Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, December 16, 1913, Image 3

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t ■. ■ conomica ncline This store's broad range of selections, em bracing everything of the worthiest character in jewelry, gems, watches, silver and gold wares and unusual small wares of usefulness and beau ty, offers freest choice to both the buyer who must think most of cost and the buyer to whom cost is of secondary consideration. But whatever votir Christmas appropriation, the best solution of your gift problem lies in a visit to this store. Whether you come to buy or merely to inspect, whether your purchase is large or small, the Eugene V. Haynes Company assures you alwavs of the most courteous attention, THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS. PARKS-CHAMBERS- HARDWICK 37-39 Peachtree COMPANY Atlanta, Ga. Of All tke Gifts Gi iven to Child ren MISS BAIN CHAMPIONS THE TANGO BUT DRAWS LINE AT TURKEY TROT v , ry lime Atlantans uml'in the last year ■ pay for it. cert ever Riven in Atlanta Most of the musicians will he Atlanta prod nets, which in itself is guarantee Princess Mary Mixed In Charity Tangle Special Cable to The Atlanta Georgian. LONDON, Dec. 16 The kind heart of Princess Mary has made trouble for her She set out to make Venetian bead necklaces to be sold for charity. Im mediately she was beset by applicants British and American who sent checks and asked neckluces in return She sent bav\( the checks, but some who got neither necklace nor check made a fuss. <r ^ Let Y our Best Gift Be a Diamoed Diamonds are the supreme symbols of value Their beauty and worth are as enduring as time Itself They make ideal gifts If you can not visit the store we shall be glad to send you a selection for examination all express charges paid. You have the privilege of paying all cash or make settlement in conven ient monthly payments. We cimrge only 6 per cent simple interest on the amount deferred after deducting your cash pay ment. Only one-fifth cash re quired nt time of sale. Write for our booklet. Facts About Diamonds, and ItiO-page illustrated catalogue Maur & Berkele. Inc. Diamond Merchants Established 1887. 31-33 Whitehall Street, Atlanta, (la. Any Little Chap would sit up all night to eat bread and Velva—that great food-sweet for old or young. No, there isn’t anything like VeIva on the table or in the kitchen. Everyone who eats it likes it, because it's good—and it's as low in cost as it is good. In red cans or green .At , ^ your grocer's. iUClip Send ior booklet of cooking and candy recipes. PENICK & FORD, Ltd. New Orleans typewriters rented 4 mos. w up. Am. Wtg. Mach. Co. r coals will please you. Call us. 3 CARROLL & HUNTER pleasing as wear one wi iii b nice things to Of all the stores you may visit in making your selections, none will have a broader range—prettier styles—better values nor more reasonable prices. Suits double breasted, Norfolk and Russian styles- Middies and Sailors, too—in rich and attractive designs. Suits priced from $5.00 to $15.00. Overcoats from $5.00 to $18.00. Play Suits in all styles, priced from $1.00 to $5.00. Nature Shaped Broadwalk Shoes, $1.75 to $3.50, according to Sizes and quality. Scout Shoes, Official, $2.00 to $3.00, according to sizes Hundreds of articles in Boys’ and Children’s Wear, which are top-notch ers as gifts for little ones. *it, • Boys’ G-loves, Jewelry, Handkerchiefs, Ties, Sweaters, Stockings, Pajamas, Underwear. Blouses, Shirts. Wool Knit Combination Sweater Suits, con sisting of Sweater Coat, Leggins, Gloves and Toque, $5.00. Knitted Leggins, Toque and Gloves, $1.00. Many novel things in Children’s Toys. Don’t overlook our Boys’ Department in your eagerness to make the little fellows happy when they gather around their “At Home Tree.” Goods Sent Parcel Post or Express to Out- of-Town Customers wu o rder by M ail. There i is still hope. wp near the close of this year’s vc ’> things down the request- strewn s tri .mi of life we approach now the land of “Something for Nothing.’ Land i .\;11 he sighted at the For mer next Sunday afternoon »ck sharp. and" will he a great free " r the benefit of The Geor- gian-Ami ’ tempty Stocking Fund, an d it wi i! sighted by some of the ,rs ri Atlanta’s musical cir- 'he favorite commanders YOT'S a > 11,1 sic lovers. 1 '|, ; ind You- and as many r ‘ f ‘ are in town-—are in- •• and hear the finest con- enough, for ^.n Atlanta musician is like everything -else in Atlanta—he's the best there is. And although the concert is for the benefit of the Empty Stocking Fund and something may turn up that will add a few dollars to the money that is being, raised to bring Santa Claus to the homes of the poor little boys and girls of Atlanta the main idea is that it will not cost you a cent to come and hear the good music and mingle with the crowds. Every scat in the house will lie free. There will be nobody at the door to take up a ticket, and there will be nobody there to charge you a dime for a reserved seat. Ushers will be there to show you to the best seats in the,house and the doors will be open ari hour before the performance starts and they will not have anything t«> sol). Young Leon McConville, 12 years old, who does things with the cor net that stamp him as one ■ f the coming musicians of the coutuh will play anything from grand opera to ragtime. And the way that little bo\ can play those- old favorite*} like “Coinin' Through the Rye” and "Auld Lang Syne” with all the triple trim mings—well, you'll have to hear him to know how he does it. And then there'll be E. C. Barber and Fred Wedemeyer and Jake«Matthiessen. At lanta's most famous band leaders. They’ll have musicians with them from the American Federation <>i La bor. which accepted the invitation to play for the poor kiddies of Atlanta so quickly they'll always have a soft The The 0. p SPECIAL HOLIDAY RATES I To