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HEATtSrS SUNDAY AMERICAN, ATLANTA, GA„ SUNDAY, AUGUST 24, 1913.
5 H
RTF
D. A. R. COMPILES BOOK
OF LEGENDS OF GEORGIA.
M RS. SHEPHARD W. FOSTER,
State regent of the Daughters
of the American Revolution,
has been busy al! summer organizing
chapters of the D. A. R. and getting
ready for publication “The Book of
Legends of Georgia,” which ha» been
compiled by the various chapters in
the State.
One of the most recent chapters
organized was the James Mason
Chapter, D. A. R., at Forsyth, which
met at the home of Mrs. Richard P.
Brook in July, and has since been
officially taken into the society.
The officers are: Mrs. J. O. Pon
der, regent; Mrs. W. C. Hill, vice re
gent; Miss Elizabeth Threatt, regis
trar; Miss Florrie Hollis, assistant
registrar; Mrs. Charles Hardin, treas
urer; Mra Lee McGehee, Miss Eliza
beth Hardin, corresponding secretary,
and Miss Kate Ford, genealogist.
CLUBWOMEN ATTEND THE
DAIRY TRAIN LECTURES.
T HE dairy train lectures and dem
onstrations which were made n
the Terminal Station Thursday
and Friday were well attended by the
women of the Atlanta Federation and
other women not in woman's organi
zations. Mrs. Charles J. Haden, pres
ident of the City Federation, has
taken a vital Interest In all that per
tains to the question of health and
civic betterment, was one of the in
terested visitors to the train.
Other clubwomen attended the two
lectures on Friday given for the ben
efit of the housekeeper and mother.
• • •
MISS PETERS TO LEAVE.
M ISS ELLEN PETERS, D. A. R..
will go to North Carolina for s>
few weeks in September. Mrs
Thomas Peters, U. D. C., who has
been visiting In Virginia for two
months, will return home Septem
ber 1.
• * •
FEDERATED WOMEN’S CLUB
IS PLANNED FOR AUGUST.
A MOVEMENT was started several
weeks ago at Augusta to estab
lish a Federation of Women's
Clubs in that city. Wednesday the
idea took definite shape, and a num
ber of the representative clubwomen
of Augusta met In the assembly room
of the Young Women's Christian As
sociation and formally decided to or
ganize a club.
The parliamentary c 1 a - - will hold
its meetings until the last of Septem
ber, at which time their year of
study will be brought to a close, and
then the Federation of Women's Clubs
will be started.
The committee selected to look into
the formation of the club is Mrs. A. H.
Brenner, Mrs. Frank Flemming, Mrs.
Percy Burnam and Mra Lindsay Ar
rington.
• • •
CHURCH DECORATED WITH
FLOWERS PASTOR SENT.
M RS. E. L. CONNOLLY, member
of the Board of the Uncle Re
mus Memorial Association, was
the recipient last week of a box of
splendid gladioli sent to her by the
Rev. S. M. Sayloe, one of the dele
gates who attended the recent Pres
byterian conference held in this city.
The gladioli included every color and
variety of that flower, and were grown
in the garden of Dr. Sayloe at his
home in Huntington, Ind. Growing
gladioli is a fad with Dr. Sayloe, and
he has several thousand bulbs in his
garden.
Mrs. Connolly used the flowers to
decorate the platform at the Second
Baptist Church on Banner Day.
HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY
GIVEN ’CUE AT CLAYTON.
T HE speakers of the Georgia State
Horticultural Society were giv
en a delightful barbecue at
Clayton Wednesday, at which time the
tables were set beneath great oak
trees and the old-fashioned barbecue
menu was served in a most tempting
manner by the ladies who prepared
the entertainment.
Among the guests present from a
distance were E. Cole, of Washing
ton, D. C.; Ju'.ien Field, of Atlanta;
Professor. J. W, Firor, of Athens; Mrs.
Julia O'Keefe Nelson, of Atlanta-!
James D. Price, of Athens; W. B.
