Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, July 24, 1913, Image 9

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

rr ^T > >t THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS. The dinner-dance at the Capital City Country Club Thursday evening will assemble 100 club members and their friends, many of whom will mo tor out early in the afternoon for swimming. rowing 1 , tennis or golf. Dinner will be served on the piazza. One of the largest parties of the evening will be that given by Mr. and Mrs. John J. Wood vide, Jr., in honor Of their young cousin, Miss Margue rite Gause. who has Just returned home, after an extended absence in North Carolina. The other guests will include Misses Louise Riley, Jean nette Lowndes, Helen Hobbs, Messrs Philip L’Engle, Eugene Kelly, Henry Lyons. Robin Adair and Edward Gay. Mr. and Mrs. Rutherford Lipscomb will entertain a party .of eight, their guests to be Mrs Prioleau Ellis of Springfield, Mass.; Mr. and Mrs. Frank Lipscomb of Athena. Mr. and Mrs. George M. Brown and Mr. George Forrester. Mr. and Mrs. George C. Speir will entertain a party in honor of their guest, Miss Nancy Reed, the other guests to be Misses Estelle Fort. Lou ise Bradbury, Mary Carl Hurst, Mr. and Mrs. Carl Hurst, Messrs. Stewart Bell, Eugene Haynes and F. L. Ayers of Boston. Others who will entertain small parties are Mr. and Mrs. William A. Speer. Messrs. J. S. Watson, J. K. Douglas. J. C. Holditch, Charlie Sci- ple, A. W. Alfriend, Kenneth McRae and Mr. Baskerville. For Miss Jones. Miss Harriet McCullough gave an infornial tea at the Piedmont Club Wednesday afternoon for her guest. Mies* Dorothy Jones, of Newnan. Six girls were guests Thursday afternoon Miss Frances Broyles gave a swimming party, fol lowed by tea at the Capital City Country Club for Miss Jones, and Miss Madeline McCullough will en tertain at a matinee party Friday afternoon at the Forsyth f^r her. Sewing Club Meets. Mrs. Julian Prade entertained the sewing club of which she is a member at her home on West Peachtree street Thursday morning. The house was decorated with garden flowers. The members of this club are Misses Mary Blalock, Helen Thorn. Grace Thorn, Martha Ryder, Mary Lou Turner, Katie Sturdivant, Annie Lou Paggett, Lillian Sturdivant, Edith Dunson, Elizabeth Dunson, Emmie Willing ham, Van McKinnon and Laura Hooper. For Miss Robbins. Miss Lenora Maddox entertained at an informal tea at the Piedmont Club Thursday afternoon in compli ment ?o Miss Dorothy Robbins, of Bir mingham, the guest of‘Mrs. J. P. C. Allan. For Mrs. Lipscomb. Mrs. Frank Lipscomb, of Athens, who, with her husband, is spending the summer with Mr. and Mrs. Ruth erford Lipscomb, was the central fig ure in a motor party, followed by tea at the Capital City Club, on Wednes day afternoon, when Mrs. Ben Wat kins invited four friends to meet Mrs. Lipscomb. Mrs. Lipscomb will remain in Atlanta during the sessions of the General Assembly, of which her hus hand is a member, and she is being entertained informally during her visit. Lawn Fete. The Ladies’ Aid Society of West minster Presbyterian Church will give a lawn fete Friday, July 25, in the afternoon and evening on the mansa lawn. Everybody is invited. Homemade cake and candy will be on sale. For Mrs. Harris. Mrs. Corra Harris, who is spending a few days at the Georgian Terrace before returning to the mountains of North Georgia, was the honor guest at a delightful dinner party given Wednesday' evening by Colonel and Mrs. Robert J. Lowry. The dinner was given at the Piedmont Driving Club and covers were laid for four teen at a table having a novel and charming decoration of gladioli, dah lias and maidenhair ferns, arranged in a large Central basket, with two smaller baskets holding zinnias shad ing from pink to deep rose. As fa- ^r^^eachj^te^ther^were^jiiii^ circle. Mrs. Howard