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THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS. FRIDAY, MAY 23. 1913.
Miss Frances t'onnally entertained
it tea at the Driving dub Friday aft
ernoon for Miss Elizabeth Boyd.
• s' of Miss Carolyn King, and Miss
Edith Bowron, of Birmingham, who is
visiting Xlrs. Frank Pearson.
Tea was served in the pink room.
The table around which the guests
were seated had as a centerpiece
vase ot Dorothy Perkins roses. The
mints and ices were in pink and sil
ver candle sticks with pink shades
added another touch of color-.
Miss Connalfy’s guests were Misses
Edith Bowron, Elizaoeth Boyd, Caro
lyn King. Elizabeth Morgan. Lula
Dean Jones, Hildreth Burton-Smith.
Nancy Prince. Courtenay Harrison,
Nancy Hill Hopkins. Eloise Oliver,
Harriet On, Charles Owens. Mary
Robinson and Mrs. Frank Pearson.
Mrs. Selden Hostess at Tea.
Mrs. G. K. Selden gave an informal
5 o'clock tea Thursday afternoon for
Miss Anne Selden, her house guest:
Miss Isabel Clarke, of Augusta, a
guest of Miss Eloise Stewart: Mrs.
Mary Cooley, who will be married in
June, and Miss Lillian Beattey, of Co
lumbus, Ohio, a guest of Mrs. Henry
Troutman. The attractive apartment
was decorated in sweetpebs and car
nations. sweetpeas being as a center-
piece on the tea table.
Mrs. Seldon received her guests
wearing a lingerie gown of white
crepe. Twenty guests enjoyed the in
formality of the afternoon.
Musical Recital.
At the Barili School of Music, Sat
urday afternoon, a recital will be
given by Miss Edith Dunson and Miss
Elizabeth Hancock. Following is the
program:
Piano Solos. “To Spring,” “The But
terfly, ” "Anitra’s Dance.” “In the
Hall of the Mountain King,” Grieg—
Miss Hancock.
Aria. “Mignon,” Ambrolse Thomas—
Miss Dunson.
Piano Solos. 'The Mill.” “Will-o’-
the-Wisp,” Jensen—Miss Hancock.
Songs. “I Know Now the Great
Golden Sun." Ryder; “The Maiden and
the Butterfly,” D’Albert; “At Dawn
ing.” Cadman; “He Loves Me,” Chad
wick—Miss Dunson.
Piano Solo, ‘Sonata Pathetlque."
Beethoven—Miss Hancock
Song. “The Loreley,” Liszt—Miss
Dunstn.
Dinner-Dance at Club.
There will be an informal dinner-
dance at the Piedmont Driving Club
Saturday evening, for which several
Informal parties are being arranged.
Evening Party.
Miss Annie Winship Bates will en
tertain a number of boys and girls a:
an evening party Friday, .May 30, at
her mother’s home on West Peachtree
Street.
For Miss Hartzog.
Miss Irene Hartzog. a bride-elect,
was tendered a bridge party Thurs
day afternoon by Mrs. Irby Bagwell.
Guests were: Mrs. J. O. Watson, Mrs.
C. N. Dennis, Mrs. W. M. Lewis, Mrs.
John Burdine, Mrs. R. D. Ison, Mrs.
Jeff Green, Mrs. A. J. Wilson and the
Misses Edith Daniel, Ar’ine Goree.
Ruby Lawton and Irene Bearden.
Peanut Hunt at Mrs. Shewmakes.
Circle No. 7 of the First Methodist
Church, of which Miss Laura Wyatt
is chairman, will give a peanut hunt
Saturday afternoon on the lawn of
Mrs. Claude Shewmake’s residence.
If the weather is inclement the hunt
will be postponed.
Informal Luncheon.
Mrs. William A. Wimbish enter
tained informally at luncheon Thurs
day for Miss Lula Vergehas, of South
Georgia. Guests were a few- young
people.
Music at Jewish Temple.
Friday evening the entire 8 o'clock
service at the Jewish Temple will be
devoted to music. The public will be
welcome.
PROGRAM.
