Newspaper Page Text
4H
pehorees SOCIETY CHATTER
o Continued From Page 1.
s e
: men who have the courage 19
igare and do anyvthing on earth
;’Thll special young man, as I sald,
es his Ford calling with him.
Pnder the cover of darkness, he
jrlves up and leaves the little car
Sway off in the shade of the old ap
iple tree. Which, I think, is an un
h way to. treat a good and falth
t %3] servant.
} I am telling on him. Can't give
name, but I'll put you on to
# ®omething which will be sure to
EMelp you {dentify him if vou
_ want to.
i" He only calls on the girls who live
L #n a hill.
i There simply must be hill in the
@front or (preferably) in the rear of
'the premises upon which the young
y lives, for tha Ford has to be
tarted after his call, doesn't 117
i Now, make out a list of the girls
who live on a hill and find out all
282 young meon who call on them.
nd when you find one man’s name
B all these lists—then make a few
n inquiries, thereby ascertalning
hat this man does not call on any
f#rl who has not a hill near her
nd you have him!
5 n, when you get him, whatcher
rointerdcwithim?
— KN
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i Qeflecfions A
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| f i’IANO is not an investment for a day, but %
! Afor a lifetime. Reflection will show the
| ! wisdom of selecting your piano for its
| known high quality and durability.
i Of such recognized quality is the Knabe—
, made with exacting care by skilled artisans
| ~its perfect voice sings on for generations,
| ““The Piano for a Lifetime"’
| 82 N. Pryor St. Ivy 892
J.J. BOOKOUT
NOW IN THE
ARCADE
. There is onlu one place, and
only one No. 110 New Peach
; . ; A
L tree ARCADE, to obtain. ¢ A
BOOKOUT;
; Dependablc WJ{?/’ wafi
e The new Peachtree Arcaed runs through from No. 8 Peachtree street
" to Broad strete, alongside the rallroad tracks, entrances being between
[ the bridge and Five Points. All Georgia folks know just where this is.
l. And John Bookout's new store is in this arcade, only one door from
Peachtree street and next to Charles A. Bmith Drug Co's, beautifu! new
new Grug store,
John J. Bookout's nam»
is known to thousands of
people in Atlanta and
Georgia In connection
with the optical and jew
elry business. His shop
‘has always been a stop
ping place and a meeting
ghce for hundreds and
u‘dre?n of people from
‘out of town, as well as lo
cal residents, who have
been h‘prfly fitted with
y fort-giving glosses,
¢ w Bookout has mov
‘ed to a splendid new shop
’mtplcndid new buflding
(1 nderful Areade),
;Mn the very heart
‘of the §ity. Here he will
»_ and serve you
3 an ever,
; JEWELER
J. J. BOOKOUT ok
. NO. 110 NEW PEACHTREE ARCADE
Two Hearts Pierced—
HARKINU back t» weddings,
which are always most inter
egting subjects to talk about, even
If there aren't any, I have heard
some exciting speculations concern
ing a mysterions ring which one of
the prettiest and most popular girls
in the city is said to have in her
possession,
No one has ever seen her wear
the ring, so far as | know, and no
one knows exactly where 'tis kept.
There are suspicions and rumors,
however, of a little bag worn next
to a warm little heart—or maybe
a cold little heart (she's an awful
flirt, anyway!), and in that bag,
“they do say,” is a most gorgeous
ring —a perfectly adorable ring, and
well, 1 can even glve you a de
scription of the ring-—also from
hearsay :
1t 18 a design in two hearts, made
of sapphires and dlamonds and
pierced by a platinum arrow.
No wonder she doesn't wear it,
un*’l she is ready for everyone to
know her secret. One could not
possibly say, like most brides do
when they don thelr new ring for
the first time:
“Oh, that--why, that ring was
just a gift from father.”
Father would never choose dia-
i mes
5 ARCADE — fi
EE ¢
HEARST’S SUNDAY AMEKICAN . A Newspaper for People Who Think — SUNDAY, MARCH 31, 1918.
Miss Claire Rosalind Gershon |
Whose engagement is announeced to Bert 1. Fox, of Atlanta. ,
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mond and sapphire hearts pierced
by platinum' arrows—now, would
he? Not unlerss father wns a wid
ower and buying his ring for some
other woman than his little daugh
ter.