Marcus and Mrs. R. C. Birkmans, of
Augusta; Dr. J. P. Fort, of Mount
Airy; Dr. and Mrs. J. A. Green, of
Macon, and Mr. and Mrs. Anderson,
of South Carolina.
MRS. W. D.’ELLIS TO VISIT
BOWDEN WHEELER.
M RS. W. D. ELLIS, president of
the Atlanta Memorial Associa
tion, with her husband, Colonel
W. D. Ellis and her daughter, Mrs
Bishop, will spend the remainder of
the month at Bowden Wheeler
Springs, and will return during the
early part of September.
« • •
Mr. and Mrs. George. Hinman and
family, who have been spending some
time at Sewanee, Tenn., with their
family, will return home next month.
In a recent production of "Don," a
comedy in three acts, given under the
direction of M. Benedict Papot, who is
delightfully remembered as the dis
tinguished guest of Mrs. Albert
Thornton last winter, Mr. Hinman,
who is organizer of the Story Tellers'
League of Atlanta, took the part of
Canon Bonington, the rector of Old-
wick, in “Don" very successfully. His
•on, William Hinman, took the part
of Albert Tbompsett.
Mr and Mrs. Hinman had planned
a "trip to Europe for the summer, but
changed their plans after they went
to Sewanee, and have been there since
June. . . .
COLLEGIANS PRESENT
VIEWS ON SUFFRAGE.
T HE Atlanta Suffrage Association
had an unusually interesting
program Wednesday afternoon
when a number of college men gave
their views on the suffrage question
and why woman should be enfran
chised. _ „ ,
The speakers were George Baker
Mayer, of Cleveland, Ohio, a student
in th architectural department of the
University of Pennsylvania; Charles
McDaniels, student of the Universi'v
of Georgia; Victor Victor, a member
of the senior class of the same uni
versity, and Leonard Grossman, who
discussed the State-wide campaign
for the enfranchisement *f women.
* ♦ •
MALE MILLINER GIVES
FALL STYXES EXHIBIT.
A UNIQUE entertainment was giv
en last Tuesday in one of the
Eastern cities when a famous
man milliner gave an open-air exhi
bition of fall hats.
The clubwomen, the society women
and all the women of the nearby
towns attended, and the occasion was
one of unusual Interest to womankind
in general.
At the appointed time six big auto
mobiles, bearing the models, correc*ly
dressed and wearing the latest styles
in hats, were driven out to one of the
beautiful public parks, where they
were exhibited.
CENTER HILL WOMEN PUSH
ROAD PROJECT.
T HE Woman's Civic Improvement
Club of Center Hill held Its reg
ular semi-monthly meeting at
the home of Mrs. John Starr August
13. There was a good attendance.
The organization committee reported
fourteen new members.
The committee of sixteen, appointed
at the last meeting to go before the
County Commissioners to urge the
widening of the Mayson and Turner's
Ferry road as far west as the Peyton
road, reported that the full commit
tee went before said’eommissioners;
that the commissioners stated this
was on the active list, that in their
opinion it was a rather large piece of
work and probably could not be com
pleted in less than two years.
That, on the contrary, the commit
tee had been informed that County
Surveyor Wilson, in making his last
report, had said it was a small piece
of work, and could be completed in a
short time.
The club, upon the suggestion of
this committee, appointed a commit
tee of two to wait upon Mr. Wilson
and Mr. Donaldson in order to find, if
possible, how long it will really take
to do this work. Their report will
be made at the next meeting, so that
the club can take the matter up at
the next meeting of the County Com
missioners.
A constitution was adopted. After
the business session the club enjoyed
a social hour.'
* * *
EUGENICS DRAMA FOR U. S.
HEALTH CONGRESS.
T HE presentation of a social drama
at the Health Congress in Buf
falo. dealing with the great prob
lem of fitness for marriage, that is
appealing to the entire country to
day, is to be one of the most interest
ing features of the session.
The play is “Damaged Goods” and
deals with the marriage of a young
man who marries against his physi
cian’s advice. The plot of the play
is filled with a tragic aftermath of
calamities, and is said to carry a les
son well worth the learning. The play
is by Eugene Brieux.
