Newspaper Page Text
Georgian’s Boys and Girls
Something new every week day for
boys and girls to do. Entertaining and
useful.
Dixie Highway Being
Inspected by Officers
V. D. L. Robinson, seeretary of the
Dixie Highway Association, ils ex
pected in Atlanta Friday or Saturday
To Please the Eyes of Youth fi
AN
MISSES’ SPRING DRESSES =4
AT
Be It of Tricotine Severe and Tailored, ; ' “‘
.or Taffeta Frivolously Tucked and Frilled, / k. Y
the First Spring Frock Receives an Ovalion. 4 ‘ 1 ij?!
‘ HiMA !B B
HE first Spring frock is important—if added to ™ ";f&f, .
I being the first Spring froek, the frock is pretty, "‘f* ‘g«
then there is little more to ask. The Lyle Shop i) \_‘:"'t
presents the first Spring dresses " Py
TP
To Maitch the Spirit of Spring \
To Sum Up the Mode of Smartness
Almost all of these Spring dresses have short sleeves,
some of them are saucy, some no less severely than
cleverly tailored. 'The more formal frocks of silk
are frilled, quilled, pleated, made with smart harem
hems, finished with tassels, bright with ribbons, em
broidered, or corded> Sizes 14 to 18 years. '
TRICOTINE . METEOR
SERGE ' CLIMAX SATIN
MIGNONETTE CHINCHILLA SATIN
PLAIN GEORGETTE POMPADOUR GEORGETTE
CREPE DE CHINE FLOWERED GEORGETTE
TAFFETA KITTEN'E EAR CREPE
$25.00 to SIIO.OO '
§" | H i
= 7 MASTER PIANIST | %
=\ Will Be Heard in Coneert at ’ \
;, i EGLESTON MEMORIAL HALL, Friday Evening, February 27 ‘}_:
; GODOWSKY Uses the KNABE B
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= Lok al\ AL $ rQ >EEEs R
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=% Wm. Knabe & Co,, ’ =
" ! Gentlemen: I must express to you my hv:n't‘\ appreciation of ” = .
= the noble qualities of your instruments M- F
&"' The requirements of modern piano playing are so great and 1 :"‘
) manifold, demanding of the instrument orchestral volume and 1 : :
Al variety of color as much as utmost delicacy, clearness and that El u
ok pearly quality peculiar to the piano passages, that it is a most i =
il perplexing problem to the piano manufacturer to satisfy all th ? i B
) demands of the XXth contury pianist *s} :
= 3 Cordially yours, ' ! -;
:’0 N LEOPOLD GODOWSKY., }‘% (
;i i s
il PHILLIPS & CREW | |
! ' “'. 2
i PIANO CO. | X
A Ivy 801 82 N. Pryor St. {l =
4| Knabe Agents for Over Fifty Years ‘
on his tour of inspection of the reads
south of Chattanooga. i
He will attend the hithway rally
in Dalton Thursday afternoon at
which Frank T. Reynolds will speak
in behalf of the (eorgia County
Commissioners’ Association bond
issue,
ODLyle Inc.
Second Floor Connally Bidg.
Overlooking Whitekall, Corner Alabama Street.
ATEANTA - GEORGIAN - = o
THUR ,/.‘.‘.. ,A‘:‘ aE, 75 ¥ & " T
Yy i, low
»
Young Women’s Hebrew
Association to Meel
The monthly meeting o’ the Yourg
Women's Hebrew Assccration will he
held at 8 p. m. Thuraday at the Jew
ish Eduecational Aliance, %0 upitol
avenue. An entertaining program has
been arranged,
The county commission, at its
regular meeting next Wednesday, will
receive a recommendation from the
county public works committee, of
wlnwh Paul S. Etheridge is chairman,
that permanent repairs, estimated at
{ $50,000, be made on the Collins Dridge
over the Chattahoochee River, The
ihrhlm‘ is declared in dangerous con
| dition,
The cost of the repairs is to be
apportioned among Fulton and Cobb
Counties and the Georgia Ralilway
};mrl Power Company. The propor
' tionate amount to be paid by each is
to be determined at a conference be
tween the county attorneys of Ful
ton and Cobb and the attorneys of
the power company, who will con
strue the State law relating to the
.h-n!'lmx: of joint county bridges. -
i The recommendation of the public
! works committee was determined
! Wednesday afternoon at a joint meet
{ing of the committee and the Cobb
i County commissioners. Th=2 Cobb
| commissioners, who wished time to
ls'm!\ four plans submitted for mak
ing the bridge safe, will take action
at their regular meeting next Tues
day, and then will meet with the
ll‘ulmn commission on Wednesday to
i make their report. The Cobb com
missioners indicated that they, too,
favored the plan of permancat re
| pair, which provides for the raising
'uf the bridge four feet and the build
-ling of a concrete approah on the
C'obb Cotnty side.
