Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, July 28, 1913, Image 7

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THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS. IIEMCI KNIT INIS IK IIS TEN! TROPHY v Miss Frances Winshin entertained at tea at the Piedmont Club Monday afternoon for Miss Dorothy Jones, of Newnan, who is visiting Miss Har riet McCullough. The table on the terrace where the guests were seated was decorated with pink and white flowers. Miss Winship wore a pink, em broidered mull with a pink chiffon hat Mflorned with pink faille ribbon. The guests were Misses Harriet ■ McCullough. Dorothy Jones. Alice Muse. Frances Broyles, Nellie Dodd, Julia Murphy, Madeline McCullough, Nina Hopkins. Dorothy Arkwright, Katherine Dickey. Elizabeth Haw kins, Marporie Weldon and Isabel Amorous. A Iverson - Blackwell. Mr. Virgil M. Alverson and Miss Margaret Blackwell, of Oakland City, were married Saturday evening at 7:30 o’clock at the home of the bride’s brother. Mr. Bassel Blackwell, on Al- leen avenue. The ceremony was per formed by the Rev. S. H. Hall, pas tor of Christ’s Church, of West End. They left Atlanta for an extended tour for Washington. Baltimore, Phil adelphia. New York and other points. For Miss Evans. Misses Katherine and Pearl Evans entertained Friday night for Miss Mary Evans, of Clearwater, Fla. Those present were Misses Ivey Harp, Mary McAfee. Esther Hull. Lola Beiter, Maggie Donald. Aline Garrison, Eloise Smith and Helen Griglighter. Miss Hugh Cates, Albert Beiter. Lester Ga ble. Lonnie Grubbs, Lumpkin Schel- pert, William Coogler and Oscar Spi vey. For Wedding Party. Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Trammell will give a buffet supper Tuesday evening after the rehearsal for the wedding of Miss Harriet Trammell to Mr. Les ter Harvey, which will take place on Wednesday evening at home at 9 o’clock. Mrs. Lowndes Connally will be her sister’s matron of honor and Miss Dorothy Trammell will be maid of honor. Among the out-of-town guests here for the wedding are Mrs. O. H. Mc Donald, Miss Marjorie McDonald, of Valdosta; Miss Emmie Ball, Miss Kathleen Ball, of Columbus, and Mrs. Karl Tuttle, of Birmingham. For Miss Schuessler. A recent hearts-dice party was given by Miss Emma E. Lafltte in honor of Miss Lena Schuessler, of Macon. Miss Gabrille Lowenthal’s guest. Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Lafltte and Mrs. Dennis Ward assisted in enter taining. and a color scheme of white and green was carried out in the ices and decorations. Misses Anaus La fltte and Mary Thomas served punch, and the prizes were won by Miss Fan- ny May Beall and Harry Montgomery. Guests were Miss Lena Schuessler, Miss Gabrielle Lowenthal, Miss Gaadis Smith. Miss Dorothy Devo- reaux, Miss Ruth Atkinson, Miss Fan ny May Beall, Miss Jarte T. Lafltte, Miss Lelia Caldwell. Miss S. Louise Lafltte, Mr. George Bethea. Mr. Har ry Montgomery. Mr. Ernest Lowen thal Mr. Nat Beall. Dr. Gus Steele. Mr. Theron Pindley, Mr. John Ward, Mr. Ghee and Mr. Milford. Luncheon for Visitors. Mr. Hammond Johnson, of Norfolk, entertained at luncheon at the capital City Club Saturday for Mrs. Hughes Spalding’s guests, Miss Mattie Wilson DuBose. and Mrs Edgeworth Lamp- kin, of Athens. Mr. and Mrs. Hughes Spalding and Mr. and Mrs. William Schroder completed the party. For Visitors. Mrs. W. I. Maddox will entertain at bridge Friday afternoon in compli ment to Miss Dorothy Robbins, of Birmingham. and Miss Margaret Bransford. of Nashville, who are the guests of Mrs. J. P. B. Allan. Mrs. Allan will give a tea from 5 to 6 o’clock Tuesday afternoon for her guests. For Miss Trammell. Mrs. Edward Kirke entertained at a matinee party at the Forsyth Mon day afternoon for Miss Harriet Tram mell, whose wedding takes place Wednesday evening. Her guests were Miss Harriet Trammell, and Mrs. Karl Tutte, of Birmingham. Dance at East Lake. * The dances at East Lake continue quite popular during the hot months. Among those at the dance last Sat urday evening were Misses Edith Dunson, Dorothy Robbins, of Bir- MEN WELCOME MOTHER'S FRIEND A Duty That Every Man Owes to Those Who Perpetuate the Race. n 1 . juai as important that men shoum of progressive methods in advance •therhood. The suffering, pain and ss incident to child-bearing can be avoided by having at hand a bot- Mother's Friend. r is a wonderful penetrating, exter- pplication that relieves all tension the muscles and