington Seminary before their
grad uation.
Miss Emma B. Scott, principal, will
entertain Monday, May 19. The ju
niors will give a reception Friday aft
ernoon at Miss Willis Smith’s resi
dence. Miss Grace Stephens will en
tertain May 14. Miss Virginia Farr
will give a reception May 15. Miss
Dorothy Traynham will entertain
May 19.
Following graduation exercises at
the Atlanta Theater Wednesday even
ing, May 21, a reception will be held
at the seminary.
Dinner Dance at Driving Club.
There will be an informal dinner
dance at the Piedmont Driving Club
Saturday evening, for which a num
ber of parties are being arranged.
Several hundred guests will attend
the annual reception and election of
officers Tuesday.
Tea at Driving Club.
Each afternoon the terrace of the
Piedmont Driving Club is gay with
many informal parties for tea, served
on the terrace. Among those visit
ing the club Wednesday afternoon
were Mrs. Robert J. Lowry, Mrs. John
E. Murphy, Mrs. Roy Collier, Dr. and
Mrs. Kellog, Misses Helen Dargan
and guest. Ruth Wilson, of New
York; May Atkinson, Jennie D. Har
ris. Julia Murphy, Jennie Mobley and
others. Mr*. Thornton Mayre enter
tained a few friends.
For Mrs. Lyon.
Mrs. Maxwell Thebaut will enter-
tairf Friday at luncheon at the Geor
gian Terrace, followed by a matinee j
party at the Forsyth, for Mrs. George |
Girl He ‘Met' Through Matrimonial
Agency Weds Another—Heart
Aches $35,000 Worth.
CLEVELAND, OHIO, May 8.—Mrs.
Austin Williams, a bride of a month,
is defendant in a suit for 835,850 for
alleged breach of promise. A “want
ad fiance” is the plaintiff.
James H. Fort, I^aPorte, Ind., “met”
Mrs. Williams, then Mrs. Warren
Bowers, through a matrimonial
agency. Without seeing each other
they became betrothed. Then Mrs.
Warren met Austin Williams. He
broke off the engagement. Fort says
his heartache is worth $35,000 and
some presents he gave her $850.
E. King's guest. Mrs. Howard Lyon,
of Baltimore. Other guests will be
Mesdames William Akers, Joseph Le-
Conte, Irving Thomas and George
Boynton.
Informal Bridge for Miss Phinizy.
Mrs. Phinizy Calhoun entertained
three tables of bridge informally
Thursday afternoon for Mrs. A. W.
Calhoun’s guest, Miss Marian Phin
izy, of Augusta.
PERSONALS
Mrs. Malcolm Reybold Is conva
lescent after a severe illness.
Mr. and Mrs. Ludlow Jordan have
returned, after spending several
weeks in Palm Beach, Miami and Key
West.
Miss Elizabeth Winn, of Richmond,
who has been pleasantly entertains 1
as a guest of Mrr. Hugh Lokey an i
Mrs. Ruddle, will return home Thurs
day night.
STOPS DANDRUFF
Parisian Sage Stops Falling
Hair, Destroys Dandruff,
Cleaanses Your Scalp.
What a delight to have a beau
tiful head of hair, fluffy, lustrous,
abundant and free from dandruff.
Hair is a plant and your head
is a garden—a little cultivation
works wonders’. If the hair Is too
dry, It needs freshening up. If it
begins to get thin, it needs fertiliz
ing.
Parisian Sage is a scientifically
made preparation that gives the
hair just what it lacks to make It
soft, luxuriant, abundant and radi
ant with life. It removes dandruff
Immediately, and cleanses the hair
of dirt and excessive oils. It is
perfectly harmless.
Parisian Sage is a tea-colored
liquid—not sticks or greasy—deli
cately perfumed, that comes in
flfty-cent bottles at the druggists
and toilet counters. The "Girl with
the Auburn Hair" on the package.
The very first application will
astonish you—If used dally for a
week you will be delighted with
the improvement it has made in
your hair and scalp.
You run no risk, as we guaran
tee to refund the money if you are
not perfectly satisfied—a :wife offer
on our part Delighted users of '
Parisian Sage all over the coun
try write us enthusiastically about
it. They pronounce it a rare and
wonderful hair dressing. Giroux
Mfg Co., Buffalo, N. Y.
For sale by Jacobs’ ten stores.
WOMEN, RAIDED,
ACCUSE DETECTIVE
James Kirk, “Vice Squad” Mem
ber, Faces Charge of Making
Improper Proposals.
Sensational testimony that James
Kirk, a member of Police* Chief Bea
vers’ "vice squad,” has threatened a
number of women with arrest unless
they complied yvlth his demands, will
develop In the trial Friday morning
before Judge Broyles of Mrs. N. P.
