Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, August 21, 1913, Image 5

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i. TTTE ATLANTA GEORGIAN ALT) NEWS. 100 BILLS STILL In compMment to Miss Eva Be&tle, of New Tork, who is visiting Miss Josephine Smith, after being the guest of Miss Marie Norris several weeks, Miss Edwina Harper gave a luncheon Wednesday morning at her home in Lee street. Luncheon was served on the shaded terrace on four small tables. After luncheon bridge was played for pret ty prizes. The guests included Misses Mary Murphy, Louise Jones, Ruth Small, of Macon, who is visiting Mrs. R. H. White; Emma Jordan, Katherine Perry, Kathleen Law, Luclle Bean, Theodosia Andrews, Charlie McClain, Brock Jeter, Leila Ponder, Mildred Thomas, Annie Ray, Marlon Woolley, Carrie Parrish, Frances Springer, Josephine Smith and Miss Beatie. Miss Leila Ponder will entertain at bridge Thursday afternoon in honor of Miss Beatie. Clubwomen Asked to See Dairy Train. The Southern Railway’s dairy train, which will be in Atlanta Thursday and Friday, will be of interest to housekeepers. Members of the City Federation are especially invited to visit the train to see the exhibits and hear the lectures that will be given by experts and skilled men In the knowledge and the care and the hand ling of milk. her guest, Carol Dean, of Gainesville; Emmie Willingham, Theodosia Wil lingham, Mary Blalock, Laura and Christine Hooper and Van McKinnon. Swimming Party at East Lake. Mrs. Dan I. MacIntyre, Jr., and Miss Frances Ansley gave a swim ming party ai East Lake Wednesday afternoon in compliment to Miss Ju lia MacIntyre’s guest, Miss Fraser Mitchell, of Thomasville, and for Mrs. George Ansley, a bride. After swimming, the party had tea on the porch of the clubhouse. About twelve guests were invited. [ Governor Is Busy Approving the Measures Passed by Last Legislature. PERSONAL Miss Annie B. Cable is seriously 111 at Dr. Crawshaw’s Sanitarium, fol lowing an operation. Miss Ona Cochran and Miss Edith Hays have returned from the moun tains of’North Georgia. Mrs. Walker Dunson and little daughter, Evelyn, will return next week from Warm Springs. Mrs. Daley-Hickey, of Macon, is being entertained in an informal way as Mrs. John J. Lynch’s guest. Mrs. G. Aubry Fuller and Miss Catherine Riser, of Birmingham, are the guests of Mrs. J. G. Fuller. Birthday Party. Miss Carrie Elice Powers enter tained at a party in honor of her third birthday recently. The house was decorated with pink and green. Three tiny candles burned in the cen ter of the birthday cake. After refreshments were served games were played on the lawn. Among those Invited were Misses Daisy Lovelace, Lillian Mitchell, Ethel Stein, Annie Maud Alexander, Eve lyn Louise Schultz, Martha Peacock, Grace Withrow, Jannie Mead, Rosa- lee Powers, and Messrs. Jack Stein, Bosell Turner Hen'«on, Billy Love lace and Willie Withrow. W. C. T. U. Meeting. The W. C. T. U. will hold its reg ular service Thursday at 3:30 p. m. in the Sunday school room of Trin ity church. Mary L. McLendon, pres ident and Jare A. Adkins, secretary, urge the member to attend, as the meeting will be important. Church Gives Festival. An ice cream festival will be given at the Pryor Street Presbyterian Church, corner Pryor and Glenn streets, -Friday evening. Mrs. Ransom Hostess. Mrs. Ronald Ransom will give a tea at the Piedmont Club Wednes day afternoon in compliment, to Miss Sallie Cobb Hull, whose marriage to Mr. Philip Weltner will take pla?3 September 3. Twelve guests will be invited. At the Driving Club. The social quietude of midsummer will be broken by the regular Sat urday evening dinner dance at the Piedmont Driving Club, for which several parties are being arranged. The usual Sunday evening supper also will be served, the week-end at this popular clubhouse promising to be unusually pleasant. The terrace is the scene of many informal par ties every afternoon, the club man agement being