Newspaper Page Text
TUESDAY, APRIL 20. 1915.-
-TTTE ATLANTA GEOROTAN-
-ATLANTA, GA.
Miss Lowndes to
Wed Lafayette
Montgomery
The brilliant social event of The
evening will be the marriage of Miss
Jeannette Lowndes, youngest daugh
ter of Mr. and Mrs. George Stella
Lowndes, and Lafayette Montgomery,
nephew of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Mont
gomery. The young couple will be
surrounded by a group of prominent
young people as attendants, and the
church*ceremonial. taking place at the
First Baptist Church at 8:30 o’clock,
will be followed by a targe reception
at the home of the bride’s parents <n
Ansley Park.
Miss Emily Lowndes will be her
sister’s maid of honor and Miss Louise
Riley will be first bridesmaid. Miss
Virginia Bowman, MisS Catherine
Wylie, Miss Laura Lee Cooney and
Miss Mary Butler will be bridesmaids.
Wimberly Peters will be best man,
and Frank Martin, Sanford Rust, A.
W. Hill, Gerald O’Keefe and Philip
L’Bngle will be groomsmen. Dr. John
E. White will officiate. The church
decorations will be elaborate.
At the reception punch will be
served by Miss Jeannette Williams,
of Columbus: Miss Charlotte Meador
and Miss Sarah Schoen. Following
the reception Mr. Montgomery and
his bride will leave for a wedding
Journey, and returning they will be
at home with Mr. and Mrs. Montgom
ery on Ponce DeLeon avenue.
Among the out-of-town guests at
the wedding will be Mrs. Montgom-
A
Bualnsss 1$ Good at Attant»'» Busy Theater.
FORSYTH -irrtr
ENGAGEMENT EXTRAORDINARY
HOUOINl
WORLD’S MASTER MYSTIC
ETHEL GREEN, Comedienne; JOHN B. HY-
MER, At Jimtown Junction; DOOLEY & RU-
GEL, Musical Comedy; Smith &. Kaufman,
Comedian*; Other Keith Notables.
NEXT WEEK NORMAN HACKETT
WITH THE MOVIES
’T'HE STRAND
* Wednesday.
Beginning at 10:45 o’clock there will
be run fourteen reels of Mutual pic
tures, from which five will be selected
for program. One admission pays for
the entire run In the morning.
A lamo No. i
The Little Playhouse With a
Big Show.
Wednesday.
“The Way to Happiness,” three-
reel drama, full of heart throbs.
X/AUDETTE
V Home of the Ml
Irror Screen
Wednesday.
“Return of Maurice Donnelly,”
three-reel Vltagrapn, featuring Leah
Baird and Leo Delaney.
THE TEXAS QUARTET.
L
yHE ALSHA,
Wednesday.
“The Moment of Sacrifice,” Than-
houser drama. “The Beauty Bur
glars,” Keystone comedy that is a
scream.
ery's sister, Mrs. Joel Johnson, of
Jackson, Miss.
The closing event in the series of
parties given for Miss Lowndes and
Mr. Montgomery before their mar
riage was the buffet supper at which
Mr. and Mrs. George S. Lowndes, Jr.,
entertained in thei’ honor Monday
evening at their home following the
church rehearsal for the wedding. The
decorations carried out the col ir
i scheme of green and white, dogwood
i blossoms forming the basis for an ef-
fective decoration. In the dining
| room the table held a basket of white
! roses and ferns, about which were
grouped white unshaded tapers in
I silver candlesticks, all minor details
! being in green and white.
The hostess wore yellow taffeta and
Mrs. Holland Lowndes, who served
i coffee, wore white tulle veiling white
j charmeuse. Miss Lowndes wore shell-
j pink taffeta. Ti e guests Included only
i the bridal party.
Reception for Writers’ Club.
Dr. and Mrs. Herbert Truax will
, entertain at a reception on Tuesday
evening at their home on Capitol ave-
i nue in honor of the Atlanta Writers’
! Club, the members of which are cel
ebrating the club’s first anniversary.
The guests will include the forty
members of the club. They organized
last year with only eight members—
Mrs. Robert Argo, Mrs. Thomas Pe
ters, Mrs. Lollie Belle Wylie. Miss
Isma Dooly, Miss Katherine Wooten,
Angus Perkerson Tarleton Collier and
Britt Craig, with John Temple
Graves as honorary president. Many
distinguished people have been the
guests of the club since Its organiza
tion and the membership has grown
to forty.