Among the well-known speakers at
the Health Congress will be Dr.
Charles W. Elliot, president emeritus
of Harvard University; Professor
Thomas W. Balliet, dean of the School
of Pedagogy, New York University;
President William T. Foster, of Read
College, Portland, Oreg., and Hon.
Philander P. Claxton, United States
Commissioner of Education.
The question of fitness for marriage
has been engaging the thought of
many of the Atlanta clubwomen and
has become one of great importance
to the world in general, as it means
the health and happiness of the future
generat ons.
It is Lively that Atlanta will be rep
resented by one or more clubwomen
when the congress meets.
• * *
MRS. WOLFF TO VISIT HER
DAUGHTER IN EAST.
M ^S. M’DOWELL WOLFF, chair- j
man of the educational com- 1
mittee of the Atlanta Chapter, i
D. A. R., will go to H ertford, Conn., !
to spend some time with her daugh- ,
ter, Mrs. Arthur G. Krug, who Is in ■
the States for several months. Mrs. ,
Krug has been living at Sao Paulo, j
South America, for several years, and :
is pleasantly known in Atlanta, where j
she has frequently been the guest of
her brother, Dr. Bernard Wolff, and
her mother. Mrs. McDowell Wolff.
Mrs. Wolff will leave early in Sep
tember for Connecticut, and will be
absent some time, visiting her old
home in Virginia before returning to
Atlanta.
* * »
D, A. R. GIVES WASHINGTON
SEMINARY SCHOLARSHIP.
T HE Bessie Candler scholarship to
be given by the Atlanta Chapter.
D. A. R., will Include a four-
year term in the Washington Semi
nary In all the English and literary
branches.
A number of young girls have ap
plied for the scholarship, which will
he given without competitive exami
nation. Many women's clubs are giv
ing scholarships and have done a
splendid work in an educational way.
The United Daughters of the Con
federacy will give a number of fine
scholarships this year. Last ye^r they
gave fifteen, including the best col
leges in the United States.
* * «
MRS. A. P. COLES HEADS AT
LANTA WOMAN’S CLUB.
( HI OR the coming year the officers
for the Atlanta Woman’s Club
will be: Mrs. A. G. Coles, presi
dent; Miss Alice Baxter, vice presi
dent; Mrs. Linton C. Hopkins, second
vice president; Mrs. Lott Warren, re
cording secretary; Mrs. Albert Akers,
assistant recording secretary; Mrs. M.
M. Davies, treasurer; Mrs. V. H.
Kriegshaber. corresponding secretary,
and Mrs. Arthur Powell, auditor.
The standing committees will be:
Mrs. Howard McCall, finance; Mrs.
William Percy, hospitality; Mrs. D. I.
Carson, year book; Mrs. James Jack-
son, resolutions, and Mrs. A. O.
Woodward, calendar.
The program will open October 13,
with the installation of the new offi
cers, which ceremony will take place
at the Woman’s Club house in West
Baker street. Mrs. Henry DeWar will
have charge of the program.on Octo
ber 28, which will be on prisons and
jails.
On November 10 the eighteenth
birthday of the club will be cele
brated. There will be an elaborate
program and many notable club
women coming to Atlanta will take
part in the ceremonies.
November 24 has been set aside as
Conservation Day, with Mrs. Lee
Worsham as chairman. Art Day will
be celebrated on December 8, with
Miss Virginia Woolley, president of
the Pen and Brush Club, as chair
man. Mrs. Calkins will talk on light,
air and sunshine December 22, in
troducing some new and interesting
suggestions along the line of health
and hygiene.
New Year’s Day -ill be observed
by the Atlanta Woman’s Club with
a beautiful reception, at which time
the officers of the club will receive
the guests.
Mrs. Edward Brown will present a
•program on Children’s Day, January
5. Mrs. Spencer Atkinson will ar
range the program for Education
Day, which will be an interesting one
This will be January 11.
College Day will be observed and
Mrs. Emma Garrett Boyd will be
chairman for the day’s program on
January 26. Home economics will find
a place on the year’s program with
Mrs. J. F. Spratling as chairman. Mrs.