McFall will en- j tertaln her embroidery club Friday afternoon in honor of Mias Pike. Miss Margaret Bransford, of Nash ville, will arrive Monday to be the P. B. Allan. guest of Mrs. J. P. B. Allan. She will share honors with Miss Dorothy Rob bins and Miss Margaret Buckner at the tea Mrs. Allan will give Tuesday afternoon. Poultry Gossip FILMS DEVELOPED FREE IN OUR PICTURE DEPARTMENT By JUDGE F. J. MARSHALL. Is there a difference between roup end sorehead? My neighbor tells me they are the same thing, only roup is j sorehead in the fall and winter, and Dr. B. G. Swanson will return from I what we usually call sorehead is the Cumberland Island the last of the week. Mrs. B. G. Swanson, Jr., and her young son, James Banks, after spending a month In Anniston. Ala., with her mother. Mrs. C. B. Ridley will return to the city the last of the week. same disease in hot weather. I would like to have your views upon the sub ject.—Mrs. J. R. C , Dallas, Ga. These are two entirely different dis eases. and come from different causes. Both are diseases of the blood, though the effect Is quite different. Then at In regard to water vessels, feed troughs and nests. Filth will spread the trouble j faster than you can cure It. |: Roup Like Common Cold. : Roup'Is to fowls what a had cold is I to people, and. as ll Is in the human family, it is liuble to take various forms if not checked in Its Incipient'* It may- become malignant, with an offensive odor, and often develop into swelled | head and at limes Into a cunkerous con dition of the throat and mouth. It will be observed by opening the iature aeroplanes, and the place cards bore original verses, which were read aloud by each guest with much merri ment. Mrs. Lowry was a charming host ess, and Mrs. Harris, who is being cordially welcomed durin- her short stay in Atlanta, was attractive in a dinner gown of black satin. Mrs. Spurlock Entertains. Mrs. J. E. Spurlock entertained on Wednesday evening in honor of Miss Lillian Daniel, of Hogansville, and Miss Nellie Boyce, of Columbus, Miss Leslie Weathers' guest. Ferns and cut flowers were the decorations. Mias Mary Daniel served punch. In a pro gressive game Mr. Conway Felesky and Miss Nellie Boyce won the prises. The guests were Misses Irene Den nis Nora Ingram, Alice Snodgrass, Edith Hudson, Mattie May Finney, Mart Miller of Macon. Louise Miller of Macon, Mary Daniel, Messrs. George Edmondson. George Freeman, Archibald Freeman. George West, Robert Ingram. Wharey Little. Dean Christopher, Rob Maddox, Hawthorne Ware and Mr. Harper. Mrs. Reed Entertains. Mrs. G. L. Reed gave a 500 party Wednesday afternoon for her guest, Miss Mary Neubecker, of Baltimore. The decorations were yellow and white, and the refreshments .carried out the color scheme. Mrs. Reed a ll! also give a dinner Thursday evening for her guest. Miss West Hostess. Miss Clifford West will entertain at tea at the Piedmont Club Friday aft ernoon for Miss Margaret Buckner, jf Roanoke, the guest of Miss Helen Jones, and for Miss Dorothy Robbins, of Birmingham, who is visiting Mrs. J. P. B. Allan. Her guests will include Misses Rob bins. Margaret Buckner, Helen Jones. Elizabeth Morgan, Mrs. J. P. B. Allan, Mrs. W. A. Speer and Mrs. Adam Jones. Haygood- Etheredge. Mr. and Mrs. William Lee Haygood announce the marriage of theis daughter, Vesta, to Mr. John Sanford Etheredge. the ceremopy having taken place Wednesday, July 16. Mr. and Mrs. Etheredge will be at home after July 15 in Quitman, Ga. Morning Bridge. Mrs. Fred Houser and Miss Alma Nance gave an informal bridge party Thursday morning at the home of Mrs. Houser in the Virginian in com pliment to Miss Viola Wade and Mrs. Ben Wade, of Palmetto, Fla., who are the guests of Miss Alma Nance. Roses and potted plants decorated the apartment, and the prizes were correspondence cards and a book. Mrs. Houser wore