Powell, Mrs. Lena Bernard and Mrs.
John Bryant, according to Attorneys
Gober and Jackson, who represen:
them. The three women were ar
rested by the "vice squad” last week
on charges of running a disorderly
house at 95 Spring Street.
Mrs. Powell asserts that K1rk
raided her home because she refused
to consent to his Improper proposal*.
Her attorneys declare they will show
that Kirk has made advances to a
number of women of that vicinity.
The women also assert that Kirk
has made the house at 96 Spring
Street his headquarters when not on
duty, and that he has spent entire aft
ernoons there, drinking wine and
chatting with Mrs. Powell and her
friends.
On Wednesday afternoon Mr*,
Powell, through her attorneys, se
cured from Judge Bell of the Superior
Court an order temporarily restrain
ing the police from carrying out their
alleged threat to evict her. The hear
ing of the Injunction Is set for Satur
day morning.
Strikers Riot on
Advice of Haywood
Serious Trouble Feared With Jersey
Silk Workers—Police
Arrest 24.
PATERSON, N. J., May 8.—A S3-
ries of minor riots early to-day. In
which guns were brandished an!
sticks and stones hurled, resulted l.i
the arrest of 24 silk mill strikers and
Industrial Workers of the World.
The strikers seemed in an uglv
mood to-day, and serious trouble was
feared before nightfall.
The injunction of William D. Hay
wood, the Industrial Workers of the
World leader—“Let neither owners
nor strikebreakers enter the mills un
less over your dead bodies"—stirred
the strikers to n high pitch, and
everywhere threats to carry out Hay
wood’s advice were heard.
APE, TRAINED BURGLAR,
ROBS HOUSE OF JEWELS
CHICAGO, May 8.—The police of
Evanston, a suburb, are searching for
a trained monkey that has been edu
cated as a burglar. ,
The monkey was seen in the home
of H. B. Wheelock He escaped with
both bands filled with jewelry.
(9oo Drops®
ALCOHOL 3 PER CENT.
A'Wgctabk Prrparaiton 6rAs
slrailaiingihcFbodamfRrtul*
ting tte Storaadis amUtowdsof
Promotes Digestion jCkterful
ness and Rest.Contalns ndttor
Opiuni.Morphine norMtaraL
Not Narcotic.
MxJmm*
MkUUUh-
For Infants and Children.
The Kind You Have
Always Bought
Bears the
Signature
of
AwtW *
Aperfect Remedy forCtmsflp
tlon. Sour Stomach. Dlarrtm
Worms jC onvulskms .Feverish
ness and Loss or SLEEP.
JhcSimile Sight rut of
NEW YORK.
/%f b months old
35 Doses-35c e nts
GuarartteecTuiwiertWFo'^J
Exact Copy of Wrapper.
In
Use
For Over
Thirty Years
CASTORIA
THE MNTAUR COMPANY, NSW YORK CITY.
Protect Your Estate—
No trust estate has ever suffered by reason of
dishonesty on the part of an officer or an em
ployee of a trust company.
Safeguard your estate by placing its administration
with the
Trust Company of Georgia
Capital and Surplus $1,800,000
Equitable Building. Pryor Street.
| Atlanta—Southern Suit & Skirt Co.—new York
SUIT SALE
$25 Spring Suits $
While They Last
I4M
in %
ss. /
SUITS, DRESSES—Two simple words, but MIGHTY
their importance to the growth and success of tips business.
Other stores may have a thousand different lines of merchan- ,
dise to offer you—THIS store’s very business EXISTENCE de- %
pends upon the sale of SUITS and DRESSES. In THIS line i
our SUPREMACY IS CONCEDED. /
The Go On Sale To-morrow at 9 A. M. ||
Compare this Thursday Sui t Event with other Spring Sales to
—compare the quality—the style—the VALUE—then ACT |
QUICKLY! Dashing Balkan Blouse Suits—Smart Cutaways— ^
Beautifully trimmed Suits with gracefully draped skirts and §
suits of simple elegance—Shepherd Checks, Fancy Cheeks, Bed- to
ford Cords, Eponge, Serges, etc. We don’t claim a $30 or $35 |
value for these suits, but we do MOST EMPHATICALLY state ^
that they are worthy $25 Suits, every one! Beginning to-mor
row morning and until the last one
is sold they are yours at just
$14. so
Usual Credit Courtesies Extended to
Those Desiring Goods Charged
Southern Suit & Skirt Co.
‘Atlanta’s Exclusive Women’s Apparel Store,” 43-45 Whitehall St.