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SRCIE
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HEY WILL dance, you know, and
T there’s no earthly use trying to
stop them, for no matter what
the obstacle, they manage somehow
to gvercome it. It was a congenial
automobile party which had motored
out for a picnio supper, three cars full
of them, and they were returning to
the home of one of the girls for a
littla dancing, when the most terrific
storm came up. It thundered and it
poured, and it drove tie merry mo
torists to take shelter in a nearby
farmhouse. The storm kept up all
evening, but d4id they sulk and pine
for the dance they were going to
have? Not they. They routed out
an ancient negro, with an equally an
clent mouth organ, and they danced
untfl #t was 11 o'clock and the stars
were shining again. I hear that the
farmers were the only people who
didn’t thoroughly enjoy the proceed
ings, for the ancient negro had just
as goo.d & time as anybody.
. * -
N Ansley Park girl had a rather
A embarrassing experience the
other afternoon when she went
out in a great hurry with just enough
time to catch the last car that would
get her to the matinee before the cur
tain went up. She was in too much of
a hurry to put on her gloves before
ghe xot on the car, and then she.dis
covered that what she had thought
were her white silk gloves were in
reality e pair of white silk stockings
that she had picked up in her haste.
It was & crowded car, too, which only
served to make things worse.
- . e
OVERHEARD a very warm argu
| ment the other day on one of the
eternal questions which will serve
as food for conversation for many
and many a long year to come. There
are a goodly number of these, but the
particular one that was under dis
cussion by this group of young things
was regarding the best way to.win &
woman. FEach side of the argument
—and there were quite a number of
gides—had a chain of evidence to
produce and illustrations without end
to prove what they contended, until
by the time ail the evidence was In I
knew more about my neighbors’ af
fairs than I had ever even hoped for.
“Persistence is the only thing that
counts,” argued one. “A man can
marry any girl he wants if he just
hangs on long enough.” “Provided,”
put in another, “that she doesn’t run
off with someone she has Kknown
about a week in the meantime.” Tt
seems that fherée were innumerable
cages of this very persistence at the
tongue's lip of them both, and they
told us all about them.
It was the announcement of the en
gagement of a certain Macon girl
who has visited here often that
brought on the discussion in the first
place. Persistence had to be strung
out over four years before it accom
plished anything in her case. Then,
of course, there were the two or
thres who always stand out for love
at first sight or nothing at all. It is
a curious thing, but I've always found
that these are the ones who have
each a persistent lover lingering in
the background, and they don’t like to
look forward to anything so unro
mantic as.final surrender. When they
had finally argued it all out and con
vinced nobody, one of them suddenly
remembered me.
“\"‘Vhy, Polly ought to know,” she
exclaimed, and they all turned to me
sagerly. Oh, well, Polly has her ideas,
tut Polly isn't telling.
- . .
LL of you remember—at least all
ZX of yvou who are old enough—
remember “Dolly Varden” and
the man who fell in love with her,
*though he had only seen her ankles
and her feet.” And if history repeats
{tselt, why shouldn't romance, which
{s mso much more linteresting? In
this case romance has, and ‘“Dolly
Varden” has come to Atlanta, but not
in the sedan chair with the bottom
out, in which she made her entrance
in the opera. She sat on the porch of
the Fast Lake boathouse, and appar
ently she was there to watch the
ewimmers, but the sun seemed to
bother her and she held a dainty par
as>l so that she couldn’t see the water
—or rather, so that no one in the
water could see her face. He was
swimming, and in spite of the fact
that the water was good and cold,
and that ordinarily he was very fond
of swimming, he soon became more
interested in something else.
That someathing else was a pair of
diminutive feet that were perched on
the ralling above his head. He is oer
ixiz shat thera len't a smaller foot or
e slenderer ankle in ell Atlanta, or a
nobbier set of shoes and stockings,
sither. The shoes were patent leather
with cut steel buckles and very high,
bright-red heels, and the stockingzs
were white embroidered in black.
Above that was a black and white
striped skirt, and above that a black
and white parasol held at just the
most tantalizing angle in the world.