Peel will have charge of the Music
Day program on February 23. Mrs.
A. R. Colcord will arrange the pro
gram for Civic Day, March 9. April
23 will be Literature Day, with Mrs.
Spiker as chairman.
The last public day on the program
will be Industrial Day, with Mrs.
Frank Neely as chairman.
Chairmen of the standing commit
tees are: Mrs. J. D. Matthewson. li
brary; Mrs. Dan C. Lyle, lecture; Mrs.
Spencer Atkinson, education; Mr3.
Edward Brown. Children’s Day; Mrs
Frank Neely, industrial; Mrs. Irvine
Thomas, child welfare; Mrs. Charles
Haden, federation; Mrs. William C.
Spiker, literature; Miss Virginia
Woolley, arts and i ^fts; Mrs. F. J.
Spratling, home economics; Mrs. Wil
liam L. Peel, music; Mrs. A. R. Col
cord, civic: Mrs. Hamilton Douglas,
parliamentary law; Miss Willette Al
len, kindergarten; Mrs. Emma Con-
nally, current events: Mrs. Lee Wor
sham, conservation: Mrs. J. R. Watts,
floral; Mrs. Hayner McFadden. press;
Mrs. Jullen T. Bradley, scrapbook:
Mrs. Lyman Amsden, repairs; Mrs.
W .B. Price-Smith, reserve; Mrs. J.
K. Ottley, Legislature; Mrs. Harry
DeWar, prisons and Jails: Mrs. N. H.
Kirkpatrick, health and hygiene; Mrs.
D. I. MacIntyre, philanthropy.
The Atlanta Woman’s Club will
take up some important work as soon
as the Initial fall meeting is held.
♦ * *
WOMAN’S CLUB ISSUES
DAINTY BLUE YEAR BOOK.
T HE ATLANTA WOMAN’S CLUB,
with Mrs. A. P. Coles as presi
dent, has Issued Its Year Book,
which is a credit to the year book
committee, composed of Mrs. Henry
Bernard Scott, chairman, and Mrs. A.
P. Coles, Mrs. Lott Warren, Mrs. Wil
liam Hurd Hillyer, Mrs. J. N, Mc-
Eachern and Mrs. Victor Kriegshaber.
The year book has a dainty blue
cover and Is illuminated on the front
page by a picture of the Woman's
Club house.
• * •
SCHOOL FOR MOUNTAIN
CHILDREN OPENS SOON.
The Mineral Bluff School, founded
several years ago by Miss Helen
Gray, of Atlanta, who is traveling in
Finland. Russia and other foreign
countries studying political science In
the interest of the Southern Wom
an’s Economic and Political Associa
tion,^ which she founded last October
at New Orleans, Is about to begin its
fall session.
This school for mountain children
has been successful despite the fact
that it was started without a dollar,
and had only the brains and energies
of capable women at the back of the
enterprise.
On account of the congested condi
tions of the school the management
is builting a $1,300 class hall, where
the mothers can meet, the closing
exercises of the school can be held
and lectures on civic improvement
and other entertainment may be
given. This hall has been built with
the co-operation of the citizens of
the community, who have given of
their own incomes and freely of their
labor In the construction of the build
ing; but money is needed to meet
the expenses.
The pupils of the Mineral Bluff
School will devote the first few weeks
of the school term to canning the veg
etables which abound in the neigh
borhood, the products to be put on
the market and sold to add to the
maintenance fund of the school. Two
capable teachers, who graduated from
the State Normal and Industrial
school, will be in charge of the school
this year, and will introduce into the
work new and valuable ideas for the
development of the pupils along In
dustrial and other useful lines.
Contributions to this school are de
sired, and scholarships which cost but
$50 are asked for girls who desire t i
prepare themselves for a more useful
and wider scope in life than their
limited opportunities have givin
them.
The president of the Southern
Mountain Educational Association is
Mrs. Edward W. LaZarus. and it has
been largely due to Mrs. LaZarus that
the school has prospered and grown
as it has, for she has given much of
her time and thought to the work of
developing it.
