Newspaper Page Text
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Brilliant Parfics
Al Opcera Mafinee
The matinee performance of "Faust’
Tuesday afternoon was a brilliant oe
caglon and the box partics and arena
were filled with many smurtly gowned
Atlanta and wvisiting women
Among the box partie Were
Mr. and Mrs, John Slaton enter
tained Mrs. Willilam Grant, Sr Mrs
Harry Roberts and Mrs, Robert D
Cummings
Dr. and Mrs. W, 8. Elkin, Mrs, Ed
ward H. loman and her ister, Mr
Frank Hardeman, of Athens, were to
gether
Mr ind Mrs Frank Ell enter
tained M Henry Newman and Mij
Florence ¥llis
Mrs. Henr Richardson, Mnr ld
ward Hem: 1 Bla : A aliis
St. John ( tne and Campbe
Courtney, all of South Carolina, o«
pupied their box, and had as their
guest Mrs. Charle 2 Northen
Dr. and Mrs. Phiniz Calhoun en
tertained Mrs Fyanl Adair Mrs
Benjamin Gatin Mrs, Frank Flem
ing and Misg Nellie Hightower
Mr, and Mrs. William A. Speer en
tertained Mrs. Edward H. Barnes and
Mre. William A. Wimbish
Mr. and Mrs, Jack Spaiding enter
tained in their hox Mrs Edmund
Berkeley, of Virginia, who is their
guest Mrs. Carter Coo and Mrs
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Bings this week at the Audi
torium. He sings every day
in the year through the Vie- ‘
trola—
—at— ‘
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Lable Piana [ompany
82-84 N. Broad St. Atlanta.
Home of the
Mason & Hamlin Piano.
FINISHING SERVICE
Leave films by 9 a.m.
Get pictures at 5 p.m.
On the Main Floor
Our Special Sale of
° ’ o -
Ladies’ Fine Footwear
Conti Thursd
ontinues tomorrow, 1 hursday
It is not often that you can secure this
early in the season such unusual of ferings
in Pumps and Oxfords as we continue
to offer Thursday in Remnant styles and
iz>s al the remarkably low price
" ‘An‘ ]
o it
\, i) R e T
. NG : 5,
| » the pair. Y
The line embiaces the following styles:
Tan Calf Oxfords with turn sole and covered heel.
Brown Kid Pumps with welt sole and military heel.
Patent Kid Colonial Pumps with turn sole and covered heel.
Tan Kid Pumps with turn sole and Cuban heel.
Black Kid Pumps with leather Louis heel.
Tan Calf Colonial Pumps with turn sole and covered heel.
These are BROKEN LOTS, taken from this scagzon's latest stules, and
are perject in cvevy way—the only ercuse we have for offering them at
such a big sacrifice is because the sizes are broken and we have decided
to closge out the entive line of Remnants as deseribed above-—consisting
of strictly high-class footwear—ranging up to cleven dollars the pair, at
FIVE NINETY-FIVE
Mail Orders Filled Promptly if
We Have Style and Size Desired.
;:
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~ Oy lelant,
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'HE ATLANTA GEORGIAN vy e A Clean Newspaper for Southern Homes » e WEDNESDAY, APRIL 23, 1919.
Hughes Spalding and Mr. and Mrs.
William H, Schroeder
Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Crawford and
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Massey, of Bir
mingham, Ala., formed a box party
attending the matinee,
Mre, Samuel Candler Dobbs enter
tained as their guests Miss Helen
Wilson, Miss Lillian Dobbs and 8. C,
Dobbs, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs, John E. Murphy had
as their guests Miss Mamie Gatins
and Miss Katherine Murphy,
Mrs. Marguerite 8. Dillard enter
tained Mrs Herman Glade, Mrs, Wil
liam Jarivs, Mrs, George Tignor, Mrs.
Spencer Struble, Mrs, M. S. Stuart,
Miss Ann Bucher and Miss L.ila Mans
field, of Chattanooga.
Mr. and Mrs. John W. Grant enter.
tained Mrs, Joseph Lamar, Mrs, Wil-
Hlam D. Grant, Jr, Miss Ann Grant
and Richard Wilmer, of Panama.
