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IIEARST’S RT7NDAY AMERICAN. ATLANTA. OA., SUNDAY. .TT'NE 13. 1915.
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country club it too funny! Tn© New
Yorker wear* sport clothe* appro
priately. When *he 1* downtown
shopping the wesito tailored suits or
dark *ilk gown* with shoe* and hate
to match, and when she goes out to a
club to remain through the evening
and dine ahe wear* an afternoon <os-
tume of the style known a* (more or
leaa) "dressy." And «he is always
correct.
• • •
O F course you have heard of that
intrepid American girl artist,
Katherine Carl, of New York,
who once upon a time went to China
and lived for months in the Inner
place of that awful old Dowager Em
press Tal Ann, snd painted the first
portrait of t’hlna’s grand old woman
that was ever painted—and the last,
pr> far at I know. Many of you, I sup
pose, have read with keen Interest the
tale she lived to tell—that Is, the book
which Mies Carl wrote of her expe
riences in the Imperial Palace of the
Lotus Lilies (or something like that)
after she got back home Well, I hear
that Mias Carl has pAlnted another
portrait which will Interest ua, for
the subject la one of Atlanta’s charm
ing glrla, Marjorie Brown The por
trait has created something of a sen
sation in New York because of Its
speaking liken*..s Th<* term is used
MARTHA WAtHIROTON
time home.made
Martha
Washington
Candies
Factory, 505 Twelfth St N. W.
Wuhinffton, D. C
Parker's Drug Store,
Cor. Forsyth and Luckie St*.
Sole Agents,
Ivy 461. Atlanta 461.
advisably, as. 'tie said, the slender
young girl of the picture, brown
eyed and brown-haired and creamy
of complexion, **em» to be opening
her smiling lips to speak, if one looks
at the portrait intently for a few mo
menta. The work was done by Mias
Carl the past year, while Marjorie
was In New York, for the entire win
ter, except for frequent short visits to
her cousins in the White House at
Washington.
• • •
| HEAR that Arrington Butt, the
I English lassie who Is visiting
here has a very clever Joke which
she perpetrates on new acquaintances
from time to time. There are no rep
etitions In any one city, for obvious
reason*, but the first time Is always
a grand success An Atlanta man
name unknown—figured In the Joke
carried out last week by Miss Butt,
who, by tiie way, cays she is not Eng
lish, but American, even if she does
apeak "pure English." 'Twas while
she was the guest of Lyda Nash at
East Lake that on© evening, several
young men being among those pres
ent, the subject of quick marriages
came up, or was brought up by the
sly Jokester After gradually leading
up to the point, the young man chosen
for the party of the seefnd part In the
Joke, was informed by Miss Arrington
Butt, of Liverpool, England, that she
would marry him right away if he
said the word. Well, the young man
was game, all right. So the entire
party got Into an automobile and rode
out to Decatur, where the young man
knew a minister was to be had The
door bell was rung and the minister
routed out of hia comfortable couch at
II o’clock In the evening. Then the
1’oung man came back to the waiting
bride-to-be (?) and her friends, when
he was told to "Jump In quick," the
chauffeur unloosed the power that
propelled the car, arid the party went
off as fast as the car would go before
the astonished bridegroom-elect could
realize that he and the minister were
"It,” all right!
And they say the same thing hap-
IK»ned In Augusta, only the bride
groom was an Augusta man.
• • •
T HE Importance of the June bride
on the social horizon is threat
ened only by the bridesmaid. A
Vftfceful bride selects her maids w'lth a
view to the effect, not only on the
tout ensemble, but on herself partic
ularly. She is a girl who knows her
own points, who Is willing to have a
bevy of real beauties In her bridal
party—or, for the matter of that, is
willing to have real beauties as
"Chums" before the time comes to se
lect her bridesmaids. The three times
and out fallacy has been prover^again
and again by Atlanta girls who have j
achieved a habit of being bridesmaids.
Nearly all of the home wedding par
ties of the present season will be I
largely made up of Atlanta girls,
though several visitors will also fig- j
tire In the bridesmaid contingent.
f Eliza Dancy, of Baltimore, cornea to
! be, a rnald at Jane Thornton’s wed-
j ding, and Mildred Sykes, of Mlafls-
j sippi, has already arrived to be in
Hassle May Ottley’s wedding group.
Bertha Moore’s bevy of nine pretty
girls < goodness me!) will include flve
outrof-town maids—a fair proportion,
j I suppose, as she Is to go to their
I town as a bride. Margaret Gage is
! coming over from Birmingham "to
j attend" Mary King. And vice versa
| to all this, Atlanta girls will figure in
I out-of-town weddings. Alrnee Hun-
j nicutt will "maid" a New Orleans
friend, and Alice May Freeman goes
to Birmingham to act as bridesmaid
at the marriage of her friend, Dorothy
Johnson, on the 17th.