Next Monday afternoon Norman
Hackett will be honor guest at the
meeting of the club at the University
Club. Miss Elizabeth Tully will read
a short play by Stanley Horton,
called “Phipps,” and Miss Louise
Barili will sing. Miss Rosa Pringle
| Smith will give several piano selec-
j tions.
j Luncheon for Bride.
Mrs. William Hoyt entertained at
luncheon on Tuesday at her home in
Ansley Park for Mrs. George Brown,
Jr., a bride of last week.
Dogwood and honeysuckle deco
rated the house, and In the dining
room the table had as its centerpiece
a basket filled with flag lilies and
pink honeysuckle. The candles were
shaded in pink and the silver holders
held bows of tulle. The place cards
were small baskets filled with bon
bons bearing the guests’ names on
the ribbon bows tied upon the han
dles.
Mrs. Hoyt received her guests
wearing white lace and blue char
meuse. Mrs. Brown wore pompadour
silk with the background of green.
Her large black hat was trimmed in
flowers and faced with pink crepe.
The guests were Misses Laura
Gowles, Dorothy Hebert of New Or
leans, Elizabeth Morgan, Carolyn
King, Flora Crowe, Carrie Norcross,
Corrie Hoyt Brown, Margaret Hoyt,
Helen McCarty, Virginia Lipscomb,
Mrs. Charles M. Sciple and Miss Sally
Eugenia Brown.
Many Parties at Tea-Dance.
Many parties will be given at the
tea-dance at the Piedmont Driving
Club Wednesday afternono, when
dancing will be on the terrace if the
weather permits. Already there are
many visitors in the city, and they
will be honor guests in a number of
parties.
Miss Eliza Dancy, of Baltimore,
Miss Katherine Ellis’ guest, will be
honor guest in the party which Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Hopkins, Jr., give,
when the guests will include only a
few of the friends made by Miss Dan
cy during her residence here.
Miss Lydia Belle Kuehnle, of Den
nison, Iowa, Mrs. Charles Remsen’s
guest, will be honor guest in a party
given by Lamar Hill, and Mrs. Klatte
Armstrong will entertain for her sis
ter, Misses May and Clifford Quinney,
of Waynesboro, who are her guests.
Mrs. Peter Godfrey, of Covington,
will entertain in honor of Mrs. George
M. Brown, Jr., a recent bride. Mrs.
Edward Van Winkle will give a small
'HE DE SOTO
• Wednesday.
“The Bottomless Pit,” Kay-Bee
drama. “Branch No. 37,” Majestic.
“Her Hero,” Keystone comedy.
POLITE VAUDEVILLE.
T he park
East °olnt, Gs.
Wednesday.
Four reels of good first-run pic
tures dally.
LAMO No. 2
* m Wednesday.
“The Terrible One,” a three-reel
Lubln special feature drama of In
tense Interest.
SLAGER AND ESTELLE,
Classy Entertainers.
THE MONTGOMERY
* Wednesday.
“The Girl of the Golden West,” a
wonderful drama of American life,
produced by Jesse L. Laskey.
S AVOY
To-day.
“The Stool Pigeon,” two-part Vic
tor drama, with J. Warren Kerrigan
and Vera Sisson. “Animated Week
ly,” pictorial review of the world’s
latest news.
LPHA
Wednesday.
m “Grand Opening of the World’s
® Only Movie City,” Victor. “Fatty’s
Faithful Fldo,” Keystone comedy,
featuring Arbuckle. “The Stolen Jew
els,” Thanhouser drama.
By putting an At
lanta Telephone in
your home for 81-3
cents a day, or in your
business at $4 a month,
you can exercise sub
stantial economy with
out sacrifice in effi
ciency.
Our rapid-fire ser
vice covers all of
Greater Atlanta.
Atlanta Telephone
« Telegraph Co*
T he gem
Marietta. Ga.
Wednesday.
“The Bombay Buddha,” three-reel
Imp drama of Intense Interest, fea
turing Hobart Henley and Francis
Nelaon.
HOOPING COUGH
I I M
' The Celebrated Effectual Remedy
Without Internal Medicine, ^ K
Roche’s Herbal Embrocation
will also be found very efficacious in cases of
BRONCHITIS. LUMBAGO and RHEUMATISM
W. Edwards A Son, London. England
AllJJrUQgiStS.crr E.Foufera t •n..»0 R„kstiSC.H.Y.
So increase m
Atlanta Woman Is Golf
Tournament Enthusiast
Mrs. W. H.