With Mr, and Mrs, John D. Little
were Miss Martina Burke and Sam
uel Dunlap, of Macon.,
Mrs. Dozier Lowndes, Miss Jennie
Dargan, Mrs, Milton Dargan and Mrs.
George Crandall occupied a box for
the matinee,
With Miss Marjore Brown were her
guests, Miss Louise Walker, of Mon
roe, Ga., Mrs. George McCarty, Miss
Maiy Mitchell and Lieutenant Daniel
Sullivan, N
Dr. and Mrs. Dunbar Roy, Mr. and
Mrs., Robert F. Maddox and Mr. and
Mrs. Willlam H. Kiser will form a
box party attending all of the opera
performances,
Mrs. Andrew Calhoun entertained
Mrs. Stuart Witham, Miss Patty Mar
tin of Chattanooga and Mrs. Richard
Wilmer, of Washington, D, C,
Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Peel enter
tained Mr. and Mrs, W, W. Hubbard,
of Baltimore, Md.
Mr. and Mrs. H. P. Hermance en
tertained Mrs, L. F, Deming, Mrs. D.
A. Ritehie and Miss Edna Nicholson.
' Among the visitors attending the
matinee were Mrs, Harry T. Smith,
Mrs. V, T. Sawyer, Mrs. William Pat
terson, Miss Virginia Sawyer and
Miss Mabel Heutis, all of Mobile,
Ala.; Mrs. W, A, Graham, of Eden
ton, N. C,; Mrs, Willilam H. Bough
ton, of Buffalo, N, Y., .Mrs. Leigh
Palmer, of Washington, D. C.; Mrs.
MecChesney Hogshead, of Chatta
nooga, arnd Miss Frances Cauble, of
South Carolina, the guests of Mrs.
Frank Owens; Mr. and Mrs. James
Johnson and their nieces, the Misses
Johnson, of Chattanooga, who are at
the Georgian Terrace;, Mr. and Mrs.
John Phillips and Mrs, W. E. Harvey,
of New Orleans; Mrs, Oscar Johnson,
of Charleston, 8. C., and Mrs, A. P.
Stecle, of Statesboro, N. (*,; Miss Lila
Mansfield, of Chattanooga, who is
visiting Mrs. Thomas Daniel; Miss
Kva Fitch, of Florida, who is visiting
Mrs. Hal Hart; Mrs., Edward Buck
ingham Hall, of Morristown, N. J.,
who is visiting her parents, Mr., and
Mrs. John Owens, at their home on
West Eleventh street; Mrs. Thomas
Barrett, Mrs. Julian Barrett and Mrs.
Langing Lee, all of Augusta, who are
with Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Broyles,
on Junipe: street; Miss Kitty Brack,
of San Francisco, Cal,, who is visiting
Miss Carolinre Blount at her home in
Piedmont avenue, Miss Frances Ter
rell, of Pittsburg, the guest of Mrs.
Edmund Martin; Miss Lillian Du
' Bage, of Selma, an attractive visitor:
- Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Peeples, of Car
tevaville, who are at the Georgian |
Tevrace; Mrs. Gecrge Smathers and |
Miss Ella Smathers, of Asheville.l
Mis Emma Willis, o, North (‘arollna.‘
and Mrs. H. P. Bartleit of Montgom
ery, the guests ¢f Mr and Mrs. G.I
SOCIAL CALENDAR
$ $
§ ¢
FOR THURSDAY
Mrs. Orton Bishop Brown, of
Berlin, N. H, and Mrs. Leigh '
$ Palmer, of Washington, D, C., were
! the honor guests at a luncheon at |
gtho Piedmont Driving Club, with
( Mes. Walter Gordon Roper as |
! hog'ees, ' $
é Mr. and Mrs. Joseph F. Gatins '
were entertained at a farewell |
luncheon given by Mr. and Mu.z
John Little, ¢
¢ Mr., and Mrs. Frank Ca"lvvlyé
I will be hosts at a supper-dance !
following the opera “Aida,” inf
compliment to Mr. and Mrs., Or- §
ton Bishop Brown, of Berlin, N. H, ¢
$ A supepr-dance wiil be given at ¢
stho Capital City Cilub following
the opera “Aida.”
