Newspaper Page Text
Caught In the Current
Three times a week on The Georgian
editorial page, James B. Nevin has his
personal intimate gossip column.
Firemasters Want to
Sell N. Pryor Station
Sale of the North Pryor street fire
P e
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£ b
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$2.00 es B ds $1.75
each u"a oar each
(By mail, 15¢ extra)
An Ouija will tell yon
Just when it will rain, p
Reveal the best way
‘ To alleviate pain,
Will foretell the future
And clear up the past,
Show how long the High Cost
Of Living will last,
GAVAN'S 71 Whitehall Bt.
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b The kiddies can't get enough ‘ — FAN
(Y 7 hot-cakes if they're servad with i
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A G[ ALAGA
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SYRUP L GRIOG
Pure cane syrup with just enough corn syrup e R LLR e
Ro give it a rich consistency, BTSN = L S
Packed b B T T T LA
ALABAMA-GEORGIA SYRUP CO. :
Montgomery, Als, Jacksonville. Fla. ;2
" Raaas anne o ; S—— e T
o LEOPOLD
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@9 , GODOWSKY
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= i Pianist
SN ] Who P lays
- ‘
. Friday Night
At Egleston Hall
Can Always Be Heard on
As an exponent of piano technique, Godowsky is everywhere con
ceded to be unequaled. On this side of his art he is dazzling and
altogether wonderful, a faet which renders still more remarkable
his possession of the other supreme qualities which, to give the
term its utmost significance, must be included in the equipment
of a truly great pianist. His poetic insight, extraordinary range
of expression and fluent, singing tone, supplementing his mase
tery of the keyboard, combine to make him a musician of such
fine balance as is rarely met with,
We invite you in to hear these remark
able Records of his playing
TWELVE-INCH: $1.50,
Onmpanelln, (Liset.) . Asasd
Haurk, Hark, The Lark! (Schubert.Lisst)
Gondellers in G Flat, (Hensell) (b) If I Were a Bind, Henselt ABToL
Waltz in A Flat (Chopin)
Rigoletto, Paraphrase (Verd!-Lisst. ) ADAS
Crudle Song. (Henselt) 4
If out of town order by mail.
We pay postage.
LUDDE%’BAIES
“Establishéd 1870
SONTHERN E\ISIC HOASE
80 N. Pryor St. Atlanta, Ga.
station was recommended to City
Council late Wednesday by the Board
of Firemasters. Some other location
less affected by traffic congestion
was urged.
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Six P, M, Friday Is Closing Time
for Submission of Ideas on
Woman’s Clothes.
‘ WOMAN'S CLOTHES BUDGET
CONTEST CLOSES FRIDAY,
Rules for The Georgian and Sun- |
day American “Woman's Clothes
Budget” contest:
1-—Letters must be addressed to
“The Woman's Budget Editor,” The
Atlanta Georglan and Sunday Ameri
can.
2--No anonymonus communications
will be entertained. All letters must
bear the writer's full name, address
and, if possible, the telephone nums
ber for purposes of confirmation by
the judges.
3—All letters must be In the of
five of The Georglan-American be
fore 6 o'clock Friday evening, Feb
ruary 27.
4—Letters are limited to 300 words;
write on one side of the paper, and,
particularly, itemize clothes and cost
of each item, and the relation of the
wife's clothes budget to a husband's
1 35,000 income-—whether the clothes
should cost five, ten or some other
' per ceat of that amount.
b—~Announcement of award of the
“On With the Dance™ tickets and
season pasres to the Rialto Theater
| will be made In The Sunday Ameri
l can February 29.
Bix o'clock tonight!
That's the closing time for the let
ters in The Georgian and Sunday
American contest on the clothes bud
get of milady.
Letters galore are coming in at
the last hours.
And it's no small wonder, with fine
feathers for spring the subject of the
letters.