White
shown at play
on the links.
She is
constantly on
the golf course
these bright
spring days,
and has entered
at the various
tournaments
of the clubs,
taking keenest
delight in
athletic affairs.
Miss Mary Branan. a recent graduate
of the American School of Dramatic
Art.
Baraca-Philathea Union.
The Baraca-Philathea City Union
will meet Tuesday evening at the Sec
ond Baptist Church. Norman F. Wil
liamson, of Rome, aecretary of the
State Baraca Union, will be the prin
cipal speaker. Supper will be served
at 6:30 o’clock, after which plans for
the Baraca-Philathea convention will
be discussed. All Interested In the
work are Invited to attend.
Hanie- Brown.
The wedding of Miss Uorah Hanie
and W. J. Brown took place Saturday
evening, April 17, at the home of the
bride’s aunt, Mrs. Charles Gatlin, the
Rev. Robert Ivey officiating.
PERSONALS
The Modern Topic Club will meet
Wednesday morning at 10 o’clock with
Mrs. S. C. Baker at her home, No. 73
Greenwood avenue.
The North Side Embroidery Club
will meet with Mrs. A. H. Parham,
No. 91 McLendon street, Wednesday
afternoon at 3 o’clock.
The Wednesday Afternoon Rook
Club will meet Wednesday at 2:30
o’clock with Mrs. T. E. Rogers, Jr., at
No. 279 Gordon street.
The Woman's International Union
Label League will meet Monday
evening at 8 o’clock in the New Kim
ball. Mrs. Sara Conboy will ad
dress the meeting.
The Atlanta Equal Suffrage Asso
ciation will hold a business meeting
Wednesday afternoon at 3 o’clock In
the parlors of the Hotel Ansley. All
members are urged to be present.
Misses Margaret Montgomery and
Gladys Howcott will be among the
party coming .from New Orleans for
grand opera wfiw will be at the Geor
gian Terrace.
The Study Club will meet with Mrs.
William Shallenberger on Inman Cir*-
cle Wednesday afternoon at 3 o’clock.
Miss Ruth Barry will entertain the
Ansley Park Sewing Club on Thurs
day morning.
Mrs. H. M. Hall, of Newnan, is the
guest of Mrs. Everard Richardson.
Mrs. Richardson will have with her
for opera Mrs. E. H. Richardson, of
Cedartown, and Mrs. Giles VanCleve,
of Louisville. Miss Florine Mardwick,
of Cedartown, will also be with her
for a few days during next week.
Mrs. H. G. Hastings has returned
from Milledgeville, where she was the
guest of Mrs. C. A. Whitehead during
the meeting of the Tenth District
Convention of the State Federation
of Women's Clubs, at which she de
livered an address. Mrs. Hastings
spent the week-end in Sandersville
before returning home.
party in honor of Miss Harriet
Broyles’ guest, Miss Fay Taylor, of
Summerville.
Others who will give small parties
are Mr. and Mrs. Brutus Clay, Dr.
and Mrs. George Kent Varden, Mr.
and Mrs. Gus Dodd, Mr. and Mrs.
Frank Lake, Mr. and Mrs. Claude
Buchanan, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur
Clarke, Mrs. J. B. Horne and Bowie
Martin.
At the tea-dance at this club on
Wednesday afternoon of opera week
the hours will be from 5 until 7, in
order to allow the guests time to re
turn hoirte and dress for the opera.
Assisting Miss Ladson.
Only a few will assist Miss Leone
Ladson in entertaining her guests
when she gives a buffet luncheon
Wednesday at the home of her sister,
Mrs. Frank Adair, in Druid Hills, for
Miss Eliza Dancy, of Baltimore, who
has been visiting Mrs. Robert C. Al
ston, but who Is now with Miss Kath
erine Ellis for a few days before re
turning home on Thursday. They will
be Mrs. Frank Adair, Mrs. Forrest
Adair, Jr., and Miss Katherine Ellis.
About 60 guests among the young so
ciety set will be present.
Mias Broyles Gives Luncheon.
Miss Harriet Broyles was hostess
at a luncheon Tuesday at her home
on Merritts avenue, In compliment to
her guest, Miss Fay Taylor, of Sum
merville, and for Miss Louise Broyles.
The table had as Its centerpiece
pink roses In a silver loving cup.
Eight small vases of apple blossoms
and pink roses surrounded the cen
terpiece and miniature baskets of
flowers marked the place of each
guest.