He swam arcund a while and walted
for the parasol to be moved, but it
held its original position stubbornly.
When he realized that it wasn't go
ing to be moved, out he came, and he
hurried moat awfully over to his
dressing room, but alas! for romancs.
When he reached the porch the divin
ity of the tiny feet and the ample
parasol was gone, and if the earth
had swallowed her up she couldn’t
have vanished more completely.
Now, he says—and I really think he
thinks he meang it—that he can’t be
happy until he finds her. He main
tains, moreover, that he will know
those feet anywherg he sees them,
even without the red heels, and I un
derstand that he is spending his va
catinn in the shopping district search-
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e ——— - :
radiies, B
ing vainly for those tiniest feet in
Atlanta and their owner. It's an ex
cellent opportunity for a bit of pri
vate detective work if you want to
play sleuth.
. L .
OME Atlanta girls certalnly do go
S in for the original. There is
Miss Margaret Northen, for In
stance.
Somebody was telllng me about
seeing Misg Northen on a Ponce De-
Leon car the other morning. She was
sitting right up near the front and
combing her hair—that adorable yel
low-gold hair that is one of her best
features.
ph. well—l guess it would have
been Monday morning, or Thursday:
and I also guess Miss Margaret would
have been on the way back from a
swim in the Adair pool, where the
men are barred the mornings of Mon
day and Thursday, and feminine so
clety takes its swim.
But it was a cute ldea, wasn't it—
combing out your golden locks on a
street car? And it would be anotifer
good idea to hang the g. 1. out of the
window afterward, to dry in the
breeze. Maybe she had been doing
that. My informant didn't say.
. - -
OMEBODY sends m a marked
S copy of The Evening Dispatch,
of Wilmington, N. C., contalning
an account of a dancing conquest at
the famous Beach by Miss Janet
Hatcher and Eugene V. Haynes, of
Atlanta, who were awarded the silver
cup offered as first prize in a one-step
competition at Lumina, one of the
big dancing pavilions. The informa
tion was not given as to which part
ner retained the cup, but I can make
a guess. Bugene has a lot of his ewn
and, besides, he is very gallant.
. - -
UT eon the glossy floor of one of
O the Atlanta clubs the other
night there stepped a young
woman who looked queer. That Is
the only way I can put it. She looked
queer. Her clothes looked queer. Her
dancing looked queer. I thought so.
Other people thought so. I heard a
middle-aged, sober-minded physician
saying to hls wife that either that
AEARST'S SUNDAY AMERICAN, ATLANTA, GA, SUNDAY, JULY 19, __lll_4_
Society FoIR. in Gay Dance
Miss Marguetite Ward and Henry Taylor executing one of
the difficult steps of the tango. Miss Ward is the daughter of
! Mrs. B. C. Ward and one of the most popular members of the
{ younger set. Both she and Mr. Taylor are considered among
{ the best dancers who frequent the popular East Lake Club.
.
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young person was in the wrong place
or they were.
But it was a false alarm. They
were all wrong and the girl was all
right. She was just from the coun
try and had blossomed a bit too un
educatedly into the fuil bloom of the
ultra-modern frocks and dances.
She hadn’t quite learned to carry
them off, and they made her look—
well, sort of uncertain.
Which goes to show that Friend
Pope was correct in his celebrated
surmise that a little learning was apt
to get one-in bad.
- . .
N Atlanta there is a Lonely Man.
I His wife has gone to the country.
Hooray! Hoo——
No. That is not the way he feels
about it. He is woe-begones and bored
in the extreme. His ennui is some
thing to blubber about. I suppose
he does blubber about it. He looks as
if he did.
Therefore, it is not amazing that he
should fall into wild dissipation. Here
is a sample of his untoward reckless
ness, and if his wife ever gets news of
it it surely will bring her back to
town.
The other afternoon he was going
along the street, being just as ennui
as he could, which (as suggested) was
very ennul indeed. He met a woman
whom he knew. The following dia
logue ensued:
“Where are you going?’ He did
not add “my pretty maid,” probably
because he did not think of it in tima.