• * *
T HE calling of girls by their first
name is a privilege enjoyed by
all the men and boys "in their
set," as a general thing. So If any
Atlanta man wants to use a name for
his fiancee that non* of the other fel
lows use he has to call her “Sweet
heart"-—and even then he may not be
the only one! I have always thought
the custom a little too promiscuous, as
It were, and have never become ac
customed to the ease with which ev
ery man in town Is calling a visitor
by her first name the day after she
gets here. But there is a young visi
tor here at present who upsets my
theories. Out at the East I«ake din
ner-dance Wednesday evening Miss
Woolley, of New York, the guest of
Ida Winshlp for a long Ptay (let us
hope), was so altogether fetching in
her smart sports suit of American
Beauty corduroy and Panama hat
banded in the same bright shade, to
match h°r sunny brown hair and
smiling brown eyes—she was so tall
and slender amf* graceful and gay—
what else could she be called but a
Delight?
1
/ OU have heard of the man who
' said he had never seen a child
until his own son was born.
There are lots of people who, while
not going to that extreme, yet have a
keen«r interest in other children when
they have one of their own. So It has
been with our friend, Mrs. Ringland
Fisher Kilpatrick, of New York, who
was a former Atlantan and very pop
ular hero. The many friends of Mrs.
Kilpatrick will appreciate the little
story told by a returning Atlantan
the other day. Mrs. Kilpatrick’s
charming young son has endeared ail
"kiddies" to the young mother and
when she was out on a long motor
trip the other day she was more than
horrified to hear a woman scream
and to see another woman and a man
struggling to get the distressed wom
an’s child from her arms. Mrs. Kil
patrick had the car slowed down and
for a few moments watched the un
equal fight, the woman from whose
arms the child was being torn show
ing by her distress and desperate
courage that It was her own little one
for whom she fought. Presently the
tender-hearted mother could stand It
no longer, so she Jumped on* of her
car and angrily went to the rescue.
P. 8.— Yes, It was a "movie" In the
making, but Mrs. Kilpatrick felt much
better, even at that, than if she had
rolled on and left a struggling mother
to her fate.
• * •
D OWN by the-sad sea waves which
lap the coast of Florida the Joke
was played, and by the waves
themselves. No; of course you do not
believe it, but it Is so, Just the same.
Girls, you remember one Mr. Lyles
Black, of Nashville, who danced so
divinely at the clubs after the opera
this spring? Sure, you remember,
and I’ll wager some of you have this
story before I had It, via "a regular
correspondence”—eh? Chancing to be
at a pleasant beach a week or so
ago, Mr. Black decided to go in for a
swim early one morning, despite the
fact that he had danced almost all
night. He had a nice plunge and a
gay frolic in the water; then decided
to go ashore and wait for his com;-
panions, who showed signs of spend
ing the entire morning in the sea. He
lay down on the, soft sands and the
cool breezes swept over him. and—
well, he went to sleep. How long he
slept he never knew, but he dreamed
that he was in a torpedoed boat and
had been thrown out to drift for hours
and hours and hours, when suddenly
a grating slide over wet sands and a
decided bump which sent a Jar
through his entire body awakened the
dreamer and he found that while he
slept he had truly been rocked In the
cradle of the deep. The tide had car
ried him out and brought him back,
still sleeping, only to rudely awaken
him with a horrid bump as he struck
the beach again.
* * *
A S Mr. Horine’a conduct through
the entire affair was that
of a "perfect gentleman," I
Bee no reason why I should not tell
you about It. The Incident happened
at'the Greek play given on the lawn
of the Slaton residence the other eve
ning—or. rather, It happened Just aft-
er the play: for when Mr. Horine
brought his car to take two or three
members of hia family home, accom
panied by "some of the others who are
LA
| going with ua,” according to the vague
| information previously imparted by
! his daughter, and a lone woman ap-
| proached, showing unmistakable signs
I of getting into the car, Mr. Horine
.descended and gallantly handed her to
•a seat. He supposed her to be his
! daughter's friend, whom he should
| know, but did not. When daughter
and her friends arrived to And a
j woman already ensconced, they sup-
| posed her to be a friend of Mr. Ho-
I f ine's, whom they probably should
know—but did not.
After a while, as the members of
| the party were dropped off at their
i homes one by one, it finally dawned
upon the owner of the car that nobody
j knew the strange woman at all. So
I Mr. Horine politely asked;
“Where shall I put you down, mad-
1 amp?”
| “Oh. I live on Washington street.”
.said she. “but you can put me off at
the Piedmont and I will catch the car
there.”
Then Mr. Horine decided she
thought his auto was a Jitney bus, but
when sh£ started to descend she
knocked that idea sky high by sweetly
asking:
"To whom am I indebted for this
ride?”