Miss Broyles wore brown char
meuse with a full drapery of silk
tulle. Miss Taylor was gowned In
gray taffeta with white as a trim
ming, and Miss Louise Broyles wore
a morning gown of blue taffeta, the
Roman stripes appearing horizontally
in the full skirt and tight-fitting
waist.
The guests Included Misses Mar
garet Grant, Virginia Lipscomb, Dor
othy Harman, Rosalie Davis, Dorothy
Arkwright, Helen McCarty, Marga
ret McCarty and Mrs. Ewell Gay.
To Organize at Governor’s Mansion.
The Junior Memorial Association
will be organized at the Governor’s
Mansion on Wednesday afternoon,
and at 2:46 o’clock Governor John M.
Slaton will address the members.
Mrs. Arthur Wilson will organize the
children and will have charge of the
meeting. There are more than a
hundred children already enrolled for
membership, which will make the as
sociation the largest of Its kind in
the United States. The object of the
Junior Memorial Association will be
to continue the work of Memorial
Day observance, as the older organi
zations have done for 60 years, and
to build f monuments and pay honor
to the d**d heroes of the Civil War.
Mrs. Wilson will be assisted in or
ganizing the association by Mrs. W.
JD. Ellis, president of the Ladies’ Me
morial Association; Mrs. A. McD.
Wilson, &tate vice president of the
national organization, and the local
officers of the Atlanta association.
The public Is invited to attend.
College Park Club to Meet.
The College Park Woman’s Club
will meet Wednesday afternoon at 3
o’clock In the High School auditorium.
The program has been arranged by
Mrs. Hansell Jackson, chairman of
the committee on home economics.
The speakers will be Virlyn Jones,
who will speak on “The Public
School Teacher In Georgia,” and Dr.
Plato Durham, who will speak on
“The Beauty of Self-Expression.”
Miss Frances Stovall will give a
piano solo, and Mrs. Kurt Mueller
will sing selections from "The Magic
Flute.”
Musical Tea for Church.
Committee No. 6 of St. Luke’s
Church, Mrs. D. B. DeSaussure chair
man, will entertain their friends, both
old and young, at a musical tea par-
] ty and guessing contest on Wednes-
‘ day from 4 to 6 o’clock, In the Sun
day school room. A prize will be
given the lucky contestant.
Mrs. Albert Woolley and Mrs.
Frank Sands will sing, and Miss Nel
lie Joe Johnson will give a violin se
lection. A free-will offering will be
taken at the door.
History Class to Meet.
The Nineteenth Century History
Class will meet at the residence of
Mrs. Vassar Woolley, corner Spring
and Twelfth streets, Wednesday aft
ernoon at 3:30 o’clock. This will be
the last meeting of the class for the
year 1914-16, and a full attendance is
desired.
Weaver- Lipham.
Mrs, E. M. Weaver announces the
marriage of her daughter Ellen to
Richard E. Lipham.
Young People to Present Plays.
The Players’ Club of St. Philip’s
Cathedral, an organization of young
people, Will present three one-act
plays Wednesday and Thursday eve
nings in the Sunday school room at
No. 16 Washington street.
This club was organized by Dean
John R. Atkinson because, he said, ne
believed that an efficient, well-
equipped amateur dramatic club was
an enterprise distinctly worth while
In that it tends to create a keener ap
preciation of the possibilities of good
drama as a civic and moral good,
serving as entertainer and educator
and critic.
A temporary stage has been erected
and seats provided for 300. So great
was the crowd to see the club’s first
effort, "The Rector,” In January that
it was deemed wise to give these plays
two nights—Wednesday and Thurs
day.
The plays have been directed by
OBITUARY.
The funeral of Samuel W. Dibble, 37.
newspaper man. who died Monday
morning, was held Tuesday at the
home of his father. W. J. Dibble, No.
153 Summit avenue, the Rev. C. B.
Wilmer, pastor of St. Luke's Episco
pal Church, officiating, and the inter-
V ment was in Westview. The pallbear
ers, mostly fellow newspaper workers,
were Frank L. Stanton, Francis W.
Clarke. Fred Lewis, A. Hardy Ulm,
T. H. Beauchamp and Dr. W. C. Bry
ant. Mr. Dibble’s friends throughout
the States sent messages of sympathy
and floral offerings and the funeral
was largely attended.
The body of Captain R. L. Hebert, 68.
who died Monday night at a private
sanitarium, was sent Tuesday to Mur
phy. N. C.. for funeral and interment.