always ready to ex tend hospitality. For Miss Irwin. Mrs. William K. Jenkins will give a series of bridge parties next week for her cousin, Miss Irma Irwin, of Mont gomery, who arrives to-morrow to visit her. Miss Irwin will be the central figure In a party of four at tending the East Lake dance Satur day evening. Sewing Club Meets. Miss Mary Lucy Turner entertained the members of her sewing club Wed nesday morning at her home on Ponce DeLeon avenue. Those present were Misses Edith Dunson, Elizabeth Dunson, Gladys Dunson, Grace Thorn, Helen Thorn, Martha Ryder, Annie Lou Pagett and Mr. Eric Thrasher is convalescent at his home on Courtland street, aft er a severe illness in New York. Mrs. W. M. McKenzie is visiting her sister, Mrs. J. C. Wilson, at Man hattan, Cal., a suburb of Los An geles. Mr. and Mrs. Charles J. Haden will spend the week-end on a motor tour of the country surrounding Tallulah Falls. Mr. H. A. Snelling, formerly of Atlanta, now a resident of Baltimore, is the guest of his mother, Mrs. J. S. Snelling. Mr. and Mrs. Ulric Atkinson have returned to Atlanta after a short stay in the Adirondacks and in New York City. Mr. and Mrs. Charles West an nounce the birth of a daughter, who will be called Helen Rebecca, for her two grandmothers. ^ Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Harper and Marguerite Harper are spending two weeks at Lake Toxaway and other North Carolina resorts. Miss Annie Laurie Thiot, of Sa vannah, will visit Mrs. George Win- ship next week on the completion ot her visit to Miss Ruth Barry. Miss Mary Helen Moody will re turn to Atlanta September 1 from Toxaway, where she is being chap eroned by Mrs. Milton Dargan. Mrs. J. M. Chandler, of Sumter. S. C„ spent several weeks In Atlanta with her sisters, Mrs. Arminiua Wright and Mrs. H. M. Dunwoody. Mrs. Fred Cannaday, of Roanoke, and little daughter, Adelaide, arrived Wednesday morning to be the guests of Mrs. Cannaday’s sister, Mrs. Dud ley Cowles, through September. Mr. and Mrs. William Schroder have returned from New York, where they spent ten days at the Hotel Mc- Alpin, followed by a short stay at the Marlbcrough-Blenheim, Atlantic City. Miss Callie Hoke Smith left At lantic City Monday for Toxaway, where she joined Mrs. Welborn Hill. >Iiss Lucy Hoke Smith remained with her mother in Atlantic City and to gether they will come to Atlanta the first week in September to open their home in West Peachtree street for the winter. Miss Callie Hoke Smith meeting them here. With virtually all of the important general bills signed in more than twelve hours of hard work Tuesday, Governor Slaton started to work early Wednesday morning with about a hundred local bills on his desk that must be signed by midnight to-night. Among the important measures that received the official signature and became law's Tuesday were the general appropriations bill, the Inher itance tax bill, the bill establishing a home for wayward girls, the perma nent registration bill, the medical practices act, the bill increasing the occupation tax on corporations, and the “blue sky” law relating to the sale of stocks and bonds. By signing the wayward home girls' bill the Governor effectually disposed of the rumor that he intended to veto the measure. The basis of the report, it is understood, was the Governor’s antipathy to signing any bill that would increase the appro priations while it made no provision for increasing the revenues propor tionately. Telegrams Flood Office. Tuesday Governor Slaton received between seventy-five and one hundred telegrams from individuals and or ganizations, urging him to sign the bill, which doubtless influenced him to a certain extent, together with the new report that tax returns showed an increase in taxable values of sev eral myiions of dollars. The appointment of a committee of two men and one woman to have charge of the home probably will not be announced until Governor Slaton returns from Colorado Springs, where