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IIEARST’S SUNDAY AMERICAN, ATLANTA, OA., SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 1914.
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. RICH & BROS. CO.
“D'
O you read all that Polly Peach-
' tree rubbish every week?” a
certain man asked me just the
other day.
"Well, sometimes,” I admitted
meekly.
"Well, occasionally It’s very good,”
he said grudgingly, “but some weeks
I think it would be much better if she
6imply said: ‘I can’t think of anything
to say this week, but I will try to do
better next time.’ It would save every
body a lot of trouble.”
They say there is nothing like see
ing yourself as others see you, and I
certainly hope there isn’t. I confess
that I didn’t enjoy the experience a
bit. And I hope that man sees this,
and I hope he feels quite badly about
it. Anyway, I shall console myself by
thinking that because I have never,
never written him up he is simply
jealous and spiteful about it. So
thare!
W HY don’t more people grow old
gracefully? If I have heard
it asked once, I have heard it
asked a million times—almost. And
no one ever seems to know, unless
the correct answer was found by the
person who said that people never do
anything gracefully that they hate as
they hate getting old. That may be
the solution. But some people DO
grow old gracefully. There is Dr. A.
T. Spalding, for instance, who is S3
now, and to ho is loved by every man,
woman and child who knows him, es
pecially the children. He has such a
number of grandchildren himself, and
even a great-grandchild or two; so
he knows all there is to know’ about
children, and he is always doing
something for some of them. And
just recently he has completed a mod
el dolls’ house for the little kiddies
at the Baptist Orphans’ Home, a real
house, with doors and window’s and
furniture, and a chimney large
enough for a doll Santa Claus to come
dow’n with the greatest ease. It is the
delight of every little girl in the home,
and even of some of the small boys.
And that is just one of the things
that he is doing for children eveiy
day; if not his own grandchildren,
then someone else’s. And he has
grown old so gracefully that they can
not realize that he is old at all. I
wish that here were more like him in
the w’orld.
And light touches of Cuticura
Ointment. They remove dan
druff, allay irritation and pro
mote permanent hair health.
Samples Free by Mail
Cuticura Soap and Ointment sold throughout the
world. Liberal sample of each mailed free, with 32-p.
book. Address ••Cuticura.” Dept. 2F. Boston.
4 { | despise people who use scented
I soap.”
1 It was a fair-faced young
girl on the Buckhead line edifying her
companions with likes and dislikes in
her budding mind.
“I despise any sort o^perfume,” an
other girl spoke.
“Look at that coat,” pointing to the
sidewalk where & girl stdod in a
checked sport wrap. The girls
giggled.
“I despise coats like that, ’ com
mented the first girl. .
“My daddy uses something to keep
his face from getting tender when he
shaves, and I despise the scent of it,”
began the first girl all over again.
“Is it bay rum?” asked the second
girl. “I despise that.”
“No, it’s soap. I like white soap.”
"I despise castile soap,” said the
second girl.
“I like it. I despise rose soap.”
“Do you know’ ?” naming a well
known boy of the dancing set.
“Yes. I despise him!” .
“I the car stopped* and the
girls got off and all I could hear w*as
a faint but emphatic, “despise
as they went into a beautiful resi-
break the engagement. He had left
is office, so she gave that most fa
miliar number to central.
“Would you mind stepping out in
front and asking Mr. Blank to come
to the phone?” she Inquired sweetly
of the man who answered.
“I don’t know Mr. Blank,’’ came the
reply. “How shall I find him?”
“Why, he Is small and quite ugly,”
she answered in some confusion.
“Yes, I am sure he will be the ugliest
man there.”
And, with this adequate descrip
tion, Mr. Blank was soon at the
phone. But the trouble all came
when he Insisted on knowing how’ the
perfectly strange man knew who he
was, but I am quite sure she will
never tell him.
