Newspaper Page Text
FANTASTIC IDEA
PREDOMINATES
IN SHOE STYLES
Sandal Effect Will Be Used Even
in High Button Footwear by
Dame Fashion’s Followers.
BLACK TOPS ARE POPULAR
Brilliant Ornanyjnts Will Be Seen
in Slippers Worn at Evening
Entertainments.
rASHIONABLE shoes are fantas
tic. More attention Is paid to
footwear than formerly, and
therein Iles the reason for the sup
ply of shoe novelties.
The sandal effect is used even In
high button shoes, and the slippers
show sandal lacings of ribbons or
leather straps. The cut of these shoes
is extremely frivolous, but there Is
nothing really Impractical in the shoes
themselves.
Nearly all shoes are buttoned, and
the leading leathers are gun metal
and patent calf with tops of self or
cloth. The most popular cloth topping
is black corkscrew cloth, which is very
smart in effect, but many colored nov
elties will be found.
There is a great increase in the de
mand for evening footwear, and there
fore many brilliant ornaments In imi
tation platinum and diamonds, steel
and jet are carried by the best deal
ers.
The shoe styles for men are not so
varied nor so numerous as for wom
en. They must adhere more closely
to the conventional and not tend to
ward the fantastic.
The little details which mark each
season's changes are evidenced in the
buttoned styles and the gun metal,
patent and tan leathers, with flat re
cede toe.
Cloth tops for patent leather boots
are In considerable demand, especially
for evening wear. The evening shoe
has the long, slim, aristocratic line,
with the sole more closely trimmed
than the street boot and no tip or
trimming to mar the smoothness of
the patent leather vamp and top of
fine twilled cloth.
Something Atlanta Has Needed for Years—An Ice Showing Where ■ Ice Cream that is made from the Genuine Cow’s
Cream Factory, Supplying Cream that n < t oC\ » ! —~>r- Milk and Pure Cream. Ice Cream that
is ABSOLUTELY PURE—Both I ***s you and U our guests will thoroughly enjoy—
to its own fountains and , Read thia adverrnamant and
to the hottie I trial order
Cream
ffiUgfo <v /s / er ~ fjsi, jmi|Art|L *«.^r^^RW,,,,, mßM StffßL. ' vffj *■ 1
«*** ii» v .wilrSPa Served r. BBL*/ XT nfluF W
OwKwlwF* Tj-Wa^wmy LiSSaE'**' ii ~ / ■ r ß ***!***^ ‘ LlSn 1 'P ’**
' c< £hmEßK gP
- 7
W% i" :- Mm4 >> ?.'• * *w ./
V -ISWr - -rjr •■' flhbW' > /
w 4>
W t un u^ v
. u^ 4961 ’ \Ve take pleasure in I j
3S-- ;!' ; o ***' announcing the fact that we have ,7Jn ih. /
s , hought the soda fountains in the McClure 10c Store and
sv» te ’ 68 t * ,e Southern Book Concern, photographs of which appear in the illustra- OfiCe '^z77r^ W >
TtfcC^ e 106 tions shown above, and we shall conduct both places in such a manner as to appeal to the la-
F2^»-^\ !ia> w' 1 ‘ e diesandgentleinen<>f Atiaiita.
V oXJII It makes no difference what particular soft drink your appetite calls for, you will find that either of our fountains will serve it in
just the particular way that you like it most. ,
Lunches Served
We shall begin to-morrow morning serving
lunches that can be quickly prepared, tempting
lunches for the busy man and woman, an<l we
invite the Atlanta public to eat with us at any
and all times of the day.
Henry P. Osborne
The McClure 10c Store
6.3 Whitehall
A Black Satin Coat 7"""''
Southern Suit Com
pany has a saffron vest a black broadcloth skirt. The coat col
lar and cuffs are of seal.
/" mA s'
rJ-V/
/ JR® v
JET L
AjOf Asnß ' t f , jffli I
i V >
’’l ■
b A s*'-777. <
I ft \
' \ b >•’ *
V\ M ;■» -l
1 \ nH V /
* \ V vJSfrßflfraaW /
vL \ *' W ' /
%\ \ la -ik- *7 /
' ’ - ; ' z ’ “
m wxl
’’’
(ObSfe
v ' I
f k 1 HF
Icecream Factory
We have equipped one of the most up-to-date
plants for making ice creams and sherbets in the
city, and we are now making our own brand,
“C. & O.” cream. Our plant has a capacity of
360 gallons per day, and we want you to know
what “C. & 0.” cream really is. Once you try it
you will recognize in it an individuality that
spells ‘better cream.” 1
CASSELS & OSBORNE
:-: :-: :-: Our Motto Is “Service”
HEARST’S SUNDAY AMERICAN, ATLANTA. GA.. SUNDAY. SEPTEMBER 21. 1913
VELVET GOAT
SUIT INELGDNIED
FOB WINTER USE
Southern Suit and Skirt Com
pany Shows Striking Model
in Its Fall Display.
Brocaded velvet coat with plain
broadcloth skirt is the . mode for
dressy suits These suits are hand
some enough for any occasion, and
are welcomed eagerly by the women
who value coat suits above all other
garments.
One suit of this type was seen at
the Southern Suit and Skirt Company.
It is of the ever popular black, with
pale lavender lining adding the only
touch of color. The coat is of a
graceful length, with simulated pock
ets and large pocket flaps. The mink
neckpiece gives a decorative, practi
cal finish.