he will attend the conference of Gov ernors which will be held there four days beginning next Tuesday. He will be accompanied by Mrs. Slaton, Colonel FTederic J. Paxon, chief of staff, and Mrs. Paxon. The party will leave Atlanta Saturday and expect to arrive in Colorado Springs Monday. The conference next week promises to be the greatest gathering of Gov ernors ever held in the United States. Forty-six out of the forty-eight Gov ernors of the Union have declared they will be present. Great Welcome Promised. Governor Ammons, of Colorado, and Mayor McKesson, of Colorado Springs, will welcome the visitors, and Governor Spry, of Utah, will re spond to the greetings. The perma nent organization will then be effect ed, and in the evening the Governors and their wives will be guests at a re ception given by Mrs. Ammons, wife of the Governor of Colorado. Wednesday the official sessions of the conference will begin, and will continue until Saturday evening. Among the speakers will be Governors Cruce, of Oklahoma; Lister, of Wash ington; O’Neal; of Alabama; Hunt, of Arizona: Hodges, of Kansas; Dunne, of Illinois; Baldwin, of Con necticut, and Carey, of Wyoming. WATER BOARD TO TALK SUIT. The City Water Board meets Wed nesday afternoon at 3:30 o’clock. W. E. Dunn, chairman of the board, said many matters of importance i probably would come up for discus- j sion, including the suit for $50,000 damages against the city by the At lanta Steel Company. IN DIGESTION? NEW SCHOOL AT FORSYTH. FORSYTH.—Preparations are be ing made for the opening of Bank| Stephens Institute, the local high school, on September 1. Professor J s R. Campbell, of Jonesboro, the new principal, is already here. The new $30,000 school building is completed. Stop it quickly; Have your grocer send you one doa. bottles of SHIVA R GINGER ALE Drink with meals, and if not prompt ly relieved, get your money back at our expense. Wholesome, deli cious, refreshing. Prepared with the celebrated Shlvar Mineral Water and the purest flavoring material*. SHIVAR SPRING, Manufacturers SHELTON, S. C. S. L. ADAMS CO., Distributors, Atlanta. YOU WILL HAVE TO HURRY If You Want to Get Any of the Bargains at the HAYNES AUCTION ONLY A FEW DAYS MORE. NEVER BEFORE SUCH AN EPIDEMIC OF ENTHUSIASM IN > ATLANTA AT A SALE OF THIS KIND. Especially at this season of the year. THERE IS ONLY ONE ANSWER. EVERYBODY IS GETTING BARGAINS or they would not turn out in such c ^wds. Customers that bought the first day are still buying. Come and see and be convinced that this is xeaily a bargain feast. Sales daily at 11:30 a. m. and 3:30 p. m. EUGENE V. HAYNES CO, Briggs & Rei i, Auctioneers. Killed in Runaway- After Pho'ning ‘Joke’ Report of Auto Hurt PENSACOLA, Aug. 20.—A few minutes after jokingly telephoning his daughter that he had been struck by an automobile and Injured, R. A. Hendricks, a carpenter, was killed when :he horse he was driving lan away. Hendricks telephoned his daughter just before getting into the buggy, telling her he had been injured and was on the way to a sanitarium. Aft er he had ridden a short distance, the horse became frightened and ran away. Hendricks was thrown out when the buggy hit a post. A physician and ambulance were summoned and started with him to a sanitarium, but the injured man died on the way. Mrs. CarolineWeaver, Fulton Pioneer, Dies Mrs. Caroline Weaver, a lifelong resident of Fulton County, died at the home of her son. Captain Homer Weaver, No. 17 South Wellington street, Tuesday night at 11:30 o’clock. She was 81 years old. The funeral will be held from the resi dence Wednesday afternoon at 5 o’clock. The body will then be taken to the Donehoo undertaking parlors, and Thursday morning will be ship ped over the Seaboard to Tucker. Ga., for interment. Besides her son, Homer, w r ho has charge of the armory at the Audito rium, Mrs. Weaver is survived by two sons and two daughters—J. H. Wea ver, a contractor; W. W. Weaver, Mrs. L. C. Wilson