Organ prelude—Gade.
Service—Dunkley.
Solo, “Unto Thee Will 1 Sing,"
Huhn—Mr. John Mullin.
Anthem, “By Babylon’s Wave,”
Gounod.
Organ solo, “At Evening," Buck.
Charles A. Sheldon, Jr., organist
and director.
Dance at Scgadlo’s.
There will be a dance at Segadlo’s
Friday evening, given by a number of
young men.
Bagmen of Bagdad
Parade in Columbus
COLUMBUS. GA., May 23.—The
Grand Council of the Georgia-Florida
division of the United Commercial
Travelers, In annual session here, will
conclude its "business session late this
afternoon, after which the parade of
the Bagmen of Bagdad will take
place.
To-night at 7:30 o’clock the Bag-
men of Bagdad will hold a business
session, when they will elect officers
for the year. The business session
will be followed by a dance at the
Racine Hotel.
Rev. B. F. Fraser to
Preach to Veterans
"The Soldier’s Spirit” will be the
subject of a morning sermon by the
Rev. B. F. Fraser at the St. Paul’s
Methodist Church Sunday.
The occasion will be in honor of
Confederate veterans of Atlanta. A
special musical program has been ar
ranged.
The evening service will be in
charge of the children of the church
Sunday school. Songs and recitations
will be innovations.
RAILWAY TO TRY WIRELESS. .
PITTSBURG, May 23.—The Penn
sylvania Railroad may soon estab
lish a wireless telegraph station in
Pittsburg, to connect this city with
Philadelphia and other division points.
personal^ n ASSERTS FORT MOULTRIE
Miss Emily Cassin, who is ill of
diphtheria, Is being missed frtm the
social affairs of the week.
Miss Louise Watts entertained in
formally at bridge Friday afternoon
for a number of visitors.
Miss Irene Nickerson, of Athens,
left Friday afternoon after being the
guest of Mrs. Hilliard Spalding for a
week.
Mrs. A. W. Hill will entertain a few
friends at tea at the Driving Club
Saturday afternoon for Mrs. Wal
ter Keenan, of Columbia, S. C., a guest
of Miss Helen Taylor.
Mrs. D. B. Osborne gave a bridge
party Friday afternoon in honor of
two brides of the past winter. Mrs.
George Varden and Mrs. Edward
King.
Mr. and Mrs. George Addy, of Pitts
burg, are guests of their nephew and
niece, Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Wheeler.
They are en route home after spend
ing three months at their winter home
at Deland, Fla.
The box party that Miss Ruth
Korthen was to have given Saturday
afternoon for Miss Elizabeth Boyd,
guest of Miss Carolyn King, has been
postponed because of the death of
her kinsman, Mr. B. S. Walker. Jr.
Mrs. Fred Lee Bennett, of Roches
ter, N. Y„ who was Miss Mary Eliza
beth Holcomb, of Atlanta, is visiting
her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Philo Hol
comb. Mrs. Bennett will be in the
South until after the marriage of her
brother, Mr. Alfred Holcomb, to Miss
Mary Rosser, June 5.
Mrs. Strachan Barrett, of Hender
son, Ky„ is the guest of Mrs. Virgil
Perryman, and will remain with her
through next week. Among the in
formal affairs tendered her was a
bridge party by Mrs. William Rush-
ton, and an informal tea Friday after
noon at the Piedmont Driving Club.
Mr. R. W. Tidwell, Mr. Frank Tid-
w r ell and Miss Lilien Tidw'ell leave
next week for their country home.
"Poplar Grove,” on Williams Mill
Road, where they will spend the sum
mer. Mr. and Mrs. Howard H. Mc
Call. .Howard McCall, Jr, and Mr.
and Mrs. George S. Obear. Jr., and
children will join them and be away
from the city until fall. Reuben
Bruce Tidwell, of Denver, also will
spend the summer with his grandfa
ther, Mr. Tidwell.
Odd Fellows Give
Third Degree to 20
A meeting of Odd Fellows will be
held Friday evening when Fulton
Lodge will confer the third degree on
twenty or more candidates for Capi
tal Lodge No. 60.