enables them to id without the painful strain upon 1 laments. Thus there Is avoided ose nervous spells; the tendency to ■a or morning sickness is counter- and a bright, sunny, happy dls- on Is preserved that reflects woo lly upon the character and temper- t of the little one soon to open Its In bewilderment at the Joy of his tl You can obtain a bottle ol tor's Friend" at any drug store at and it will be the best dollar t , vou ever obtained. It preserves other’s health, enables her to man ■k and complete recovery, and thus ed strength she will eagerly devote f to the care and attention which so much to the welfare of the Write to the Bradfleld Rcgula- o 129 Lamar Bldg.. Atlanta. Ga. leir valuable and instructive book tdanee for expectant mothej-a. Get tie of Mother 1 * Friend to-day. ming-ham, the guest of Mrs. J. B. Al lan; Carolyn King. Nancy Prince Elise Brown, Passie May Ottley, Mary Lucy Turner, Ntll Prince, Mary Hines, Jennilu Lindsey. Nellie Kiser Stewart, Mr. and Mrs. Julian Prade. Mr. and Mrs. Luther Rosser Jr. Messrs. Hugh Hackney, Boyce Wor thy, Moultrie Hitt. Curry Moon. An drew Nlcolson, George McCarty, Dr. Charles Hodge. Thomas Monroe. Hall Miller, Ches Haile. Eugene Kelly, Will Henry, A1 Wynn, Thomas Callaway, of LaGrange; Eugene Harrington, Frank Spratling and Hughes Roberts. Miss Murphey’s Dance. Miss Mary Murphy will entertain at a dancing party at East Lake Monday evening for her guests, Miss Lyra Swift and Miss Edna Craw ford of Columbus. About 200 young people will be her guests. For Miss Pike. Mrs. G. A. Terry entertained her bridge club Saturday afternoon for Miss Mildred Pike, of Thomasville, who is visiting Mrs. Hal Morrison, Jr., and for Mrs. J. F. Clarke, of Chatta nooga, the, guest of Mrs. T. S. Car- lock. The house was decorated with yel low flowers and the prizes were silk stocking.". The guests Included Mrs. John Reese, Mrs. E. F. Braswell Mrs. T. S. Carlock, Mrs. J. W. Nix.' Mrs. J. F. Clarke, Mrs. Hal Morrison, Jr.. Mrs. Lincoln Morrison, Mrs. Harry Oross- walte. Mips Grace Darling, Miss Christine Nelson. Miss Corinne Con yers and Miss Louise Gibson, of Rome, the guest of Mrs. John Reese. Tuesday afternoon Mrs. J. W. Nix will entertain her bridge club In com pliment tp Miss Pike. Mrs. DeGive Hostess. Mrs. Julius DeGive entertained at tea at the Piedmont Club Monday afternoon for Mrs. Everett Ginn, of Winchester, Mass., who is visiting her sister, Mrs. Laura Wyatt, In Ansley Park. Tea was served on the terrace and the table was beautifully deco rated with pink roses and smilax, Mrs. DeGive was becomingly gown ed In white embroidered crepe with a large white hat weighted with pink roses. Ten matrons enjoyed Mrs. DeGivVs hospitality. At the Piedmont Club. The dinner dance at the Piedmont Club Saturday evening was largely attended and was one of the most de lightful in the w-eek-end series Among the parties was one includ ing Miss Helen McCullough, Miss Gladys Dunson. Mr. and Mrs. Julian Maglll, Messrs. Arthur Clarke, Ernest Mrs. A. D. Adair. Dr. and Mrs George gan. Mr. and Mrs A. D. Adair, Jr., en tertained a small party in honor of Mr. and Mrs. Calvin Morgan Mc- Clung, of Knoxville, guests of Mr. and Mrs. A. D. Adair, Dr, and Mrs. George Kent Varden completed this party. Mr. and Mrs. Lee Lewman enter tained Mr, and Mrs. Thomas B. Fel der, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Adger Smythe, Mr. and Mrs. James T. Wil liams and Dr. and Mrs. Willis West moreland. Mr. and Mrs. Hudson Moore and Mr. and Mrs. Nym McCullough were guests of Mr. and Mrs. James L. Riley. Misses Emma Kate Amorous, Ruth Stallings, Marlon Goldsmith, Marv Butler, Augusta Pearce of New York, Adgate Ellis, Marion Achison, tyessrs. Hal Hentx, Lynn Werner. Lewifc Car- hart, Wallace Draper, William Man- ry, Mr. and Mrs. George Harrington, Mr. and Mrs. Edward C. Peters were among others present. Urges BathingSkirts For ‘Unshapely’ Men CHICAGO, July 28.—A legal fight was started to-day by Dr. Rosalie M. Ladova, who was arrested at a park bathing beach because she appeared in a Sunday afternoon crowd of swimmers in bloomers. “Women can not swim well in skirts,” said Dr. Ladova to-day. “Their figures are rounded so that they do not need as thorough cov ering as men. Men bathers go about almost naked. Their hideous figures should be covered from their necks to their toes. They should be com pelled to wear the skirts.” Boy Gives Life for Cigarette Papers WAYCROSS, July 28.