Any woman, ammost. could talk
enough about or write enough, to fill
a book on what she should have to
spend for clothes, the proper allow
ance from Mr. Husband, and what
the different itemsa cost.
The clothes budget contest was
suggested, you know, by Peggy Wells’
story recen‘ly in The Georgian on
the cost of “clothes worn by women
in various statlons of life, A school
teacher, manicurist, salesgirl, stenog
rapher, newspaper reporter and
others figured out the cost of their
“fine feathers.”
SONIA FOUND A WAY,
And, with the conting of the photo
plz “On With the Dance” to the
Rigito next week, the contest sug
gested itself, because Bonia, of “On
With the Dance,” became a masked
dancer in a cabaret tp get more
money for clothes.
l Do you think u moderately success
ful husband should give his wife all
A ';L; ’
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: LTS S\ &
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SR RN Od() WSKY
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MRS LR SR, N AUDITORUM-ARMORY,
: S m - February 27
A e ST >
; et LAt \‘l \‘\“\\\ SO Under the Management oy
SRRt ) . AN z . .
. S, b Atlanta Music Study Club.
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RN 2\ \ Says Huneker, critic of the New
Q;,--‘__-;,, = York Times, of Godowsky, “Noth
‘\‘;‘\;,{-”: ing like him, as far as I know, is
NN ol to be found in the history of piano
STI ,‘.{ _"‘,\A playing since Chopin. Heis a mir-
R i}gg\ . aclecworker—the greatest creator
el A K ’3; \ of thythmic values since Liszt.”
{(‘, . s AR, | -
Af‘— i/ /_ R i G COLUMBIA GRAPHOPHONE COMPANY, New York
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Godowsky will play for you, in 7" ¢4, . e 74 I
your own home, on the records ‘l'.' ’:i ./N ./ ' I
\s:nu‘h ‘hc makes c‘\\'lm.xvcl\' for !%“’\3 4’ ke ’ ;
2. et o
sk e AT R, ¢ 25 oo §IOO, Perted
lew Columbia Recordeon Sale PV are — e y > P origns up
lh\c IO(M 'nnd‘.?()lh; of -1»0'7 A:.o’uh '?':-‘:fi. "fifl" tt;‘r_’ .. -
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(O b A VAR eO iy
D’ LA ° ARE /g P L
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Lol e9@ AXTH Ao, A 8
Mest of us, perhaps, are inclined
to think there never was such a dev
ilishly unsatisfactory C(ongress as
that which has been . quarreling a
year sver the peace treaty and get
ting -Aowhere. But away baek in
Cleveland’'s time statesmen were be
ing roasted just as hard, if one may
jvudge from a poem published in the
Pittsburg Dispatch and handed me
from the scrapbook of my friend,i.
A, Dickey. Here it is:
THE SUGAR-CURED CONGRESS,
How dear to our hearts is our Democratic
Congress
As hopeles inaotion presents it to view:
The h‘lltlxrinf'r poor Wilson, the deep tangled
And every mad pledge that their lunacy
knew!
The widespread depression, the mills that
closed by lit, :
The rock of free silver where great
Grover fell,
They've busted our country, no use to
deny it,
And dxlnlrn the old party, it's busted as
we
j This G. Cleveland Congrass,
This Queen Lilly Congrees,
‘ This wild free trade Congreas
‘ We all love so well,
'Their moss covered pledges we no longer
treasure,
For Jn;,t-*n at noon when out hunting a
ob,
We find that instead of the corn they
had promised,
They'vg given us nothfng—not even a
cob.
How ardent we've cussed "em with lips
overflowing
With sulphurous blessings as great swear
words fell,
The emblems of hunger, free trade and
free silver,
the clothes she wants? What is a
reasonable allowance for clothes?
Suppose the husband makes $5.000
a year—what should be the wife's
clothes allowance? And, if the al
lowance is not enough, do you think
she should earn money as a dancer
to increase her clothes allowance?