The school will open September 1
with an increas® in attendance.
* * •
FORMER STATE REGENT
WRITES D. A. R. HISTORY.
Mrs. John M. Graham, former State
regent of the United Daughters of
the American Revolution, is writing
an interesting history of the organi
zation in Georgia, which, when com
piled into book form, will be a valu
able asset to the organization.
* * *
MRS. BEACH VISITING AT
NACOOCHEE VALLEY.
Mrs. Lila Stowe Beach, a promi
nent member of the Atlanta Regis
tered Nurses’ Association, has gone
to Nacoochee Valely to spend a week
with her daughter, Miss Kathleen
Beach, who has been spending the
summer with the Misses Glenn, at
Sautee. Napoochee Valley. Mrs. Beach
will return the latter part of next
week.
• • •
ATLANTA WOMEN TO HELP
DIRECT CANAL EXPOSI
TION.
That Atlanta will be represented at
the Panama-Pacific International Ex
position by a number of her foremost
club women Is an assured fact. This
exposition carries with it, besides its
features of general Interest, especial
interest in the fact that, for the first
time, women will act on the same
footing officially with the men en
gaged In the enterprise.
When it was decided that California
should have the exposition, a number
of the mos* prominent women in
that State went be fore the Board of
Directors and offered their services,
provided they be fciven equal author
ity with the men.. Their proposition
was accepted, and the Woman’s
Board was organized at once.
This board is composed of Califor
nia women who are in close proxim
ity to the work, but other women of
prominence will be asked to co-oper
ate with the California women. Jane
Addams will give valuable assistance
to the work of sociology, which will
be promoted by Alvin E. Pope, chief
of the Department of Social Economy
at the exposition. Other women
known throughout the United States
.and Europe will be asked to serve on
the Advisory Board.
It is a matter of great pride to the
women of the various clubs through
out the entire world that the classi
fications will not be made by sex.
but that the men and women will ex
hibit tilde by side, and with equal
privileges.
The Incorporated Woman’s Board
jvill provide a fund for the mainte
nance of a corp9 of woman atten
dants, and distinguished women from
all over the world will be asked to
attend the exposition, the Woman’s
Board defraying their expenses from
a fund they expect to raise later.
These women will be sociologists of
distinction from America and abroad.
Officers of the Incorporated Wom
an's Board are Mrs. Phoebe A.
Hearst, honorary president; Mrs.
Fred G. Sanborn, president; Mrs.
Lovell White, vice president; Mrs.
Gailyard Stony, secretary; Mrs. P. E.
Bowles, treasurer, and Mrs. Charles
W. Black, auditor.
Although rather far in the future
to be discussing plans for pleasure,
many of the Atlanta club women have
signified their intention of attending
the exposition, and It is generally
understood that there will be at least
one Georgia woman on the Advisory
Board when it is completed.
* * *
MISS KOCH DESCRIBES AD
VANCE OF SUFFRAGE.
M ISS KATHERINE KOCH, corre
sponding secretary of the Geor
gia Woman’s Suffrage Associa
tion, has many interesting things to
say in favor of the movement that
is sweeping women toward the bal
lot in this country.
“It is 23 years ago since the vv Om
an’s Suffrage Association was organ
ized in Georgia, and for years there
was only a small band of women who
dared face that keenest and deadliest
of weapons, ridicule. But they have
gone forward with Implicit faith in
the righteousness of their cause and
spread the suffrage propaganda over
Georgia.”
Foremost among the workers in
the South for suffrage has been Mrs.
Mary L. McLendon, president of the
association; Mrs. William Felton, of
Cartersville; Mrs. Jennie Hart Sib
ley. of Union Point; Miss Lucy Stan
ton, of Athens: Miss H. Augusta
Howard, of Columbus; Mrs S. E.
Cunningham, of Decatur; Miss Mil
dred Hicks, of Bainbridge; Miss
Katherine Koch, of Atlanta, and Mrs.