This will be the degree contested
for at the coming session of the Grand
Lodge of Georgia in Savannah next
week. Fulton Lodge team is to be a
contestant for the prize.
Bryan to Proclaim
Direct Vote Senators
WASHINGTON, May 23.—Secre
tary Bry..n Is preparing to make for
mal announcement of t 3 ratification
of the seventeenth amendment to the
Constitution, providing for the direct
election of United States Senators.
It will m-rk the closing chapter
of a reform movement which started
eighty-seven years ago.
L
Insists Girls’ High Take Prece
dence Over All Other Matters
in June Budget.
t
KILLS F
Mayor Woodward declared Friday
he would urge an appropriation for a
new English-Commercial Girls' High
School building to take precedence
over other matters when the finance
committee prepares the June budget.
The Mayor said there could be no
question that this building was the
city’s most important need, and he
would insist on the money being pro
vided for it if everything else had
to be sacrificed.
The Board of Education Thursday
adopted a resolution insisting that
Council provide $75,000 for this build
ing. Members of the finance com
mittee promised the amount the first
of the year.
Girls Now Poorly Housed.
Hundreds of girls seeking a com
mercial education are being noused
in small rented dwelling houses, and
members of the Board or Education
assert that condittyns are intolerable.
The finance committee will meet
Friday to begin work on the new
budget. With only $120,000 available.
Council has recommended an expen
diture of $30,000 on the Whitehall
Street regrading. The board of
trustees of t^ie Grady Hospital wants
an additional $26,000 for a nurse’s
dormitory. All the departments want
additional appropriations. If the new
high school building is provided for
virtually all other special appropria
tions will have to be sacrificed.
Smith Sees Tax Dodging.
Chairman Charles W. Smith, of the
tax committee, declared' Thursday he
believed there were nearly 1,200 pupils
attending the public schools whose
parents were not paying any taxes.
He said the fact that many were not
real estate owners was nothing
against them, but that they were
dodging their street and sanitary
taxes.
A list of the pupils has been se
cured and is being checked with the
tax books. Chairman Smith believes
a notification of parents of school
children that they were delinquent in
their taxes would result in immediate
payment.
BRYAN TO SPEAK AT AUBURN.
MOBILE, ALA.. May 23.—Definite
acceptance from Secretary of State
Bryan to an invitation to deliver an
address on Tuesday morning, June
3, at the Alabama F’olytechnic Insti
tute commencement at Auburn has
been received here.
Coast Artillery Captain and Three
Privates Victims—Four Oth
ers Seriously Hurt.
CHARLESTON, S. C., May 23 —
Captain Guy Hanna, Coast Artillery
Corps. U. S. A., died shortly before 11
o’clock to-day at the Fort Moultrie
Hospital, his being the fourth death
from the explosion of a 4 7 inch gun
at Battery Lord. Fort Moultrie, last
night at 9:20 o’clock, when officers
and men were at night target prac
tice.
The other dead are Privates Baxter,
Christian and Dalton, and the seri
ously hurt are Privates Swagger-
ty and Steinspringer. Hospital Stew
ard Lamar, and a corporal whose
name was not learned. Th# corporal s
right shoulder was torn off. Several
others received minor injuries.
Two Killed Outright.
Privates Baxter and Christian were
killed outright. Their bodies were
cut in two. Private Dalton died three
hours later in the post hospital. Cap
tain Hanna was struck by a fragment
of the breech lock of the big gun,
which tore a hole in his side. Captain
Clarke find Lieutenant Perry, be
tween whom he was standing, es
caped without injury.
The injured were rushed to the
post hospital, nearby, and physicians
were called from Charleston to assist
the army surgeons in caring for the
victims.
Mrs. Radcliff Saved
By Insanity Decision
COLUMBUS, GA, May 23,^-Dr. L.
N. Jones, Superintendent of tl>e State
Insane Asylum at Milledgeville, testi
fying here as an alienist, declared
that Mrs. Jennie Mae Radcliff is in
sane and William Green is in his
right mind.