I AM really coming to believe what
I didn’t think was possible a
month or tw’o ago, and that is
that our winter dancing is going to
be be even more strenuous than our
summer dancing was. It didn’t seem
as If we could have gotten In one
more dance step than we did all dur
ing the warm weather, but now in ad
dition to all the regular club affairs
and the entertaining for debutantes,
the Ansley has started supper dances
on Monday evening and tea dances on
Friday that, if the start Is any indi
cation, are going to be immensely
popular. Mrs. Forbush is an ex
ceedingly graceful dancer, and her
partner, Morgan Wheeler, was sever
al years at the Jardin de Danse, in
New York. More recently he w’as on
the stage and was here last winter
with Otis Skinner in “Kismet.”
Then I hear that the Piedmont is
going to have supper dances again
after the theater, as they did last
winter, and this will make another
place to go. They say that dancing
is the best exercise in the world for
ieducing flesh, and if that is so,
there ought not to be a single fat
person—man, woman or child—in the
city of Atlanta by the time the win
ter is half over.
RS. HOWARD BUCKNELL is
back from a most delightful
trip to upper Saranac, wnere
she has a summer camp that goes un
der the euphonious name of “Pine
Point Lodge.” She had been intend
ing to open her camp and have a se
ries of delightful house parties, but
she put this off on account of the
illness of her sister-in-law, Mrs. Wil
liam Bucknell, and has been attend
ing the latter. Mrs. William Buck-
nell’s daughter, the Countess Dan-
iele Peeorini, of Rome, Italy, and her
husband, have also been at Upper
Saranac for several weeks. The
Count is an officer in the Italian army
and is also prominent in diplomatic
circles. He and the Countess have
lived several years in China, where he
was sent on a diplomatic mission.
They had intended to spend some
time in Atlanta before re(urning to
Italy, and their visit would have been
the signal for an unending round of
gayety, but the Countess does not
wish to leave her mother while she
is in such poor health, so they will
stay on at Upper Saranac until busi
ness compels their return to Italy.
\
/ OUNQ SMITH certainly stole a
march on his friends when he
married Miss Edith Branson In
Chapel Hill, and though it must
have all been planned before
hand, I can.’t find a soul who
had any inkling of it until the an
nouncement cards arrived on Thurs
day. I nearly always manage to find
out things, but I must confess that I
was completely in the dark this time,
though I have wondered occasionally
why it was that Mr. Smith did not
seem to care particularly for any of
our Atlanta girls. He was away at
college so many years, first at Geor
gia and then at Columbia, that it has
been only in the last year or so that
he has become identified with his
home town. I was talking to him not
long ago, but I must say that he
guarded his secret well, and no one
seemed to suspect anything when he
said he was going to Chapel Hill on
business. And then the announce
ment cards! I am sure Mrs. Smith
will be a most attractive addition Uf
the young married set, and the bride
groom’s friends are preparing to give
them both a warm welcome when
they return from their honeymoon,
about November 1.
To Get Rid of Wrinkles
and Bad Complexion
It is more important now than during ]
the period of profuse perspiration to
keep the pores clean. All cosmetics
clog the pores. In cool weather this
Interferes greatly with elimination of
waste material, Injuring Instead of aid
ing the complexion. Ordinary merco-
llzed wax serves all the purposes of
creams, powders and rouges, giving far
better results. It actually peels off an
offensive skin, at the same time unclog
ging the pores. Minute particles of
scarf skin come off day by day, causing
not the least pain or discomfort. Grad
ually the healthy, younger skin beneath
peeps out, and In less than a fortnight
you have a lovelier complexion than you
ever dreamed of acquiring Mercollzed
wax, obtainable at any drug store, is
spread on nightly like cold cream and
washed off mornings. One ounce usual
ly suffices.
For removing wrinkles, without stop
ping the pores with pasty stuff, here’s
a never-failing formula: 1 oz. pow
dered saxollte, dlssolvecFTn H pint witch
hazel. Bathe the face In this dally for
a while; every line will vanish com
pletely. Even the first application gives
isi
New $23.50 to $29.50 Dresses at
$16.75
T HE dresses represent the surplus stock of
two of our best makers. Their valuation is
a true one—not guessed at. Because we have
identical dresses from these same makers in
stock that sold at $23.50, $25 and $29.50. They, too, have been added to
this lot of newcomers. In all there are 147 dresses, and choice is only
$16.75.