J. J. Ansley, of Marshallville.
Miss Koch believes that if the mo
thers of Georgia were part of the
constituency of the lawmakers of the
State, the State would not be fet
tered as it Is by such laws as the
present age of consent; that the
blight of illiteracy would be taken
from her children; that the exploita
tion of little children would not be
tolerated; that woman would not
have to toil ten hours a day or night
in mill or factory If she had the gift
and talent to practice law. In fact,
Miss Koch believes with the grow-
ing army of women of to-day that
the law’s of the State could and would
be administered with more Justice,
consideration and ability if women
had a voice in making the laws of
Georgia.
“Because they could not vote,” Miss
Koch has said, “women have not been
standing Idly by, indifferent to the un
just laws and Institutions in our
State. Year after year they have gone
before the Legislature and pleaded
for the enactment of such law's as
would insure happier homes, a
stronger and better and more intelli
gent citizenship; but women have
found that nothing is so audible and
impressive to the ear of the average
legislator as the soft flutter of bal
lots as they fall into the ballot box,
and that indirect influence is produc
tive of little else than fair prom
ises and high-flown compliments, so
the women of Georgia are turning
their attentions suffrage-ward.”
Since the woman’s suffrage move
ment has begun to widen hundreds
of w’omen in Georgia have come into
the several associations and suffrage
leagues that have been organized
through the State.
At a recent distribution of suffrage
literature In this city by one of the
woman’s suffrage leagues over 50 new
members were enrolled, many of the
new names earning with them influ
ence and strength to the movement.
Within six months the woman’s
suffrage movement in Georgia has
taken on encouraging proportions and
'till is growing, according to associa
tion presidents.
NEWNAN CIVIC LEAGUE
PLANS FOR BUSY SEASON.
T HE Newnan Civic League will
resume Its meetings September
1, after a two-months vacation.
Although the club was disbanded In
June, its activities have not stopped,
and when the meetings are resumed
there will be a well-defined work
ready to be taken up.
At the close of the meetings, a re
port was made showing that $75 had
been cleared from the woman’s edi
tion of one of the local papers which
the clubwomen had edited for the
benefit of their settlement work.
The Newnan Civic League was or
ganized in 1911, and federated the
same year. There are 80 members in
the league, and it has accomplished
much good In that section of the State
where It focuses Its energies. Mrs. J.
S. Powell is president and Miss Louise
Atkinson secretary.
The Newnan Civic League is one ot
eighteen woman’s clubs in the Fourth
District, with Mrs. R. B. Daniel chair
man of the district. There are the
Civic Improvement Club at Bulloch-
vllle, with Miss Lucie Harris as pres
ident, and the Stinson School Im
provement Club, with Mra R. S.
Crowder as president.
At Columbus the clubs are City
Federation, Miss Edwina Wood presi
dent; Orpheus Club, Miss Georgia
Creighton president; Students’ Club,
Mrs. F. G. Lumpkin president; Wom
an's Reading Club, Mrs. W. R. Blan
chard president; Parent-Teacher As
sociation. Mrs. P. W. Massicot presi
dent; East Highlands Parent-Teacher
Association, Mrs. S. D. Wright presi
dent
The Mothers’ Club at Cusseta has
Mrs. Charles N. Howard for its presi
dent. Greenville has two clubs, the
School Improvement Club, with Mrs.
W. R. Jones as president, and the
Woman’s Civic Club, with Mrs. Y. F.
Freeman as president.
There is a Woman’s Club at La-
Grange, with Mrs. Henry Wood presi
dent; at Senoia a Civic League, with
Mrs. J. W. Arnall president. We£*t
Point has a Woman’s Club, Mra. P. J.
McNarra president and a Mothers’
Study Circle, Mrs. M. J. McAfee presi
dent. Woodbury has a Once-a-Week
Club, w’ith Mrs. J. M, Strother as
president
These clubs have played a promi
nent part In the development of their
towns and have opened up fields of
improvement undreamed of until the
civic clubs became so strong a part of
community life.
The Newnan and Columbus clubs i
have Improved the public parks. The I
club at LaGrange has directed its j
work toward the establishment of
well-equipped playgrounds, and Co
lumbus and LaGrange have worked '
successfully toward the screening of j
the shops and meat markets, and j
other clubs in the district have worked j
to some beneficial end for their towns, i
• • *
CLUBWOMEN RETURN FROM
ATLANTIC CITY.
