Newspaper Page Text
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 1916.
— .DT IEMDBER 15, 1916,
WOEHENS NEWS<THIE SOCIAL WORLD
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Capital City Cfub
Among those attending the dinner
dance Thirsday evening at the Cap
ital City olub were Mr. and Mrs. Bert
Neorris, Nr. and Mrs. Robert Butters,
Mr. and frs. Walter Keenan, Mr, and
Mrs. W/g. Cramp, Mr. and Mrs. Ar
thur M. Reid, Mrs, William Armang,
Mr. and Mrs. R. Stewart Abbott, Mrs.
Russe ' Bridges, Mr. and Mrs, E, H.
Goodyart, Mrs. C. M. Frederick, Mr.
and Jirs, £T. Wilcox, Dr. and Mrs.
Cyryg Strickler, Mrs, John HBall, of
Chajlotte, N C.; Mr. and Mrs. Frank
lin Mikell. .
Sses Mary Murphy, Janet Hatch
er, Mae Crichton, Marion Dunson,
Mg Bell McGorman, of Charleston,
8./C.; Adelaide Singleton, Frances
Pyce, of Athens; Lydia Griffith, of
N/w Orleans; Tommie Quinnie, “of
ynesboro; Effie Boykin, Nellie
dd, Jennie Mobley, Henry Lyen, R.
Clarke, Harvey Hills To Peeples,
adison Bell, Arthur Keely, C. T.
utlaw, Judge Ben Hill, H. A. Pov
rlite, Jacoh Levin, Hugh Richard
on, George Barry Graves, Davis
irkland, Eugene Black, Jr., William
MeKenzie, W. (. Hall, John 8. Cohen,
Charles I. Ryan, C. B, Bell, Thomas
Lyon, Dr. C. P, Hodge, D. W. Roun
tree, Carl Fort, L. C. Quinn, H. C.
Bagley, John F. Hardisty, Lamar Hill,
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Fashionable Footwear
For Autumn Wear
We can not let this opportunity pass without telling
you atout the beautiful new styles of Ladies’ Boots.
Everyhing is here for your inspection. The prices
are vary reasonable, ranging
from $3.50 to $lO
for syles you will not see elsewhere.
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Black Kid Boots
In Button or Lace, $4.50
Made of soft, glossy kid with welt sole and leath
erfFrench heels. Like all Queen Quality Shoes, this
mbdel is extremely stylish, the acme of fit and com-
H!‘!.
| Similar models in patent leather with cloth tops.
/
M. Rich & Bros. Co.
52-56 Whitehall St., Atlanta, Ga.
Alfred S. Priddy, H. L. Harvey, A.
Gus Ryan, L. P. Nash, J. B. Jacoway,
J. B. Jacoway, J, B. Connally, H. 3‘l
Calef, Thomas Harrold, J. M. Hatch- |
er, G. W. MoCarty, Jr,, V. A. Batch
elor, Thomas Howell, of Americus;
Laddie Hatcher, of Celumbus, and
Howard McCall.
For Mrs. Ball,
Mrs. George C. Spain was hostess
at a swimming party Friday at the
Capital City Club in henor of Mrs.
John Ball, of Charlotte, N. C., who is
visiting Mrs. John Latham in Ansley
Park.
Dinner at Druid Hills Club.
The Druid Hills Golf Club will have
a dinner Sunday evening from 6 to 9
o'clock, as usual. The tables will be
set in the palm gardens and on the
terrace, if the weather permits. A
musical program has been arranged
for the orchestra]l concert during
dinner.
Miss Crichton Entertains.
Miss May Crichton entertained at
dinner Thursday evening at her home
on Piedmont avenue for Howard Me-~
Call and his guests, Laddie Hatcher,
of Columbus, and Thomas Howell, of
Americus, who left Friday for Ath
ens to enter the University of Geor.
gia.
~ The table had as its centerpiece a
pink* wicker basket filled with pink
‘dahlias and the place eards were
l,hand-painted in debutantes wearing
pink frocks.
The guests included Misses Marion
‘ Dunson, Janet Hatcher, Thomas How
‘ell, Laddie Hatcher and Howard Mc-
Call.
~ After dinner the Fuests attended
the dance at the Capital City Club.
Miss Crichten wore a hunter’s green
satin frock with the collars and cuffs
of white erepe embroidered in green
and her hat was of green satin to
match. z
Miss Dunson wore canary yellow
Georgette crepe with a purple panne
velvet hat.