Captain Hebert is survived by two
sons. Ed and Frank Hebert; four
daughters. Miss Annie Hebert, Mrs.
Ben McGlanery, Mrs. J. A. Penland,
Mrs. Harris Long, all of Murphy.
The funeral of Mrs. J. O. Williams, 39,
who died Monday, was held Tuesday
from the home, No. 11 Augusta ave
nue, the Revs. J. W. Quillian and F.
J. Fleming officiating, and the inter
ment was in Westview. The pallbear
ers were J. D. McCarty, Harry Mur
phy, G. W. Curtis. B. H. Nesserni,
Gideon Allen and Madison Davis.
The funeral of Mrs. M. F. Donehoo, 74,
who died Monday at the home of her
daughter, Mrs. A. D. Duncan, in East
Point, was held Tuesday from St.
Paul’s Church and the Interment was
in Oakland.
The funeral of Mrs. Harry Jackson, 69.
who died Sunday night, was held
Tuesday from the home of her daugh
ter. Mrs. Shepard Bryan, Peachtree
and Twelfth streets, and the body was
sent to Athens for interment in the
Oconee Cemetery.
Mrs. Sarah M. Bartlett, 74, died Tuesday
at the home, on the Adamsville road.
The body was removed to Donehoo’s
and will be sent Wednesday morning
at 9 o’clock to Madras, Ga.. for funer
al and interment. Mrs. Bartlett is
survived by a daughter, Mrs. Mary
Stanford, and six sons, H. B., A. T.,
J. C.. G. O.. A. J. and C. T. Bartlett.
Victory in D. A, R.
Fight Is Claimed
By Mrs. Guernsey
[By International Nawa Saryloa.J
WASHINGTON. April 20.—The real
fight for factional supremacy in the
twenty-fourth annual convention of
the Daughters of the American Revo
lution began to-day with the presen
tation of committee reports. The re
port* of committees in charge of the
activities, the conduct of which has
been made an issue of the campaign,
were vigorously debated.
Mrs. George T. Guernsey, of Inde
pendence, Kans., who is fighting to
succeed Mrs. William Gumming
Story, of New York, as president gen
eral of the organization, to-day claims
victory by fifteen votes.
The Guernsey forces planned to
make another attempt to advance for
hearing from Thursday to to-day the
report of the committee on the publi
cation of the society’s magazine, the
management of which they are mak
ing an issue. Mrs. Guernsey wants
this report read before election to
morrow. The Story forces yesterday
prevented such a move.
178 Enroll in DeKalb
Corn-Canning Clubs
As a result of the membership cam
paign waged by County Agent R. S.
Hunter, Miss Annie Wesley and the
Decatur Board of Trade, 178 boys and
girls have enrolled In the DeKalb
County Corn and Canning Clubs.
The Board of Trade has offered $200
In prizes for the best exhibits at the
products pageant in Decatur next Oc
tober.
DeKalb County Boys
Organizing Pig Clubs
The DeKalb County Boys’ Pig Club
is being organized by County Demon
stration Agent R. S. Hunter. Mem
bers will be enrolled up to June 1.
The Decatur Board of Trade has
offered $100 In prizes for the best ex
hibits at the Products Pageant and
Home-Coming Day, to be held next
October.
1.500 Expected as
State S. S. Meeting
Opens at Americus
AMERICUS, April 20.—The State
Sunday School Association convened
here this afternoon in annual con
vention. Already 1,000 delegates are
In attendance, and It is thought the
official register will show 1,200 to 1,-
600 present.
Dr. Joseph Broughton, of Atlanta,
president of the association, presided
at the opening meeting. Secretary
D. W. Simms, also of Atlanta, Is in
active charge of the convention busi
ness.
The people of Americus have made
elaborate plans to entertain the dele
gates. The convention meetings are
being held In th4 auditorium of the
First Methodist Church. Music is be
ing furnished by a large trained
choir, under the direction of Profes
sor E. O. Excell, noted Sunday school
song writer. He is assisted by Pro
fessor Roper, pianist.
The 300 or more delegates from At
lanta and vicinity arrived this morn
ing at 2 o’clock.
The convention lasts through
Thursday. In addition to the pro
gram arranged by the association of
ficials, several special features have
been prepared by the Americus com
mittee.
Tenth Ward Grooms
Council Candidates
George P. Dickson, formerly a
member of the Police Board, and A.