A supper-dance will be given at
the Georgian Terrace after the
performance of “Aida.”
|
AP PAINPSPPPPY
Francis Wiliis, a. thelr bome in Druid
Hillg; Mrs. J. F. Lebelle, of Florida;
Miss 'rene Russel!. ¢f Chicago; Miss
Elizabeth Hill, of Nushville, Tenn.,
‘lno guest of Misa Mary Nelson; Miss
Fauny Duncan, of Union, 8. ~ Miss
Sarah Meyers, Miss Alice Rembert
and Mrs. Nellie Payne Meyers, of
SEpartanburg, 8. ~ who are visiting
Mr. and Mrs. Turner Fitten in Ansley
Park; Miss Rebecca (lark, of Moul
trie, the guest of Miss Corrie Hoyt
Brown, Mrs. Lamar Rucker, of Ath
ens, and Mrs. Ralph Black, of Se
wir ee, Tenn, who are visiting Mrs.
Neille Peters Black, Mrs. Herbert
Franklin, of Tennille, the guest of
Mrs., John A. Perdue; Mr. and Mrs.
N. W Grady, Mr. and Mrs. Harry
Van Dusen, Mrs. Garnett Andrews
and Mrs. Scott L. Prosbasco, all of
Chattanooga; Mrs. John I® Patterson,
of North Carolina, the guest of Judge,
and Mrs, W T. Newman and Miss
Frances Newman: Mrs. George Hey
ward, of South Carolina, and Mrs.
Martin Cannon, of North Carolina,
who are at the Georgian Terrace.
Entertainment for Marines.
The Atlanta Chapter of U. D. C.
will hold a meeting Thursday after
noon at 3 o'clock at the Woman's Club
on Baker street, in honor of the
United States marines,
The business program will begin
promptly at 2:45 and Mrs. Richard
Moore ,the treasurer, will be present
to receive dues now payable. Ar
rangements pertaining to the Memo
rial Day parade and the bestowal of
the crosses of honor will be perfected
at this time. Mrs. R. M, Jones is the
custodian of the crosses,
© Mrg. W, 8. (Coleman will preside
over the business session and will
also mmke her report as delegate to
the recent U. D, C. convention at
Louisville,
Mrs. H. H. Fudge, chairman of the
Soldiers’ Home committee, will have
charge of the program. Mr. McAllis
ter and Captain Sapp, from the home,
will make short talks, and a number
of veterans will be present.
Henry 8. Murphy and George O.
Christensen, members of the marines,
will sing.
Mrs. R. B, Blackburn will give a
reading, and Mrs, George P. Moore
will also read,
Major H. (‘olvocoresses and a num-
Ler of marines will be the guests of
the afternoon,
The club will be decorated especial
ly for the occasion and dainty re
freshments will be served.
All marines, soldiers, sailors and |
visitors in the city are mocst cordially
invited to be present,
Dance at Elks' Club.
Saturday evening from 9 to 12 o'clock
Atlanta Elks will give their usual dance
in their home on East Ellis stret. The
affair will be informal and all JElks in
good standing will be admitted on their
paid-up April card. Non-Elks vouched
for by any Elk will be admitted by
card, which will cost one dollar. La
dies free and must be accompanied by
escort. Refreshments will be served
consisting of punch, for which no (‘hnrxul
will be made. The newly elected of
ficers will be the guests of honor on]
this occasion and all visiting Elks who
happen to be in the city are cordially
Invited to come as guests of Atlanta
Lodge. The entertainment committee is
unm{mned of Albert L. Dunn, Henry
Willlamson, Frederick Ball, Samual C,
Little and Willlam B. Cummings. John
S Mv(;lrllaml} exalted ruler of At
lanta Lodge, Is ex-officio member o!l
the committee,
Miss Sparkes Honor Guest.
Miss Leonora Sparkes, artist of the
Matropolitan Opera Company, was hon
oree at the beautiful luncheo ngiven on
Wednesday at the Piedmont Driving
Club at which Mrs. Veasey Rainwater
was hostess,
Covers were laid for ten guests at a
luncheon table decorated with a large
white wicker baset filled with purple iris
and columbine and pink roses gathered
from rMs. Rainwater's garden
Mrs. Rainwater received her guests
weuring a toilette of dark blue trico
lette with a small sable collar.
