Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, May 15, 1913, Image 8

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8 TTTE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS. WEDNESDAY, MAY 14, 1919. Girl Earns 7,500 Votes for Shetland Pony in Half Day ENGLISH P +•+ +•+ +•+ +•+ +,+ +•+ +,+ +,+ +#+ +•+ +•+ *•* | cunpK [ Young Contestants Letter Shows Spirit Which Wins LEADER IN FIRST DISTRICT PILES UP 12,950 VOTES IN ONE WEEK BY EASY EFFORT One afternoon * work yielded Fannie Mae Cook, of District 4. 7.500 votes In The Georgian and American pony outfit contest. She started In at 1 o’clock In the afternoon and by nightfall had Increased her strength in the race by that substantial figure Ross Greer, a carrier, got exactly the number of votes in the pa me length of time. Josephine Simrall. leader In District No. 1. earned 12,950 votes In n week. These are some of the records reported to us Others, no doubt, are doing as well. These Instances are quoted merely to show how simple a matter it Is to forge ahead In the race for a pony outfit. The spirit which accomplishes such things is displayed In the fol lowing fetter from out in ths State: Pony Contest Editor. Dear Sir: Inclosed find nomination blank. Please send me full instructions, subscription books and receipts, so that I ran go to work and win one of the pony outfits. No doubts are expressed. The contestant says he Is going to win a pony. Probably he will, starting with that determination. The standing of contestants 1s given below: DISTRICT NUMBER ONE George Rosser 21 East Sixteenth 19605 Josephine Simril 9 East Alexander Street 15390 Jacob Patterson 574 West Peachtree Street n,OA Willie Ivey Wiggins 41 B. Tumi In Street Miss Margaret Lewis 25 Baltimore TMock Jas. O. Godard 180 621 5 (530 105 Fowler Street 4695 Vera Nefle Brantley 31 East Alf^xander Street 3500 Janet Oxenham 47 East Eleventh Street 3410 Hillmann McCalla 365 Luckle Street 2960 Hugh B. Luttrell 75 East Twelfth Street 201., Phillip S. Reid 132 Moreland Avenue 12 50 Miss Estelle Sullivan 4 West Peachtree Street U25 Miss Louise Thompson 19 East Cain Street 1105 Lottie Mae Dedman 59 Lovejoy Street 1045 Win. Eisele 105 Mills Street 1030 Wvman Coriard 63 West Cain i’treet 1000 Mollle Lee Kendall 42 Mills Street 1000 Yoland Gwin 373 Spring Street 1000 Harold Holsombach 385 Luckle Street 1000 T L. Hoshall, Jr 82 West Br er Street 1000 Roy Mauldin 131 Spring Street 1000 Andrew May 62 West Baker Street 1000 Albert Smith 358 Peachtree Street 10JO Dorothy Stiff 17 Grant Place 1000 Edgar Watkins. Jr 602 West Peachtree Street 1000 Norman Caldwell 98 East Pine Street 1000 Ml83 l^ouise McCrary 78 East North Avenue 1000 Miss Sudie King *. 53 East Twelfth Street 1000 Glenn Moon 9 Ashland Avenue 1000 Eugene Morgan 602 West Peachtree Street 1100 Mis Frankie ,1. Smith 198 West Peachtree Street 1000 Miss Mildred Stewart 196 Ivy Street 1000 Miss Gaynell Phillips 86 Luckle Street 1000 Miss Mary K- Peacock 82 Simpson Street 1000 Robert A. Harden 48 Baker Street 1000 K M. Harrison 506 Ponce DeLeon 1000 Caldwell Holliday 1010 Peachtree Street 1000 John R. Wood . 176 Angier Avenue. 