Upon this testimony depended
whether or not Mrs. Radcliff. charged
with killing her husband. George M.
Radcliff. a Columbus merchant, and
Green, charged with killing O. D.
Kitchens, a young insurance man,
would go to trial.
Judge Price Gilbert committed Mrs.
Radcliff to the asy.um. If she re
covers her mental faculties she will
stand trial. Green will likely be put
on trial Monday.
Girl Faints When
Telephone Bill Is $58
BETHLEHEM, PA.. May 28.—Mary
Smak, a pretty Hungarian domestic,
not knowing what the rules or regu
lations of the telephone company
were, decided to call her sweetheart
on the telephone at Cleveland. She
went into the booth in Gottlieb Hueb-
ner’s candy store to-day and got con
nections with Cleveland.
Fifty-eight minutes she remained
there. After she was through Hueb-
ner was told that the bill was
$58. He informed the girl, who frfirtt-
ed. She earns only $2.50 a week.
Clerical Onions Are
• Barred by Church
PHILADELPHIA. May 23 The
Lutheran Ministerium, the supreme
body of that sect, decided at the
sixty-sixth annual convention, that
hereafter ministers of that denomina
tion must not engage in outside work.
One minister has been ordained
thirty-seven years and in that time
has preached three sermons, but this
was not as flagrant as one who raised
onions, presumably' for market, or an
other who was an undertaker on the
side.
“PROGRESS”
REFRIGERATORS
Are built entirely of steel; their construction
renders thwn absolutely sanitary, durable and
economical. They are germ proof, non-absorb-
tent and easily cleaned. Every refrigerator es
sential is combined in the “Progress.” Rea
sonably priced, at
$13.50 to $40
MARTIN & KNOTT FURNITURE CO.
135 Whitehall Street
a
White City Park Now Open
V
Spring Cleaning
Time is Here
Don't be satis
fied with the “top
cleaning” which
pleases but doesn’t
protect.
Use CN and
make your home pure-clean
I —sure clean.
CN removes dirt and cuts
j grease better than ordinary
I cleansers. It is a powerful
disinfectant and a safe de
odorant.
CN is equally effective on
woodwork, marble,
tiling, etc. Make
j this spring clean
ing thorough by
! using CN.
! Alt Gracer®, DraiffUlR
and Department Store*
10c/ 25c, 50c, $1
The yellow package
with the gable-top
West Disinfecting Co.
Atlanta, Ga.
if
U. C. V. REUNION
CHATTANOOGA, TENN.
Southern Railway
Premier Carrier ol the South
$100
Round Trip
From Atlanta
$100
Correspondingly low fares from other points.
Tickets on sale May 24-25 26-27-28, and for
trains scheduled to arrive at Chattanooga be
fore noon May 29.
Return limit June 5, with privilege of exten
sion.
Stopovers at all Stations.
SPECIAL TRAINS.
May 26—Lv. Atlanta 8:30 a.m. 12:15 noon
Ar. Chattanooga 2:05 p. m. 5:15 p. m.
May 27—Lv. Atlanta 8:30 a.m.
Ar. Chattanooga 2:05 p.m.
4 Regular Trains Daily 4
CITY TICKET OFFICE, NO 1 PEACHTREE STREET.
J. L. MEEK, A. O. P. A. R L. BAYLOR, D P. A.
ATLANTA, GA
READ GEORGIAN WANT ADS.
A Rummage Sale
On Second Floor
Suits, Dresses, Skirts, W aists
At $ me F.ct
A Special a W Saturday Sale
This department, preparatory to a fresh inflow of mid-summer mer
chandise. is clearing its shelve* and table* #f ONE OF A KIND
STYLES—dresses soiled in displays and broken size assortments.
To effect an immediate disposal, they are ridiculously underpriced.
They are to he sold for a final clearance, and are not EXCHANGE
ABLE or RETURNABLE.
m
the collection you will find great pickings and unusual bargains.