Mrs. F. H. Orme and Mrs. Francis
Block, with her little daughter. Mar
garet, have returned from Atlantic
City. Mrs. Orme is prominently Iden
tified with the Atlanta Chapter, D.
A. R., and the Colonial Dames, and
Mrs. Block Is a member of the execu
tive board of Colonial Dames.
• • •
PIONEER SOCIETY TO MEET
IN SEPTEMBER.
The Atlanta Woman's Pioneer So
ciety will resume its regular monthly
meetings In September, the flrit
meeting being held at the Aragon Ho
tel. Mrs. Joseph H. Morgan has some
Interesting plans for the coming year,
which will be put Into motion as soon
as the club begins Its fall work.
Mrs. Anthony Murphy, vice presi
dent of the Pioneer Society, Is ex
pected home from Atlantic City Sep
tember 1 after a delightful summer
spent at Tate Springs and Atlantic
City.
Davison-Paxon-Stokes Co.
Send Your Roll
To Me
FOR
Free Developing
AND
8-Hour Finishing
Service
Send roll for trial. Don't send
any money. Pay if O. K. Write
SHEELEY IVEY, Manager, The
College “Co-Op,” 119 Peachtree
Street, Candler Bldg., Atlanta,
Georgia.
"The most completely lost of
all days is the one on which
we have not laughed.”
The
Piedmont
Hotel
Is the center of Atlan
ta’s gayety, and happy
dining parties constant
ly throng its Ladies’
Restaurant, its Cafe and
the Buffet.
To add to the pleasure
of our guests and pa
trons, we are now serv
ing
Imported
Muenchener
Kinderl’ Brau
—on draught.
And also the celebrated
Piet’s Pilsener
—on draught.
The Piedmont Hotel
has exclusive sale for
these well-known im
ported beverages and
the patronage of dis
criminating persons is
courteously solicited.
You
are invited to make the
Piedmont Hotel your
headquarters for any
meal or After-the-The-
ater. Service superior to
any heretofore known
in the South.
For STYLES Glance at the
StandardFashionSheet
September Number
Now ready, and FREE at the
Pattern Counter
A Sale of Cotton
Dress Fabrics
The remaining stocks of Wash Goods and Sum
mer Cottons are priced so extremely low that one
finds it hard to withstand the temptation to bny
dresses by the half-dozen to lay away for next season.
Some examples:
J Or _ j For Printed Crepe Voiles that have sold
all season at 25c yard. Bulgarian and
Jouy patterns—some bordered effects—36 inches
wide.
Y 1 (. d For Bates’ Toile du Nord and A. F. C.
'A I 1 • Ginghams and Anderson’s Madras—the
regular 12%c and 15c grades; 25 full, new pieces to
sell Monday at 714c yard.
lAr- j For regular 20c White Luna Lawn—a
sheer, beautiful fabrio for infants’ and
children’s dresses and women’s waists.
l _ j For 36-inch Pajama Checks, small-size
J ‘ checks.
For 36-inch Brown Blouse Linen; all
’pure flax; special value.
New Fall Goods
Mikado Crepes in new fall styles; plain and
fancies, for kimonos and lounging robes; 1714c yard.
New Outings for fall are here in dainty colors
and effects for sleeping garments; 10c yard.
&
15 c yd.
Hemstitched, embroidered Pillow Cases, 45x36-
inch sizes; priced for Monday at 19c each.
Embroidered-scallop edge scarfs; 17x50-inch
size. Special at 19c each.
New Linen
Laces at
5c y^ird
A new shipment of new Linen Laces in new and
dainty patterns—narrow widths—has come to sup
ply the demands for trimming infants’ and chil
dren’s clothes.
They will be put on a table for your choosing
Monday—plenty of edges and insertions—all at 5c
yard.
Monday Opportunities in
The Downstairs Section
Every Department of the Lower-Priced Store is getting ready for new
Fall goods, soon to arrive, and much good merchandise must be cleared
away to make room for the shipments as they come.