—Jumping from a northbound passenger train on the Atlanta, Birmingham and Atlan tic Railroad at Haywood, Ira Mor gan, son of a farmer who lives near Waycross, to-day struck a crosstie and was instantly killed. The boy boarded the train at the Haywood depot to get some cigarette papers from a newsbutcher. Turkey Trot Causes Fatal German Duel Special Cable to The Georgian. BERLIN, July 28.—The turkey trot caused a fatal duel at Landau be tween a Prussian general and a col onel, whose names are suppressed. The general challenged the colonel because the latter criticised him for allowing his daughter to dance the turkey trot with an officer at a gar rison ball. After a desperate fight with swords the colonel died from his wounds. McLaughlin Brings Cup Bfjck Home by Victory Over Dickso; of England. Two Hustlers in Shetland Contest AUEU5TI SILL'S Special Cable to The Georgian. WIMBLEDON. ENGLAND, July 28 The Davis trophy, the most sought- for cup in the tennis world, which has been away from the United States since 1903, will come back to America. The United States team, after beat ing the Australians* in the preliminary games in New York last June and working their way up to the chal lenge round by defeating the German and Canadian teams in England, to day won the trophy for the United States by defeating the English de fenders. Maurice E. McLoughlin, the young Californian, brought victory to his country' by defeating C. P. Dixon in three straight sets in the single match to-day. Although his service was faulty at the beginning of the match to-day, McLoughlin soon got into his stride. * He won the first set after a hard- fought set-to. the score being 8-6. From then on the issue was never in doubt, the American proving him self the master of the Englishman ai all stages of the second and third sets, winning the former 6-3 and the latter 6-2. The match for the trophy began on FTfiday, when McLoughlin was defeat ed by J. C. Parke, the Irish coampion R. Norris Williams, of Philadelphia evened up matters when he defeated Dixon in the other single match tha day. Saturday the Americans jumped into the foreground, when McLough lin and Harold H. Hacket, the doubie team, defeated Dixon and H. Roper Barrett. McLoughlin’s play, which was a lit tie off color on Friday, was much im proved Saturday and to-day. His in dividual skill did much to bring the cup back to America. In the semi-flnal game between Parks and Williams, the Englishman won after a hard match of five sets. The score: 6-2, 5-7, 5-7, 6-4. 6-2. This defeat did not have any bearing on the general result. Standing Changes Fast—County Contestants Redouble Efforts. Shetlands To Be Exhibited. Four yearly subscriptions, with Red Letter Ballots, counting in all 8.000 votes—were brought in by one contestant in The Georgian and American pony contest. "Was it a rival in your district?” the contest manager ask? the boys FIREMAN IS KILLED. COLUMBUS.—A Central of Geor gia freight engine, weighing 300.000 pounds, turned over at Kellyton, Ala- Ala., 81 miles west of Columbus, late yesterday afternoon, crushing Will Harrison, fireman, to death. Two ne groes, Bud Wynn and Will Wilson, were badly scalded. Mrs. T. T. Oglesby, of West Peach tree street, has returned from Char lotte, N. C., where she visited friends Mr. and Mrs. Ray Gladding Groff, of Newport, R. I.. announce the birth of a son. Mrs. Groff was formerly Miss Aline Lucille Dantzler, of At lanta. Miss Frances Dowman *?hve a mati nee party at the Forsyth Monday aft ernoon for Miss Sue Erwin, of West Point, the guest of Miss Evelyn Ar nold. Mrs. William Ellis, Jr, and Miss Adgate Ellis have returned from Tal- luHah Falls, where they spent sev eral weeks, and are at their Ansley Park residence. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph McCord, Mrs. Walker and Mis«» Eloise Walker mo, tored to Thomaston Saturday It* spend the week-end with Mrs. Wal ker’s sister, Mrs. J. M. Tumlin. Miss Mary Allgood Jones, w’ho is at the Davis-Fisher Sanitarium, Is rap idly improving ana will leave the in stitution Monday to be the guest of Mrs. L. S. Crane In Ansley Park. Mrs. Flora Newcomer and Miss Nina Tree are now enjoying a house party given in their honor by Mr. Harold Nicholson and sister. Miss Helen Nicholson, of Stephens, Ga, After a trip of two w'eeks. Mr. and Mrs. W. H White. Jr., left French Lick Springs Thursday night for Chi cago. where they will spend the re mainder