Series of Revivals Announced.
The Bast Point Baptist Church an
nounces a serigs of revival meetings,
beginning Sunday, April 27, and con
tinuing for two weeks
The meetings will be held each eve
ning and the Rev. W, M. Culbertson
of Commerce, will be the principal
preacher, '
Old-Fashioned Party Announced.
Miss Dow, of the Y. W, (", A, will
entertain at the Soldiers’ Club with
an old-fashioned party Thursday
night at 7:456. Miss Dow will be as
gisted by about 25 or 30 young la
dies Refreshments will be served
and old-fashioned games enjoyved, All
enlisted men are invited
Mrs. M. G. Patterson, of Montgom
ery, is visiting her mother, Mrs, K. M
Sheran, at her apartment on Juniper
street during opera week
Mr. and Mrs. J. H. K. Dixon, of Lake
land, Florida, announce the marriage of
their daughter Dorothy Elizabeth, to
Charles Landrum Shirley, which took
place Saturday evening, April 19, at the
home of the Reverend James F. Edens,
who officiated
Curtis Everett is critically ill at Fort
MePherson
Mrs, Willlam K. Jenkins, of West
Knd, ls expecting Miss Ethe! Blou, of
Knoxville, to arrive soon for a visit of
several weeks
Mr. and Mrs. R. J. Flournoy, of* Ma
con, will spend the week-end with Mr
and Mrs 5‘ H. Jeter, of Decatur, to
attend the opera
Mrs. H. R, Jewett, of Decatur, has
returned from Philadelphia, where she
has been the guest of Mr. and Mrs
Ross Harper
Mr. and Mrs, James Baldwin an
nounce the birth of a daughter on East
er Sunday April 20, at St. Joseph's In
firmary.
Mrs. Willie Payne Myers and Miss
Sarah Myers, of Tifton, are guests for
opera week of Mrs. Wallace Kirkpatrick
on Peachtree road.
| ————— . ——————— .. —— —————————————————
MACON, April 23—A great aero
nautical congress will be staged in
Macon May 2-10, according to an
nouncement from Washington. Four
governmentaleagencies are preparing
to participate on a very extensive
scale with exposition and flying dem
onstrations. .
It was annvunced today that rep
resentatives of the War and Postoffice
Departments have decided to estab
lish an aerial mail route between Ma
con and Montgomery, a distance of
1560 miles, during the congress. The
flights will be experimental, but if
successful, probably will be made
permanent.
Major General C. T. Menoher, di
rector of the air service, will be one
of the speakers He will discuss the
development of aviation since the be
ginning of the war and will outline
plans of the War Department for es
tabilishing flying fields in all sections
of the country. An address also will
be made by Otte Praeger, Second
Assistant Postmaster General, in
charge of aerial mail service
Permission was granted by City
C'ounci! last night for the use of the
State Fair Ass-.ciation grounds. At
least eleven airplanes, two captured
from™®ermans will be used by avi
ators from Taylor, Souther, Carl
gtrom and Door Fields! There also
wiil re a balloon company from Camp
Eragg. Two dirible balloons will make
flights, one coming from Pensacola,
Fla.. and the other, belonging to the
Geodyear Rubber Company, from
Akron, Onlo.
.
Eastern Star to Give
Play for War Orphans
An interesting program has been
prepared for the play and musicale
to be given in the Auditorium May ll
under the auspices of Atlanta Chap
ter and Oglethorpe Chapter, Order
of the Kastern Star, for the benefit of
the fatherless children of France
“That Blond Person” is the name
of the play, to be given by six talent
ed girls. Preparations for the big
entertainment are being supervised
by Mrs. W. W, King, past worthy
matron of Oglethorpe (Chapter and
now a grand officer in the State chap
ter. Soldiers will be admitted free,
it was announced Wednesday. Boy
Scouts will act as ushers. Tickets
have been placed on sale in J. F.
C‘reel’s jewelry store, No. 127 Arcade
Building, and will be on sale in the
Auditorium box office on the date of
the entertainment.