1000 James Grugra 137 Hunnlcutt Street 1000 Miss Edith Clower .24 Ellis Street 1000 Miss Ruth Grogan 140 Or me Street H. E. Watkins, Jr 125 Juniper Street Miss Annie Phillips 85 Luckle Street ... Miss Christa Powers 94 Spring Street Oliff Moody 114 Simpson Street William Ernest 149 Mills Street 1009 1000 1000 300) 1000 1000 William Turner Miss Beverly Swanton George NVIson Baker . Edgar Wilson Miss Ora F. Dozier . . . E. F. Marquett DISTRICT NUMBER SIX. 251 Lawton Street 9450 ... 45 Evans Street . .. ...381 < )ak Street .... . . . 40 Park Street .... . . . 35 Sells Avenue .... 20 West End Avenue ohn Baker Long Richard Rainey Merriot Brown Reid . . ‘ iss Frances Summer L Luci Fort McPherson. Ga. . . . East Point. Ga, 205 Cooper Street 9ft Orange Street 352 Whitehall. Apt. B. 437 2220 1805 1420 1150 1270 1113 1000 1000 1000 1000 1350 1750 1075 1165 1000 1000 Arthur Pepin 103 East Pine Street 1000 DISTRICT NUMBER TWO Miss Lottie McNair ^1250 DeKalb Avenue 7635 Miss Mildred Brlckxnan 48 Kirkwood Road 6355 Miss Roberta Harbour 340 Ponce DeLeon Avenue 6230 Miss Marjorie McLeod 34 Greenwood Avenue 57 40 Miss Elizabeth Willard 30 Oakdale Drive 4950 Miss Edith Gray 25 Howard Street, Kirkwood.... 3660 Rav Warwick 172 Angier Avenue 3520 Miss Idelle Shaw 179 Pine Street 2835 Edmund Hurt 785 Piedmont Avenue 2125 Paul M. Clark 16 Church Street 2115 Miss Eliza 1 jth Smith 34 East Avenue 1955 J. Edgar Sheridan 1 West Ashland Avenue 1660 Miss Virginia Walton 670 North Boulevard 1650 George M. Barnes 788 Piedmont Avenue 1600 Miss Nelle Reynolds 126 Cooper Street 1585 Miss Elizabeth Garwood Decatur, Ga 1285 Max Cleln 49 North Butler Street 1200 Martin Comerford 186 East Merritts 1000 Rue! Crawley 125 North Jackson Street 1000 Elsie Goan ell 127 Cleburne Avenue 1000 Clinton Hutchinson 60 Ponce DeLeon Place 1000 Willie Harden Decatur, Ga. 1000 Chas. M. Kellog, Jr Decatur, Ga 1000 Raley Ray 73 East Hardee Street 1000 Wm. Wellborn 35 Church Street 1000 Miss Lucy Withers 17 Maude Street 7700 Miss Elizabeth Downing 457 North Jackson Street 1000 Robert R. Andrews 18^ Waverly Way 1000 St. Leonard Veitch J... . 1360 DeKalb Avenue 1000 Willett Matthews 917 Seaboard Avenue 16, ft Robert Wood 176 Angier Avenue 1180 DISTRICT NUMBER THREE. Chas M. Stevens South Kirkwood 14690 J P. Goets, Jr 32 Rogers Street 5700 Miss Mary Well 101 Ormewood 1833 Norman Gooch 121 Boulevard DeKalb 1000 Willette Matthews 917 Seaboard Avenue 1000 Willie Reynolds 126 Cooper Street 1000 Harry Brown 129 Pulliam Street 1000 DISTRICT NUMBER FOUR. Fannie Mae Cook 488 Pulliam 14160 Florence Greenoe 387 Pulliam Street 13410 Oscar Eugene Cook 176 Grant Street 8923 Nathaniel Kay 234 South Pryor Street 7380 Ida G. Fox 147 Pulliam Street 6965 Howell Conway 229 Woodward Avenue *..2265 Miss Ida Bloomberg 63 Martin Street tSGft II. L W. Brown 450 Crew Street 1460 Loui« Joel 140 Capitol Avenue 1693 Estelle Honer 137 Pulliam Street 1260 David F. Nowell 170 Capitol Avenue 1295 J. Walling Davis 143 Glennwood Avenue 1010 Miss L. E. Abbott 244 Hill Street 1000 Miss Lovle C. Dean 350 Pulliam Streot 1001 Miss Alice Feldman 272 East Fair Street 100'? Frank Henley 620 Woodward Avenue 1000 Miss Annie Mae Hilsman 202 Grant Street 1000 Milton Holcombe 90 Bryan Street 1000 Lynn A. Hubbard 394 Fraser Street 1000 Raymond Smith 66 Augusta Avenue 1460 Harry Stone 101 Capitol Avenue 1000 Miss Marie Toy 439 Woodward Avenue 1230 (’has Ernest Vernoy 219 Cherokee Avenue 1009 Miss Sarah Whitaker 244 Glennwood Avenue 1000 Miss Margaret White .' 