8o the symbolical ring, if it really
is in the possession of this Atlanta
girl, has been hidden away with a
purpose, and only when you see It
glittering on her finger can you be,
sure of there being another inter
esting wedgling in Atlanta soclety.
Ooon
Bringing Out Talent—
AND if there are no special social
affairs on to help the time
pass, there are still “war work” par
ties to furnish occupation for many
hours.
There was Mrs. Ulric Atkinson's
hat sale the other day for the Red
Cross. A half dozen women and
girls who never handled a hat, in its
unfinished state, “before the war,”
spent days and days in planning,
making and trimming chapeaux of
every style. They did it well, toq,
and the hats which sold for five
dollars were just as pretty and be
coming as many those same women
had bought for fifteen —and thought
they had a bargain at that.
“They"” talk of prohibiting the
manufacture of milllnery as a war
measure-—and nobody cares much,
though we do like hats at thaw
8o long as Atlanta women can
make hats like those at the Red
Cross sale for the price, we should
worry over the hat industry dur
ing war times. .
000 o
Necessity the Mother—
THEN. do you know, some of the
girls have even got down to
~ cooking their own meals of late? At
- any rate, one girl I know attempt
-, ed 1t
~ Last Sunday, I believe it was, the
- Stearns family arose to figd that
every servant had fled —cook, butler,
maid-—gone without even saying
~ good-bye—gone to & “war family
- home,” 1 guess.
- And Marion, whu. had taken les
; sons in cooking at the Junior
~ League school, volunteered to fix up
~ the dinner. She got along fine with
everything but the piece de resist
ance, and Marion says that not yet
has the baked chicken been baked!
“l put the chicken In the oven
l at 10 o'clock,” was the plaintive ex
planation of the amateur cook.
“And 1 cooked it all day Sunday
and all day Monday, and Tuesday
morning I had to go to another
cooking lesson, so I didn‘t finish
getting the chicken baked at all!™
| But, of course, the chicken was at
- fault—"he” shouldn’'t have been so
absolutely determined not to be
baked.
OO
Brides Elsewhere—\
W HEN Dorothy Trotter, of Chat
tanooga, came down last
winter after her debut in Chatta
nooga for a visit here, she
brought her Kknitting and was,
1 believe, the first girl to introduce
the hand manufacture of satks at
the Piedmont Driving Chub,
| In fact, she may still hold the
‘ record for knitting at a Driving
Club danee, so far as I know. You
see, knitting socks is not a favorite
occupaticn of the girls while at the
Driving Club. They knit at home,
I suppose, giving them the benefit
of the doubt.
Anyway, Dorothy Trotter carried
her knitting and did knit. And now
Dorothy is going to marry an avi
ator, and all the socks in her hope
chest will make a nice little wed
ding gift to young Sidney Walker
Riddle, who will get one of his
wings on or about April 6, and will
hasten hence from Texas for his
bride.
Dorothy Trotter was a Washing
ton Seminary girl and has many
friends here who are "“thrilled” over
her romance.
Mrs. Fred Hodgson's sister, Miss
Jane Fassett, was married last
week, too—rather hurriedly despite
the fact of her engagement having
been announced some months ago to
Ensign Ethelbert Nevin, son and
namesake of the composer.
The marriage took place in the
Vanderbilt Hotel and was so quick
ly decided upon that Mrs. Hodgson
had not time to get up for the cer
emony,
And whilst on wéddings 1 will
note that Lieutenant and Mrs. Rog
ers Toy have reported for duty after
a 'short honeymoon trip. Mrs. Toy,
who was Emma Jordan and a well
known young Atlantan, has been
living in Monticello for a few years,
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AWM ) OO Values |
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B & T il S 85 l
S N T NRE — ‘
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Cash k 41':'1 l»‘ ';i";-i A > :
Mo / T Grey Kid |||
Orders Sy GTR 3t |
Filled . Cbampagnc ‘
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A‘ : o, TS and White ||
Stunning Model -~ % d [
Is Priced at sl2 ki ™ [
,r: ()f;n: r( Shops on o i K’ f
Whitehall. i i
|
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o . Selling for Cash and Paying the |
SHO Lowest Rent on Whitehall '
e Street Are the Reasons for |
These Wonderful Values 5
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Elovolof, 2528 2d Floor Connally Bldg ‘(,;?:b::t:l”:t:'lel:“ .