Miss Hatcher was gowned in blue
satin heavily be&dog in blue and
black and her hat was of black vel
vet.
Bridge-Tea at East Lake.
~ Miss Marie Harris was hostess at
a bridge-tea at East Lake Country
Cluk Thursday afternoon in honor of
’Mlss Edgar Sims. The party assem
bled in the sun parlor, which was dec
orated with goldenrod.
Those present were Misses Mary
Kate Davidson, Rosa Belle Chapman,
Ve Strickland, Lucile Daley, Bessie
Hollowell, Ruth Morris, Ruth Mobley,
Carroll Cabaniss, Mrs. Krese Dun
wody, Mrs. Edgar Sims and Mrs. H.
B. Ham. N
Miss Roberts Entertained.
Miss Julia Mclntyre entertained at
a bridge-luncheon Friday morning at
her home on Peachtree road in com
pliment to her guest, Miss Essie Rob
erts, of Fairburn.
Quantities of goldenglow, zinnias
and goldenrod decorated the rooms
where bridge was played. The prizes
were silk hose and handkerchiefs.
The guests were Misses Roberts,
Elizabeth Tuller, Mamie Kirkpatrick,
Eleanor Williams, Dodo White, Hazel
Sims, Louise McNulty, Mrs, Henry
Herbenor and Mrs. Dan J. Maclntyre,
Jr,
Miss Elizabeth Tuller will be hos
tess at a bridge-luncheon Saturday at
her home in compliment to Miss Rob
erts.
Affairs for Visitors. <
Misses Julia Shackleford and Mary
Ida Woed, of Birmingham, are the
guests of Miss Laura Sawtell while
en route to school at Randolph-Ma
con. Miss Sawtell will leave with
them Sunday for Virginia.
Several parties have been planning
for them during their short visit. Miss
Dorethy Traynham will entertain at
luneheon Saturday in their honor at
her home on Peachtree road. Satur
day evening Miss Shackleford and
Miss Wood will be honor guests at a
dinner party at the East Lake Coun
try Club.
Argentine Club Dance.
The Argentine Club will have its
first fall dance on Friday evening.
Mrs. Alfred Fox has returned home
after an illness at a local hospital.
Miss Essie Holcomb is convales
cent after an illness at Davis-Fischer
Sanitarium.
Dr. A. R. Donaldson, who has been
in Rochester, Minn., for several weeks,
has returned home. 5
Dr. Charles Remsen returned from
a month’s stay in Boston, New York
and on the New England coast.
Miss Julia Maclntyre leaves Wed
nesday of next week to continue her
studies at Columbia University.
Dr. and Mrs. E. B. Elder, who have
been in Memphis this summer, are
spending September in Toronto.
Miss Ella Witcher, who has spent
a year in North Carolina, will arrive
—Mail orders for all ad
vertised items will be
filled the same day re
eceived. All purchases
guaranteed satisfactory.
Men!---
New E?ll Patterns in SI.OO, $1.25 to $1.50
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BNJ. M. HIGH CO. i
to visit Mrs. C. A. Manston in Inman|
Park.
Mr. and Mrs, J. J. MeGrath havel
gone to New York for a short stay
and from there they go to Old Point
Comfort, Va,
Mr. and Mrs. Harrison Jones an
nounce the birth of a sen, on Sep
tember 15. He has been named Har
rison, for his father.
Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Sandford, of
Knoxville, are at the Georgian Ter
race, en route home from a stay at
Grove Park Inn, Asheville.
Mr. and Mrs. Harry E, Clarke, of
Kirkwood, and Lucile Talmadge will
be the guest of Mrs. H. M. Tyus, of
Carrollton, for the week-end. ‘
Miss Sarah Clement is spending
the week-end in Galnfivllle as the
guest of Mrs. C, N. Da¥id. She will
leave October 1 for Fairmont Semi
‘nary, in Washingten, D. C.
Mrs. T. M. Arden and children, Miss
Eleanor, John and Ann Arden, left
Thursday night for Savannah to visit
Mrs. Arden’s mother for a few days.
‘F‘rom there they will go to Jackson
ville, where they will make their home.
Mr. Arden will join them there.
English War Vigtims
(By International News Service.)
BERLIN, Sept. 15.—Copenhagen
ldlspatches to the International News
Agency states that business has been
completely suspended at a number
of British ports, owing to the large
number of transports earrying home
wounded and dead from the French
front.