of the week, returning home Monday. Miss Jessie McKee returned home Friday afternoon after studying sev eral months abroad. Mr. McKee met her in New York and they were In Atlantic City a few' days before com ing to Atlanta. Mrs. Charles A. Sisson has returned home from Warm Springs, w'here she was delightfully entertained as the guest of the Misses Joseph at their summer cottage. Dr. and Mrs. Rufus R. Dorsey have returned home from Waynesville, N. C., having come to meet their par ents, Mr. and Mrs. William S. With- am, on their return from a short stay abroad. Dr. and Mrs. W. S. Elkin have re turned home from Kentucky. Mrs. Elkin has been away several weeks, j Dr. Elkin having Joined her ten days , ago. Mr. and Mrs. James S Doughertv have returned from a trip to New York and Boston via Savannah, and are at their summei home, “Craven i wood.” Hal Reynolds is at Fortress Mon - 1 roe, Va.. visiting Cooper Barnes, son | of Captain H. C. Barnes, U. S. A. He will go to Annapolis to see his brother midshipman. Walter Reynolds, of the United States Naval Academy. Mrs. Charles A. Davis will go to New York early in September to meet her daughters Mrs. Harvey Ander son and Miss Rosalie Davis, who have been abroad. Mrs. W. A. Sims, of Inman Park, has returned home after a visit to the country home of her father. Mrs. Gus T. Dodd is at Indian Springs. Mrs Kyle Bow’den. of Midland; Mrs. Paul Ruffin. Mr. and Mrs. Her bert Pearce and Miss Elizabeth Pearce, of Columbus, have returned home after a delightful visit to their aunt, Mrs. W. N. Hudson, No. 477 Cherokee avenue, and other relatives on the North Side. Leo Bowden, Athens, Ga. and girls. “You don’t know. Very ikely, it was. Nothing is more treacherous nowadays than over-con- fldence. "Three days remain, after IV 1 : da>. The strain soon will be over There is not a boy or girl in the race who ran not w'ell afford to put every effort into the work for this brief, final spurt.” Some May Be Disappointed. When the contestants come into the office, the contest manager gets an excellent line on their ideas. Some times they are amusing. There are several beys and girls who were lead ing a w’eek ago by good margins. Strangely enough, in spite of repeated warnings, these youngsters will not believe that they are behind now. This is the attitude which will bring bitter disappointment when the final standings are published next Sunday, and the winners announced. One feature of the contest upor which little stress has been put is the fact that the boy or girl who gets the greatest total of votes has first choice af all twenty-two ponies, and so on down the list. For the ambi tious lad it is not enough to win in his district. He wants also to get one of the first selections from the herd of twenty-two Shetlands. No Apathy in Country. True, it may happen that the very’ last pony may suit the very last con testant to perfection. But, again, the chances are it will not. There is no apathy in the country districts. The work done by the con testants outside of Atlanta is re markable. The ponies were to have been pa raded Sunday, but the weather was not propitious. If the weather does not agair interfere the ponies will be shown in the business section of At lanta Wednesday morning at 10 o’clock. Wife Swallows 100 Grains of Bichloride ST. LOUIS. July 28.—Physicians to-day said there was no chance of recovery' for Mrs. Carrie Dubois, 21. who swallowed 100 grains of bichlo ride of mercury. She attempted suicide because her husband refused to allow her to ac company him on a picnic trip, which was a stag affair. Apnes Meara, 52 Beecher street. ITII Or IIEGRO Wounded Dunbar Merchant Not in Sympathy With Houston County Mob’s Action. MACON. July 28.—When G. F. Hammock, a merchant of Dunbar, was told at a private hospital here to-day that John Shake, the negro who shot yim Saturday night, had been lynched by a Houston County mob. he said: “I am sorry' the boys did that. Shake was a had negro, all right, but it wasn’t right to hang him.” Hammt-ck is not seriously injured, though weak from loss of blood. He expects to return to his home this yreek. Hammock detected the negro burg larizing his store about midnight. When he called on Shake to sur render, the negro fired a shotgun The shot fractured Hammock's left wrist and also caused a painful wound in the chest. The negro escaped and took refuge in the swamps below Wellston. A mob caught him late Sunday afternoon. After confessing that he did the shooting, the negro was hanged to a tree on the outskirts of Dunbar. Swats ’Skeeter and Wrecks Car; 3 Hurt ATLANTIC CITY. July 28.