Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, June 02, 1913, Image 10

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white and fluffy in the center, crisp and brown outside, are made with Swift’s Silver-Leaf Lard Doughnuts need not be grease soaked, tough, indigestible. Look to the shortening you use and the frying fat. Swift’s Silver-Leaf Lard best foi both uses. It is the secret of doughnut success. Use it and you will have the satisfaction of having your friends say, “Delicious, I must try your recipe. ** hi For doughnuts that melt in your mouth, CL JX try this recipe. ( 1 ynp sugar; 2%tablespoonsful Swiff, BIlver.1 • ' -—i Leaf Lard; 3 etrffs: 1 cup milk; 4 teaspoons baking • powder; Vi teaspoon cinnamon; Vi teaspoon * — -T 1 grated nutmeg; lVti teaspoon salt. « —-P asY^f 3 ?? ,ard and arfd H of *agar. Beat egg i l/i I until light, add remain tng sugar, combine the M. jj two mixtures. Add 3^ cups flour, baking gi I// powder, salt and spices and enough more gf r ur to make a dough just stiff enough to gg J ?«**’ ? o1 *’ cut out and fry in deep fat gg£ THE ATLANTA CEORCfAN AND NEWS. Society en Mases to Attend Players’ Club Comedy Tuesday Night at Grand ATLANTA AFLUTTER OVER PLAY IN' WHICH SOCIAL LEADERS WILL TAKE PART 'yMrs./William Owpns, preparing for her role. Audience Is‘Expected to Surpass any Since Grand Opera. Atlanta Is al4 \ aflutter over the coming performance of the Ptet>**r*' Clnb. When the cuitainftt at*the <t«narvd part Tuesday ntgWtt to- reveal tha opening scene of "The Import fmce- of Being Earnest," the audience un doubtedly' will present more brlllliince^ and sparkle than ha* bean seem in^ this cityssince grand 1 opera time. Society will have gathered e nit Mare h Adair both make, their debut masse to witness ItseJf enact Oscjirt [at Tuesday evening’s performance. Wilde’s comedy behind the fnotltghls. Mrs. John Marshal! Slaton, one of the most talented members and an ex-president of the club, takes an Important role. Lamar Hill and Ham ilton Douglas, who have played in other productions by the club, will also be In the cast. A charming member of the cast, who has not ap peared before, Is Miss Hildreth Burton-Smith. Mr*. Henry Bernard Scott and Mrs. Thomas B. Felder Is the pres- Mrs. John M. Slaton adding the finishing touches to her stage complexion. ldent of the club, the Wilde comedy being the Initial performance under her regime. FLIES- IBan’s Deadliest Enemy Did you rt»ad the powerful editorial on flies in The Sunday American? Listen to a few of the statements in that remarkable editorial: “Flies will kill firis year more Americans than will ever he lost in a battle. “Why do we tolerate and ignore the annual invasion of an enemy more deadly and dangerous than all the yellow men of Asia? “The fly kills tons of thousands of children evert- year. “The fly causes more blindness in children than ail other causes com bined. “The fly spreads every- known disease to children and adults, for it fre quents evert* disease-breeding spot, and hunts purposely for filth. “Scientists have been studying the housefly for several years, and all of them unite in saying that this insect is more deadly than the tiger or the cobra. It is the most dangerous insect on earth. ’’ Then what are ytm going to do? Listen again to this advice from the same authority: “Early in the season kill flies. Treat the flies as our ancestors of old treated the red Indians and the wolves. First prepare against them—then exterminate them.’’ SCREEN YOUR WINDOWS. SCREEN YOUR DOORS. Keep your garbage cans covered. Keep your sewage system iu good order. We have every kind of flv destrover manufactured. KILL THE FLIES. King Hardware Co. Militant Hunger Striker Under Knife Special Cable to The Atlanta Georgian. LONDON, June 2.—Mrs. Flora (General) Drummond, militant suffra gette and right-hand bovver of Mi*3. Emmeline Pankhurst, recently taken from the Jail because of illness brought on by voluntary starvation, was operated on to-day. liar condition is said to be serious and another operation will be neces sary. Mrs. Drummond, with a num ber of other women, was charged with Inciting riot. Soaps and cleansing pow ders may clean your walls, floors and woodwork, but they won’t kill disease germs. CN does both; it makes everything with which it comes in contact 100 per cent clean. It frees the home of conditions fa vorable to germ life, clean from cellar to garret. All (Jroccrv. Prag- «t*te and Depart m*nt Store*. 