Cream Serge Suits
Black Pongee Suits
Colored Serge Suits
Taffeta Silk Dresses
Black Voile Skirts
Chiffon Blouse Waists
Lingerie Waists
Linen Coat Suits
Hair-1 me Stripe Suits
Natural Pongee Suits
Taffeta Silk Suits *
One-piece Serge Dresses
French Serge Skirts
Lace Trimmed AVaists
Allover Wants
One -piece Linen Dresses
Your Choice, Five Dollars
ENJOY LIFE—GO SWIMMING
By EVELYN WREN
T HE song of the surf, the beckoning of the
breakers, the lure of the lake invite us.
The water fascinates, allures and enthralls. We
act well and wisely to hsed its call and
Go swimming!
The intimate contact with the water, the over
coming of this element, the struggle and the con
quest are inspiring. The laughter comes to your
heart, the joy speaks from your eyes and intense
happiness is yours.
The opportunities for this delight are at hand
Popular Piedmont Park is the scene of much
of this wholesome gayety. East Lake is the mecea
for those who appreciate the benefits of this rec
reation.
Did you ever bathe or swim when a gentle
rain was falling? The raindrops tickle your
nose, they confuse your sight, they tantalize and
tease, adding to the joy of conquest. They help
to make you feel the joy of living, the pleasure
of happy combat with the water.
If you can't swim, learn. Wade out into the
cool, refreshing water, just as far as you can
keep your footing, and get acquainted. Laugh
at the water, coax and love it, but never let it
guess that you are a wee bit afraid. Let it learn
that you intend to be victorious, splendidly vic
torious, as your acquaintance proceeds.
By and by the water will yield to your efforts.
You will glide along as if it consciously aided
and abetted your joy of conquest The knowl
edge that you have overcome those first few fear
fill thoughts, that you are at home in the water
and the pleasure in the bracing, physical contact
inspires and cheers you.
The first requisite for swimming or bathing is
a good suit. The suit must be cut properly, fit
comfortably and be becoming. It detracts much
from your first feeling of helplessness if the bath
ing suit is becoming. When you are expert you
will judge of other details which add to your
progress—flat trimmings, elimination of super
fluous weight and ease of donning.
The J. M. High Company has bathing suits
for the novice and the expert, for the maid and
matron, for the youngster and his dad—for ev
eryone who appreciates the value of the best of
recreations.
The simple suits, well made and cut according
to the new lines, are a delight to the beginner.
They carry the flat trimming or pretty turn-over
eollars-which will not dangle, damp and dripping,
in your face. Every detail is carefully planned
to aid, not impede, your progress.
When you first go swimming your costume
will be rather elaborate. You will wish a pair
of the bright, pretty bathing slippers and the,
whole liiTe of accessories. You will choose your
cap with a view to becomingness and be far less
conscious of your lack of skill than if you looked
and felt a dowd.
When you can really swim you will become
an expert in choosing your bathing costume.
You will know that the pretty sashes, the long
ties and the large collars give a gorgeous effect
on land, but prove real hindrances in the water.
You will learn that your suit can be pretty, yet
practical.
That swimming may be enjoyed to its fullest,
•J. M. High Company has selected the most prac
tical of bathing suits. You will not be misled
into the purchas? of a suit that will prove im
possible for swimming, though attractive on the
beach. Every suit is practical. Moreover, they
are all fashionable. They embrace all the timely
touches with no loss of practicability. You can
appear well, feel comfortable and swim with lit
tle effort.
These suits range in material from serviceable
self-material, braid, striped material and stitch-
mohair to shining silk. The trimmings are in
ing. The prices begin at $2.50, for a pretty, prac
tical suit, to $15.00 for a handsome, practical one.
The caps, in all colors and a great variety of be
coming styles, cost from 50c to $1.50. The slip
pers, picturesque with their long ankle lacings,
are priced at 25c to $1.00.
There is no exercise so physically beneficial.
There is no pleasure so intensely wholesome.
Every muscle is brought into play. The, chest
broadens and grows strong. The mental attitude
is positive and inspiring. To swim is to live at
your fullest.
J. M. High Company is co-operating with us
this year. They are ready with bathing suits,
bathing accessories and bathing suggestions
Let’s go see them and then—
Let's go swimming!