and Mrs. L. S. Me- Mullln. She is the widow of Judge W. D. Weaver, who was on the bench in Atlanta several years. OBITUARY Evelyn Cates, the 8-year-old daugh ter of Mr. and Mrs. C. I. Cates, died at 8 o'clock Tuesday night at a local sanitarium. Funeral arrange ments will be made later. Mrs. M. C. Weaver, 82 years old, died late Tuesday night at the home of her son Homer Weaver, No 17 South Wellington street. Surviving her are three sons. Homer, Hollie and Will Weaver, and two daugh ters. Mrs. L. C. McMillan and Mrs Louise Wilson. The Body of H. A. Bailey, of Bear Creek, Ala., who died Tuesday from injuries received in falling from a train, is at Patterson's chapel, awaiting the arrival of relatives from Alabama. HORSE THIEF BREAKS JAIL. CLEVELAND.—Robert Ashe, who stole a horse from Robert Sears, of Tesnatee Valley, near Cleveland, last week, has escaped from the White County Jail by springing two Iron window bars apart and swinging to the ground on a blanket rope. F Passengers Held Up in Outskirts of Portland, Oreg.—Tramp Wounded by Robbers. PORTLAND, OREO., Aug. 20.— Passengers on the Soo-Spokane ex press train on the Oregon-Washlng- ton Railroad and Navigation line were forced to stand In line and give up their money and valuables to-day when five masked men held up the train as it was passing under the East Twelfth Street Bridge. Every coach was visited by the rob bers and more than a score of shots were fired to frighten the passengers and trainmen. A man said to be have been beat ing his way on the top of a coach was wounded by the bandit. Rewards totalling $20,000 were of fered for the capture of the rob ber*. The holdup men stopped the train shortly after it left the 9tatlon. The fireman jumped from the engine cab and ran to telephone the police as soon as he realized what was hap pening. The engineer remained at his plhce, one of the robbers covering lilm with a revolver while the others went back Into the Pullman coache3 and held up the passengers. The observation car occupants gave up $87 in cash and $500 worth of Jewelry, according to estimates made by railroad detectives. The police declared they believed the wounded man who said he was beating his way on top of a Pullman was one of the robber gang and that he was struck by one of the bullets fired by the robbers to intimidate the trainmen. Toads May Save The South Millions JACKSON, MISS., Aug. 20.—Ex perts of Mississippi's Agricultural De partment believe the garden toad of fers the solution of the boll weevil problem, that hae cost the South mil lions of dollars. A scries of experiments shows toads to be the best weevil destroyers so far found. In the stomach of one was found 100 weevils, in that another, 70. Backs New Railroad Line Across Georgia FORSYTH, Aug. 20.—R. L. Wil liams, Jr., a Macon lawyer and for mer resident of Forsyth, is promot ing the plan to build a new railroad to connect Columbus and Augusta. The route from Columbus includes Talbotfon, Thomaston. Forsyth, Ju liette, Monticello, Eatonton, Union Point and Washington to Augusta. The plan is to Interest local capi talists, business men and farmers all along the route, and they are being approached to this end. INJURED IN COLLISION. FORSYTH.—A. L. Ham, of Smarra, was painfully injured in a collision between a motorcycle and the buggy In which he was driving. He was thrown to the ground, landing on his head. CASTOR l A For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature Man Once Candidate Against Lincoln Dies LOS ANGELES, Aug. 20.—Herman Silver, a pioneer capitalist of the West, and for many years a govern ment employee, died suddenly at his home. He was 84 years old. Mr. Silver at one time was a can didate against Abraham Lincoln for Clerk of the Circuit Court in Illinois. TRAIN KILLS CONDUCTOR. DALTON, Aug., 20.