blue ere-- ipeteor and Miss Nance and Miss Wade were gowned in white crepe and lace. The guests were Miss Wade. Miss Mainer Lee Hardin. Mrs. Hatton Rog ers Mrs. Ben Wade of Palmetto, Mrs B. C. Broyles. Mrs. Albert Bar«es. Mrs. Grover McGahee, Mrs. J. C. Beall and Mrs. T. J. Nance. same specimen. Mrs William Donovan will leave i For example, a fowl having the sore- Atlanta Thursday night with Captain I '’rr, "".'i “'L b , r ° ke ” ™t with the sores _ . w« a T . „ n c5\ - X . ! or humps on its comb and head, will, and Mrs. John R. Sharpe, of Bain- . by roosting in a hot damp place, con- bridge, to spend a month or six weeks tract the roup. This* will cause the air visiting Toxaway, Asheville, Brevard passages to become inflamed and till and other points in North Carolina, with mucous, causing the fowl to Captain and Mrs Sharpe have been | breathe through it® mouth, the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Claude j Th „ h ? e !*thtJgV™S.ge t„'the nostrils being stopped the Inflamed matter will ! be forced out through the eye duct, filling the space around the eye. causing ; it to water and swell. If It is not re- j lieved the matter will harden and Anal ly the eye will go blind and peel out. While this 19 going on the soreheafl trouble will wrinkle up the comb and if not checked will form a solid scab I upon the head and comb and will so WINCHESTER, KY„ July 24.—The afreet the general health of the speci- r, ... . ... . . | men as to cause death in many cases. ( ommonwealth closed its evidence in it jp only in rare cases, however, that the trial of Fletcher Deaton, charged ’he two are combined. Either one is ‘ * , ... . , , sufficient Jn itself io cause enough with oon8piracy to kill Ed Callahan, trouble to do a world of damage to an and the defense began Its evidence, otherwise thrifty flock. The sorehead a n .« n ni„w a. ,. . comes on as a result of infection intro- ” w eplng denials to all charg s | duced by the sting of the mosquito, against "Uncle Fletch," as he is * When once established In a flock it is i_ ... transmitted from one to the other. known in the mountains, were made. without the aid of the mosquito, by The Commonwealth sprang a sur- personal contact, prise when a deputy sheriff of Breath- Moaq ®,?SeS rirel'yVu.er Them during times the two^troubles are found in the beak wide that there Is a thick, >el- lowish coating on the throat und tongue, like cheese. Some experts advise the re moving of this coating with a feather quill and powdering the raw surface Spools Shewmake for a few day?*. Defense in Deaton Feudist Case Opens itt County testified that Deaton told him shortly before the-killing that he would have to have Callahan killed. the day, so that where a person will take the trouble to make his poultry coops mosauito proof with netting they ! will have but little trouble from sore- I head. Where this is not done, a great { preventive measure is the giving of Ep- ! Bom salts freely in the -drinking water during July and August. It must not | be omitted for any length of time or the system allowed to get out of the influence of it or the sores will make LOS ANGELES, July 24,-WilUe do come up, it f a Ritchie, lightweight champion, is in good plan to take any affected ones from the flock and treat them individually by dipping a feather in oil of tar and touch TALK OF RITCHIE’S NEXT FIGHT IN LOS ANGELES Los Angeles after an automobile trip from San Francisco. Ritchie prob ably will meet Promoter Tom Mc- Carey to-day and talk over the possi bilities of a match for either Labor. Day or September 9. There is a pos sibility of a match being arranged between the champion and either Joe Rivers or the w inner of the Cross- Baldwin match next Tuesday night. Ritchie and McCarey have been in correspondence for some time, and the two may get together on the mat ter of terms for