10c, 25c, 50c, $1 Th* yellow package icitk the gable-top. West Disinfecfisf Co. Atlanta, Ga. Miss Kittie Thornton Dies at LaGrange Miss Kittie M. Thornton died late Sunday night at her home in La- Grange, Ga. She was 26 years old. Miss Thornton was popular, both in LaGrange and in Atlanta, where she often visited. She is survived by her mother, Mrs. J. P. Thornton, of La Grange; two brothers, Thomas J. and Steve W. Thornton, and two aunts. Mrs. Henry Banks, Sr., and Mrs. Al bert E. Thornton, of Atlanta. Funeral arrangements will > be an nounced later. OBITUARY. The remains of Sam Salosktn, a for mer resident of Atlanta who died at Denver Sunday, are being brought here for interment by Albert Wal ker. a former Atlantan and a friend of the deceased. Archie T. Ormond, th« 8-month-old child of Mr. and Mrs W. E. Ormond, 27 Cooper Street, died Monday morn ing. The funeral will be from the residence at 10 o’clock Tuesday morning. Interment at Westview. Mrs. Sarah Horr Fuller, mother-in- law of Bishop FYederlck D. Leete, died Sunday morning at the Leete residence, 9 West Eleventh Street. The funeral was held at the home Monday afternoon. The body was sent to Watertown, N. Y., for inter- Mrs. Thomas B. Felder (standing) and Miss Hildreth Bur ton-Smith aiding each othor “mate up.” ment. Mrs. Fuller was 75 years old and the mother of the Rev. Spencer R. Fuller, a prominent pastor of New York. She had lived in Atlanta for the last two years. Miss Lizzie Campbell, 24 years old. died at the residence of her parents, 1274 Marietta Street, Monday morn ing, after a lingering illness. The body was taken to the chapel of A. O. and Roy Donohue, whence it will be shipped to Resaca, Ga., for the funeral and interment. Surviving are the father and mother, Mr. and Mra. A. P. Chappell, and fo-ur broth ers, J. H., Anderson, Grover and Ernest ChappelL The funeral of John J, Kennedy, age 68, veteran engineer for the W. and A. Railroad, who died at hie home, 291 Simpson Street, Sunday, will be held from the Jones Avenue Bap tist Church Tuesday afternoon at 4 o’clock. Mr. Kennedy was one of the best known men in the em ploy of the company. For forty-one years he served as an engineer. He is survived by four sons, W. D., S. P., F. J. and S. G. Kennedy, White City Park Now Open P-R-I-N-T-O-R-I-A-L-S 1 No. 144 Humanizing Word* and Pictures There’s an old saying—that ’’one touch of nature makes the whole world kin”—and the advertiser who adopts the theory that he is addressing human beings in his advertising is going to get the closest to the people he addresses and make his advertising PROLIFIC, instead of perfunctory The public is quick to appre ciate originality in thought and picture in the advertising litera ture that reaches them through the mail, and it is our province to prepare and print just such advertising litera ture. We "HUMANIZE” our copy. It appeals. It brings result*. Our PRINTED THINGS PROTECT YOUR POSTAGE. Phone for our Representative to call and give you our ideas of “Human Nature Advertising.” No obli- , gat ions incurred. BYRD PRINTING CO. 46-43-50 W. Alabama, Atlanta. Phones M. 1560, 2608. 2614. m and three daughters, Mrs. J. H. Chastain, Mrs. J. D. Rawlings and Miss Helen Kennedy. Mrs. D. B. Bennett, 88 years old, 664 Chestnut Street, died Sunday morn ing at a private sanitarium. The funeral was held from Poole’s Chapel, 96 South Pryor Street, at 10 o’clock Monday morning. The body was sent to Ball Ground, Ga., for interment. Griffin Teachers Named. GRIFFIN,—The City Board of Edu cation has elected teachers for an other year. J. A. Jones is superin tendent and J. A. Eakes principal of the High School. Chattanooga Free Of Reunion Deficit CHATTANOOGA, TENN., June * Reports from the General Reunion Committee to-day were that there will be no deficit as the result ot th® entertainment of the Confederate erans last week. Subscription, and revenue from concessions will be suf ficient to defray all expenses. Thqj exact figures have not been compiled. The Jacksonville committee is see curing a copy of the plans used here. CASTOR IA For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of I