552 Washington Street 1090 Charles Stone 101 Capitol Avenue 1000 Mi ss Ida G. Fox 147 Pulliam Street 1000 Miss Susie Black 282 Ormond Street 1000 John Thrasher 46 Buena Vista Avenue 1000 R H. Brown 582 Central Avenue 1000 Miss Meta Mitchell 57 Pulliam Street 1000 Dick Denton 220 Form wait Street 100ft Miss Rosemund Humphries 253 South Pryor Street 1000 Ralph Ross ....269 Crew Street 1090 Agnes Shatren 464 Pulliam Street 1000 •MIss Wllhelmina Tucker 4 51 Pulliam Street 2640 \Y. H. Hamilton, Jr 5S8 Woodward Avenue 469J Miss Beatrice Brunson - 3S2 Whitehall Street 1173 Moae Gold 310 Woodward Avenue 100!) Hugh Terrell 86 Chatham Street lOOO Miss Annie Graham 214 Forsyth Street 1400 Miss Carlotta Burns 123 Cooper Street 1000 Roy Young • * 42 Loomis Avenue 1420 Miss Maude L. Berry' 123 Cooper Street 204) William Henderson 320 Ormond Street too) DISTRICT NUMBER FIVE. Frank Ison, Jr. College Park, Ga .22330 Harndon Thomas 94 Form wait Street 5740 Miss Louise Chewning 9S Form wait Street 3335 Emery Ward Fort McPherson, Ga ,9225 Miss Mary’ Holloway Hapeville. Ga 14S5 Bonnell Bloodworth 277 South Pryor Street 10OO Miss Carlotta Burn 123 Cooper Street lOOO Miss Texia Mae Butler 352 Whitehall Street 1000 Miss Anna Graham 214 South Forsyth Street 1009 Wm. Hood 371 Whitehall Street 100? Miss Margaret La Feure 72 Washington Street lift;* Albert Leake 94 Crew Street 100) Gay Reynolds 18 Oglethorpe Avenue . Miss Susanne Springer 283 Gordon Street .... Miss Grace Davis 159 Peeples Street .... .Gregory J. Eaton 39 Eggleston Street ... Angie C. Newton 16 Bailey Street Benjamin F. Safiets 23 Orange Street Edw. DeLoach 97 South Gordon Street J. T. Sewell 30 Park Street Charlie Hood 17 Gordon Street .... Miss Margaret Thornton 231 oak Street Mias Virginia Jackson 50 Royston Avenue .. Grady Harris 41 Hendrix Avenue .. DISTRICT NUMBER SEVEN A. Morrison 77 Jones Avenue 100<5 James Allen 66 Davis Street ....4 1763 Joe DuPre 114 Simpson Street 1 1 1 •> Lawrence McGinnis *.....47 Franklin Street 1000 George H. Melton 74 Newport Street 1000 Clyde Mitchell 66 Jones Avenue 1000 Charles Owen 68% Connally Street 1008 CITY CARRIERS AND NEWSBOYS Ross Greer 57 Whitehall Terrace 16760 Harold Hamby 8 McAfee Street . : 1252) Moae Brodkin 62 Gilmer Street 9825 O. B. Bigger 348 Glenn Street 9200 Jno. Trimble 401 South Boulevard 8230 Roy Cook East Point, Ga 7035 Harold Turner 309 Luckle Street 5850 J. E. Moore 600 Flat Shoals Road 3840 Raymond Wilkinson Kirkwood Station 3740 W. H. Hamilton. Jr 588 Woodward Avenue 3675 Irvan Willingham 372 East Georgia Avenue 2965 Everett J. Cain 45 Ira Street 2370 L. M. Harrison 506 Ponce DeLeon Avenue 1560 Johnnie Evans .120 Nprth Avenue, East 1000 Grady Cook 20 Fortress Avenue 1000 Frank Garwood Decatur, Ga 1000 Sterling Jordan 23 Ferguson Street 2845 Charles Barron ■ R. F. I). No. 5 1759 Olin Neal Bass 23 Orange Street 1000 R. S. McConnell R. K. D. No. 5 1000 OUT-OF-TOWN AGENTS AND CARRIERS. John Martin Columbus, Ga 13895 Ambrose Scarboro Royston, Ga 3565 Leon Spence Carrollton, Ga 3220 James S. Plunkett Carey Station, Ga 1480 Morgan E. Dasch Stone Mountain, Ga 14(75 Hyman Esseman Rome, Ga 1345 James Wilkins Caffney, S. C Alfred Chappell© Sparta, Ga John Gardner Newnan, Ga Herman Corliss LaGrange, Ga. ... Smith Fallaw Opelika, Ala