A mahogany cut velour makes an
extremely handsome suit. The vel
vet collar and cuffs of the same shade
are embroidered in rich design The
skirt is draped in a becoming manner,
and buttons combine usefulness and
picturesqueness.
Black satin charmeuse makes a
handsome coat which looks a trifle
somber from the back, where the
pleats are fashioned beneath a velvet
belt. Turn it around —behold a saf
fron velvet vest of sufficient gor
geousness to make the garment as
sume greater value in feminine eyes
than ever a wholly black one could.
This velvet vest just peeps unobtru
sively from beneath the plaited front
of the coat, and its huge satin-bound
buttonholes display just the proper
amount of restricted gayety.
Golden brown broadcloth with saf
fron lining, gendarme blue matelasse
with vest of Chinese design, a taupe
and Nell rose matelasse and moire
velvet in deep blue with chiffon
some of the newest stylse seen in
broadcloth skirt give faint ideas of
the Southern Suit and Skirt Compa
ny’s display cases.
? Pew Feathers Seen on Hats
Hats depend more upon their shape
and placing of trimming than on a
profusion of flowers or feathers. They
are mostly close-fitting to accommo
date the new head-shape coiffures.
Ostrich plumes are in high favor
and are combined with gold and silver
laces to make the most charming of
dress hats. Flowers are little hsed, the
adoption of the French bouquets or
one or two large flowers having be
come the most desired trimming.
Virot is the magic name at which a
woman glances after she has ad
mired and donned a deep purple vel
vet hat trimmed with plumes which
Cream Delivered
NJe pack any of our creams or sherbets in
ice-packed freezers and deliver it to your home
at the particular time you want it. We make
vanilla, peach, chocolate, strawberry, banana,
tutti-frutti creams and all kinds of sherbets.
swims
JOIN IN FIGHT
FOR MODESTY
Prize of SIOO Is Offered for De
sign by American Which Will
Be Acceptable.
A plea for modesty in woman's
dress!
And it comes not from haphazard
reformers nor casual critics, but from
the highest sources of authority on
the subject. And it takes a substan
tial form.
A prize of SIOO is offered in a letter
received by The Sunday American
from the National Cloak, Suit and
Skirt Manufacturers' Association to
any woman or organization of women
who will draw or sketch an original
coat, suit or skirt which the associa
tion accepts as new, modest and dig
nified. and which can be made for
American women by American manu
facturers.
Manufacturers ore tired, it seems,
of looking to the extremities of Par
isian modistes for their fashions. \
recent decision by officials of the as
sociation has for its conclusion the
fact that sufficient individuality ex
ists among Americans to warrant the
creation of their own styles. Hence
the prize offer.
"Not all American women want
snap or suggestiveness in their outer
garments," declares J. P. Hovland, of
Chicago, president of the association,
in making the announcement that ths
prize will be offered. He voices the
complaint that manufacturers are
weary of the freaks and fads that
creep into the construction of clothes
for American women.
"A wholesome note In clothes Is de
sired. The platters must be graceful,
dignified and modest. These requl
sites are not incompatible with the
present styles, but it seems that th -y
are not always obtained under exist
ing conditions.”
hang gracefully down upon the shoul
ders in approved French style.
A gold cloth wflth plaiting of pink
chiffon edged with Vai lace makes a
charming evening hat. The close-fit
ting little hat is trimmed with a rib
bon band and adorned with a single
rose. These hats and many others
equally as pretty were seen at J. M.
High Company's.
Mourning—heavy and somber—has
always brought a chill to the hearts
of all beholders. It seemed a pity
that one's grief should make so many
miserable. There Is a solution to this
desire to show the world that our sor
row needs protection.
Anti-Powder Puff
Edict Stirs Women
Clerks in Treasury Department
Threatened Revolt on Account
of Recent Order.
WASHINGTON, Sept. 20.—Indig
nant women are threatening tne pear?
# SHOES
*350 /O SSOO
/ // 1
B® W.
I 11 Ml* I
i-. ™
I r/ / "T\orothy Dodd Shoes are made by
I 7 / specialists in women’s footwear,
k'Z-/ / w ho manufacture nothing else. Their
r J. I factory works only on shoes for the fair
I N
I ' K { i Making women’s shoes is an art dis-
llvt'i tinct from the making of men’s shoes
LU—a finer art —a more difficult one
. | But the Dorothy Dodd manufacturers
I IBr make that art their sole specialty and
K they have succeeded this year in giving
more marvelous values than ever.
__ 25 Whitehall. Fred S. Stewart r
Prices Delivered
We deliver cream at the following prices:
Quart . . . 40c
Half-Gallon . 75c
Gallon . . . $1.40
of the Treasury Department since
Assistant Secretary John Skelton Wil
liams Issued an order that forbade
clerks to carry handbags, lunch
boxes or other packages there. This
has been accepted by the 800 women
clerks a- a direct attempt to elimi
nate the powder puff.
Assistant Secretary Williams re
torts that the order is a precaution-
Buy (( C. & 0.” Cream
Buy “ C. & 0.” cream for your home use—
buy it for the reason that it is pure and be
cause it is better than other creams. You can
get “C. & 0.” cream at either of our foun
tains.
Walter L. Cassels
Southern Book Concern
71 Whitehall
ary one solely. Under it all pack
ages and hand baggage must be left
In the locker room in the basement
of the building before the elerks actu
ally pass Into the of the great
granite structure devoted to the
housing of the Government's cash an!
securities. This, the clerks say, is
risky, and they object to inviting per
sonal losses.
13H