—Rais ing his hand to swat a mosquito, A. K. Siler, of Narbleth. Pa., who was driving an automobile around a curve near here, lost control of his machine. The machine went over an em bankment and the party of five were pinned beneath it. Three were seri ously hurt. WAREHOUSE MEETING AUGUST 5 JACKSON.—On August 5 the an nual meeting of the stockholders of the Farmers' Union warehouse will be held, when business of the past year will be gone over and officers and directors chosen. DIXIE MEN HELD ON COAST. PASA\ 'DNA, CAL.. July 28.—James Hutton and Louis Cole, claiming Ken tucky' as their home, are under arrest here, caught in the act of robbing the old residence of the late E. J. (Lucky) LBaldw ; n at Arcadia, 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 moisture-proof package. in the NATIONAL BISCUIT COMPANY Commission Government Act De nied to Friendly Committee. Lipscomb Act Up Tuesday A fight for the reference of the bill giving Augusta the commission form of government, by members of the kirhmond County delegation, fea tured Monday’s .session of the House, Judge Picquett winning in his efforts to have it referred to the Committee on Municipal Government, of which he is chairman. The authors of the bill, Olive and Garlington. sought to have the bill referred to the General Judiciary Committee No. 1, of which both are members. The Lipscomb taxation bill was set as a continuing order beginning Tuesday. This provides a tax of $50 on lobbyists; doubles the occupation tax of corporations; increases the tax on bottling plants; places an annual tax of $5 on automobiles; levies an inheritance tax and various other taxes to Increase the revenue of 1915. It is expected that this hill will occupy the House for several day's. If it passes within this time limit it will be a record time for Georgia lawmakers to dispose of so im portant a matter. Senator Kelley, of the Eighteenth District, introduced a bill in the Sen ate last Friday covering the same matter. This has not as yet been acted upon. Considerable discussion resulted when the optometrist bill, providing for a board to examine opticians in Georgia before they he allowed to practice, was read. This hill previous ly had been adversely' reported. Its author. Wallace Miller, of Bibb, urged that the bill be considered seriously. Blacks Avenge Death Of One of Their Race WAYCROSS, July 28.—Angered a* the killing of John Davis, a negro employee of the Hebard Cypress Company', a crowd of negro laborers to-day endeavored to kill Ike Beals, alias Charles Johnson, a negro, whose home is at Donaldsonville. Beals was shot a dozen times and is probably fatally wounded. He was brought to jail. Before B^als was captured by dep uties he wounded two io-groes. Rich Man a Negro; Death Bares Secret CHICAGO, July 28.—William Hen ry Lee, wealthy publisher whose $200,000 estate will be taken by the State of Illinois because there were no relatives to claim it, was a negro. For nearly 50 years he kept the se- ret. The secret of his being of negro blood was admitted by Fred C. Laird, for ten years his partner. Lee never married, Mr. Laird said, because he feared that in his children the secret of his negro ancestry might be re vealed. Appendix All Alone In London, Said Jack SAN FRANCISCO, July 28—Here ! s the latest joke Jack London, the famous author, is telling on himself; London vas operated on recently for appendicitis. After the ordeal the surgeon held up the severed ap pendix in his fingers for the patient (o si e. The author looked at it thoughtfully, then grinned and said: "It was a case of all alone in Lon don, wasn't it, doc?” TRIES II SHOOT HIS It; KILLS Reward Offered for Clem Poole, Slayer of Dalton Policeman. Posse Loses Trail. sane man will contend that the Au gusta disturbance justified its en forcement. If in foreign invasion or civil war the courts are actually closed and it is impossible to admin ister criminal Justice according to law, then, in the theater of active mil itary operations, where war really prevails, there Is a necessity to fur nish a substitute, for the civil author ity. and as no power h* left but tile military, it is allowed to govern b;- martial rule until the laws can have their free course. Constitution Paramount. Martial rule is