Those are the questions you should
answer in your letter,
And, to prove your arguments,
make out an itemized statement of
the clothes budget—so much for
dresses, hats, shoes, etc.
HERE ARE THE RULES.
Read the rules, printed above, and
there still is time if you hurry.
Here is the list of prizes:
For the best letter, The Georgian-
American will award a 12-month's
pass to the Rialto theater.
For the second preze, there 18 a
‘B-months’ pass to the Rialto.
Third prize, 3-months’ pass to the
Rialto,
Fourth prize, ten passes to the
Rialto to “On with the Dance.”
Fifth to twentieth prizes, two
passes each tg the Rialto to “On
With thé Dance.”
Twenty-first to fiftieth—one pass
each to the Riallo to “On With the
Dance.”
The masked dancer in the windows
of Daniel Bros., windows on Peach
tree near Five Points, continues to
attract big crowds. She will be
masked and continue to dance for
the throngs Saturday, and Monday
will appear in a prologue on “On
With the Dance” at the Rialto.
NEW LEGION COMMANDER.
AMERICUS, Ga., Feb 26.—John D.
Mathis Post American ULegion has
chosi Gordon Howell to succeed
Jamg. A. 3&)11 as commander. Howell
was formerly vice commander, and
Evan T. Mathis Jr., was elected to fill
the office made vacant by his pro
motion.
. Are sounding in sorrow the working
man's knell,
. This bank-breaking Congress,
This mill-closing Congress,
This starvation Congress
We all love so well.
How sweet from their eloquent lips to re
ceive it,
“Cur;(-;ll tariff protection no longer up
a”
We Hfl?med——and voted our dinner palls
einpty,
The factories silent, the furnaces cold,
And now.far removed from our lost sit
uations,
The tear of regret doth intrusively swell,
We yearn for Republican administration
And sigh for the Congress that served us
so well,
This Fifty-third Congress,
This Democrat Congress,
This sugar-cured Congress
We wish was in—well.
Miss Anne Morgan harided a bit of
a jolt to Dave W. Webb, president
of the Advertising Club, when she‘
gpoke at the club luncheon Thursday
afternoon. Mr. Webb had just in
troduced her as the woman who went
nearer the front lines in France
than any other woman.
‘I find myself in the position of
‘selling something to the publie,” said
Miss Morgan. “But I find I have
neglected the important matter of
iadverusing my goods in advance.
And I have learned a lesson from
your president—that advertising is
the art of telling an untruth skil
fully!” |
/ And right over her head hung the
club motto: “Truth in Advertising.”
Paderewski to Resume
. .
His Tour of America
(By International News Service.)
PASO ROBLES, Cal, Feb. 26.—Ig
nace Paderewski, ex-premier of Po
land and world famous pianist, is ex
pected to resume the American tour
he bolted so abruptly early in the
great war to give his money, time
and energy to the liberation of Po
land, acecording to word received here
today by William Hemphill, the ar
tist’'s American manager.
Hemphill has a letter from Pader
vewski in which the musician says he
exp2cts to return to America soon to
resume his tour from San Francisco.
Lets Own Wound Wait
; .
‘ While Dog Is Treated
~ (By International News Service.)
~ NEW YORK, Feb, 26.—After be
iing shot and seriously wounded by
a burglar in his Eleventh avenue res
taurant early today, Martin Matarch
refused medical attention until hd
could call a veterinary surgeon on
‘the telephone to treat his watch dog
that had been shot by the robber,
GGovernor Approves
Payment of Pensions
Governor Dorsey Thursday ap
proved notes for the payment of
$632,820, the first installment of the
1920 pensions.
The fund is paid in semi-annual
payments, half the counties receiving
their allotments the first payment an
the other half the last of the year.
L GIRLS HELD O
THEFT CHARGES
The police believe they have cap
tured two accomplices to a band of
burglars and shoplifters operating in
Atlanta in the arrest Wednesday
night of two well dressed young wo
.
men giving their names as Fay Hlam
ilton and Mrs. J. W. Weaver. They
are docketed at headquarters as sus
pects.