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Read for Profit l
!
AMERICAN WANT ADS !
at a beautiful country home which
Mrs. Jordan has transformed inte
the typical ante-bellum home with
all'modern improvements.
The wedding, 1 hear, was of the
same (ype—-an old-fashioned South
en ecountry-home wedding—with
all the modern improvements,
The couple spent their hgneymoon
in New York, stopping for a brief
visit to the bridegroom's sister, Mrs,
Willilam Bailey Lamar, in Wash
ington.
SCLooo
But a June Bride—
B UT there's to be a June wed
ding—~U've just heard of it
and now I will take a freegh start on
the weddings. Perhaps June will
do beiter than Easter
Mary Allgocd Jones has decided
to enter the matrimonial fleld, after
due deliberation. Mary Algood has
always loved horses and dogs so
well she could not focus much of
her interegt on mere mun, But for
the last vear or so, since she has
been traveling around quite a bit,
from her grandmother’'s home in
North Georgia to Reno, Nev. (no
joke here-—-shg really wen'), this
young Atlanta cports-woman has
sold her horses and given away her
dogs and now she has gone the
way of al!l girls: Here-comes-the
bride-—toodle-oodie—umpty-do!
Mary Algood's fiance is 8 young
Chattanocgan man, and-—neeadless to
say——is getting his kahki snit tailor
made right now. Mr. Robert Purse,
whose name is on the roll of the
University of Pennsylvania gradu
ates for this year, is the lucky man.
He enters upon the study of avia
tion &s soon as college daysz are
over, and in June, a charming out
of-door wedding will unite these
two-—the couple to be married, ac
cording to present plans, at the
handsome o!d colonial home of the
bride’s grandamother, al{ Trion,
which is near Rome, in North (Geor
gia.
Mary Algood has won many =
bive-ribben race-—here's hoping she
is as lucky on her new venture!
PO
Liberty Motors!—
Y()L‘ all know about the “avia
tion” parties which a certain
group of Young girls and young
men have been having for the last
three months. 1 was told about
the first one introduced by a giddy
little girl who was full of fun and
frolic and was—er—the right age
for “aviating.”
And I was bound to secrecy be
cause the stunt would lose its abil
ity to create surprise and excite
ment If it was known. So the
“aviating” parties in this young
set went on among themselves for
these three months past. Only the
initiated know what the “aviation”
parties were, and each “initiation”
was a great succcss,
But last week one heedless young
thing happened to describe the
stunt before her grandmother—
and then the secret was out!
So, now that it is public prop
etry, I will explain that “aviating”
as done at social affairs consists in
blindfolding the victilm and stand
ing her on the end of a plank while
a husky guest jumps on the other
end, seesaw fashion.
The blindfolded one, judging the
distance of her sudden rise with
out the ald of sight, misses her
guess nbout a mile, the result be
ing highly exciting for the avia~
trix and highly amusing for the
rest of the crowd.
The other night a daring mem
ber of the older set attempted to
jump the plank with disastrous re
sults. Her hair fell down, despite
tle silver threads among the gold
(no gold visible) and her teeth fell
out—or maybhe it was her eyes
popped—and >verybody had a high
old time.
Davison-Paxon-Stokes CO-
The Question of Women’s Suits
Is Every Day More Important
Pre-Easter selling has enabled us to judge accurately which of
the season’s styles are particularly approved. With this as our
guide, we have chosen with a degree of certainty that assures our
stocks of meeting your every requirement.
The variety of individual stvles permits you to have garments
as exclusive as if they were specially designed for you.
Ve H 3 Beautiful
Suits Special at $25
This is a good deal less than their value ealls for. They are
new, smart and very delightful Suits, and will be happily wel
comed by women wanting a Suit at this popular price.
In this choice collection are the shades so fashionable now:
Grays, putty, sand—and plenty of ever-wanted navy and black.