GEORGIA SCHOOL BOYS AND GIRLS. Miss Virginia McCowen Marietta Car Line B. B. Tillman Senoia, Ga Miss Belle Ragsdale Andrew B. Tribble . . Warren Taliafero . . Blake Nichols Clifford Henry Miss Jessie Collier Miss Gladys Daniel Maxwell Aubrey Paul Josney 1015 1000 1000 1000 1000 2873 2460 . Lithonia, Ga 1425 . Lithonia, Ga. Mansfield. Ga R. F. D. No. 5, Atlanta, Ga. Carrollton, Ga Bamesville, Ga Bolton, Ga Bolton, Ga. Forsyth, Ga. Ga. Robert Davis Columbus, Ga. Horould C. Ogllvie Savannah, Ga. Lois Casey Chattahoochee, Eugene Scarborough Macon, Ga Miss Belle Staine Toccoa, Ga Emory Steele Commerce, Ga Clay Burruss :. Carnesvllle, Gr Miss Mary Caldwell Chlpley, Ga Miss Sarah Carter Savannah, Ga Alfred Chappelle Sparta, Ga Beaufort C. Elder Blakely, Ga Miss Sallie M. Evans Douglasvllle. Ga Gertrude Marshall Savannah, Ga R. W. Mattox, Jr 4 Perry St., Newnan, Ga. W. L. Mattox 4 Perry St.. Newnan. Ga. Dan Patrick Conyers, Ga. .. Harry H. Redwlne Fayetteville, Ga Felix Reid Unidn City, Ga Terry Strozier, Jr Greenville* Ga. H. Eugene Whit* FlovlUa, Ga Eugene Lee, Jr Covington, Ga. .. Miss Ennis Spinks Chlpley, Ga Elmer Towns Social Circle, Ga. Patrick Jones Macon, Ga. Ralph Little Commerce. Ga. Miss Berta Davis Fayetteville, Ga. Warner Webb Griffin, Ga. Miss Esther Boorstln Covington. Ga. 1375 1249 1170 1060 1103 1985 1985 10* I 1050 1030 1025 1025 1020 1015 1000 lOo) 1000 1000 1090 1000 1000 1000 1090 1090 1000 10(9 10-C 1090 . 1255 . 1985 1000 1000 1000 1000 1000 1000 Edward A. Heckle Miss Dorothy Davis Dothan. Ala Miss Annie McCar ell Charleston, S. C. Novel Wheeler * Florence, S. C. Robt. Hyatt Mumhy Murphy, N. C. .. Avvhrey Hopkins Anderson. N. C. Pauline Trull Raleigh, N. C. . J. T. Webb, Jr Piedmont, Ala. .. Lindsay W. Graves Knoxville, Term. George Andrews Opelika. Ala. ... Fain E. Webb, Jr Piedmont. Ala. . Miss Lydia Bemley Chester, S. C. .. I nominate, as a candidate in The Hearst’s Sun day American and Atlanta Georgian Pony Outfit Contest: Name Address Nominated by Address GOOD FOR 1,000 VOTES. Berry East Point. Ga. 1000 3115 1000 1000 10*9 1070 Girl Aids Stabbers Of Court Officers CHICAGO, May 14.—Miss Gerrtude LaFairfteld to-day confessed to aid ing Harr> Evans and Peter Jensen, convicted robbers, in their spectacular attempt to escape in Judge Cooper's court after sentence was passed on them. The young woman said she gave the knives to the prisoners with which they stabbed Joseph Bhaboy, Sheriff A. D. Busholte and a detec tive. The two young prisoners had planned to strike down the officers with their knives, take their revolvers and shoot their way to freedom. Cubist Hats, Wasp Gowns and High-Slit Skirts Cause Many a Gasp at Longchamps. PARIS, May 14.—For once Paris has been relegated to second place in the matter of fashion frocks. With their Cubist hats, wasp gowns and skirts split to a height rarely dared by the Paris exponents of extreme modes, their sisters from across the Channel invaded the Longchamps paddock in unprecedented number and made the racegoers gasp. The Cubist hats, in small models, are made of waterproof silk and shaped in a perfect cube. There is no trimming except a wide ribbon with scores of polychromous cubes handpainted and tightly drawn around the sharp-angled sides. A Cubist pin fastens the curious head- gear to the