The Hamilton girl was arrested by
Detective Vick Young in a depart
ment store. She gave her address as
27 Bast Harris street. Mrs. Weaver
whs taken when the police searched
Whats What for the Younger Generation
in the Spring
Wash Suit News
as uit INews.
By special interview with . . ¥
the Boys' Specialist at Muse's
I SAID to this official— ‘I want to get a few e
fashion notes on what’s what for small '
% boys.”’ '
A “Wash Suits,”” he said and ‘‘suiting the’ fi_
action and the word,”” he proceeded to show me fil‘rfi:..l
a 9 Ay tho I hadn’t said a word about being from my A l{“ 1)
g‘w special State. "'j' ‘~-;
)oy This is what I got—for the smallest boy— &g’«fifk=
< i Spring Wash Suit fashions are unusually A cay :
smart. They have caught the French air of R
quaintness which is so charming. Impudent
little trousers that yank up just like you were N
A ' reading Dickens and had dropped a loose leaf < >
(1) —and Oliver Twist rolled out on the floor— M L)
—and . - -
—the quaint French Suits #
—Sailor Suits
—Juvenile Norfolks
—Middy Suits
Done in white—white and combinaYions of -
stripes or solid color with white trimmings.
—Second
; Floor.
!
$2.50 to $lO
1
GEO. MUSE CLOTHING CO.
3-5-7 Whitehall
the East Harris street apartment and
found valuable dresses and dry goods
believed to have been stolen.
The arrests follow many thefts
from Atlanta stores. Simultaneously
.
$ ’
3 Professional Men’s
ss,ooo.oo—Payable for accidental death, less of two limbs or both eyes.
SIOO.OO Monthly—Payable FOUR YEARS, for any ACCIDENT causing total
disability; one-fourth the amount as long as insured lives and continues
totally disabled.
SIOO.OO Monthly—Payable ONE YEAR, for any ILLNESS causing house coen
finement; ‘one-fourth the amount as long as insured lives and continues
totally confined to the house:
12.50—PER QUARTER—SI2.SO
. .
This rate applies to office. men between the ages of 18 and 50. Larger or
smaller policies at proportionate rates. Rates quoted on all occupations
upon request,
ARCH M. CONWAY, General Agent
1015 HEALEY BUILDING. PHONE IVY 7341,
You Will Find a Complete
Stock of Selections by
On Columbia Records at
]he@e&:'}zeon CS’}W Inc.
“In the Arcade”
117.121 @
Atlanta, Ga.
As an exponent of piano technique, Godowsky is every
where conceded to be unequaled. On this side of his art
he is dazzling and altogether wonderful, a fact which ren
ders still more remarkable his possession of the other su
preme qualities which, to give the term its utmost signifi
cance, must be included in the equipment of a truly great
pianist. His poetic insight, extraordinary range of ex
pression and fluent, singing tone, supplementing his mas
tery of the keyboard, combined to make him a musician
of such fine balance as is rarely met with,
\
We Call Your Attention Especially
to These Records:
TWELVE-INCH, $1.50 el
Oampanells, (LABBt.) .icvevrsonsis consoneaisssissveines ANBA
Hark, Hark, the Lark! (Schubert-Liszt.)
Gondoliera in G Flat, (lenselt.) (b) If I Were a Bird.
CHERREIE ). 5 vnvviasssvanes ié vis it nnaisnias v et DTUR
Waltz in A Flat. (Chopin.)
Rigoletto. Paraphrase. (Verdi-Liszt.)...eevivieeses s.A 5896
Cradle Song. (Henselt.) .
Arthuz Brisbane’s Today
Every day Arthur Brisbane, the dis
tinguished editor, telegraphs to The Geor
gian his comment on today's news. “
there were a number of burglaries in
different parts of the city.
When the women were appre-=
hended they consented to be taken
to headquarters protesting innocence.