Curtain!
Aunt Sally’s Advice
to Beauty Seekers
her work or in her appearance from
the time she first came upon the stage
until she left it. Ably seconded in
her efforts to create the illusion of a
Forest of Arden, filled with lovers of
high and low degree, was Rosalind of
the sunny curls and deep blue eyes
by Victor Victor as Touchstone, W.
F. Modre as Jacques, Mrs Shallenber-
ger as Celia, Umar Hill as Orlando—
and all the rest of the merry crew. In
fact, they were just so good that I
for one gasped in absolute astonish
ment. Take It from me, nothing in
the past ten years, at least—which Is
as far back as I remember— has ever
surpassed (and lam tempted to a^y
equaled) the production of "As You
Like It" by the Habersham Players in
the wood adjoining the Peel residence
on Peachtree road Thursday afternoon
for purely artistic achievement by
amateurs. And during the entire per
formance nothing happened to inter
rupt or mar the occasion, except that
a little bit of a dog took It into his
head to bark at the moon a few min
utes, which really did not matter at
all. And nothing was forgotten in the
arrangement of things, except to no
tify the Southern trains to stop for
the afternoon or. at any rate, to go
by the Forest of Arden without so
much puffing and tooting!
K. C. F. asks: "Will you tell me how
to get my hands white and soft? They
have become rough and are so dark la
contrast to my arms.’ The method men-
tloned in reply to Elotse should brlna
the doslred results; wear gloves to pr«.
vent soiling the bed linen.
D. N. A. writes: "How can I reduce
a double chin? Also how get rid of
crow’s feet?’’ Use a wash lotion pro-
pared by dissolving 1 oz. powdered stuto
llte in V* pt. witch hazel. This tightens
the skin, tending to disperse wrinkles
as well as flabbiness about the chin or
elsewhere.
Eloise says: "My freckles are wn ri%
than ever this year, made doubly con
spicuous by a pallid complexion. i B
there anv cure?’’ Ask your druggiit
for an ounce of mercolized wax. apply i
nightly like cold cream, removing in the I
morning with warm water. As the wag
gradually absorbs the lifeless outlcle
not only will the freckles vanish, but
the new and younger skin which ap.
pears will have a healthy color. Prnb-
ably you will need to continue treat
ment a couple weeks or so.—Woman's
Realm.—Advertisement.
Y ES. indeed; all the world's a stage j
and that bit of it selected for the
Habersham Players’ debut the
other afternoon was more suitable
than any made-up staffe could have
been. And all the men and women
are merely players, hence the general
excellence of a cast selected from the
rank and file of Atlanta's social set to
present a difficult and highly artistic
masterpiece, which they did in a most
pleasing manner, too! Of course,
there were "high lights"—there are In
realjife—for while all of us "strut and
fret upon the stage we play many
different parts, and play them with a
great variance of degree in either suc-
cess or failure. I have often seen
Mrs. Jarnagin In amateur theatricals,
and each time I am more convinced
that she was one among ten thou
sand with "the divine fire," who, had
she chosen, could have made a great
name for herself in the world of art.
Hor Rosalind, too. was the best she
has ever done, and as nearly perfect
as I can imagine the role to be. There
was no suggestion of the amateur In
LAST CHANCE
WINDING UP SALE
Victor Records
SLIGHTLY DAMAGED
Unheard-of Prices
$4.00 Records,6 for $5.00
$3.00 Records,6 for $4.00
$2.00 Records,6 for $2:50
$ 1.50 Records,6 for $2.00
$1.25 Records, 6 for $1.50
$1.00 Records, 6 for $1.25
75c Records. 6 for $1.00
60c Records, 6 for 75c
LESS THAN SIX RECORDS, 75% DISCOUNT
A FEW VICTROLAS LEFT, CHEAP
L. J. EVANS, MANAGER, 64 PEACHTREE ST.
Keep the Ice Man Outside
Any McCray Refrigerator can be arranged with outside
icing door to be ieed from the rear porch—which keeps the
ice man and all his muss and dirt outside the home
McCRAY
Sanitary Refrigerators
with linings of Opal-Glass, Solid i’orcelaln. White Enamel or odor-
lees white wood are sanitary and easily cleaned.
The perfect circulation of pure, cold, dry air automatically dis
charges all odors and Impurities through the water sealed drain
pipe, and keeps.all foods fresh and wholesome.
Every McCray Refrigerator is sold under a positive guarantee
of absolute satisfaction or money refunded
A little Investigation beforehand is better than a lot. of regret
afterward.
Come in aud let us show you why the McCray is the best.
Office and Salesroom; 219 Peachtree St., Atlanta, Ga.
Phone Ivy 7438.