hair, which is neatly done In Botticelli style. The wasp gowns worn by two tall Englishwomen consisted of tight-fit ting dresses of soft dull silk, the waist line circled with wide stripes of yel low and black alternately. The fashionable gown must not be symmetrical and the trimming on the left side be different from that on the right, or if the same material is used It shall be disposed unequally. Some gowns that look perfectly plain In front are very elaborate in the back, and vice versa. Several women wore platinum cir cles studded with precious stones around their forehead, with their hats under the chin with narrow velvet ribbon of a color to match the dress. Persian styles, which, it was said at the beginning of the season, had been superseded by those of Venice in the eighteenth century, appear instead to be gaining renewed popularity. Fight Over Children May Bring New Law AUGUSTA, GA., May 14.—As the result of a contest over the custody of little Frances Zachry, an effort will be made to change the Georgia law’ governing the disposition of children in the event their parents separate. The little girl is the daughter of Julian J. Zachry, a well-known Au gusta attorney and cotton man, and wife, who have separated. The moth er refused to give up little Frances and her sister. Zachry brought ha beas corpus proceedings before the ordinary. Under a recent decision of the Supreme Court that the father, in the absence of anything to the con trary, is the proper person to rear the children, Ordinary Walton order ed that Frances, aged two, and Mil dred, aged six months, be given to the father. Prolonged Filibuster by Repub licans Likely to Bring About Compromise. WASHINGTON, May 14 —The light on the Penrose motion to instruct the Finance Committee to hold pub lic hearings on the Underwood tariff bill was resumed to-day. It was thought that there would be slight chance of pushing through the public hearings motion. though it was conceded that the 1 LaFollctte amendment providing sixteen ques tions to be answered undeY oath by those who testified had materially strengthed the position of the Repub licans by offering a way in which to curtail the testimony of the wit nesses. With the LaFollette amendment and a possible agreement as to the time to be given to trie hearings, it was thought not improbable that a prolonged filibuster on the part Republicans would bring about some sort of a compromise with regard to open hearings*' Tariff Cuts Please English and Germans. WASHINGTON, May 14.—English and German paper manufacturers are pleased with the Underwood tariff, according to Ettore Ripamonti, a manufacturer of Milan. The princi pal effect of the new tariff, he says, will be to raise prices to Americans. The United States, he says, unlike England, does not believe that‘she is the only nation capable of supplying the wants of her people. She is will ing to try foreign-made goods if the price is right. He declares that busi ness in this country is 4 little dis turbed, so far, by the prbspect of a tariff change. Billy Long to Give Party for ‘Taggers’ Miss Billy Long, star of the stock company playing at the Atlanta The ater. will entertain tag day workers at a nratinee performance Monday afternoon at the Initial presentation in Atlanta of 'The Deep Purple.” Manager