TEXAS VIA Southern Pacific Sunset Route Tickets on sale Dec. 20th. 21st and 22d. Final Return Limit Jan. 18th. 1914. Superior Service front NEW ORLEANS Daily. Winter Tourist Rates to Many Texas Points. . ^position Line==lMl5=To California and Pacific Coast Siinset Limited=No Extra Fare- The Sunset Express) irning Locomotives—No Soot. Dust or 1 inders -r <>n us for information, literature and Bartlett, g. a 121 Peacht ree St. Atlanta, Ga spot in the heart of the Christmas Editor. And that’s not one-third of the list, but the others are just as good. So you can see that it is a dead open and shut proposition that this concert Is going to be the best en tertainment that the Christmas Edi tor has yet arranged. And a word must be said for the boys who are responding most loy ally to the appeal of the “Good Fel low” in Monday’s Georgian, who ask- ed that ali the boys break away from tiie club stuff for one day and send the. money they’ll save to the Christ mas Fund. The “Good Fellow” was talking to the men who make fairly good and really good salaries, but who are stranded in Atlanta without any home ties and with no place to find ’.lie congeniality man desires except at the clubs and around the hotel lob bies. Good Fellow No. 2” appeared early Tuesday morning. His letter and his? dollar were awaiting the Christmas Editor when he got down to work. • Here’s mine.” he wrote. "Now let the other boys come along with theirs I'm not going home for Christmas, but , Ini going to have a good Christmas to have your because some kid will be playing round with a little red engine or some little girl will be crooning over a oil—and T bought it.” It’s Fine for That Grouch. Now. there are without doubt hun dreds of men who are developing that grouch—-the greatest grouch of them ail—that comes when they learn they can not go home for Christmas. They think they’re going to have a bad Christmas, with nothing but a hotel dinner and a show to make up for the iiigt her and love of the home. Arid they probably will—unless they’re "Good Fellows.” Being a good fellow is the best Dfipe on the market right now for nt grouch. Send your dpllar to the • hristmas Editor—and wake up Christmas Day with joy in your heart, rat your hotel dinner or boarding Louse dinner in peace and comfort, ,,nd go to the show in the afternoon and have a good time—for you can do it if you have the knowledge that .. I’ve helped some little boy or girl. Incidentally, the Christmas Editor asks all who are dressing dolls to return them to The Georgian office, No 20 East Alabama street, as soon as they can. The dolls must be boxed and prepared for distribution, and l there are only a few days left till Christmas. And if you haven't dressed a doll yea—there are still a few mere that the Christmas Editor will be glad to let you have. NEW SCHOOL OFFICIAL. DALTON. Dec 16 -Dennis B Barren I ,, befen elected to the city school board -5 ,cceed H. L. Smith, resigned, also being made secretALV arui irfeAsuxar. It Is Not Too Late order for Engraved Cards or Stationery cuted by J. P. Stevens Engraving Co., Atlanta. In the Whole Gamut of men’s dress there is positively nothing that should require such individual at-ten- 1 ion as the shirt. The Trio Laundry launders your shirts—not in a “haphazard” sort j r»f fashion. We use the latest approved method of pressing—not ironing—your shirts. This insures the garment against ordinary scorching or tearing and makes it last twice as long. Ivy 1099. E. H. WILSON. W. H HARRIS. A magnificent, new five-story plant has greatly increased their facilities, which enable them to fill orders promptly up to the last minute. Comes h defender of the much- flouted. much-maligned tango in the person of charming Miss Donna Bain But the turkey trot—horrors! Miss Bain positively shuddered Tuesday vs hen it was suggested that her com mendation might extend to this other modern dance. “Oh, my, no!” she exclaimed, with a scandalized expression. I cant even bear to think of it. Beiieve me, I don’t dance it. Why, I may say I don’t even know how—and that Ls saying quite a little, for I pride my self on knowing most of the dances of American and foreign origin and knowing them well.” It probably is just as well to ex plain right here, although most At lantans know it, that Miss Bain is an authority on dancing. She Is an Atlanta Girl. She is an Atlanta girl, but for the last six years she has been in New York, part of the time giving expo sitions of the old and modern dances at fashionable teas and other exclu sive functions, and more latterly teaching the people of the ultra smart set how the best of the popular dances should be executed. She has made herself a student of liancing, not only in America; but abroad as well. What she doesn’t know about the pedigree and per- I formance of dance, steps ancient and modern is hardly worth adding to one’s store of knowledge. And it was plainly evident in her conversation Tuesday that site didn’t think much of the lineage of the tur key trot. The tango—that was differ- i ent! “Nothing in the modern dances so much resembles the stately old min uet-as does the tango,” she vouch safed. "That is why 1 like it. It is the most beautiful dance I ever have seen when It is danced properly. There isn’t any undignified Tompish- ness’ about it. Calls Turkey Trot “Horrible.” “It is the dance of the ultra set. In its present form it originated with the best Parisian society. The real people don’t go in much for the other sort, of dances—like the turkey trot, 1 mean. “The turkey trot—that’s horrible, particularly the Wriggling of the shouldrrs and the other outlandish I movements. The slums of San Fran - I cisco gave America the turkey trot. That nrobably accounts for its unlove ly and ungraceful characteristics.” exe- Miss Donna Bam and Mr. Crane doing the real tango, it left. At right, they are shown dancing the Maxixe.