. .
Adair Community Center
3. 8
Association to Meet
The Community Center Association
of the Adair Public School 1 ‘‘rict,
will meet at 7:30 o'clock Irilay
night at Catherine and Maylard
streets, to receive reports fromn com
mittees on proposed civic improve
ments. An entertainment will be
given,
’ Proposed improvements are better
i street car service, concrete paving
and larger sewers. Efforts will e
made to begin quickly concrete pav
ing in Stewart avenue, to eliminate
water overflow into yards of resi
dences and to have a double car track
in Stewart avenue, |
’
Senora’s Corset Had
.
Three Quarts Inside
DOUGLAS, Ariz, Feb. 26.—Wear
ing a galvanized lined corset contain
ing three quarts of whisky and driv
ing au automobile bearing two extra
tires filled with liquor, Senora Refu
gia L. de Ayala, the wife of a weal
thy Mexican congressman, was ar
{ rested here by American customs au
thorities ¢harged with attempted
i‘qnugglinz.
———
Lavoptik
The quick action of simple witch
hazel, camphor, hydrastis, etc. as
mixed in Lavoptik eye wash will sur
prise Atlanta people. One young lady
with weak, red eyes was greatly ben
ofitted in three days. The witch
hazel and camphor soothe. and re
lieve the inflammation; the hydras
tis and other ingredients have tonic
and antiseptic properties. We guar.
antee a small botile Lavoptik to help
ANY CASE weak, strained or in
flamed eyes. Aluminum eye cup
FREE.—Jacobs' " Pharmacy Co., and
111 leading druggists.—Adv.
Combing Won't Rid
Hair of Dandruff
The only sure way to get rid of
landruff is to dissolve it, then you
jestroy it entirely To do this, get
Ihout four ounces of ordinary liquid
irvon, apply it at night when retir
ing: use enough to moisten the scalp
ind rub it in gently with the finger
tips.
Ilm this tonight, and by moring
most, if not all, of your dandruff will
be gone, and three or four more ap
plications will completely dissolve and
entirely destroy (voiy single sign and
trace of it, no matter how much dan
irnff you may have,
You will find, too, that all itching
ind digging of the scalp will stop at
nece, and your hair wili be fluffy
lustrous, glossy, silky and soft, and
look and feel a hundred times better
You ecan get liguid arvon at any
Irug store It is inexpensive and
never fails to do the work.—Adv,
Itched and Burned. Scalp
Soreandßed. CuticuraHeals
““My ten months old baby had a
dreadful breaking out on his head.
He would scratch spreading the
eruption, and his scalp wes sore
and very red. The mah iched and
burned painfully. He was terribly
cross and lufi;fld would He awake
nights and me awake., The
eruption also sopped the growth of
his hair.
“Then I sent for a free sample of
Cuticura Soap and Ointment, |
afterwards bought more, and 1 used
one cake of Cuticura Soap and one
box of Cuticura Ointment when he
was healed." (Slined) Leslie San
ders, Knottsville, Ky., April 9, 1919.
Use Cuticura for all tollet purposes.
u-u.uenmy Mall Ag:. “Outbonrs
Laborsiories Dept K Malden. Sold every
whare “oap Be Ointment 25 and e hb;.;-
! *‘(-lk-c!u.-h-vum—. !