Homer C. George already has mailed invitations to the chair women in charge. Last Monday Miss Long was un able to volunteer her services in any way, because of a performance at the theater. Following the performance of “The Deep Purple,” Miss Long and members of the company will hold a stage reception for the tag day work ers If invitations are accepted by SENATE COMMITTEE FOR WOMAN VOTE AMENDMENT Gov. Brown to View State Institutions Governor and Mrs. Brown left At lanta at 12:30 o'clock Wednesday aft ernoon for MilledgeviUe, where the Governor will visit the Georgia Nor mal and Industrial School and inspect the State institutions. The Governor Wednesday night will sleep In the old State mansion, be neath the same roof, In the same room and in the same bed that his father slept in when he was Governor of Georgia a half-century ago. Gov ernor Brown’s father was Governor from 1857 to 1865, the longest con tinuous service of any Georgia’s Gov ernors. A reception will be tendered the Governor and Mrs. Brown Wednesday evening: the State Institutions will be Inspected Thursday, and the return to Atlanta will be made Thursday after noon at 4 o’clock. WASHINGTON, May 14.—The Sen ate Committee on Woman Suffrage to-day decided to report favorably penator Chamberlain’s resolution to amend the Constitution so as to pro vide for equal suffrage. BEATS WIFE TO DEATH. SPARTA, WIS., May 14.—William Hogue, 70. a retired farmer, to-dav beat his wife to death with a club, shot and fatally wounded his deugh- . ter. wounded her husband, then .1 slashed his own tnroat and <H»d Mrs, Longstreet Will Accept $3,600 Job WASHINGTON, May 14.—Mrs. Helen D. Longstreet, widow of the famous Confederate general, will ac cept a 7>lace offered her by the for mer Union soldier, Colonel Albert E. Boone, of Clarksburg. W. Va., pro vided s*he finds herself fitted for the post, accordirig to a statement made by Mrs. Longstreet to-day. The position, which commands a salary of $3,600, was offered the wid ow following the refusal of the United States Government to appoint her postmaster of Gainesville. Ga. There’s a world of satisfac tion in buying Uneeda Biscuit because you know you will get what you want—soda crackers that are oven-fresh, crisp, clean, appetizing and nourishing. Uneeda Biscuit are always uniform in quality—they are always alike in crispness, in flavor—they are soda crackers you can depend upon. And all because Uneeda Biscuit are uncommon soda crack ers packed in an uncommon way. Five cents everywhere in the moisture-proof package. NATIONAL BISCUIT COMPANY .Cornelia, Ga 1000 Etheridge Bradley ., Smyrna, Ga 1000 Ernest Baker Washington, Ga 1000 Alfred Wilkes R. F. D. No. 5. Atlanta, Ga 1000 Miss Lily Wilkes R. F. D. No. 5, Atlanta, Ga 1000 J. P. Craven Baxley, Ga 1090 John H, Hewlett Conyers, C»a 1000 Carl Bragg ' Woodcliff, Ga 1000 Charles E. Crawford Chlpley, Ga 1090 Ernest Turner Chlpley, Ga 1085 J. C. Smith Oxford. Ga 1035 R. E. Hudson Unadllla, Ga 1000 Eugene Lee, Jr .'Covington, Ga 1255 Maurice Means Meansville, Ga 1155 Leon Br Spears Wood stock, Ga 1285 O. S. Morton Raymond. Ga 1000 Miss Margerite Danner Doraville, Ga 1020 Miss Erva Blackstock Hogansville, Ga 1000 Miss Helen Mitchell Richwood. Ga 1000 Charles Harlan R. F. D. No. 4 1000 William Reid Columbus. Ga 1210 Rudolph Campbell Fairburn, Ga 1000 Walter Harrell, Jr Quitman. Ga 1090 SCHOOL BOYS AND GIRLS OUTSIDE OF STATE OF GEORGIA. Rodney Stephens Abbeville, S. C 28 YOUNG DOCTORS TO GET DIPLOMAS FROM GEORGIA AUGUSTA, GA„ May 14.