a bout within the next few' days. ing the sores Another good remedy is a stick of caustic touched to soft water and then to the 6ore. Either one of these will have a tendency to kill the germs and dry up the sores. The salts should also be given. Everything should be spick and span about the premises with powdered borax twice a day. A dose of castor oil every other day for three days; then (follow It up with salts In the water. This is a constitutional treatment that will help rUl the system of the poison. The swelled head condition Is besfr treated with kerosene oil We have found nothing so handy to use as a snring-bottom sewing machine oil can, the small tip of which can be inserted into the nostril. With this the oil can be forced through the nostrils into theT head. Foam is First Symptom. If the noultrvman is alert and looks closely after his fowls he will notice a little foam collected in the corner of the eye. This is the first indication of roup and the closing of the air passages. This is the time to treat with the kero sene. which will usuallly, in about two or three applications, clear out the trouble entirely. While roup usually is considered a cold weather disease, yet it very fre quently makes its appearance in the very hottest times of the summer At such times it is as the result of chickens being confined in hot, close quarters, not well ventilated and full of bad odors. At such times it is often more trouble to handle than in cold weather because of the difficulty in securing free fresh air. For Friday and Saturday 200 White P K Skirts HARVARD SIGNS THREE TRACK TEAM COACHES BOSTON, July 24.—Harvard’s track team and field athletes Will be coached during the next tw r o years by William F. (Pooch) Donovan and J. Fred Powers and the Crimson Cross Country Runners will work under the direction of Alfred J. Shrubb, Dono van and Powers have singed con tract* for two years, while Shrubb’s term is for one year. Tell Your Real Dealer CRICHTON-SHUMAKER SOUTH PRYOR AND HUNTER STREETS. ATLANTA. Not a cheap school, but a GOOD school. A school for those who want the best, and who know the best when they see it. There are many who do. $1.00 Values to $2.00 While, They Last Just received seven new, nobby styles of White P K Bedford and Linene Skirts, waist meas ures up to 36 inches. We can fit any size woman! The best val ues up to $2.00. We have only 200 of these Skirts, so be sure to buy yours to-morrow rfh •! —while they last at *jp X New Mid-Sum* Cl 70 mer Waists at Our buyer, now in New York, has just sent in thi* special purchase of Crepe, Voile and Lingerie Waists—all the new low and high-neck styles, Dutch Collars, etc. They are well worth M.75 and $2.00 each— 'Jfr O Q our price X • Zm LA Half-Price Sale Every Junior Dress to Close Quickly Smart Tub Frocks and elegant Lingerie and Voile Dresses for misses and small women ranging 13, 14, 15, 16, 17 and 18-year sizes. Quality dresses every one; from the highest class makers of girls’ wear; no cheap looking "poor folksy" dress will ever be found in High’s Children’s and Juniors’ Departments. V__ $17.00 White Lingerie Dresses $8.50 $16.00 White Voile Dresses $8.00 $15.00 White Lingerie Dresses $7.50 $14.00 White Lingerie Dresses $7.00 $13.50 White Lingerie Dresses ..$6.75 COME EARLY AND $12.50 White Lingerie Dresses $6.25 $10.00 White Lingerie Dresses $5.00 $10.00 and $12.50 Tub Dresses $5.00 $5.00 and $6.50 Tub Dresses $2.89 $2.50 and $3.00 Tub DreSses $1.49 GET FIRST PICK. PERSONALS FACE BtOLY Also on Hands. Broke Out in Pim ples. Itched Badly. Spread AIM Washington street Over Body. Cuticura Soap and Ointment Cured. Mr. and Mrs. Robert F. Moore an nounce the birth of a son. Mr. Stuart Boyd has returned from Atlantic City and Wrightsville Beach. Miss Carrie Johnston, of Macon, is visiting her brother, O. S. Johnston, in West End. Mrs. C. R. Achison