OLD HATS
MADE NEW
CHARGE ACCOUNTS
SOLICITED.
SPORT HATS
Those snappy, rakish and bewitching
styles that are so appealing and fanoin »t-
ing. A large shipmeent Just received, at
$1.00 to $5.00
TRIMMED HATS
(OUR SPECIALTY)
A special lot of the season’s latest de
signs and styles :n Leghorns. Horsehair
and Malines, at
$5.00. $7.50, $10.00
Mrs. C. H. SMITH
Importer and Designer.
115 Peachtree. Next Candler Building.
J. P. Allen & Co.
Sale of Women’s
Shoes
Monday
$1.50
51-53 Whitehall St.
Does Your Baby
Get Hungry
Between Regular
Feedings?
The baby should sleep
peacefully between feedings
— if you feed him regularly.
If the baby wakes up and
cries fretfully and gnaws his
little hands, you are probably
not giving him enough to
eat. Your breast milk is best, of course, but it may be too
thin. Add a feeding each day of
Nestles Foocl
the nearest to mother’s milk.
Later, you can give him two
feedings of Nestle s each
day, and then three, until
your baby is entirely weaned
without trouble or worry.
Don’t think that cow’s milk can
take the place of your breast milk.
Over and over again scientists and
doctors have told us that cow’s
milk is too heavy for your bebv.
Its big, thick curds settle like lead
in his little stomach. And cow’s
milk may bring sickness. With the
help of medical science, Nestlc’s
Food has removed all the dangers
of ordinary cow’s milk for you.
The basis of Nestle’* is milk—
milk taken from carefully examined
cows in sanitary dairies —with all
its harmful parts modified and with
your baby’s special needs added —
reduced to a powder and packed
in air-tight cans so that no sickness
can get near it
Send the coupon for the big
sample can. and you will soon
find out why the mothers of three
generations have used Nestle's.
NESTLt’S FOOD COMPANY.
Wool worth Bids-. Now Yorl
Pleaoe »end me FREE your book and
trial package.
Introducing Much New
Mid-Summer Sport Wear
For the cool, smart thing for mid-summer com
fort and trinmess—for sport novelties and other
things lately appearing on the Fashion horizon
—look through the three fashion floors at AL
LEN’S.
Tub Dresses
Several hundred different
and fascinating models—
$5.95, $6.75, $7.95, $9.75
and $19.75
Net Dresses
A most comprehensive
showing of these in a
broad range of prices—
$15, $19.75, $25, $35 and
up to $65
Summer Silk Dresses
A-plenty, showing a world
of good taste in designs,
and every soft, graceful
silk of summer weave.
$16.75, $19.75 and $25
New Dresses of Handkerchief Linen
Just in—four pretty models with Puritan col
lars—vhite. pink, blue and lavender—
$16.75 and $19.75
Wash Skirts a most unlimited num-
tailored model— ber ' everv one a 8mart
$1, $2, $2.95, $3. 75 and $5
A Great Showing of
New Taffeta Skirts
$6. 75, $8.50, $10, $12.50 and $15
J. P. Allen
J. P. Allen & Co.
Our Great June Sale Unabated
Thousands of Mid-Summer Dresses, Coats, Skirts,
Blouses, Have Now Special Mid-Summer Prices
(r~ /v\ ^ _ aL . Everything for Outdoor Sports
^5 A10 U V/ £ Smock coats, silk sweater coats, white polo
coats. All kinds of
1 ^. Dust Coats for the Motor
just the right kind—
$2, $4.50, $5.95, $8. 75 and up to $25
Several Hundred
New White and Colored Golfine Coats
$4.95, $6. 75, $9. 75
New White Fox Furs
A smart white fox collar at $2.50
Several Hundred New Models
Mid-Summer Hats
Golf Hats. "Garden Gate” Hats—felt hats,
■white and the new pastel shades.
$5, $6.50, $8.50 and $10
Everything for the Seashore
Silk Bathing Dresses
$5 to $22.50
All accessories to match—or to strikingly con
trast—
New—Just in — Two Late Models
Taffeta Silk Suits
Navy and black—just the suit for going away—
specially priced at $35.
Every Wool Suit
from the spring season will be sold at less than
the actual cost of the materials used—
Plenty of navy blues, black and black-and-
white checks.
SUITS formerly sold at $25, $29.75, $35 and
up to $67.50. now
$6.45, $8. 75. $10. 75 and up
to $21.50
All Palm Beach and Linen Suits Are
Very Much Reduced
Suits formerly $8.75, $12.50 and $16.50, now
$6.45, $8. 75 and $11. 75
Several Thousand New Blouses
Hundreds of new summer designs created for
hot weather use—
$1, $2, $3 and up to $8.50
& Cn 51 ’ 53
V'V. Whitehall