“To a sewing circle.”
“Take me with you.”
“Do you know the people?”
“Not at all; but you can introduce
me.”
“Come with me.”
They went. The extent of this un
happy man’s ennui may be guessed
from the fact that he spent the entire
afternoon trying to make himself
agreeable to that hen party—he belng
usually a reticent sort of man, con
versing largely in grunts and requir
ing to be amused when in a normal
state of mind.
He stayed the entire afternoon at
the sewing party, and it is my infor
mation that only one circumstance
prevented him from remaining to din
ner—the hostess announced pointedly
that she was golng out to dine.
So the Lonely Man wandered forth
to be ennul some more.
. . .
™8 good to be young, especially if
' you are beautiful. Beauty always
appeals to everyone. Now, here
comes a report from a globe-trotter
who has followed behind the Jack
Sanders party through one or two big
forelign towns, and it tells in glowing
terms of the limpression made by
pretty Louice Riley, who I 8 traveling
with the Sanders abroad this sum
mer. In Bremen she was the hon
oree at several elaborate social af
fairs, and at Barcelona it was the
same. The Sanders have many per
’SUnal friends in these two cities, and
{t was to them and their beautifui
niece, Miss Riley, that the entertain
ments were given. Miss Riley will
return to Atlanta next week, accom
panied by her father and mother, Mr.
and Mrs. R. BE. Riley, who went to
New York to meet the party last
week.
. . .
OAST not, except to someone in
B a distant city who can’t prove
anything on you. That is good
advice, as one of our most recent re
crufts to the ranks of the Benedicts
has found out to his sorrow. I doubt
if he ever hears the last of the va
riations that his friends are getting
up on a very simple little tale. The
newly married man didn't like to ad
mit even to his best friend and one
time best man that he had taken to
living a life of ease, so he maintained
that he still rose at 6, and that 7
o’clock found him at the office every
morning. Mr. Best Man may have
entertained some doubts, but he said
nothing and bided his time. One
morning the following week, when
Benedi’t and his wife strolled down
1o breakfast about half-past 7, there
sat the best friend calmly eating hig
cggs. He exhibited much surprise.
“l knew, of course, that you had
already gone to the office,” he sald,
“put 1 thought I'd stop in and get
some left-over breakfast.” |
Now Benedict boasts no more.
g ‘
flfi
} b o
@z«%fifi};
Anyhow, 8 o'clock is early enough for
gny man to go to work.
. - .
HAVE oftan heard the waves called
| gad and have always wondered
why. It seems to me that the
ocean ought to be a very jolly old
soul, at least that part of it that is
near the coast where all the pretty
girls go in swimming. And that it
can be & very naughty ocean when It
wants to was proved the other day at
Cumberland when a great big wave
not only tumbled a little girl over, but
ripped the skirt of her bathing suit
from waist to hem. She was all right
as long as she stayed in the water,
and when she came out there was no
lingering on the beach for that morn
ing. Instead, she carefully held the
edges of the gap together and beat a
hasty retreat to&zard the hotel, re
fusing all {nvitations to play ball or
run racss or sit on the sand and talk.
And veey few people ever knew why
she was ®o unsociable that morning.
- . -
NEW use has been found for ths
A moon, used for untcld ages to
spoon under and for canine ger
enades.
Now it 18 the tango searchlight;
and those who have tried it say that
all artificial illumination appears loud
and garish as a purple bathing suit by
contrast.
The experiment came about by way
of necessity, as most inventions do.
The other night at the Capital City
Club the tangoers were distressed by
the turning off of the lights at mid
‘night.
“Let's dance by moonlight,” sug
gested some inspired dancer.
It was on the roof garden, and that
is just what they did. The orchestra
was bribed and otherwise persuaded
to perform by ear, which it did very
acceptably; and the tangoing contin
ued until—
Well, untfl it stopped. The moon
was in fine fettle that night.
.s s .
HE argument is a sort ef long-
T and-ghort-of-it affair—are tall
girls better dancers than short
girls?