employed when force may expel the civil authorities from a part of the State, or when the civil law is unable to perform Its functions, the military b^ing on the spot to ex ecute it where no civil authority ex ists. When it docs r»xfjq the Consti tution is imperative that it s*hall be paramount to the military. The power of arrest in this case would have secured the alleged dis turbers and law-breakers until the State was prepared for their trial ant the courts were ready to try them The men responsible for this atroci ty were tried by a court-martial and acquitted, but as the military was without jurifsdictlon. the conclusion reached is not binding upon the State Courts-martial may try offenses committed in violation of the military- law. as above defined, but acts done in the caprice of tyranny under martial rule make the military commander and his subordinates accountable to the law of the land, both by prose cution in the criminal courts and by civil action at the instance of the parties aggrieved. DALTON. July 28.—At an early hour this morning the posse organized to hunt down Clem Poole, who near midnight shot and killed Policeman Harry Cook while the officer was at tempting to arrest him. disbanded, the search being fruitless. Poole last night shot twice at his wife as he followed her to the home of her parents on First avenue. There Policeman Cook met him. As the officer advanced, Poole fired, the bul let piercing the po.iceman’s heart and bringing instant death. Henry Mitch ell, accompanying tue officer, grabbed the weapon from Poole, but he es caped. Bloodhounds trailed the fugi tive for a time and then lost the sceht. The murder has greatly aroused Dalton, for Policeman Cook was .i popular member of the force. He is survived by his wife. A reward of $100 has been offered by the city for Poole’s capture. Fog Drives Steamer Chalmette Aground NEW YORK, July 28.—The steam er Chalmette from New Orleans for New York went ashore early to-da.v in a thick fog while a mile and a half south of Barnpgaj. It is not believed that the Chal mette is in serious danger. Word received at the company’s office in this city said that the captain and crew were safe. CASTOR IA For Infants and Children, The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature Puts Ice in Bonnet And Goes to Church ALTON, ILL.. July 28.—Mrs E. B Clarkson, aged 28. of Alton, is using ice on her head to make the trip to and from the First Presbyterian Sun day School weekly, to keep up her record of fourteen years’ consecutive attendance. Mrs. Clarkson put? a small chunk of ice under her old-fashioned bonne: to prevent being overcome by the heat. In a paper carried at her «ide with her Bible she puts another piece. When the first piece melts, the sec- one piece is substituted. SPECIAL PRICE ON PARCELPOSTSCALES A $2.50 Scale for $1.25 Owing to the fact that we have an overstock of Parcel Post Scales, for a few days only we are of fering our $2.50 Scales for $1.25. These scales can be used as a family scale as well as for Parcel Post. They are graduated by ounces up to eleven pounds. Let us have your order at once, as our stock will not last long at this price. KING HARDWARE CO. 53-55 Peachtree 87 Whitehall CHAMBERUN-JOHNSON-DuBOSE CO. ATLANTA NEW YORK PARIS Wash Skirts Are Priced Regular and Extra Sizes of Pique and Ratine Skirts at Worth-While Savings All smartly tailored and fashioned skirts, as neat and trim as you could have bought at regular prices a few days ago. With us the new pricing marks the shaking down of stocks -—fortunately for you this comes several months before the sea son eloses and consequently the savings are timely. .08 For $ 3-^* Ratine Skirts A soft quality of white pique; a tailored style, straight lines, with a few tucks at waist line and in back, overlapping belt, buttoned to left side front. Sizes 23 to 28 inch waist. The extra sizes of the same style skirt are re duced from $1.95 to $1.25. I | In both regular and extra sizes—from 23 to 35 inch waist measure. White ratine skirts, smartly fsahioned, with broad tucked fold, fastening at left side, finished with a group of small tucks and with a belt at back. They will not remain long at this price! There is not a regular priced wash skirt in stock now. Every one has its price clipped, the ratines, the piques and the linens. Fine opportunities for saving. Agents for Butterick Patterns and Publications ChamberlifrJohnsoirDuBose Co.