Reserve Bank Will
The Federal Reserve Bank at At
lanta has been notified that it may
make fifteen-day leans to member
banks at 8 1-2 per cent.
This will throw to Atlanta a lot of
small bankers’ business which for
merly went to New York. ‘
- AIE)L
: RRT TR T R A\ $ R -
R AR e M R
- ’
No Charge For This Service
—— —————— e—— ——— ———————e e e e
We clean and polish jewelry without charge. No obligation of
any kind implied. Take advantage of this service,
Visit our diamond room. See the superior stones we carry,
And ask about our divided payment plan,
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b TTA NT T 'l.'m'l_" SATAT AT
DERLEDS N PRLCIONS STORES AT O ERAL o
A
ITHE ATLANTA GEORGIAN
's Bathtub
In Officer’s Bathtu
LONG BEACH, CAL., Sept. 15.—Jose
Martinez was booked by the police on
the charge of taking a bath on prem
ises other than his own. Returning
from his beat at 4:30 in the morning,
Detective T. Cervantes, of the Long
Beach police department, discovered the
discarded clothing of a man at the foot
of the stairs in the apartment ho%se
where he lives, and upon entering is
suite, on the second floor, he hear the‘
merry splash of someone in his bath- |
room. |
The officer found Martinez in the
‘bath tub. Martinez leaped from the tub
and attempted to escape, but the officer
trapped him.
e i
Wyoming Youth Gets
Third Wound in War
DOUGLAS, WYO., Sept. 15—For the
third time Lieutenant John R, Weaver,
of. the Canadian contingent battling for
England, has been wounded in action
‘“‘somewhere in France.” His parents,
the Rev. and Mrs, W. K. Weaver, of this
lace, have just received notification
From Ottawa that he had been shot in
the thigh and was in a military hospital.
Young Weaver, who enlisted in the
first Canadian contingent, twice pre
viously had been wounded, returning to
the firing line immediately after re
covering from each wound.
Chicago Mayor Find
A Count in Overalls
CHICAGO, Sept. 15—Chieago's incom
parable Mayor knows a Count when he
sees one. When Mayor Thompsen wag
inspecting the Interlake Pulp and Paper
Company plant at Milwaukee, he saw a
distinguished looking laberer in overallg
and at once recognized him,
“That,” said the Mayor, *is ,Count
Palla de Palla Venetia de St. Nicholas
of Austria.” And the Mayor was right.
The Count is hiding because he started
a revolution once, or finished one, or
something,
To Conscience Fund
WASHINGTON, Sept. 15.—With a $4
econtribution to the Treasury's con
science fund came the following letter
signed by a Texas preacher:
“You will find inclosea four $1 bills.
~—The Main store will
be open all day tomor
row, Saturday. Shoe
store, Grocery store,
Men's wear sections,
open till O p. m.
) .
Will Be on Sale Tomorrow
for $2.60
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Neckband Size 13 to 17
‘ All Sleeve Lengths
—Your choice from near 30 dozens of
fresh, new, perfectly tailored Shirts, show
ing choice patterns, in
—Single Stripes—Double Stripes
~—Cluster Stripes
—Every conceivable color and combina
tion of colors. Also, plenty of black and
white patterns. Here are Shirts of —
—Brookwood Shirtings
—Madrases
— Percales
—Soisettes
—Jacquard Novelties
—Without doubt, the most remarkable
collection from the standpoints of variety
and value we have ever assembled. Many
of them have been in our stocks less than
10 days, yet here they are offered at a
price lower than most stores quote at the
end of the season,
HONJ. M, HIGH CO. omo w 0 mom w 0
The person that is sending them has
got_to God, and doing his best to getl
to Heaven. This is what he beat the
Government out of several {ears ago,
S 0 please make some disposal of them,
as the one sending them don't want
them.”
PRGN <TR TR o
Broker Indicted as
Head of Auto Thieves
~ (By International News Service.)
~ CHICAGO, Sept. 15—C. 1. Bond, a
| Minneapolis broker, was indicted herg
‘today by the county Grand Jury on
a charge of larceny and receiving sto
len property. Bond, it is alleged, is
the “brains” behind the ‘million dol
lar auto-thefth trust,” which is said
to have stolen hundreds of cars in
the Middle West in the past vear.
Sensational disclosures regarding
the operation of the alleged trust are
premised when the case comes to
trial. Bond was arrested once before,
but the authorities were forced to re
lease him for lack of evidence.