“The Store of Dependability”
Essential Features
in Diamond Buying
The three points that interest
the Diamond buyer are
Quality
Price
Value
In the Davis & Freeman ecollection
vou will find that these features were
constantly in our buyer’s mind when
he was making his selections. 3
He knows Quality, Price and Values
and his expert knowledge is at your
disposal.
Diamonds.
47 Whitehall St.
“The Store of Dependabiiity”
e = .
= ¢ ‘(‘Ct oy Ten b I
SR Victor Jalmte
P Records &P 000
which should be in every home
It is only natural that among the 4000
records in the Victor catalog, there should be
some numbers to stand out prominently because
of their superior merit. Here are ten of them:
Forza del Destino—Swear in This Hour—Caruso-Scotti.
Rigoletto Quartet—Galli-Clurei, Perini, Caruso and de Lueca
Lucia Sextette-——Galli-Curei, Egener, Caruso, fle Luca, Ete.
A la Luz de la Luna—Caruso-de Gogorza.
Elegie—Melodie—Caruso-Elman,
La Boheme-—OO Soave Fanciulla—Alda-Martinell
Traviata l'll]'“lln'ln" Galli-Curei-de Liuea.
Madam Butterfly-=>Tutti i fior—Alda-Braslau
Thais—Meditation—Farrar £
Uocchie Celeste—Caruso
“Darling Nellie Gray,”
“Old Black Joe,”
By GLUCK,
Mavbe von have some of them. De sure to hear the others
—COMIE¢ 10 auy time.
Phillips & C 1
PIANO CO.,
82 N. Pryor St. Phone Ivy 1834,
“Qldest Victor Dealers in Georgia."
Senator Underwood
Speaks in Huntsville
HUNTSVILLE, ALa., April 22~
Senator Oscar W. Underwood, of Ala.
bama, wag guest of honor at the week
ly Kotary Club dinner last night and
delivered an impromptu address in
which he touched on three subjects of
absorbing interest—the nitrate plant at
Muscle Shoals, Bolshevism and the Vic
tory l.oan. He said the Government
had the great nitrate plant completed
only a few days before the armistice
| was signed and is now contronted with
the question of what to do with it
The m.tte‘ will be settled at the next
session of " Congress, the Senator be
lieves,
Speaking of Bolshevism he said the
nearest thing we have to it in this coun
try is the 1. W. W. which should not
be allowed to make any progress be
cause it strikes at the very root of our
; vlvillzalio‘?. Senator Underwood urged
on the péople the necessity of making
the Victory lLoa® a success, declaring
that in the event it is not a popular
guccess the Goverument will be com
pelled to get the ®noney from the banks
.
Atlanta Gideons to Hold
y . .
Camps Fire Meeting
Atlanta Camp of Gideons will hold
a campfire meeting Saturday night at
7 o'clock at the home of the presi
dent, W, L. Hardin, No. 268 Oak street,
West kKnd. Aside from the social fea
tures there will be a number of busi
ness matters to dispose of. Plans are
to be worked out for a membership cam
paign and the Bible work and mission
plans will be discussed at length., Ar
rangements also will be completed to
send a representation to the Gideon
convention in Cleveland.
W. L. Hardin is president of the camp,
which is eomposed of thirty-eight mem
bers. The other officers are C, A.
Titus and A. F. Todd, vice presidents;
M. D. Smith, treasurer; E. L. Wor
cester, secretary, and H. A. McDonald,
chaplain.
Many Easter Checks |
. .
For Armenian Relief
Responses from the ‘‘Easter Armg
nian”’ checks sent out by the commit
tee for Armenian-Syrian relief lflst‘
Sunday, are coming by every mail, Mrs
B. M. Boykin, general chairman of the
committee, said Wednesday.
The offices of the committee have
been removed from the ground floor of
the Flatiron Building, No. 1108, of the
same building. Mrs. Boykin urges that
those desiring to contribute make out
the checks payable to her and sendl
them to the new ofces of the commit
tee. I
NEGRO CHURCH AIDED l
Dock Mitchell, negro porter in the
office of the Secretary of State and onel
of the best liked porters in the emé)lo_v,
of the State, raised the sum of $67.75
among his white friends at the Capi
tol to help the Silon Baptist Church,
colored at Kast Point in its drive for
SB.OOO to build a new church. More than
$2.000 of the sum was reported sub
scribed at a rally held in the church
last Sunday.