The materials are tricotines, gabardines and poplins.
included, too, are some fashionable sleeveless Jersey Suits for
sports wear. '—Fourth Floor.
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e : Select the right model of the Binner corset and adjust it
properly, so that it will fit your figure perfectly and give you the greatest comfort.
Binner corsets are created from beautiful materials, prettily trimmed—the lines are
superb.
TPor instance:
3676—A beautiful, low-bust model in pink coutil; elastic iuserts just below the back
waist line give the straight hip effect; elastic gores in front; price, $6.
303-310 is a superb model for slender figures; of pink batiste; low bust, free hip;
sizes up to 26; price, $5.
An exquisite model for medium full figures is of silk brocade in flesh tone, low bust,
long hip, lace and ribbon-trimmed top; price, $lO.
e .
Wide Filet Laces tor Monday
At 25¢ Yard ~
A fine, new shipment has just come and will change hands very quickly at
the little price we have put upon them.
They are imitation filet laces, in real filet patterns, and are 3 to 5% inches
wide, just what is being asked for for coat collars and such. Both edges and
bands. Very unusual, indeed, at 25¢. —First Floor.
In the Downstairs Section--Monday
Some Very Good Corsets Are Priced at 79¢
This is less than their regular price, but there
are only sizes 25 to 30, and we are going to close
them out Monday. Low bust, long-hip Corsets,
well boned, with hose supporters attached.
New Pink Camisoles, 69¢
They are of wash silk in flesh color with filet
lace top; highly desirable at 69c.
Women’s Summer Undervests, 15¢
Women are calling for light, cool underwear.
These Vests are just in time. Cotton, low neck, no
sleeves, 15¢ each.
Silk Flounce Petticoats, $2.98
They are made with seco silk top, for the better
wear, flounces of taffeta silk, in changeable color
tones. $2.98.
Wash silk Petticoats in plain colors, blues,
greens, rose, cerise and other shades: very practical,
and extra good value at $3.50.
Buy Cotton Fabrics While You May
at These Prices
Dress Ginghams in fresh, lovely plaids, stripes
and checks; extra good value at 25¢ yard.
New Percales in a great variety of dress pat
terns and shirting stripes, at 221%¢ yard.
When the Whole Outdoors Becomes a
Playground
When littie children turn to making gardens, sand
piles and the like—then rompers come into their own.
Here are rompers. well made, of madras, in pleasing
colors, or of all-white linene; priced at 89c¢.
Little boys’ sailor blouse suits, of madras. colored or
white, and of chambray: extra good value, and priced at
SI.OO.
Pretty Tub Dresses for Little Tots, 98¢
They are as cunning as can be, little short-waisted
frocks, made of good ginghams in flesh. pretty stripes and
plaids; 2 to 6-vear sizes.
Why Your Corsets N
Should Be Fiited to You
No two figures are exactly alike, any more than two faces are
identical. You may select a Corset which seems to you ideally
suited to your figure, but a corsetiere could show you that it is
not at all the model you should wear.
Pevhaps it is an inch too long or an inch too high. An ex
pert corsetiere could tell you instantly that the too-long corset
made you rigid and the too-high corset made your lines awkward.
7
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Cunning Little White
Frocks for Children
AN
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ALY
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Prettily made little Dresses of
sheer, white lawn or lingerie cloth,
with tueks and effective trimming of
lace or embroidery, sometimes both.
and wee ribbon bows.
2 to 6-year sizes are SI.OO.
8 to 14-year sizes are $1.25.
New Cretonnes and Curtain
Nets for Making the House
Springlike
Bright, fresh, pretty eretennes for
window hangings, for furniture cov
erings, for pillows, bags and so on,
are priced at 35¢ and 40c yard.
New curtain Nets in a number of
patterns, ecru shade, at 15¢ and 19¢
yard.
Filet nets in drapery ecru shade,
at 23¢ vard. :
New Bungalow Aprons
at 98¢
They are roomily cut aprons that en
tirely cover the dress. What is more.
they are made of Amoskeaz ginghams,
the material alone costs more today than
you are asked to pay for the apron ready
made. They are in blueand-white
checks. Very low priced at 98c.