Rare
Diamond Jewelry
Every piece in our
collection of rare
diamond jewelry is
the embodiment of
an ideal, the realiza- -
tion of an ambition
to express beauty in
its most charming
form.
Haynes Diamonds
offer a noteworthy
advantage to buy
ers, Comparisons
are urged:
Our divided plan of
payment makes dia
mond buying easy.
One - fifth cash---bal
ance in ten equal
monthly payments.
EugeneV.Haynes Co.
49 Whitehall St.
“The Best Diamond Store in Dixie’
Davison-Paxon-Stokes Co.
The Downstairs Section---Redolent With
Its Autumn Fashions---Sends You
a Cheery Welcome
’
You'll Want Some of These
‘¢
Best Blouses We Have Ever
2»
Shown You at $2.50
In fact, they are the most remarkable values ever of
fered at this price. All new and fresh. Some of fine, very
heavy crepe de chine, in peach, flesh, maize, turquoise
and white. Others of chiffon and lace, in flesh and eream.
They will be gone before you see them, unless you hurry.
’ -
Women’s New Suits Announce
Themselves in Several Good
Styles at $14.75
A close inspection makes you like them still hetter.
Try them on, look at their good all-wool fabries, study
their becoming lines, and their execellent tailoring. See if
you've ever found such worthy Suits at such a price—
sl4.7s.
Smart Sports Coats at $5.75
Just such Coats as women are asking for now, as the
autumn chill brings the need for a slight wrap. There are
several new and becoming models of fine, wool coatings;
convertible collars of velvet, triangular et
pockets, belts and so on; plnnty'of fashiona
ble colors to choose from. They are spe
cially priced at $5.75.
- -
A Quick Special Sale of
o )
Children’s Coats That
Are Wonderful at
s $5.00
We believe you will
,@" L& " say so, too.
5.' Frre LA One thing we abso
e S lutely know. We have
Cfi 2 never had Coats of this
0} value before to offer
f,\‘ \ you at $5.00.
‘&‘. ‘\ Just half price for
L most of them. They
\ come to us through a
special purchase,
A Some of wool coat
= ings in plain colors or
® plaids; others of excel
lent quality plush with fur trimmings. Sizes
6 to 14 years
They are too unusual to tarry long at this
price—%s.oo.
"
Baby Is Kidnaped for
. " .
Third Time in Year
CHICAGO, Sept. 15.—For the third
time in her nineteen months, Beverly
Lorraine Whitgreave has been kidnaped.
Baby Beverly is the great-granddaugh
ter of Colonel James A. Mulligan, com-
Davison- Paxon-Stokes Co.
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Patrician
The World’s Famous Style ‘
Originators '
In exclusively fine shoes, wherever fash
-lonable folk gather,
you will find the
majority wearing /
Patrician Shoes. Sw
There can be but co Y
one reason for this S 4
fact—a keen appre
ciation of value and =
style in footwear. The illustration is
of a black kidskin, four-strap slipper
with black beading.
Also in bronze and gold.
Black $7, Bronze $8
Gold $lO
mander of the “Irish Guards” im thd
Civil. war.
In obedience to a court order thal
the baby's father should be permitted td
see his child, the mother took m
Beverly to the Whitgreave home,
erly 8. Whitgreave, the father, took fi
baby in his arms, rushed to a motor
and disappeared. He is said to hav*
boarded a train for Birmingham, Ala, !
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Women’s Silk Street
Dresses at $10.75
Smart and becoming Dresses of crepe de
chine, taffeta and satin. They follow closely
the lines of fashion and have an air of indi
viduality that lifts them out of the ranks of
little-priced ready-mades. The colors are
navy, Copenhagen, green gnd black. They
are priced for Monday onmly, at $10.75.
’
New Dress Goods You'll
Wantto Share atsoc Yd.
All-wool and wool-mixed Suitings, ideal
for children's sehool dresses. Checks, plaids
and stripes; colors and black-and-white.
Very excellent materials at 50c yard.
-
Specials
Some wonderful, new Nightgowns at 69¢
~—many of them worth nearly twice this
amount
Children’'s new Wash Dresses, cunnix
styles in pretty plaids; 6 to 14-year sizes,
69e cach,
Women's good new House Dresses, pret
tily made, of sturdy gingham ; extra value at
SI.OO each,
ATLANTA, GA.
7