“Sweetest Story Ever Told,”
“I'm Longing'o' You,”
By BRASLAU.
- ~
Chambcrlln-Johnson-Dußose CO.
86-96 Whitehall ;
J .
Since the last opera season, we have moved into our new store
—which has been builded to for fifty years, representing the con
summation of our ideals, and the best that modern merchandising
architecture had attained—and now it gives us pleasure to invite
vou to a store that for attractiven ss, for completeness, for quality
of merchandise and for correctne:s of merchandising methods,
stands pre-eminent.
Those who have seen and patr mized the famous stores of Amer
ica, tell us that ours is an institution of which the whole South may
well feel proud. Such expression: are naturally pleasing to us, and
serve to spur us to further efforts, our constant aim being to do
things just a little better each day.
We believe that you will enjiy a visit to the store. We have
spared no effort to make it attractive. The aisles are broad, the
store is commodious, there is no ¢ owding, and vou can do your
shopping leisurely and with the maximum of comfort.
Those who have done business with us know that there is but
one quality of merchandise evér hindled here—the best. You ecan
have the satisfying assurance that every purchase made here puts
vou in possession of merchandise that is backed by our reputation
of fifty vears of correct dealing.
Under one roof vour shoppins needs can be served completely,
comfortably and leisurely. Six floors of merchandise await you,
including:
Aluminum Ware
Art Needlework
Art Wares
Awnings
Baby’s Wear
Bags
Baggage
Baskets
Bath Fixtures
Bathing Suits
Bed Linen
Belts
Blankets
Blouses
Braids
Brooms
Bath Robes
Boudoir Slippers
Candies
Carpets
Children’s Wear
China
Chiropody
Clocks
Clothes Baskets
Coats
Comforts
Corsets
Cretonnes
Crochet Work
Curtains
Cnt Glass
Cutlery
Dinner Sets
Draperies
For your comfort and convenience thete is a rest room, post
office, delicatessen, beauty shop, soda fount, writing room, and ex
pert modistes. And on the fifth floor, you can take lunch in the
most attractive tea room in the city, with splendid home eooking,
excellent menu and faultless service.
We cordially invite you to pay us a visit. We believe you will
enjov a trip through the store as much as you do the big stores of
the East. .
amberlin-Johnson-~
DUBOSG CO.
86-96 Whitehall
Dress Goods
Dresses
Dressmaking
Electrical Goods
Embroideries
Fancy Work
Fans
Favors
Flags
Floor Mops
Flowers (Artificial)
Flower Boxes
Fire Sets
Freezers
Furniture
Furs
Gift Novelties *
Glassware
Gloves
Grips
Groceries
Hair Dressing
Hair Goods
Hair Ornaments
Hampers
Handkerchiefs
Hardware
Hosiery
House Dresses
House Furnishings
Infants’ Goods
Ivory Goods
Japanese Wares
Jewelry
Kitchen Wares
Kimonos
Knitting Lessons
Laces
Lamps
Lamp Shades
Linens
Linings
Linoleum
Lingerie Underwear
Machines
Mattresses
Millinery
Misses’ Wear
Mosqnito Nets
Mourning Wear
Moth Bags
Muslin Underwear
Neckwar
Negligees
Nickelware
Notions
Oriental Goods
Oriental Rugs
Paints
Patterns
Perfumes
Petticoats
Phonographs
Pictures
Pillows
Porcelains
Pottery
Ready-to-Wear
Refrigerators
Ribbons
Rugs
Sanitary Goods
Sewing Machinas
Shades
Shoes
Silks
Silverware
Sofa Pillows
Sonoras
Stationery
Suits
Suit Cases
Sweaters
Tailoring
Table Linen
Talking Machines
Thermos Bottles
Tinware
Toilet Articles
Trimmings
Trunks
Umbrellas
Underwear, Knit
Underwear, Muslin
Varnishes
Vases
Veilings
Victrolas
Waists
Wash Goods
White Goods
Woodenware
Yarns