I'm not going to decide it; not L In
the first place, I have a lot of friends
on both sides. In the second place, 1
am neither long nor short myself. In
the third place, It 18 an impossible
question in the first place.
Sometimes 1 fancy that there’s
nothing quite equal to the willowy
dipper, fair and divinely tall, as Vir
gil or Ovid, or some of those sporty
olg classics would say. There i 3 Hei
en Dargan, for instance. AndG Esther
Bmith, slightly more latitudinal than
Helen, but statuesque enough to suit
tl{l]o most exacting Pygmalion of them
all,
On the other hand, we have Vir
ginia Bowman and Janet Hatcher,
and a gool many others. It really
seems to be a case of the last one you |
see dancing, 1
(Wi Wwivy Pre-Inventory Sales Rule Throughout the Store. WiV Y
M. RICH & BROS. CO. |
———————————————————————— . —————————— ——————————— =
Just in—Stylish New Wash D |
ust in—Otylish New Wash Dresses at
38 5 Worth 59 5 Worth 69 5 Worth :
. to $lO o to $l5 o to s2o°:
Here — Ready — Choose — 337 delightfully new dresses, fresh from :
our buyer in New York. .
Dresses of wonderful charm; immaculate freshness; intense fashion- :
ableness. White and colored dresses of vivacious voiles; captivating crepes; 3
natty novelties. Shown to-morrow for the first time. Dozens of different i
styles, including the newest stripe effects—every dress abreast with the.last |
clock-tick of Fashion. i
Not 2,500 dresses, nor 1,000, nor any great part of the dresses In New |
York. Just 337; merely enough to satisfy women who want one or two dis
~ tinet styles at the lowest price for which dresses of this character have |
been offered in Atlanta this season. Values are $7.50 to $2O; choose at
~ $3.85, $5.95 and $£6.95. i :
$3 to $7.50 Hair 98C
Ornaments, now
—Beauty knows no fashion—these
bands, barrettes and bandeaux must al
ways be in favor. For they are beautiful
—the featherweight aluminum provides a
perfect setting for rich, resplendent rhine
stones—cut stones of finest quality. Such
brilliancy must add beauty to any coiffure.
Values are $3, $5 to $7.60; choice 98e.
TR eT T L O e sok S L. 2LR S T 1
< Clearaway of Bags at $2.98
P R ICH'S leads in the selling of bags—neochesitating
?g@w\%fi' the carrying of extensive stocks. At intervels i
9%/ ‘)‘y [PPmeimd these stocks must be cleared of remainders—few of U,/E
v' ) V;‘,‘ljfl~ kind. Perfect, seasonable goods—but they’d get the.;
e i A ' store old if left hers to clog. Therefore you ean chooss:. |
B P> 8% y j
‘\ v A 7 $4 and 35 Leather Bags—in seal and morocco ] |
S %L'.—_L___—% / leathers, in black and colors. | ;i
N iy $5 to $7.50 German Sflver Mesh Bags. { 1
gvl - \s6 and $6 Gunmetal Mesh Bags. ( 2.98‘ g
B ) Every silk or moire bag in stock formerly sell- | :
ing up to $8.50, cholce at -} |
(Maln Floor, Right), |
e e D e .
1/ 1 & 50c to $l.OO Jewelry 19¢/
ey .
_ A olearaway of many broken lines, among which we-notess: .
i \‘ $1 sterling silv:r clr{:soune enamel brooch pins .
J 50 1 d bar pi . :
Off Any COl'Set 800 bead neckinces, Shnich Teagth b
. Y 500 bidnch black teakwood beads. /-
in StOCk % 500 cuff links—gold filled; gold plated and sterling ¢
m 40l fX 7 4 silver with cloisonne enamel
The best styles o A 500 pearl sush pins, plain and fancy
the leading makes, [} 600 jet sash pins J
Wk 500 German silver combination vanity and coin helder
all new. Also
brassieres, sanitary Fig (Main Floor—Oenter Alsle.)
goods, and all cor- &&8 : . .
ek T DEBNEE Black & White Voiles 25¢:
$3 corsets $2.25. ‘ Bluck and white striped volles—the kinds that you see made |
&6 corsets $4 eto ; ) into such pretty and cool frocks. Very scarce, so the thirtyfivey .