Most of them are the popular serges
or the serge and satin combinations
Included, also, are all satin dresses, messalines and erepe de chines.
Variously in black, several shades each of browns, blues and greens. All
sizes, $16.75.
surprising results—Advertisement.
Serge Weather &
Serge Dresses
A Winning Combination at
Out of the High Rent District
Oscar Barnes
$4.98
Six different styles, each
in black and blue.
23 EAST HUNTER STREET
All wool serge dresses.
The fashionable serge and
satin combinations.
dence on the fashionable highway.
Some time ago I wrote of the indis
criminate use of the word Wonderful,
and now it has come to Despise!
What next?
FURNITURE, ETC.
The new velvet jumpers,
combined with serge.
Let-Go of Our Fine
Model Suits&Gowns
r TT HESE are the exclusive
* one-of-a-kind styles —
faithful reproductions of the
master s—Drecoll, Callot,
Premet, Cheruit, Worth.
All have had their
prices clipped a fourth
to a half; most of them
an average third.
Were $50 to $185
Now $35 to $100
V. J
New $5.95 to
$7.50 Blouses
$3.75
P RIZES for twenty-
three women. Sev
eral are smart combina
tions of crepe de chine
and satin; the rest are the
fashionable satin Basque
blouses, fnany with the
new high frill collar.
Black, white, blue, brown.
Choice, $3.75.
We Save You Money on Every Purchase
T HERE’S a certain drug store
which is Atlanta’s official meet
ing place. For this reason the
people who stay in the store have
fallen into the habit of conducting a
regular messenger service between
those who are late and those who are
on time to appointments. The other
day, one of those dreadful days last
week, a girl who lives quite a bit from
the center of town, though I shan’t
say in what direction, had an engage
ment at the store for luncheon with a
man. And it rained—oh, my good-,
ness, how it rained! She waited
around, a bit with her hat and coat
on, hoping that it would hold up, but
when it kept on getting worse and
worse she decided to call up and
Hi
I,: ’.v „
m
$5.25
ImI
Eg*
m
1
The Petals of
Rose
Are No Prettier or Daintier Than
Exactly Like Cut
Solid Oak
Top 24x36
Finished in Fumed, Early English
or Golden Oak—Big Value.
•UA-rnAOE MARK
Stones Wrapped
Cakes
Each one is perfectly baked and wrapped in waxed
paper and delivered fresh to your grocer every day.
Then we have an Inspector whose sole duty is to
see that the grocer keeps our cakes properly and never
offers a stale one for sale.
Come and see our Cake Bakery, 57 Highland Ave.
•fiver Sfloe
10o
A Pure White
Oake
Mephlete
10c
Ohecelete Cake
•penleh Cake
10o
our Cream Spice
The F. O. Stone Baking Co.
Atlanta, Ga.
Take Highland Ave. Car and
Get Off at Dunlap
Qolden Sunbeam
10c
Rich Yellow Cake
Raleln Cake
10c
Yellow Raisin
Cake
Creole Fruit
10c
Spiced Raleln
Cake
Full 50-lb.
Pure Cotton
Mattress,
Can Not Be
Duplicated
for Less
than $7.50
Ml Next Week $4.99
Guaranteed National Spring $2.95
Wonderful Dining Table Oiler
. $8.48
Solid Oak, 45-inch top, 6-foot Ex
tension, 9-inch Pedestal, finished
n Fumed, Early English or Gold
in Oak—Worth $15.00—this sale
rnly $8.48
Perfection
Smokeless
Oil
Heaters,
Sold
Every
where
for
$5.00,
100 During
This Sale
to Go at
$2.75
Each.
I Underwear at
Modest Prices
Children's U’wear 25c
'J* —Shirts and pants—medium-weight
j, cotton, full bleached; fleece
«5 lined. High neck, long sleeves;
ankle-length pants. Sizes 8 to 12.