and Miss Achi- son left Thursday to spend a few days at their former home in Nashville. ^fies Lyndall Haddon and her aunt, Miss Allan will leave Atlanta Thurs day night for Wrightsville Beach. Miss Martha Roper is spending the week-end with her grandmother, Mrs. B. G. Swanson, at No. 136 Juniper street. Mrs. Walker Dunson. with her daughters. Misses Edith and Gladys Dunson. have returned from St. Si mons. Mrs. Charles Dowman will return to Atlanta Tuesday, after making a | visit to her husband’s relatives in Ox ford, Ga. Mr. John Anderson has returned home after four years’ study abroad and will sing at the Central Presby terian Church. Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Jekyl, who have just returned from a long Western trip, are the guests of Mrs. Jekyl in Yota Saw His Ad in The Insist that he advertise your property in the paper the class you want to reach read tha most— That’s The Georgian In this vicinity, because it goes to the man at practically the only time he has to the Sale “High’s Special” Corsets While They Last $1.00 Thejf came this morn ing just in time for Fri day and for Saturday half day. High’s Spe cial long hip corsets with six hose support ers, equal in value to others’ $1.50 models— while they last . $1.00 J Charming Crepe Kimonos m New and “Different” $2 Values =e While They Last ||| $1.50 | Newest Empire Models for Fall 1913, with new effects in colors, patterns, - collars and trimmings. A very great and unusually artistic line of designs. We have only 300, and they will go in a hurry. ., Be here early to-morrow, or telephone our Shopper for the size and color you want. (J’| CjJY Special price *3' ' 'v" “EEs E. C. CRICHTON. SHUMAKER. read—in Evening Shorthand Department; Author of CRICHTON’S SYLLABIC METHOD (Pltmanc System); has taught Shorthand In Atlanta for more than twenty years. $10 Quick sales the rula from Georgian Real Es tate Ads. Principal Business Department; Author Crichton-Shumaker "Busi ness Practice” Course; has taught BUSINESS in Atlanta for more than Twenty Years. v MONTHLY for TUITION PLACES BOTH TEACHER AND PUPIL Absolutely on Their Merit ( !Sc r f °p"?. h ;?. P d‘ ,B) CRICHTON-SHUMAKER BUSINESS COLLEGE SOUTH PRYOR AND HUNTER STREETS. ATLANTA. m !9c and 12 l-2c Laces To clearaway all odd pat terns in Val Laces and Linen Laces we place on center counters a tremen dous collection. These must be sold to make room for new goods. 10c and 12^0 laces, yard... YARD m Embroideries to 35c Fine sheer Swiss and clear soft Nainsook Embroideries, Edgings, Insertings and Eands worked in beautiful Eyelet and French pat terns. It’s time to start fall sewing for college girls. Buy what you’ll need here to-morrow at 19c yard. YARD 47 c i Week-End Specials Gloves and Hosiery Women’s Pure Thread Silk Hose Gordon and Conqueror 1 brands, black, white, tan, [ full regular made—lovely (' quality. Special pair ) Women’s $1.09 Long Silk Gloves “HIGH’S SPECIAL’’—a, glove that is much heavier, j richer quality, than any $1/ glove on the street (except Ll ^ Kayser’s, to which High’s/ special is a “close second”)A Special price to-morrow, I pair / Chamoisetle Wash Goves Women’s long or short! chamoisette gloves that ( /"V £ wash and wear splendidly iu> I l v ' white, black and natural,' V/ $1.00 and ’ Hampton 8pringi, Fla. — “I had had eczema on my face and hands for about three years. My face was badly disfigured. The eczema broke out iu pimples and itched so very badly I would scratch it all the time. It was the most irritating disease I have ever had. It started on my face and hands and it spread all over my body. I had great large sores ail oyer met caused from the eczema. It both ered me day and night so that I could not rest at all. " I used three remedies for skin disease and they didn't give relief at all. ,I was almost terrified until a friend recommended Cuticura Soap and Ointment to me. They helped me from the time I started to use them. I used the Cuticura Soap and warm water as a wash and then put tha Cuticura Ointment on the sore places. I only used two cakes of Cuticura Soap and two boxes of Cuticura Ointment and was cured. (Signed) Mrs. B. C. Parker. Dec. 7. 