“(Corsetls, S;cond,'qoo:_) new pleces will go a-gcooting at 250. Various width stripes. .
..’ 5 - :
A Stirring 9 o’Clock Sale of the :
S test Silks of the S ?
. . ’ "‘
at Prices That Will Send ’em Out a Flying ;
EDNESDAY we start invoicing the silks, To avold invoictng the broken lnes, odd’
w lots and remnants, we have clipped prices to a point that insures immediate ,;
clearance. i
'
)
'
L “dde
: For $1 &
E $1.50 Silks
y —Splild Canton Crepes—siTk
4 combined with cotton—bean
. tiful fabrics for all sorts of
} gummer dresses, Bolid colors
: or bestrewn with flowers and
y buds.
} —Printed chiffons in light and
] medium colors, beantified with
. flowers: solid colors, embroid
d ered. 40 inches,
] o i
) . *
| Wool Remnants in a Whiskaway
E Women who need a new skirt, challie kimono or dressing sacque or a new dress for;; 5
| their girl will most likely find the material among these remnants. |
E 50c &$1 Woolens 25c $1 & $1.50 Woolens 45¢ |
) Ito 7 yard lengths—challies, serges, pana- Ito 6 yard lengths—in fabrics for skirts, |
] mas, poplins and some novelties. jackets and capes. j
: (Main Floor—LefbAnnex) 1 |
) Se———————— T
»
;
.
: Stamped Gowns
: .
.
of Nainsook at
E You can see in a
8 moment that the 49c
} gowns are worth
» much more. You see it in the
» fine nainsook, alone worth mora
: than 49¢. You see it in the fine
y clear stamping—Royal Society
. stamping—each line clear cut as
s a cameo. Stamped for scallop
} ing, solid or eyelet embroldery;
b choice of round, V" or square
s neck.
1 (Maln Floor, Center.)
: =
| 10 Big Rolls 25c
.| Toilet Paper
-
* | —Rich’s Economy Toilet Paper is a fair
1 be grade; soft and absorbent, with
, smooth finish. Practically 500 worth
: for 25c,
; (Economy Basement)
AAR AAARARAASAARAAR AR M. RICH & BROS, CO.AMBMARMMAAMA BAARAS A Y
$7.50 Crepe de Chine
Blouses Will Sell at
- SS9 -
They just came in—loo of ‘em——in e /
very newest style.' Black, light and navY
S o (fll;].ga:in;fiw“r, Second Mfig
For $1.25
Silk Foulards
~—There's no silk that qufte
takes the place of foulard for
gummer. Soft and supple, with
a wonderful record for ser
vice. Foulard {8 the one safe
gilk for summer. These are
pot the skimpy 23-inch kind,
but a full yard wide. Beauti
ful patterns in neat floral, bud
and spray designs.
X . ° ;
We Make Suits & Skirts to-
Order for Our Customers.
Cotton skirts $2. Silk or wool $2.50. |
Cotton suits $lO. Silk or wool $l5. |
The New Fall Fashions Are In |
Pictures of the new Fall fashions are here. Skirtsver i
guits will follow these fashions faithfully or be modified ‘te |
meet your individuality. :
The work is guaranteed; the fit must satisfy you. At |
these low prices, we, of course, expect yon to buy your ma- :
terials here. :
(Maln Floor, Left Annex.) |
5 :
10 Big Cakes 25c i
s
Laundry Soap |
—This soap is made after the,same formn- :
la as a standard e grade. Full 8-} s
ounce bars. Double your purchasing :
power, 10 bars 25ec. .
(Economy Basement) | s
- 8
3 H
For $1.50 to 3
$2.50 Silks
—Yard-wide chiffon taffetas In °
good color assortment; bean.
tifully printed silk orepes; the
handsome flowered chiffonx
taffetas; hrocaded satins and
crepes. Not a few tag ends,
but four hundred (400) yards,
nearly every pleoes of sflk ay
dress length or more, ’