—Twenty- eight young doctors will be given their diplomas by Chancellor David C. Barrow, of the University of Geor gia, to-night. The principal address will be deliv ered by Dr. Ralston Lattimore, of Savannah, former president of the Georgia Medical Association. The class valedictorian Is Turner Z. Ca son. of Island Grove. Fla., and the salutatorian Is Ward Beecher Duvall, of Abbeville, Ga. Send It Back If Served Too Strong Tell the waiter to put Only a level teaspoonful S Southern Suit & Skirt Co.—Atlanta—New York—Southern Suit & Skirt Co. resses Lingerie D $10 Values on Sale To morrow (One Day Only) pASCINATING little Summer Frocks-- 2035 1065 1030 1015 1009 10»0 1000 10 *0 1000 1000 1000 1000 Of Instant Postum Opera in English in 3 New York Houses PARIS, May 14.—Unwillingness on the part of the Metropolitan Opera House directorate to extend more generous hospitality to the Chicago Opera Company having caused a rup ture which foreshadows competition opera in English is being promis 'd In three New- York theaters next season. Foreign and American artists in Europe are wondering what w ill hap pen on the expiration in 1915 of the contracts of Gatti-Casazza and Tos canini. On no condition, it is said here, w 111 ’ Toscanini renew his arrange ment. It is understood he may go back to his old love, the Milan Scala. In the cup of hot water. That makes it right. *# # **## # ## Those in the kitchen Often get hurried And stir in a Heaping spoonful Which is about double the Right quantity and makes It bitter. Same as a double quantity Of coffee or tea. ** • * • • • • • * However, if you Like it very strong, use The heaping spoonful. Be sure and put in plenty Of cream and it has A snap and go that Pleases some palates. Speak out and tell them j How you want it. dresses that women will like the minute •they clap their eyes on them. Beautiful lace-trimmed embroidered voiles—dainty models with skirts of white crepe, coat effect of fig ured crepe and girdle of soft satin—lovely lingerie dresses trim med in Swiss embroidery and shadow laces. Perhaps the very dress that you wanted is here, and at a LESS PRICE than formerly. On display in our show windows NOW— and -will be sold, as advertised, TO MORROW, Choice lUXLL 1UI. V/Jl $6.95 Quick SUIT Disposal Sale Thursday (One Day Only) T HIS lot embraces EVERY worthy new style of the season--Balkan Blouses, Smart Cutaways, Draped Skirts, Bulgarian Trimmed Suits and Suits of simple elegance; in fact, there ARE no later styles than these. Visit this busy store to-morrow or any other day and you’ll al ways ttud it teeming with activity—a never-ending parade of the newest modes in ladies’ apparel—a veritable Dame Fashion’s clear ing house. To-morrow’s quick disposal of fashionable suits will nat urally bring an unusual response—attend EARLY! SUITS SUITS SUITS SUITS That forme’tly Formerly $30 to Formerly $36 to Formerly up to sold at $25 $32.50 at $37.50 at $55 at $14.50 $16.50 $10.50 $25.00 H Sale Begins Promptly at 9 A. M. Thursday Southern Suit & Skirt Co. “Atlanta’s Exclusive Women’s Apparel Store,’’ 43-45 Whitehall St.