Note these special advantages for Monday.
Prices on Women s
Apparel at Low Tide
Prices which mean the going-out
of the remaining stock of summer
garments.
/JO for $2.50 pique and Ottoman
7 cloth Dresses; they have pique
collar and cuffs, button trimmed; white and
colors.
YQf. for $1.00 and $1.50 House Dresses;
* well made, prettily trimmed Dresses,
in all desirable colors, and black-and-white
effects.
C 1 QC for $3.1)0 Silk Kimonos. They
are ma( j e 0 f Japonica silk in
plain colors or floral designs; light and dark
shades.
Q Q n for long Kimonos of Serpentine
Q re p e . plain colors or figured ef
fects, with Persian band trimming.
AO for $7.50 Ramie Linen Suits;
ij? . w £7 cutaway coat, with satin collar
and tie of contrasting color; suits in light
blue, brown, pink, Copenhagen and white.
O Cf. for regular 39c short kimonos of
figured batiste; made with lace
trimmed sailor collar; a variety of patterns
to select from.
OQ_, for Misses’ Norfolk Suita; made of
good quality linene, trimmed with
contrasting color; plain skirt.
$1.00 for Women *s
White Blouses
Made of sheer lingerie cloth, prettily
trimmed with lace; regular $1.50 value.
White Voile Blouses, trimmed with lace,
at $1.50 each.
Good Inexpensive
Undermuslins
Women’s Combinations of soft nainsook;
lace or embroidery trimmed; finished with
beading and ribbon. Priced for Monday at
59c suit.
Women’s Petticoats of good muslin, trim
med with round-thread lace; special for
Monday at 39c each.
Women’s Muslin Drawers, 23 to 29 sizes—
at 19c pair.
£7 7Q For good Silk Petticoats.
. 1 ** These colors to choose from:
Brown, gray, green, tan, red, wistaria and
lavender.
Children’s Dresses
Little Prices
at
Pretty little Wash Frocks of ginghams,
percale and linene; trimmed with braids or
piping; 2 to 6-year sizes, 39c each.
Girls’ Dresses of printed batiste in pink,
blue, red or brown stripes or rings on white
ground; 6 to 14-year sizes; 69c each.
Girls’ Balkan Blouses, white with red or
blue trimming; 14 to 18-year sizes; 49c each.
A Sale of Special In
terest in the Wash
Goods Section
7 l Ac yd.
36-inch unbleached mus-
for
lin.
for plain white Voile Remnants
—1 to 3 yard lengths—worth to
20c yard.
for White Shirting Madras;
’ stripes and cluster stripes; reg
ular 19c value.
for Indian Head Linene rem
nants, ready shrunk—regular
15c value.
for 40-inch White Lawn, sheer
weave; 2 to 6-yard lengths.
for New Fall Ginghams, checks,
plaids, stripes, for school
dresses; regular 12^4c value.
for sheer checked Lawn—all-
white—small and large checks;
regular 10c value.
3^/yC yd. f or Printed Voiles in small fig-
'■* J ures and stripes; they will not
remain long at this price for
Monday.
for Straw Ticking; wide or nar
row blue stripes.
for colored Table Damask—red
or blue checks; worth 35c yard.
10c yd.
12 l Acyd.
10c yd.
9c yd.
10c yd.
7J4c yd.
10c yd.
25c yd.
$1.00 is a small sum to pay for
Corsets as good as these. Three
different makes—Warner’s, Da-
paxsto and R. & G., all new models,
very long, well boned; hose sup
porters attached.
Remnant Sale
of
Wash Goods
PRICES GREATLY REDUCED
Fine Zephyr Ginghams.
45-inch India Lawn.
36-inch Dress Percales.
Linen-finish Suiting.
Figured Plisse in small floral designs.
Plain Voile in colors.
36-inch White Ratine.
27-inch White Pique.
Fine Shirting Madras in fast colors.
Sheer White Waistings.
Fancy Voiles, Crepes and Suitings.
Imperial Chambray Ginghams.