T. Peacock, a member of the Georgia
Tech faculty, were mentioned Tues
day as promising candidates for
Council from the Tenth Ward in
event of the election of T. H. Jeffries
as County Ordinary and the conse
quent resignation of Councilman
Claude C. Mason to become his nrsi
assistant.
Councilman Mason received the in
dorsement of his colleagues in Coun
cil Monday afternoon, who signed a
statement that they favored the Jef
fries candidacy.
German Engineers
Too Busy for Fair
BERLIN, April 20.—The Society of
German Engineers has declined an In
vitation to participate in the Congress
of Engineers at Ban Francisco. It ex
plains that German engineers are too
busy with the war.
It adds that because of American
shipments of munitions to German’s
enemies It would be difficult to get Ger
man engineers to contribute papers for
the congress.
PROBABLY FATALLY WOUNDED.
CARNESVILLE. April 20.—Dean
Busha was shot and probably fatally
wounded by Carlton Hall at the home
of Busha. The origin of the difficulty
has not been learned. Hall has been
arrested.
SUPPOSE
a chauffeur had to
push his car as well
as steer it.
There’s as little
logic about sewing
without an electric
motor.
Let Us Convince You
Georgia Ry. & Power Co #
*2
Bros. Co.
MAIN FLOOR—SHOE DEPARTMENT
Wednesday Only.
Black Satin
Pumps
What’s the matter, mamma?
Not Due to Sex
Alone
Many women have come to know’
that sex isn’t the reason for all back
aches, dizzy headaches and urinary
disorders. Men have these troubles,
too, and often they come from kidney
weakness. To live simply, eat spar
ingly, take better care of one’s self
and to use Doan’s Kidney Pills is
bound to help bad kidneys get better.
There are so many thousands of wom
en who can tell you this from expe
rience.
An Atlanta Woman’s
Experience.
Mrs. George Campbell, 275 Glcnnwood
avenue, Atlanta, says: “I had suffered
for about a year from disordered kid
neys. I was afflicted with pain In my
back and was subject to severe head
aches. sometimes so bad that I couldn’t
do my housework. My hands and limbs
were badly swollen and often l couldn’t
stoop to put on my shoes. Doan’s Kid
ney Pills, procured at Jacobs’ Phar
macy, brought me relief.”
DOAN’S
50* a! all Drug Store*
Fosler-Mllbum Co.Prop* Buffalo.NY.
KIDNEY
PILLS
Davison-Paxon Stokes Co.
A Sale of Women s
Suits Wednesday at
In the Downstairs Section
$9.75
Another just Uuch a sale as has made our
Downstairs Suit Section famous.
If you have postponed the buying of a Suit
now, and want to expend only a small sum, count
yourself fortunate, for in this sale Wednesday
you may buy Suits worth $15 and $20—many of
them—and .
Pay Only $9.75
They are all new, smart, trim little Suits, for
young women and women. Norfolk styles, belted,
and with flap pockets. There are black-and-white
checks, also good, wool serges in navy and Bel
gian blues, sand and black.
Think of buying new, stylish, $12.50 to $20
Suits at—
$5.00 Values for
$1.95
\
A one-day special pricing that will snrely strike
a responsive chord and bring effective results.
Also includes black satin Colonial Pumps, tan
calf Pumps and Colonials, rubber-soled Outing
Oxfords, and patent side button Colonial Pumps.
■MMMMMMMain Floor—at Rich’s JWfWW
%
* .
t
mr
&
3g
I
n!
Si
I
S’
£
£
£
Sh
as
Sh
si
S:
READ and THINK!
$9.75
Wednesday at 8 a. m.
—Downstairs Section.
C--
c«
Pi
0
c3
5
0>
Q
0
O
CONVINCED?— NOT EXACTLY—
An Atlanta Citizen said; “I am reading all
the Ads of the Atlanta Retail Merchants Asso
ciation. They are right and they are instruct
ive. You are making ATLANTA Citizens, who
are interested in ATLANTA, think along a new
channel.
“Some other of our Citizens—like myself—
just never THOUGHT what it meant to send
money to a Northern City for clothes, gifts, or
any other merchandise. We do not need ‘con
vincing’—the question itself is ' self-convinc
ing’ to every REAL ATLANTA Citizen. What
we needed was something to make us THINK.
“Your Ads are serving this purpose well,
and you are right when you say ‘Foreign La
bels' neither ‘Boost’ nor 'Build' ATLANTA!
What are your views?
We believe you will agree with this Atlanta
Citizen—that he is right.
THINK I .UHr
Atlanta Retail Merchants Association.