Has Her Tombstone and
Coffin, but Is Healthy
WINSTON SALEM, N, C., Feb. 26
Miss KEliza Bass ts Lumberton has
had her coffin and burial robe sev-
WeMake Free
Examinations
AL . S AR AN RPN
?::iennatli;n reqt:ire:e :exa‘:e('to:):ll\
troubles. We are glad to
make these examinations
FREE and to give you HON
EST WORK at the LOWEST
possible prices.
Palace Dental
Rooms
5 W. Alabama St.
Phone Main 1946,
Open Daily 8 to 6.
1865 Oldest National Bank in the Cotton States 1920
['he Atlanta National Bank
Has Kept Pace With ‘
- ‘ .
The Banking Progress of ¢ America
The Fifty-seventh yearly report of the Comptroller
of the Currency just issied shows some remark- ,
able facts: The resources of the national banks on
November 17, 1919, were $22,444,992,000.00. The
INCREASE IN RESOURCES of the national banks
of the United States in the six years since 1913 is
$11,585,000,000.00, or 107%. Immunity from failure
breaks all records for this country or any other.
In the fiscal year ending October 31, 1919, among 7,900
; national banks there was not one failure involving losg
to depositors. From 1874 to 1914 the average failures
of national banks involving such losses were 17 a year.
In 1914 there were 8; in 1915 there were 5; in 1916 and
1917 there were three each year; in 1918 there was one
failure. :
In 1919—NONE. : -
NATIONAL BANKS IN SOUTHERN STATES have
today resources in excess of those held twenty years
ago by all the National Banks in the United States.
Just as SOUTHERN BANKS have more than kept
pace with the rest of the country, the Atlanta National
has kept pace—and faith—with the general develop
ment of the city, state and section.
THE MODERNIZED SERVICE of the Atlanta Na
tional has enabled countless business enterprises to as
sume their rightful place among the substantial and
prosperous institutions of the country.
ATLANTA NATIONAL SERVICE is more complete
today than ever before. It is at your command today,
just as it has been at the command of the public since
the days when it was the only National Bank in the cot
‘ton states. Y
% # "I‘ ' :
In continuance of its policy of service
—The Atlanta National Bank begs to
announce that Mr. A. W. Almand, 7
Income Tax Expert, who for the past
two years has assisted, without cost,
our patrons in making up their annual
U. S. Income Tax return, will be in our
: Safety Deposit Department daily, dur
ing banking hours, until March 16th.
His services will again be helpful to
our patrons, who are invited to call
upon him,
OFFICERS:
Robert F. Maddox, President
——Vice Presidents ——Assistant Cashiers———
Frank E. Block Geo. R. Donovan J. D. Leitner R. B. Cunningham
James S. Floyd Thos. J. Peeples D. B. DeSaussure Jas. F. Alexander
J. S. Kennedy, Cashier
T#e Atlanta National Bank
Resources Over $35,000,000.00
eral years. The coffin was made
to order in Lumberton. Miss Bass,
who ' keeps the coffin under her bed,
has made her own burial clothes, and
bought her tombstone.
Despite these preparations, she is
active and healthy at ‘the age of 835.
————— s e
» "
\‘ *3"'f'i";tv;“:\. o A
YV Yy
PLATES .‘."
Made and Deliverc. osame Day
e eI
Gold Crowns and
Bridge Work as low as
Silver $1 Set of $5
Filling Teeth
OLD PLATES l
made like new to 3
All other work low in proportion
and all work GUARANTEED
Arthur Brisbane’s Today
Every day Arthur Brisbane, the dis
tinguished editor, telegraphs to The Geor
gian his comment on today's news. -
.
Fun, Amusement, Music
Are All Yours on the
If You Dance—You Want
These Records:
18626—A1l the Quakers Are | 18629—1 Might Be Your “Once.
Shoulder Shakers. in-a-While.”
18625--And He'd Say 00-la-la. 18630—3“ What a Pal Was
ary.
18633—Dard§nella-—Fox Trot. 18632—00 n Miami Shore.
18639—Dublin Jig Medley. 18640—Taxi. §
18641—Fluffy Ruffles. | 18618—Tulip Time,
GOODHART-TOMPKINS CO.
(Retail Dept. Southern Photo Material Co.)
,@}‘&
< 72 N. BROAD ST.
Mr. Snapshot Says: “Use Our 8-Hour Film Developing Service”