—EM Salmon, of Rome, conductor on a northbound Southern Railway local freight train, was killed when he was run down by his train here to-day. Salmon was supervising the switch ing of cars and was struck by the tender of the engine, going under it. E- -EISEMAN BROS., Inc. Suit Values Extraordinary! A limited lot of Men’s and Young Men’s Two and Three-Piece Suits of ex cellent quality and some splendid NOR FOLK SUITS at astounding reductions. One lot Two and Three-Piece Suits, sizes 32 to 36—absolute values $12.50 to $18.00, now selling at One lot Two and Three-Piece Suits, BLUE (|)n pa SERGE, sizes 32 to 35—absolute values \ j £|l| $12.50 to $18.00, now selling at V ■ V One lot Two and Three-Piece Suits, sizes ni* 32 to 38—absolute values $15.00 to $22.50, ^ now selling at V One lot NORFOLK SUITS (Two-Piece), broken assortment and the season’s best models—absolute values818.00 to $25.00 $12.50 25% Reduction on Other Lines of Men’s Clothing ANY STRAW HAT now 95c Panama and Bangkok Hats—Half Price! Scores of Bargains in Children’s Wearables Men’s Furnishings at Cut Prices SHOES at Clearance Prices LUGGAGE SPECIAL—Matting Suit Case, splendidly madp, ex- cdlently trimmed, cloth-lined. Regular PA 2.00 values, now I .DU Guaranteed Cowhide Suit Case. The best suit case in Atlanta for the $5.00 price |7 ires. fnc. 11-13-15-17 Whitehall- CHAMBERLIN-JOHNSON-DuBOSE CO. ATLANTA NEW YORK PARIS The August Outclearing of Laces Gets Under Way at 9 o’Clock To-morrow Valenciennes, Linen, Shadow and Venise Laces— Huge Quantities at Huge Reductions. The August outclearing of laces at Chamberlin-Johnson- DuBose Co.’s has come to mean for many the time to purchase those dozens and dozens of yards of laces that a woman needs as a new season approaches. Perhaps at no other time are laces marked at such saving prices. This because we are discarding one pattern and another, clearing out all odd surpluses, making ready for the new stocks, in short, starting afresh with the new season. So, in light of the prices below and the fact that there are new dresses and underwear to be made and (not to be over looked) that the Christmas saving will doubtless be under way a long while before another such lace sale is announced, take the profit of this sale as your own. Here- 79 Valenciennes Laces a doz. They Wee $1.35 to $2.25 doz. a doz. They Were 85c to$1.35 doz. 1 Cc They Were Id in - 50c to 85c doz. These will be sold only by the dozen yards. Edges and insertions, some of them in match sets—hundreds of dozens. 79 Shadow Laces c They Were 7Ac They Were yi - $1.00 to $2.00 yd. «“ ?<*• 85c to $1.00 yd. They Were 15 yd ' 50c to 85c yd. A splendid variety of these in widths from 3 inches to 9 inches, cream and white edges and insertions, dainty patterns. f Linen 39 £ »40 5 c d5' yd. yd. Laces They Were 50c to $1.00 a yd. They Were 30c to 40c a yd. Included are edges and insertions of Cluny, Torchon and Smyrna laces—and they are all linen, sturdy and true, the kinds that make many successful round trips to the laundry. And gathered into the sale is an odd and comparatively small lot of Venise edges and bands. The price tickets show they were worth up to 35c a yard. Now they are 8c a yd. A Little Notice of Big Savings In the Wash Goods Department This is the smallest advertisement we have published this season on ■wash fabrics and it tells of the greatest savings, as those who heed it shall learn. The blue pencil man has gathered together all the oddments of wash fabrics for quick disposal. We say quick because there are 25a and 29c white checked and striped voiles at 9c a yard, and 25c piques at 9c, 45c silk and cotton marquisettes at 11c, 25c white repps at 12Vfec, again 29c voiles at 15c, and 65c Swisses at 15c, and other values, very much greater, that we would rather you see in the store than in an ad vertisement. They would seem incredible here. No, they are not per fectly fresh, they have been handled, the shades are not always the best, but it has been many a day since y.nvwere offered such values. Agents for Butterick Patterns and Publications Chamberlin=Johnson=DuBose Co.