1912. When you buy a fine toilet soap think of the advantages Cuticura Soap possesses over the most expensive toilet soap ever made. In addition to being absolutely pure and re freshingly fragrant, It Is delicately yet effec- tlvely medicated, giving you two soaps io one. a toilet and a skin soap at one price. Sold throughout the world. Sample of each mailed free, with 32-p. Skin Book. Address post-card “Cuticura. Dept. T. Boston. ag-Men who shave and shampoo with ( u- tlcura Soap will flndit best for skin and sealu. Mrs Mr. and Mrs. R. G Hudson and Misses Ethel and Edith Hudson w\ll depart Thursday night to spend ten days at Wrightsville Beach. Mrs. Emmett R. Lowe and Miss Wyolun Lowe Purtell left for Wrightsville Beach Wednesday. They will stay at the Seashore Hotel. Misses Ellen Simmons and Eeolene Morris, of Rome, and Miss Pauline Goodson, of Union City, arrived Wed nesday to be the guests of Miss Ava- leen Morris. Miss Helen Morris. Miss Genevieve Morris, Miss Atleen Morris and Miss Margaret Haverty will leave on Thursday night for Wrightsville Beach, for a ten-day stay. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas B. Paine and Miss Douglass Gay Paine will leave Atlanta Sunday for Greenbrier White Sulphur Springs, where they will re main until the middle of September. Mr. and Mrs. Howard Comtek, of Nashville, who are at the Georgian Terrace, will spend the week-end with Mr. and Mrs John Lamar Meek. Mr. Cornick Is a cousin of Mrs. Meek. Mrs. Fred Houser will leave Friday for Chicago, where she will be joined by Mr. Houser, who has been in Kan sas City on business and together they will spend several weeks on the lakes. Mrs. F. S. Carlock gave a bridge party .Thursday afternoon at her home fn West End in honor of Miss Louise Gibson, of Rome; Mrs. J. S. Clark, of Chattanooga, and Mrs. E. B. Braswell, of Fitzgerald. Miss Mildred Pike, of Thomaston. will arrive Thursday night to visit Hal Morrison. Jr., on Boulevard A Perfect Water; A Perfect Cooler PURA Distilled water is a iierfect water, absolutely pure ami germ less, crystal clear and thoroughly healthful. Distilled water is pronounced by highest medical authorities as the only sufe water to drink. Pura is distilled by most modern, setentitic processes. Thin perfect water is served from a perfect cooler—iced In block tin pipes and never in contact with the ice. For a Cooler Telephone Us Dell. Ivy 322b Atlanta 322b We install the Pura coolers in stores, offices and other places of bus! ness, keep them constantly supplied with l’ura Water and iced daily for a very moderate charge. Telephone us for full information. Dell Phone Ivy Atlanta Phone Extraordinary Clearance Sale PICTURES $3.00 Framed Pictures \ CHOICE $2.50 Framed Pictures J $2.00 Framed Pictures f fl Jj $1.50 Framed Pictures £ $1.25 Framed Picture^ \ $1.00 Framed Pictures / Sale Begins at 8:30 Friday Morning, Picture Department, Second Floor. Over 500 extra good pictures in this great disposal—pictures that will be a pleasure to every member of the family—pictures that beautify the home and that have a distinct educational value; including hand-colored photogravures, sepias, mottoes, landscapes, waterscapes. THE FRAMES ALONE ARE WORTH TWICE THE CUT PRICES. Framed in fumed oak, Mission, dull plain gold and fancy frames, in sizes 12x20, 14x24, 12x27, 16x27, 17x22. (We list sizes so that you can measure your wall spaces and get pictures to fit.) There’s a big variety of subjects to choose from in every size. Pictures priced up to $3.00, while they last, 69c.