==i-5 Women's Underwear 50c
—Shirts and pants—Jersey ribbed,
fleece lined. High neck, long
sleeve shirts, silk crochet neck
band wtth washable silk tape;
ankle-length pants. Sizes 4, 5
and 6.
— I Corset Covers 25c
—Well knit, choice of medium or
light weight. High neck, long-
sleeve styles, with tape buttons.
= ! *5 Union Suits 75c
This
High-
Class
Baby
Bed
and
Pure Cotton
Felt
Mattress
—Medium and heavy weight cotton,
full bleached. High neck, long
sleeves and ankle length. Neatly--
trimmed with silk crochet neck
band and washable silk tape.
Sizes 4, 5 and 6.
You can be fitted with any
Bon Ton CorsetYouSaw
on the Living Models
\17 OMEN know dress. Moreover
* * they are severe critics. Put a cor
set on a living model and place her before
three thousand women. If there’s any
thing wrong with the corset those women
will remark it.
Upward of three thousand women saw
the Living Model demonstration here.
They were enthusiastic over what they
Raw. Many realized for the first time
how much more graceful and comfortable
they could be if they would wear the cor
set best suited to their type of figure.
—As demonstrated on the Living Models,
there is a Bon Ton Corset for every
type of figure. All these models are
here with trained corsetieres to help you
select the model intended for you. Ap
pointments can be made by phone.
Bon Ton Corsets, $3 to $25.
(Corsets—Second Floor.)
= 5
Size 2-ft. 6-in.x4 ft. 6-in.—any
finish—$10.00.
We rent Chairs and Tables
Card Parties, Weddings, etc.
for =i
For Big and Little Girls
Sweaters—all kinds, $1.50 to $4.95.
Bloomers—Sateen, Mohair, Serge, 50c to $2.50.
Bath Robes—in various colors, 6 to 14, $2.
Dr. Denton’s Sleeping Garments, 2 to 10, 50c to $1.
Flannelet Garments with feet, 2 to 12, 50c and 65c.
Flannelet Night Gowns, sizes 2 to 14, 50c.
Flannelet Pajamas, sizes 4 to 12, at $1.25.
Flannelet Kimonos, many kinds, 6 to 14, 98c.
High-neck Rompers for tots of 2 to 6, at 50c.
Boys’ Oliver Twist Suits, 2 to 6, $1.
(Juvenile, Second Floor.)
Make your furniture new by using
VARNOIL Polish—best in the
world—25c can.
New Dolls Are Here from
Germany at 59c to $5.95
Sale of 9x12 Rugs
The Mill Drops the Patterns
We Drop the Prices, Despite
$6.50 to $9
Trunks $4.95
-Style much as shown. Made of
basswood, canvas covered, with
steel bottom and * trimmings.
Brass lock and catches. Divided
tray. All sizes 28 to 40 inches.
Guaranteed Bungalow
30-in. wide, 6 ft. long..,
36-in. wide, 6-ft. long.,.
42-in. wide, 6-ft. long...
Cots.
$3.25
$4.00
$4.50
the fact that rug prices are going upward. Designs and color
ings here to harmonize with any decorative scheme. A rug
for any room. All rugs 9x12 feet.
IVSail Orders Given Prompt Attention
Wilton Rugs
Now
$52.50
.47.50
.42.50
^ $32.50
Were
$60
$55
$50
$37.50
Sale Price on
Other Trunks
Sizes
Value Sale Price
34 & 36 in. $15.00
Axminster Rugs
Were Now
$27.50 $24
$25 $22.50
Brussels Rugs
$16.50 $13.50
rich & bros. co.
36 in
32 & 40 in
W ardrobe
Wardrobe
Wardrobe
Wardrobe
Wardrobe
22.50
24.50
32.50
37.50
50.00
35.00
17.50
$ 9.95
12.95
13.95
17.95
25.00
35.00
21.95
11.95